kitty loss

since i wrote not that long ago about the death of my cat, baby kitty, our family has lost two more cats. it has been a hard year for kitties around here. losing one is hard enough, and two felt like adding insult to injury. then our third kitty loss just left me feeling in shock. each of them has left a gaping hole in our hearts, and they are each sorely missed. i don’t mean to diminish their meaning to us by not drafting separate posts for each one. after tinker died this summer, i was unable to write about it right away, because i felt somehow responsible. it seems that kiki’s death, our third kitty loss this year, has freed up my writing muscle, when it comes to kitty eulogies.

(see her peering over the edge of the ottoman?)

kiki’s death helped me realize what an amazing array of predators must be living right on the edge of our backyard. when tinker disappeared, i had let her outside one morning, and she had simply not come back that night… or the next night. since i was the one home and taking care of her, i felt it must have been my fault. it all was made worse by the fact that tinker belonged officially to rich’s daughter, not that i wanted to be responsible for losing rich’s cat (and he was deeply bonded to tinker) but somehow it was just worse. maybe it’s the fact that i am still navigating the tricky territory of developing a relationship with rich’s kids, who are adults, not children. whereas i feel very sure of rich’s love for me, my relationship with his kids is still in its formation. they are wonderful people whom i have already grown to adore, and i think they feel kindly towards me as well, and certainly i did not feel blamed whatsoever. it’s hard to put into words, but maybe i don’t need to.

tinker was a beautiful cat. she was absolutely spoiled rotten by rich, who would go retrieve her from whatever soggy corner of the yard she was haunting, bring her inside, towel her off and brush her long tangled fur out smooth next to the woodstove. he’d play with tinker, setting a sheet of newspaper over her and watching her spring out from underneath. tinker was a big fan of the simple pleasures in life. sunbeams, catnip, belly rubs. and her belly was oh so soft, it was impossible to resist.

kiki belonged to rich’s son. she was an entirely different beauty from tinker, black and long and sleek. i was, again, the one who let kiki out the day she was attacked. she had just recovered enough from a previous predator attack, in fact, which had given her a big gash on her hindquarter, and was ready to be back outside exploring. that night she didn’t come in right away, and it took us a while to find her hiding on a high shelf in the greenhouse, wounded much more severely this time.

kiki did not really make her move into the house or into our hearts until tinker disappeared, but once she moved in, she made herself very comfortable. when she first arrived in april, she spent several months being almost permanently outside, hunting. we spent many an evening trying to coax her down off of the roof, to try to prevent her from obliterating the bat population roosting there. one day i came upon her carrying a chipmunk by the scruff of its neck. i got her to release it, as it was still alive. she was regularly fifty feet up a tree, and was quite the climber. when we would come home after dark and call for her, we’d often find her by shining a flashlight, not around the yard, but up into the canopy, where her green eyes would flash at us in the flashlight’s beam.

when kiki moved inside, she spent days and days just lolling around, trying out new spots, as kitties do. she never was one to let others initiate, but if she climbed into your lap while you were relaxing in the evening, you could bet you would be there under her for a good long time. she had a brief period of attacking our feet underneath the comforter on the bed, but eventually settled on just sleeping in between us. she, too, loved catnip, and rich got into a morning ritual of tossing her mice for her while he laced up his workboots.

but this was a kitty who reveled in her wildness. she could not be kept in, which was why she continued to live with us instead of in the apartment where her owners lived. she was very obviously thriving on having acres to prowl. unfortunately, she was not the only hunter around. the most amazing thing about kiki is that she made it back after being attacked- not once, but twice. most of the cats rich has lost to predators (think bobcats, coyotes, who knows, maybe bears?) have simply gone out one day and disappeared, like tinker. it’s a very unsettling feeling. it’s impossible to have closure. only the passage of time eventually helps, but even now we still wonder whether we just saw her streak by out of the corner of our eye.

this wild kitty had an appreciation for a good microbrew

kiki came back, and spent several days being a champ and attempting to recover from her injuries. she was clearly in pain, but let me give her water through a syringe, and ate some tuna and some of her cat food.  she even got up and tried walking around on her front leg which was clearly injured. we did not know the extent of the injury until we took her to the vet to get some antibiotics- we thought her wounds were becoming infected. only when the vet had sedated her and shaved her fur and investigated the depth of her gashes, which were far worse and more numerous than we had been able to tell through her fur, did she discover that kiki’s shoulder was essentially shattered into splinters. there was no way she could repair that injury, and she advised us that the most humane course of action was not to wake her up from the anesthesia.

what started as a trip to the vet for antibiotics became a different kind of trip entirely.

we haven’t talked a whole lot about it, but i did get from rich, who is the biggest cat guy i have ever known, that maybe we should get a big dog next time. and i think, after we heal from all these losses, we might have to do that, even if our motivation would be to protect our future kitties.

