A Long Month, A Long Blog.

October 27, 2011

This has seriously been one of the hardest months I have had in years. I have thought about writing as things were happening but instead used facebook. The amount of immediate support I received from friends on facebook was so amazing. I really don’t know how my generation made it through high school without it. We didn’t even have voicemail or answering machines for awhile there. There was so much not knowing, so much waiting. Everything is so different now, so immediate. I cant imagine living back when there weren’t lightbulbs. But I guess it is true that you can’t miss things until you have them and they are then taken away from you.

But that is not what I plan to write about. Nowadays there are plenty of people writing about facebook, immediacy, what friendship means, all that stuff. I am instead going to write about what I experienced this month, October 2011, and investigate what my “take-away” might be. But first I have to walk to the bodega for some ginger ale. I’ll be back.

Okay. The goal is to share my experience in a way that feels honest and thorough without going on and on and on.

I. INTRODUCTION

A. Carpenters come to fix the basement. I let Figgy out into the garden during the day because:

1. He gets depressed and aggressive when he doesn’t have outside time.

2. He hasn’t tried to jump the fence all summer, since I rigged it and made it harder to get out. (So he gets outside time for good behavior)

3. It is what he seems to need, which seems more important that what I feel I need (control over my pet)

2. BODY

A. Friday afternoon, September 30th, carpenters are making a massive racket clearing shit out of the basement. Figgy makes a decision and jumps over the fence. We see he is gone and reluctantly leave for the weekend assuming he will find his way home as he has done in the past.

B. He does not come back. He is gone for days and days. I can’t sleep, I cry, I make flyers, I post everywhere I can on the internet, I make more flyers in three languages saying he has asthma and is microchipped and  add a reward. We go door to door, we go into people’s homes to get access to their yards. We go to the stores and restaurants and ask. We go into garbage filled alleyways. We talk to so many people, we hear “did you find the cat yet!?” when we walk by groups of neighbors we don’t know. We climb fences with flashlights. We call out “Figgy” hundreds of times. We take note of who saw him where. I walk the streets at midnight, looking at every crack and crevice, thinking of all the places he might be. I am completely immersed in the task of finding him, helping him get home. It is all I can think about. I miss him so much. All of the calls we receive are for his lookalikes, of which there are many. People are so kind, calling and trying to help us. People start to call from farther away, “I saw it on the internet, I think I have seen your cat!”. But no one sees him. He is a really great hider. Always has been. Loved it under the butterfly bushes and under the hasta plants, outside he was always peeking out from underneath something.

C. I am desperate. I contact an animal communicator. She seems reputable, a shaman and a psychologist. I’m down with that. We talk, she contacts him shortly thereafter, he will not talk with her at first, nor will he talk through her cats – he will only talk to her dog (who is also known to take long walks and go on adventures so perhaps he sensed a kindred spirit). We talk again. The day after she tells me where I might find him, noting certain kinds of yards he says he is in and telling me that he smells food, I narrow down where he might be. That night, on my first stop I immediately see him. I am in a yard with a flashlight and I see him over a cinder block wall, he is eating dog food in the yard next door with a chihuahua who is barking at me. I call to him “Figgy!”, he looks at me. I can’t get over the wall it is too high so I call in the window to the kids I see. “Is your Dad home? Your mom? My cat is in your yard! El gato!” (At this point I know how to say “gato perdido” and “blanco y negro”). A man comes out through his window. He is called Angel so I have high hopes. I have to run around the block to get to his house. Figgy runs next door, we chase him. He is so close, suddenly up on another fence but hiding behind a tree where I can’t reach. I open the 9 lives and call to him. Angel is calling to him “Figgy Figgy” but he runs away to the next yard and we lose him then. The whole time I am not sure if it is actually him because it is dark, I am not wearing my glasses, I did not have a moment of identification with him, like when you know you know. It was as if I was in shock at actually seeing him. But it was him, I am certain of it.

D. Angel’s wife says she has been seeing Figgy for a week. “Oh that flufy cat, yeah he showed up last week and was fat but not anymore, now he’s skinny”. I want to yell and scream “haven’t you seen the 150 flyers I have posted all over your street you idiot!? My cat is lost! The psychic said he is lost and scared and has a stomach ache!” but I don’t say that. Instead I thank them for helping. Angel lets me set a humane trap in his yard. He calls at two am that night, sends me a photo of his catch but its the wrong cat. That poor cat got caught twice but at least he got to eat salmon cream cheese. Two doors down a great couple, cat lovers, they let us set a trap also. Wrong cat found the next morning. We decide to take the traps back.

