October 28th, 2011
I talk about cats a lot. People who stumble on the blog or twitter have started to get the notion that I’m some kind of cat hoarder. Then they send me emails about how I need to get out of my house and how I will, inevitably, die alone. I kid you not. So, should you be one of those stumblers and feel inclined to send me such a message, this post is for you.
We were a one cat household, not some cat hoarder den of crazy. Well, actually, until January, we were a one cat/one dog household but we lost the dog to the tragedy of old age.
When we bought our home in the spring, we didn’t move in for almost two months while we undertook some rather ambitious renovations. During this time I one, got very good at using a caulk gun and two, happened to notice that we were surrounded by cats. Feral cats. Not strays – these cats (with the exceptions of a gigantic white male who can be seen in possession of a collar and tag as well as a giant set of kitten-makin’ balls) had never been anybody’s pet and were likely born in the same yards they now prowled.
One day in early May, while we were scraping paint for what had to be the 70th hour, I looked out the window and saw the cutest little ball of fluff bouncing around in the bushes. Immediately I knew I needed to hug this little ball of fluff so outside I ran to introduce myself to its mother.
“Hello, Mama Cat!” I said, crouching down and offering a hand. “I’m very nice and I would like to hug the guts out of your baby.”
Somehow it had escaped me that a feral cat wouldn’t be all that enthusiastic about letting me do anything to her baby, much less give it the Lennie treatment. I got the clue, though, what with all the hissing and growling. When we moved in a week or two later, I started putting out dry cat food for the angry Mama Cat because I wasn’t certain whether she had a predictable food source and a nursing mother should have at least that. She ate the food but she was not my biggest fan.
Two weeks later when we got home from our honeymoon, I spotted that same ball of fluff, laid out on the concrete in the heat of the day, moving only when the mockingbirds began dive-bombing her from the trees. Enough, I thought. All it took was an outstretched hand and that little kitten came running. She was bones and fleas. Off we went to the vet and when we came home, my husband called her Midget; at six weeks old, she weighed less than a pound. And that’s when Midge came to live with us and we became a two cat household.
That’s also when I decided to do something about the uncared-for cat population on our street. And I would start with Mama Cat. I contacted a local rescue, KittiCo, who told me that I could borrow a quote/unquote humane trap, catch her, bring her in and they would spay and release. But after I emailed back for details, I never heard from them again. Which was all fine and dandy – I couldn’t bring myself to frighten an animal by trapping it in a metal cage. I don’t see that as humane and I didn’t have it in me. But I also couldn’t stand the idea of Mama, who couldn’t have been a year old, popping out litter after litter.
The best thing about the timing, though, was that Mama Cat was already working on another litter. Ha. Ha. Haaaaaaa. Yay.
Anyway, I decided when I took Mama to the vet, it would be because she let me pick her up and take her there. When my vet heard my plan, he was not thrilled.
“Be careful,” he said. “Feral cats can be very tough.”
“Whatever,” I thought. “I can be very tough.”
What I meant was stubborn. Every morning and every evening for the next several weeks, I sat on our driveway and fed Mama Cat from a bowl that I started out by placing six feet away, then four, then two, then right at my side. By the time she was eating next to me, she was also letting me scratch her back. Then she introduced me to her babies: two seriously cute little ladies (around four weeks old, by my guess) who were not so thrilled to be called to dinner while I sat nearby, but they were not given a choice. Morning after morning and night after night I sat on the driveway being eaten alive by ants and mosquitoes and sweating through my clothes. The heat of the summer drove us all to do some desperate things, and Mama was no exception – by the end of July, a combination of hard earned trust and desperation made her willing to lie belly up on the driveway and let me rub ice water into her fur. She began waiting for me at the front door, sometimes calling for me to come out.
Mama Cat became Mama Cass. Today, she lives on our back patio and not only lets me pick her up and hug her (okay, “lets” is a strong word. She tolerates it), she sits in my lap, nuzzles me and as of this week, has started leaving me presents. Two very dead, very neatly displayed robins.