 

kitty

 

 

on a thursday morning i went to look for kitty at my house but there was still no sign of her. she had not come in on tuesday when i called her, so i left her out. by wednesday i was getting worried, and thursday left a message at the pound in case she had been found. thursday after work, rich texted me “kitty is here, neighbor found her” and i was so relieved. he waited until i got there to tell me she wasn’t in good shape… i was glad he waited. kitty was in the neighbor’s dog kennel where she had spent the night (on blankets, with water bowl and everything- and a can of food i had left out for her on my doorstep). rich had brought the kennel inside, and when i got there i took kitty out of it and set her on my lap and whereas she had been distressed and breathing hard, i got her on my lap and she went limp and relaxed and purred weakly and became very calm. she went to sleep. we decided i would take her to vet in the morning (it would have been her first time since she had been in my care, though i know whoever owned her first got her spayed and probably vaccinated).  i had her in a box with a blanket near our bed, but she climbed out of it in the night, onto our feet, and i pulled her up next to me, snuggled up and she went calm and slept again… and did not wake up.

i remembered about a week later, that in the night when she had been sleeping next to me, i heard her gasping for breath in my sleep, and patted her and told her “it’s ok” and in my heart, what i was saying was, “it’s ok to go now.” i didn’t even consciously think that through, but in my sleep i know i just wanted her to be at peace, even more than i didn’t want her to leave me.

kitty was with me through a lot of gnarly shit. not to put too fine a point on it, but between kitty’s arrival in my life and the launch of my yoga practice that same year, i am still on this planet. she came at just the right time. and of course she has been with me ever since, onward and upward, riding shotgun in a uhaul with me and my pregnant belly and staying in hotels, and nesting on my belly and hatching out her baby quinn. guarding him while he napped, even though i thoroughly neglected her ever since he came along and eclipsed my love and yet still kitty went on loving me anyway… i never did know how old she was when i found her in 2004, covered in twigs in the wilderness. so when she died she was 10 or 18, or somewhere in between. she cased the joint as soon as i got her home, and clearly was familiar with the concepts of house cat-ness. yet she was 100% wild, and would never succumb to a fate of being an indoor cat. she perfected the art of the hummingbird hunt last summer, much to my chagrin. she was a great mouser, and took it upon herself to bring a ready supply of offerings to the doorstep for me. her all-wild yet all-domestic personality made her my kindred, of course. she never seemed to mind that i never got around to really naming her properly, baby kitty is all that ever stuck, even though i didn’t know her as a kitten. she meowed the loudest and most obnoxiously that i’ve ever heard from any kitty, in spite of her diminutive size. she was all fluff. and the way she died, although she didn’t seem particularly old to me, maybe she was older than i thought, because she died like such an old wild animal would do-  she stopped eating and drinking and hid outside, and just decided it was her time.

i’m sad. sometimes you’ve gotta state the obvious.

quinn, in all his 5 year old awesomeness has been everywhere with the processing. he declared “we have to get a new kitty that is exactly the same color as our kitty and looks just like our kitty.” though later he told me the new kitty “could be bigger than our kitty”. he animatedly told me “i’m never going to decide to stop eating and drinking!” then, “mama, i don’t want you to ever decide to stop eating and drinking, either!” then he was making pacts with me that “let’s you and i never decide to stop eating and drinking, ok?” he asked me, when he saw her body, “why did she get smaller, mama?” because to him she seemed smaller than she was. i said maybe it was because her spirit isn’t in this body now… and yeah just all over the board. he cried, he was really sad, but then at times he was just so five. as he helped me scoop dirt into her garden grave with a shovel, “i don’t like it when kitties die. but it is kinda fun to bury kitties.” i just wanted to hug him for 20 days.

he required a visual. i anticipated that, and did not bury her until he was home and had been filled in. as soon as i told him and he had insisted we needed to get a new one just like her, he asked me where she had died, could he see where she died? and i told her i had her body in a box now and that he could see her before we buried her. he immediately relaxed, relieved. later, he tried to convince me we needed to bury just her body but not her head, that her head would not turn back into earth. we talked through that, and we discussed various sculptures and theatrical pieces that he would like to craft in honor of kitty, in lieu of leaving her head unburied. he wants to make masks “just like the ones from rich’s play” but with additional ones: two cats and a dog. the kitties will be eating together out of the same bowl of food, and the dog will be drinking water out of another bowl. and quinn and i will be there in the play, too, drinking warm milk from cups.

~dwell~

i couldn’t agree more with lisa at visionary mom that once we have formed an intention, the way to bring it to life is to dwell in it. simple as that- you live it, breathe it and talk about it, give it energy. so very law of attraction, i think! i love her idea so much about making a project out of your intention, that i am going to do it! so, with regard to the boaty liveaboard idea i posted the other day, i am going to do a weekly dwell-in-my-intention update on things, what i’ve been up to in research mode, and maybe even pepper it with some photos and candid thoughts on the whole boat scheme like,

“i wonder what baby kitty will think of living on a boat?” (isn’t she cute with all three afghans piled on her? she and quinn have a wonderful relationship of “doting” and “tolerating”. hehe.)

and “gosh wouldn’t it be awkward if my landlords were reading my blog?” and “thank goodness we love co-sleeping! that sure saves space!” and “we can eat crab for dinner every night if we want to.” you know, stuff like that.

let’s call it ~dwell~ and i will aim for thursdays, since today is one of those. if you’ve got similar intentional projects going on and want to do the same type of thing, please post a comment so we can all cheer each other on! for the record, right now my intention is to research this bad boy, and i will not judge myself harshly if this whole boat thing does not pan out- if that’s the case i will know it is for the best, that the choices i eventually make have been made in an intentional way and that i’ve done my work.

as for this past week, i’ve taken one research-oriented walking tour of the marina i have my eye on, and looked up and down piers C, D and E, for boats for sale- quite a few, not surprisingly, given the economy. nothing that caught my eye as “the” boat for us, but still a promising visit. it’s been soggy weather and walking hasn’t seemed appealing on my last few lunch breaks but i will start to make a habit of it on nice january days. ones that look like this:

~dwell~ is a project devoted to dwelling in my intentions- giving them energy and watching them take shape!