Monday, September 05, 2005

ZIP

ZIP

Yes indeed I want to tell you more about Keisa and one of the comments made has told me how I want to do it. This person asked me to write about my other special cats. There were four including Keisa. The same motivation makes me want to show how deeply attached cats become as they age, to a loving care taker.

But first I want to thank all of you kind people for your encouragement by visiting my Keisa Blog and especially those who made comments. One comment had to do with Siamese cats. I did not intend to give the impression that they do not mew. I never had one and I did not want one. I thought they were terrible squawkers who talked all the time. I failed completely to recognize their slim grace and lively intelligence. My two cats of pantomime skill, Chip and Keisa, I called Siamese-mix, based entirely on appearance and behavior. They were recorded by their doctors as domestic cats.

Now I begin with special cat #1 – ZIP, [1929]. I have a feeling of guilt about her to this day because I failed her twice but at least it formed my resolutions: Do it yourself. Don’t cravenly leave it to another.

I don’t remember how I got Zip. She was partly long haired, pretty, timid and a perfect lady. At the family table she had a chair beside mine and she sat there content. She was also a lap cat, a gentle creature that had a horrible experience.


One night after dark as I sat in the living room there was a terrible banging racket on our front porch. I was scared. When it stopped I made myself investigate. There was nothing there. The next morning, Zip had not come home as usual. I searched and called throughout the neighborhood. No result.

It could have been as much as two weeks later that I got a phone call. A cat was under a garage. A cat had been caught by one foot in a leg-hold trap. It was ZIP and her foot had been freed, missing two toes. I carried her home. My mother said to walk her in the fresh air. Then I laid her on the bed in the room next to the dining room and we began the noon meal. Zip came dragging her infected foot to sit beside my chair. I got her onto the expected other chair. So animals don’t love? It is all instinct? Not in my mind.

Zip recovered slowly and lived to age 15. Finally she became incontinent in the house and my mother said enough. I called the humane officer and went to work with the understanding that Zip would be put to sleep at home and left there. When I got home, I learned that she had been put through the terror of being carted away. The officer had convinced my mother that he could do the work better at his office. Zip deserved better.

There had been another time in her life when I had been away from home for six months and my mother had cared for Zip faithfully. When I came back Zip promptly requested the chair at my side be restored. Mother wryly remarked that she got small thanks for her service.

The other three specials were all taken to the veterinarian by me personally and held during the proceedings and buried by me in their yard.

The first of these three was Chip. I look forward to discussing his personality. He was the clown, the investigator, the tease, the biter, the one who couldn’t care less about me, what a fraud!

CHIP

On him I have his parents. He was born in New York State near Albany at the home of my niece and husband. His mother was an ordinary black and white, always in heat but monogamous. She waited for the same big white Tom. I never saw him but I suspect he contributed the Siamese factor. I believe there was a litter of five. Chip was pure white, shorthaired, not blue-eyed and not deaf. When he was old enough I went down by bus to bring him home by bus. He enjoyed the trip. [At nine months he developed a black spot the size of a dime near his pink nose leather]

To my surprise Chip did enjoy the trip to his permanent home. He was in a container which I could carry hanging so he did not show. I sat alone in a window seat and took him out onto my lap. He was fascinated with the scenery zipping past, his head whirling side to side in response.

At break time for food at a restaurant, I boxed him and set him at my feet while I ate. He made not a sound. It was as if he knew he was contraband, so he co-operated. Back on the bus I had a feeling the driver knew but he never let on. After the 3-1/2 hour trip we were home. Chip showed no fear, only intense interest in his new surroundings. Like Keisa, his counterpart so many years later, he never tried to run away. They both understood that this was home.

Next day I had to be at work. Because Chip was a wild climber, I shut him in the bathroom where he would not get hurt. At noon I drove home to feed him. Poor Chip! He had been roasted. It was a small room with a good heat duct. With the door shutting off some of the heat to the other four rooms with the thermostat the furnace had to pump madly to warm them.