Back in the second week of August, one of Cass’ kittens got sick. I found her dying in the bushes. And that’s when Vera came to live in our bathroom, then master bedroom and then, lucky thing, permanently at my mother in law’s house.
And then there was one. One totally effing terrified-of-humans kitten, who was still nursing. When she had weaned that final kitten, I calmly picked up Mama Cass, put her in a cat carrier and took her to the vet. Because she let me.
But until a few weeks ago, the last baby cat (who we cleverly call The Baby Cat) wouldn’t even climb onto the patio to eat until I was back inside the house, watching from the utility room window. That’s when I started giving her the Mama Cass Treatment. Every night and every morning, I sit on the patio, food bowls at my knees and I do not move until she has finished. I built them a shelter out of a re-purposed storage bin and got downright gleeful when I watched Baby Cat crawl out of it the next morning, stretching and yawning. I began sneak-attack petting. And then sneak-attack hugging. And this morning, I picked her up, plopped her into a cat carrier and took her to be vaccinated and spayed. She, uh, sort of let me.
“This,” I told the kitten as I petted her nervous little head, “is what they call winning.”
(Unless, of course, you’re speaking financially, because I don’t know how winning my husband would say it feels to have spent almost twelve hundred dollars on cats who are not actually your pets but it’s like I told him: “doing the right thing isn’t usually convenient. Besides, you were warned. For every time you re-watch the NBA finals, I will rescue another kitten.” He told me I’d better start looking for a cat lady scholarship.)
And I know, believe me, I know that these feral cats are not my pets. But despite all the knowing and how often I repeat “they are wild animals,” my attachment to them is very deep and I was awfully relieved when the vet just called to say all has gone very well and that we can bring her home this evening.
“Does she have a name,” he asked.
“Oh, um, Baby Cat?”
“Well, why don’t you work on a name so we can get her rabies vaccination registered.”
So, taking my cues from Dirty Dancing, our “Baby” has just been named FrancesĀ – after the first lady in the cabinet. Or Frances “Baby” Houseman. Whatever. It’s a real grown up name.
October 26th, 2011
Today is the first day in eleven that I haven’t had a headache and I’m celebratin’ with a blog post.
Two Sundays ago, I got knocked down with a migraine so gnarly that the sound of my husband making chocolate milk at the other end of the house felt like that spoon was bouncing around tink, tink, tink inside every bone of my face. Then it never really went away. On Thursday, after a second migraine (this time, at work) that made my left foot go numb, I went to see a neurologist, who ordered an MRI and prescribed some sort of miracle, migraine killing drug. The kicker is, the drug is a compound only made at two pharmacies in the whole of Dallas/Fort Worth and wouldn’t be ready until… today. And in the meantime, I had to stop taking over-the-counter crap because, get this, it causes “rebound headaches.” So with ear plugs jammed into my ears and bags of frozen Brussels sprouts pressed into my left eye socket (what? the ice packs never resurfaced after our move) I watched the World Series and waited for the MRI that has to be approved and scheduled by my insurance company. I expect that to happen sometime around retirement.
What’s most frustrating, I mean, aside from constantly being able to feel my heart beat in my brain, the headaches do a really good job of making me stupid. I lose my train of thought, can’t seem to remember work-essential vocabulary words and I get so busy reminding myself to breathe in and out, basic literacy escapes me. It is not pretty.
But today I feel normal. And since any paranormal powers in the Universe responsible for jinxes and related silliness are all tied up in baseball right now, I think it’s safe to risk saying the headache is gone.
And speaking of baseball…
How’d you like that transition? Thanks. I worked hard on it.
With the Rangers in the World Series, I’m listening to a lot more sports radio on the way to work instead of my iPod. This morning, I happened to catch a segment the Ticket calls, “Women Say the Darndest Things About Sports.” The gem of this 5 minute trip down Condescension Street was an email from a dude who says he put a bunch of effort into coercing his wife into watching sports with him – with the singular goal that she say something revealing her lack of sports knowledge, thus giving him material to submit to the show. So he can have 45 seconds of fame. By making fun of his wife.
