
Four years ago, on my 21st birthday, my dad asked the classic parent question: āWhat do you want for your birthday?ā
Without hesitation, I declared, āA bunny.ā
To which he replied, absolutely not, in the same tone youād use if someone asked to keep a crocodile in the bathtub.Ā āWhoās going to look after it?āĀ he asked, clearly forgetting I was now a legal adult (with the maturity of a hungover toddler, but still).
I made grand promises, Iād keep the house clean, feed it, water it, make sure it didn’t die, you know, all the usual lies we tell when we want something fluffy. After a solid back-and-forth argument (aka me whining for 3 hours), he was still saying no.
So I pulled out the ultimate weapon: complete silence and puppy-dog eyes. I stopped speaking. Full-on dramatic soap opera mode. My dad, like many unsuspecting fathers before him, couldnāt handle the emotional blackmail.
So off we went to the pet shop.

The Bunny Plot Twist
TheĀ originalĀ plan was to buyĀ oneĀ bunny. Simple. Minimal chaos. Maximum fluff. But of course, when we arrived, there were only two left, twin brother and sister. And when we picked one, the other literally had a meltdown. Screaming, thumping, bunny tantrum the whole dramatic shebang.
We couldnāt leave one behind.Ā “We’re not monsters“
So we bought two. And we brought them home. š
They were the most adorable little creatures youāve ever seen for about five minutes. Then the chaos began.

Bunnies Are Cute Until They Eat Your Sofa
Hereās what I didnāt think about: destruction. Absolute, full-scale bunpocalypse.
They chewed every single wire they could find. Ate the leather sofa. Tore up the rug. Munched on my plants like it was a five-star salad bar.
The first two years were like living with tiny, fluffy wrecking balls. We werenāt prepared emotionally, (financially), or mentally. Every day was a new surprise.

The Bunny-Proof Era
Fast forward four years and, after a journey of suffering, weāve finally figured it out. The house is now bunny-proof, weāve bought a new sofa for $2,000 (still crying), and replaced the rug (who knows how much that cost, Iāve blocked it from memory).
TheyāreĀ slightlyĀ tamer now. Still sassy. Still wonāt let you touch them. But oh, theyāre adorable as long as you donāt mind justĀ lookingĀ at them like royalty that refuses to be petted.
Lessons Learned: Ask for Cake, Not Creatures
After that year, I becameĀ extremelyĀ careful about what I asked for on my birthday. Lesson learned: if it poops and chews through wires, maybe itās not a āgiftā itās aĀ lifestyle choice.
I love them to death, but letās be honest theyāre aĀ full-time job. A massive chunk of my life now revolves aroundĀ two tiny furballs who donāt pay rent.
Oh, and whenever we go on holiday, we check them into anĀ animal hotel. And guess what? We pay almost theĀ same amount as our own hotel stay. Thatās right. My rabbits are out here living a luxury life while Iām wondering if I can afford room service.
Final Thoughts from a Bunny Mum
So yes, getting bunnies was the best-worst decision of my life. If you’re thinking of getting one because they’re cute and fluffy, allow me to burst your bubble with some hard truths and a chewed-up power cable.
But hey, at least Iāve got a good story. And a new sofa. And two judgemental bunnies staring at me as I write this.
Happy Monday from Japan!Ā
Howās your Monday going? Iāve already cleaned bunny poop and wrestled with a chewed charger. Living the dream.
Loads of Luv
Hannah
IG: @boundless.pages25
PS; their name are Snow and Snowy (but they are brown), story for another time x

Leave a reply to Dustin Cancel reply