My brother John was a traveling salesman and stayed at my home when he worked in my state. His first visit after I got Chip was an experience for Chip. John and I had a good dinner and I did the dishes and went to bed. John was already asleep with door closed. Chip did not join me on my bed because he was sitting outside that closed door in shocked wonder. His ears were laid back against his head as he listened to the volume of snoring. Finally he too came to bed.

A few hours later John got up to get a glass of milk. Chip had to monitor that activity. I heard my brother go back to bed but my cat did not come. He was not in the kitchen but I heard movement. My white cat was inside my white refrigerator and only his gold eyes greeted me. We went back to bed.

Next day at lunch at the office I had to tell my table companions of Chip’s roast. This brought on a shower of gifts and established Chip as a personage.

Since my work required me to travel and be away a lot an elderly couple across the road fed him and let him out. One night he got up on the porch roof and in the morning claimed he couldn’t get down. Poor old Mr. C. had to get a ladder, climb a few rungs and offer his shoulder. Chip promptly accepted and walked down the proffered back.

Chip’s voice: Although I had him neutered he liked to go out with the boys as a witness or to defend his property [circa 65x125 feet]. When there was a fracas I could hear his beautiful clear tenor, distinct from the other howlers. I would go get him to avoid another abscess and trip to the doctor. Sometimes he was secretly glad to be rescued. [How pitiful the day I saw him lie on his side in submission before a trespassing tom on his own porch. There was no fight, no caterwaul. We three knew Chip was old.]

Chip had a high pitched purr, hardly more than a breath. One day I brought him home from a dental procedure, not yet well recovered from anesthesia, barely able to sit up. I stood with my back turned at the kitchen sink. Suddenly there was this deep loud roaring purr. I whipped around to locate a lion but it was only my white Chip, sitting in dignity, purring his joy to be home. [One more voice episode will come later in the part about, “I couldn’t care less about you”.]

Since one doesn’t mew in the house and pantomime does not work when the old gal is asleep, what to do? Ahh! The Venetian blinds! Right in the spare room next to her bedroom. You would be surprised at the racket you can make by pulling out just one slat and letting it snap back hard and with steady rhythm. She’ll get up.

Keisa and Chip were alike in having the gift of mechanical comprehension. They liked to know how things worked and were always ready with a paw to make them work, to rattle the door knob to show what needs to be done to get that door open and to use a paw to open it faster. You already know about Keisa and her special door knobs.

What I have not explained is why Chip early on got the unfair reputation of not caring about me, his caretaker. When I brought him home, my garage was at the very end of the driveway about 15 feet from the house. That left a clear space of driveway plainly visible from the street parallel to it one house away.

Chip spent a lot of time in the garage while I was at work. I had an old SAAB, manual shift, with characteristic putt putt, which Chip recognized. When I came home in late afternoons I could see Chip come out of the garage with an almost pathetic eagerness. He would come to the porch step where I had parked, close enough to be sure who was in the car, turn his back and go off into the yard with never a greeting for me. Some homecoming! I wonder who said, “You’ve never been ignored ‘til you’ve been ignored by a cat”?

In Chip’s reign, the way to the attic in my home was by way of an ordinary wooden door but the top of the stairs was closed off by a heavy trap door. It worked by a long rope around a pulley wheel and fastened to a hook at the bottom of the stairs. One day I unhooked the rope while Chip climbed to the top and waited for me to pull. I waited for him to look back at me to see why not but he ignored me. He looked over his left shoulder at the pulley wheel back of him on his own level but above the rope hook and, without a word, he said, “What’s the matter with the pulley?” Abashed, I pulled.

In his hey day Chip made it his pleasure to disturb anything I was doing like coming in a rush from behind to scatter any planting I was doing; disturbing any work inside that I had not put away; and keeping my hands decorated by claw marks or bites [my Keisa bit me also]. One day a cat appeared on my side porch, looking anxiously through the screen door. It was grey all over. I couldn’t let it in because Chip had no tolerance for trespassers, but I went to the door because of the beseeching look. Then I saw the black spot the size of a dime near the pink nose. Poor Chip! He must have gotten into something where a vacuum cleaner bag had been emptied. Poor me! What a brushing job!

