waldo said:
Keeping a difficult species would be too time consuming and would ultimately lead to me not liking the animal.
Right now in my life, I have a lot going on with school. I just defended my dissertation proposal on Tuesday (and passed--hurray!) and Wednesday, I thought, "I wonder when the snakes last ate." For some of them it had been 2 and a half weeks. All I've done with them for the last two weeks is refill their water when needed. No eating, no pooping, so no cleaning was necessary. I like to spend lots of time with them when I have it, and I love that if I don't have it, I don't even have to remember to feed them and they'll be just fine. The latter part is one of the things that makes them SO enjoyable for me. They're not picky and I can give them as much or as little attention as I have time for. I DEFINITELY don't want a demanding reptile. When I get to a time in my life where I want a demanding pet again, I'll go back to keeping seahorses before getting a difficult snake anyday (captive bred only, of course).
You've said that people don't want to leave their comfort zone. Why would they? It's a hobby, not a career, not a personal improvement venture. I don't keep corns to do anything my best. I keep my corns for the same reason that people watch TV--to relax after devoting my time and energy to learning, expanding my horizons, and pushing myself to be better at and know more about what I do as an academic. No one thinks about leaving their comfort zone when watching TV unless they are a film or TV critic, or a director, or an actor, or a sociocultural anthropologist. Most people watch TV solely because it's fun and relaxing.
I've been thinking about this a lot lately. I've been thinking about how much I like what I do for a job and how intense some people get about their hobbies, and how I just never get intense about my hobbies in that way. For some people the hobby is home improvement, for some, model aircraft flying, for some, being Dolly Parton fans, and for others, finding and figuring out how to meet herpetelogical husbandry challenges. And I think that's because most people need to direct their passion and intensity somewhere, and some people can't do that with their jobs, so they do it with their hobbies instead. And for SOME of those people, their hobby eventually becomes their job and they jump thereby into the other category! I pour myself completely into my job/career, and if I lived somewhere where I could go to the beach every day for relaxation, I probably wouldn't have any hobbies at all, because I wouldn't need 'em.