E. A couple nights later the animal intuitive calls me back. She tells me she contacted Figgy again and that he has left his body. “He is dead” I say. “Yes”, she says “he is no longer in his body”. She tells me that he saw me see him. He was already sick at that point from eating poison, probably rat poison. I wonder if someone sprinkled rat poison in their yard or if someone is trying to kill the cats. I think of the chinese restaurant, where the woman was so mean to me when I asked if she had a backyard. I want to blame her. I think of how Sara and I said “there are surprisingly few rats around here”, and then a couple days later saw the most giant rat, dead on the sidewalk, and then saw it again moved down towards the curb that night. I talk for awhile with the communicator. We talk about how people who do animal rescue or even regular pet guardians are faced with loss and grief so much more than people who are not involved with animals. We talk about being less attached. She says I am probably chosen to do this work. We talk about the good life Figgy had, although it was cut so short. We hang up eventually and I tell everyone that Figgy is dead because the cat psychic said so. No one wants to believe me. They like proof. But now, almost a month later, I think it has sunk in.

F. I build a little marker that says “Figaro”. I put his other collar, his favorite toy and his photo in a tiny wooden box and we bury it under the forsythia bush. I make a kodak picture book about his short but hopefully happy life.

G. I call another animal communicator because I would like a second opinion. I tell her nothing that the first psychic said except that I think Figgy has passed on. She tells me that she thinks he died from violent nausea and vomiting. Probably poison of some sort. I’m sold. She tells me he was seriously called to mate. She explains that sometimes when cats are spayed or neutered, there can still be “a little left” which will effect their hormones enough that they will want to mate. This explains why Figgy used to fornicate with blankets and try to get it on with my leg when I was in bed. It also explains why he was constantly trying to mount our little girl cat Billie. She then tells me some things he is supposedly saying to her but I don’t necessarily believe that he is there chatting with her. They are comforting though so I write them down anyhow. Also, Sara and Tamara ask me to a) not get another kitten, to get an older cat next time and b) to wait awhile before I adopt a new pet. I agree.

H. October 24, Monday. Follow up with the first communicator via email. She says he is a very straightforward spirit. Kind of like, “live and let live”, not one to linger or feel angst. She says he was happy with us and loved us, he misses us and had not intended to get lost and eat poison, but that is what happened and he accepts it. That our connection was very much about the physical plane, not a spiritual or teaching one. He says he saw me shortly before he crossed over and a bunch of other things that I won’t spell out here because my short story has already gone way past long.

I. Back up just a few days. October 20, Thursday night around eight. I am home watching netflix. I am exhausted from the month of searching, hoping, and mourning. I get an email from a neighbor who was in her house and heard a mewing outside her window. She has a tiny kitten with a busted leg in her front yard. She does not know what to do. I put my boots on and run across the street. I trap the kitten in one of the traps I had borrowed to catch Figgy with. The kitten is hissing and spitting. The spitting is like a really intense full body thing they do, it is actually pretty scary even though they dont bite you or anything. So then I see her leg and I offer to take her to the emergency hospital if the neighbor will pay for it since I am broke. She agrees.

J. I am driving to cobble hill with the tiny kitten who is mewing so much. I assume her arm is broken and that she is in pain. At the ER, once the tech gets her out of the cage, which is not an easy feat because even he, a tattooed pierced dude, is afraid of the spitting, I have her in my arms in a towel and she is purring. The purring is something they sometimes do when they are scared, it releases endorphins which calm them down. So I hold her for a good ten minutes. She is so beautiful and tiny. Not even a pound. Her leg is all funny, crooked and lame but does not seem to be causing pain. A vet comes in and she is very young. She tries to reach for the kitten who spits and hisses. The vet is afraid which I think is sort of funny. The kitten jumps and we are chasing her around the room. The vet finally grabs her with a towel, examines her. Says the leg is not broken bones and is probably nerve damage that may heal on its own or may not but the kitten is too young to know yet. They do an FIV test which is negative. They send her home with me. At this point I am emailing all of my cat lady neighbors. Everyone wants to help but no one can really take her. One woman offers to take her in even though she doesn’t really want to. I am about to leave for the weekend and very concerned about what to do with this kitten. It is now midnight. I make plans for people who can help while I am away, I make a lot of plans and send a lot of emails.

K. Flash forward. Saturday morning I am at ASPCA.  They will take a look at her and maybe will take her in if she is adoptable. She is so good in the car, barely cries, just looks at me, looks around. She is softening up. We get there and when he tries to take her out of the carrier she spits and hisses and she is scary so he says they can’t take her until I socialize her. I start to cry because I have pms and I am emotionally exhausted and so concerned about this kitten, who I name Olive. He gives me kitten food and a cage. I decide to just take her with me to CT because it will add two hours to my trip to drive back to Brooklyn, contact the other caretakers, set it all up, and then drive back uptown to get out of the city. So I just take her with me. I leave my mother a message saying there will be a kitten in a cage I am sorry.