Chip investigated everything that came into my house. He also rather enjoyed having his picture taken, so I have several snapshots because he was photogenically white. I like one where he is testing the texture of my new jumper, just unwrapped.

Both Chip and Keisa were heat lovers, especially Chip who plastered himself against the baseboard registers. In contrast was my #3, Tabitha, a radiant heater herself.

Now back to Chip’s attitude of “I couldn’t care less about you”. He occasionally gave himself away. On one occasion I left him for a week in the care of the Cassavants across the road while I visited a friend over 300 miles away [Chip hated being in a carrier in a car]. We came home together and Chip enjoyed Mary’s presence. Next day was Sunday and we went to early Mass. When we got home Chip was across the road, pacing anxiously in Mrs C’s driveway. She said he had complained bitterly that I had gone away again without telling him.

The next episode of this kind was not amusing. My work required me to be away for a month and a young neighbor, Chuck, who liked Chip, was in charge, and knew where I kept the key. He came over while I was gone to let Chip out into the yard and lie on the grass with him because he was aware of his loneliness. When I got back home late at night I put my key in the lock and pushed the door open. The most blood curdling scream came from my bedroom down the hall. How that cat ever knew it was my key in the door after so long tells me how much he had longed to hear it. I never left him alone overnight again and he stopped all pretence of not caring. He was getting old and so was I. Eventually he reached a point where I was all he did care about and he wanted me beside him all the time.

I now realize Chip never did say, “I couldn’t care less”. He was saying, “Oh, she’s home so I’m OK.”

He died of cancer of the mouth. A lesion inside his lower lip was excised and sent off to a laboratory.

The report was benign, an error. After a year or more he could no longer eat and finally had the humiliation of incontinence. I took him to the veterinary for his final sleep while I held him, and then buried him in his own yard as he deserved.

The next offering will be about cat #3, Tabitha, or “Tabby of the Tender Touch”, with only one accomplishment and one dramatic episode but much loving understanding.

TABITHA/ TABBY

Tabitha/Tabby

After some years with no cat and living on TV ads for cat foods instead, I gave in and thought maybe it would be reasonable to hope to outlive another cat. The last thing I wanted was to abandon an old, sick dependent pet. So I went to our local shelter to select a kitten, a small buff-orange one. There were no kittens of any kind. I cruised the cages. A small, tentative paw reached out and said, “Take me, please”, so I did. She had an ordinary black and grey tabby pattern, with an angora type face and longer hair around her neck and a bit of buffy ruffle on her chest. Her tabby pattern was perfect, mirror matched on both sides and her tail was long haired.

Of my four special cats she was the most psychic, not very smart, not helpful, expecting care and love. She knew how you were feeling especially if you were ill. She stayed with you and asked for the minimum of service.

Also she was the only one of the four who did not have confidence in my ability to take care of her in emergencies. She was easily frightened and panicked, racing off wildly to hide. [This trait brought on a problem for my neighbor one day.] When we went to the doctor, she screamed all the way and when taken from her carrier, she shoved her face into the crook of my elbow and kept it there during procedures. Not a wail on the way home.

One night I had two guests in the dead of winter and maybe we did not pay much attention to Tabby. When she asked for the door I let her out. When the guests left and Tabby had not returned, I panicked. I called and my visitors searched the yard and especially her hidey-hole under the front cement steps. No response. By 4:00 AM when my newspaper lady arrived I enlisted her help. At daylight I tried again under the porch. A faint mew! She was O.K. but she did not try to come out. The opening had been to a slippery slope but getting back up was impossible for arthritic legs and could have broken her spine.

Gita, care taking neighbor, came over and I went to get my fireman neighbor. [In those days firemen rescued cats]. He could see Tabby. The ground was hard-frozen and I could not dig it but when I proposed hiring a crane to lift the set of cement steps just as it had been dropped there, Fireman Brown thought enlarging the hole was a better idea and he did that, God bless him!

Still Tabby would not stir at my coaxing. So with sincere thanks I dismissed my good neighbors and waited at the hole. After a few moments of quiet Tabby poked her head out so I was able to pull her free none the worse for her experience.