Wow, guy. Just wow. We’ll check back in on your marriage in a few years and see how it’s holding up.
The incredibly patronizing “Women Say” segment did a great job of highlighting what I don’t like about sports broadcasting and fandom:
- Sports knowledge does not equate to intelligence. I’m always a little baffled by the Sports Genius who is ignorant about so, so many other things (world events, finances, literature, HOW TO OPERATE SMALL HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES) and yet behaves as though his sports knowledge makes him somehow erudite. You big scholar, you.
- Many, many sports rules are not logical. When the Sports Naive asks why something happens the way it does, the Duh tone that accompanies the answer is absolutely ridiculous. I give my Dork Lord much credit for never, ever assuming the Duh tone with me. You don’t get to be patronizing about a past-time that fully supports wearing seven-day-dirty drawers as a talisman against losing. You just don’t.
- Sports broadcasting often panders to sexism. Because it can. Because bucket loads of sports fans don’t see anything wrong with it. They’re likely the same ones still screaming feminine pejoratives at the TV when their heroic sports icon doesn’t quite live up to his bazillion dollar pay, too. That’s one of my favorites. A wide receiver with too many dropped passes doesn’t just really suck at his job, he’s a pussy. If he’s down too long after a hit, he’s not engaging in histrionics, he’s a whiny bitch. In sports, when a man is under-performing, he’s equated to a woman. Nice, right? All I can say is, may the good lord bless you all with daughters. And someday, may some poor fool go on national radio and talk about your little girl like she’s a halfwit.
October 12th, 2011
Every once in a while, when the store doesn’t quite have what I’m looking for, I make my own greeting cards. Today, I took a whole hour for lunch (the luxury!) and worked on these for my stinky little Skype buddies – my nephew Owen and my niece Penny who are turning three and two, respectively. Man, I love those kids. Theirs are likely the only cards that will arrive on time this year – no stamp required!


October 11th, 2011
I don’t really buy into causes. I think it’s because, on a day-to-day, choice-by-choice basis, I try really hard to do The Right Thing and stubbornly expect other folks should be doing the same. And, it follows, if we’re all doing that – being good – we shouldn’t need causes. How d’ya like that logic?
Mostly, though, causes are just really annoying. Pit-marked by tunnel vision and awkward, naive passion not wholly unlike the post-adolescent variety that made you wail Indigo Girls lyrics into the dashboard of your parents’ American made auto (don’t say you didn’t), causes can be really exhausting and frankly, a bit embarrassing, for anybody who happens to be stuck in the passenger seat.
I mean, god love ya for all your feelings, but shut up already.
When I say I try really hard to do The Right Thing, I mean, I’m still a gigantic mess of a human being who makes mistakes and, if we’re being honest here,
- is not very good at recycling outside of the office
- uses paper products instead of a towel or sponge too often
- does not check the label before buying things made in China
- manages to leave her reusable shopping bags at home on shopping day like, 93% of the time
Among other things (oh, the glorious spectrum that is my imperfection).
What’s more, my motivation for doing The Right Thing doesn’t have as much to do with the greater good as it does a fear of consequences. Simply, doing The Right Thing means I’m not doing The Wrong Thing. And for me, there’s a lot of safety in that kind of validation.
An exception, interestingly enough, is that when it comes to animals, children, anybody or anything vulnerable or weak, my motivation is born of what I can only describe as a feeling of empathy so intense it borders on grief. I become consumed and overwhelmed by it.
I didn’t need to pay a professional to tell me why I am wired like this, but I did anyway. For validation, you see.
Empathy is why, after watching Food Inc., we don’t buy mass-market chicken, eggs, beef or any other livestock who has been subjected to the kinds of conditions that the folks at Tyson, et al, raise them in. I have no problem eating animals. But now that I know there’s a choice, I want them to have as close to a Little House on the Prairie existence as possible before it’s time for, you know, the dying. The images from that movie are burned into my brain, and probably burned into my husband’s brain is the memory of me, sitting on the couch, sobbing about how those poor chickens felt never going outside like chickens are supposed to. Think of how they feeeeeel. Not exactly the point of the film, I’m guessing.