L. Wow this kitten is so cuddly and sweet. Once she stops with the hissing business she is the cutest little thing in the world. Her lame arm drags around but it doesn’t stop her. We have a weekend with cuddling and play and she is happy. I bring her back home to Brooklyn Monday night. I set her up in our guest room because she is our guest. I socialize with her. I do not sleep with her in the room because I do not want to get too attached. I take a lot of photos of her and post them on facebook. I ask people what I should do. I am offered help in finding her a home which is great.

1. Questions I ask myself:

Did Figgy send her to me so I have something to distract me from my mourning and pain? Her cuddling is very comforting.

Am I supposed to keep her? How do I know?

Am I supposed to learn something from this?

Am i supposed to not get attached?

Am I supposed to re-attach to a new being who needs a family?

Did Figgy leave to make room for her because she needs more?

Who put Olive in front of my neighbor’s house? Where did she come from? It is so rare they are in the front yards. Most of the strays are in the gardens in back. Did her mother toss her out because she is lame legged?

M. October 27, Thursday. ASPCA guy calls to tell me he has a foster home for her who can socialize her, but that I have to bring her in right away today or tomorrow. I leave work early. I enter Olive’s room and I talk with her. I give her a hundred kisses and she licks my lips and bumps my nose with hers. She wants to play with the mouse and the little tomato toy I got her. She seems to have just discovered playing on Tuesday (although perhaps she played with her littermates before she was displaced). I tell her I am sending her to the A not because I don’t love her completely but because I want what is best for her. That they will take great care of her and she will be able to play with kittens and won’t be alone all day while I am at work. I pack her up and we are driving in the car. She is so good in the car. Just a few chatty mews here and there. She is staring at me through the netting in her carrier. She has these deep soulful eyes that she gazes with, and she does that blinky thing. I feel deeply connected with her. I am so attached it is crazy, after one week. She sleeps, watches the windshield wipers go back and forth, looks at me. She trusts me, this I can feel coming from her. I cry.

3. CONCLUSION

A. The boy at the A says he can’t believe what a different cat she is. “She is a whole new cat!” He says they don’t even have to send her to a foster home for socializing because I did such a good job. He asks if I want to foster and socialize more cats for them. He takes her in to the vet where she is vaccinated and examined. They explain that her arm has permanent nerve damage from being pulled away from her body while injured. The odds are that they will amputate it but the three legged animals we know as “tripods” do fine and are usually the first to be adopted. I give her a hundred more kisses, I ask him if I am doing the right thing. He swears to me that I am, that she will do great, that he will keep me posted.

B. I get to the car I drive home I go into the guest room and get the towels, blankets, litter and clean it all up. I collapse the cage and put it away. I sit and I stare and I sob. I sob for losing Figgy, I sob for losing Olive, I sob for myself and for all of the animals at the ASPCA. I cry rivers and I realize that I am so so tired of having emotions. That I have had so so many emotions all day every single day from September 30th through this moment at eight pm on October 27.

C. I think about how I was always so afraid to let Figgy out into the yard because I was afraid he would jump and get lost and get hurt and then die and that is exactly what happened.

1. I think about how I needed to let him outside so he would be happy. I needed to let him be himself. He was a forest cat through and through. I needed to put his happiness before my need for him to be safe and stay with me. I was always trying to hold onto him in so many ways and he was just not the kind of guy to be held onto. And I am working on accepting all of that.

2. And Olive. Beautiful sweet as sugar little Olive. Who will be the lucky one to have you in their life? I feel that no one is worthy! I am so sorry that my household was not ready to have you join us. If it were just me you know you would be with me still, right Olive? Did I do the right thing? Should I have insisted you stayed? Would that have been best for you?

D. And it is now. Sara’s two old cats sit on the bed, more comfortable now that Figgy is just made of light and not a heavy jumping body who chases them around. And on Tuesday I go to my favorite psychic, the one who felt my upset stomach when I walked in her door last year. Maybe Figaro will stop in to say hi while I am there and I can ask him a few  questions. (When I try and do this on my own I fear I am just making up the answers. Way too cloudy in there right now for clarity.)  And now. I have to get back to my life. Take out the winter clothes, clean, make some art, get grounded. Maybe even see a movie.

That’s it really. I needed to write the story down. It helps with the letting go. There are more parts I did not add in, little things that seemed meaningful. But I hope that what I did share felt worthwhile to you. If you have any thoughts or answers about coincidence, the master plan, the big picture, pet psychics, beautiful animals with short term life plans, etc., please feel free to share.

This is Olive.

One Response to “A Long Month, A Long Blog.”

  1. marie said

    Write a book. You tell amazing stories. Love you

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