Now about Tabby and the tender touch: Besides the gentle paw at the Humane Society Shelter that won her a good home for years, Tabby continued to use her touch to “win friends and influence people.”

Tabby earned her keep thereby. As always there was a table at arm chair level on the left of the big chair where I took my meals on a tray. Probably she got some tidbits from my tray at times but I don’t remember. I do remember the little ceremony of concluding each meal with the same dry food she liked so well.

It was handed to her one by one in response to an incredibly delicate touch to a bare arm resting on the arm of the chair. To my surprise she would accept the pieces from my friends seated in that chair, always bringing a look of pleasure to the face of the giver.

One of my dearest memories is of my brother’s reaction. He was not fully in tune with my permissiveness about cats in the house. This day he stopped in on a visit and saw the little game. I persuaded him to take my place and supplied the bits and instructions. Tabby cooperated. Her first touch was magic. I had never seen such a look on my brother’s face, a look of wonder at being so moved.

Tabby died at age 15 or 16 of cancer of the mouth. She went over to Gita’s for that purpose one evening but I went and brought her home to her table. She never moved all night and I knew it was time. In the morning she did not resist my taking her to be put to sleep. As I waited for her doctor we were at a window with a bird feeder outside. Incredibly Tabby aroused to excitement at the sight. She was the one of the four with the strongest wild instincts.

Her place in her yard was ready and I put her in it. This time I said, “No more cats” and I meant it.

Then years later, came Keisa, the Companion Cat whom you already know, but whose resume needs a bit more detail.

Friday, February 18, 2005

KEISA'S DOOR KNOCKER AND HOW IT CAME TO BE

KEISA tm Posted by Hello

The doughnut door knocker Posted by Hello

Keisa's Door Knocker - and how it came to be

Keisa arrived at her permanent home on November 29, 1993 complete with name, birthdate [May 29, 1989] and health history. She was spayed, had all tests, including rabies shots. She was four and 1/2 years old, came from a good home in which she had been saved from death from a severe infestation of fleas on arrival as a small kitten. Family circumstances made it necessary to find her a new home, this one, occupied by a single lady in her mid-nineties now, and veteran caretaker of three special cats, with Keisa, the fourth.

In her first week in her new residence, Keisa drew attention to herself by giving a visitor a casual clip to one ankle. Next day the visitor phoned to say that she had reported Keisa to the Department of Health. She was surprised to learn that Keisa had had a rabies shot, as cats are supposed to have. [It was the time of the rabies development among wild animals in our locality]. The Department never called.

The next problem was that I had planned to keep Keisa as an indoor cat. Keisa had not been consulted. She tried drama, lying on her side with her nose to the bottom of the door for one breath of fresh air. She tried staring at me. She tried getting cross. She tried everything except mewing. I wondered if she had a voice. Eventually I gave in. She had a full set of claws for defense.

Immediately, peace reigned. She explored her neighborhood, came home at reasonable hours and was cooperative about my sleeping hours and her feeding times. She was perfectly willing to have me in charge of opening and closing the door. If staring at the door and then back at me to go out did not work, she could always rattle the knob. The problem was how to get back in. Her usual pantomime didn't work. She considered taking the door down, beginning with clawing away the rubber weather stripping. Something had to be done.

Keisa was the second cat I had had who was part Siamese and never mewed for ordinary needs. The voice was reserved for times of high emotion, pain, anger, fighting with other cats, and many, many conversational trills and generous loving purrs. So how was I to know when Keisa wanted to come in? It was simple really. After a few false starts with little bells hung on the outside door knob, I was fortunate to find that I had a doughnut-shaped piece of wood just about the size of a very thick doughnut with a hole 1-1/4 inches in diameter. This proved ideal. It was easy to attach it to a long nylon cord and to form the other end into a loop large enough to slip over the inside doorknob and long enough so that one could swing the knocker over the outside knob without detaching it.