Illogical hyper-empathy is also why, in the middle of a rainstorm, I will climb out of bed during the dead of night to build a cat fort out of painter’s tarp on my back deck. Because I won’t sleep if somewhere within my realm of responsibility, there are sick, scared, hungry or cold creatures. I mean, wild animals out in the wild? The horror, I know.
In light of yesterday’s post, please add to the above-listed imperfections:
- does not include rats on the list of animals she is responsible for preserving
And empathy is why I turned to my Dork Lord last night and said, “We can’t buy cheap chocolate anymore.”
“Okay.”
“Like, no Hershey’s or Reese’s Pieces or anything.”
“How come?”
Because I read this.
I didn’t even know. And the image of some little boy straining every muscle in his legs to lift a bag of cocoa beans so that I can give myself a headache from too many M&Ms is nauseating. I didn’t know and now I do and I’m sad. And because I don’t want that kind of suffering on my head, I’m out. I’m bound to falter (moments of weakness most likely related to late work nights and vending machines) but I will just keep trying harder so that when I close my eyes at night, I can say that I did everything I could to not hurt anyone else that day and, perhaps, save the silly bursts of panic for the neighborhood ferals.
I’m not telling you what to do, and I won’t get all cause-y about it (a stirring rendition of Language or the Kiss, anyone?) but if you’d want to know about cheap chocolate and child slavery, you can go read about it, too.
Rage Against the Minivan link via Helen Jane‘s twitter.
October 10th, 2011
I spent the last week in Key West, keeping my fingers well pruned and off a computer keyboard. Sometimes a girl just needs to disconnect. Especially after working 65 hours the week before. That was… fun. I actually really like my job and the people I work for/with, so putting in a bunch of extra hours in the name of turning out a good product doesn’t bother me. But it turns out that physically, you can’t work 7AM to 11PM several days in a row and maintain… well, anything. A good attitude or sense of humor, a household or even appropriate caffeine to food intake ratios. I was a disaster. A twitchy-eyed, cranky disaster.
But now! Now I am well rested, appropriately caffeinated and trying to get back into the swing of things at work. Only, I’m totally distracted thinking about rats.
Oh, yes, you read that right. RATS.
This morning as I went to leave for work, I looked up from my car to see actual, gigantic, thick tailed rats walking on the window ledges of my neighbor’s house and immediately felt every hair on my body stand on end. I mean, rats. On the house. Next door. First, I freaked out and ran inside to my be-toweled husband who said he was unsurprised – the yard next door is in a state of serious neglect and the amount of rain we’d gotten over the last couple of days simply drove the vermin upwards. Totally un-comforted, I ran back outside.
“Mama!” I hollered. “C’mere, Mama!”
As Mama Cass came running, with her bow-legged little trot, from where she’d taken shelter on our back deck (I made a tent for her and the Last Wild Kitten out of a blue tarp and some patio furniture and while sure, it looks like we’ve got squatters, I just couldn’t stand the idea of them out in that rain) and I realized two things:
1) Mama is not a whole lot bigger than one of those damned rats and
2) Omg, thank the baby j that I have wild cats living in my yard
Mama Cass took after that nasty thing in a blink and, having seen Mama Cass yank a bird out of mid-air once, I was filled with every confidence that she and the LWK would soon be snacking on wild beasties. At the very least, she will keep them on their side of the fence.
Which all leads to the very important question:
Is there such a thing as anti-vermin traps or poisons that won’t hurt Mama and her kitten?
I feel like we should be pretty aggressive about keeping those horrid creatures away from our home, but I won’t do anything to compromise the health and safety of our officially unofficial pets. You know, the ones I’m considering buying a dog house for so they won’t get so wet and fine, probably even an electric blanket because cold is not an option either. SUCKER.
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About Writer. Mother. Hiker. Yogi.
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