Closeup of the doughnut door knocker and groomer Posted by Hello

Keisa's Door Knocker - continued

Have I mentioned that Keisa was intelligent, a fast learner with front paws as skillful as hands? It took only a few whacks with the knocker on the inside of the metal door before opening it untill she caught on and did it herself to request my help.. From the outside, it made a fine rumbling knock all over this small house to the entertainment of visitors who hurried to wait on her.With no coaching of any kind, Keisa discovered that she could insert one paw into the doughnut hole and pull the cord taut, thereby providing a satisfying place to rub both cheeks alternately on the cord.

Keisa's attic door knocker Posted by Hello

Keisa's Door Knocker - continued

I ate my meals on a tray in the living room in a recliner. Keisa was always present and enjoyed her own meal [or part of mine] on a small table at my elbow. She finished first and immediately had to go up attic. A good a rattle of that doorknob and an expectant stare would get me up and the door open. So this required another door knocker on the inside knob for when she had finished her survey of her estate and her nap. This knocker made just as good a knocking sound against the wooden door as against the metal one but it was more mysterious.

____Written by Veronique, an appreciated caretaker of a self-confidant cat.

FINALE ON KEISA

After winning the indoor-outdoor battle Keisa explored the neighborhood. Beyond my back fence there was a particular tree that she liked to climb up that made a problem for me because she claimed she could not climb down. Since I was unwilling to leave her outdoors when I went to bed or anytime I left home. I had to ask that neighbor’s permission to trespass and then stand patiently under the tree and reassure Keisa that if she would work her way down a little more I would grab her. Finally she did and I did to the applause of an observer. This happened twice, with the applause from a different quarter, Gita, friend and caretaker.

Of course I had to carry Keisa home, struggling, hissing and complaining, to home confinement. Slowly she realized she had to come in when I was going out and would come to my call or at least let me go pick her up.

Also Keisa decided that the large maple tree in her own front yard was a good challenge. It was a pleasure to watch her calculating distances like an engineer. She was very cautious and never missed.

Her caution stood her in good stead, especially as she grew older and more arthritic. I especially remember a day when she was beginning to weaken from her kidney failure and was worried because it affected her gait and made her miss jumps.

This day I saw her standing at the head of my driveway. She was debating whether it was safe to cross the road to study those two figures that stood there and never moved. [Halloween]. To her relief I called her. She turned and began a slow measured dignified walk down those ten yards to the kitchen door. I had never seen that gait nor such pride and confidence. She looked steadily at me and silently said, “See me!” The confidence was both that she was worth watching and that I would wait. I had to help her up the three steps into the house. One must admire the courage cats have in accepting and adjusting to aging and limitations. This was about Keisa’s last month.

That month she spent mostly in her yard, often lying in the sun on the cement block that covered the hole and finally on the ground beside it. She resented my covering the soil with a tarp but continued to use her litter box. Then she took to hiding in places she couldn’t get out of, and going over to Gita’s catnip bed. I brought her home unresisting. The night she could not stand up the fright in her eyes told me it was time. She stayed in the crook of my arm in bed, something she had never submitted to before and in the morning did not fight the carrier. But she did resist being removed from it and I know she knew. Her own Dr. Stokes let me be beside her. I resisted all suggestions that I wait a while and drove us home immediately and buried her in her familiar place unobserved. All had gone smoothly as planned. Don’t do it that way. Spend some time on a final good-by. You will be glad you did.

Keisa had earned her title of Companion Cat by being just that. Her sense of being my equal was plain. No one was in charge. We were just two people managing the household together. We each had different abilities and hence different duties. My role was that of provider and facilitator. Her role was that of hostess and co-operator: Always answer the door bell and greet the caller. Stay a while if appreciated. Always be there for the departure. Meanwhile you may have been let out and in by using the door knocker. If still outside, be oblivious to their worry about running over you. They won’t do that.

This is about Companion cat PLUS, an addition to Keisa’s title that I should have given her soon after she made her home with me, since it was a service she contributed throughout most of her time in this house. She joined me at prayer. Notice that I did not say in prayer. Since I live alone, it bothers no one if I read aloud or recite prayers aloud to help concentration.

Keisa’s service was purely voluntary, in fact inconvenient at times. It is hard to make room for a large cat when you are holding a large book or to rearrange three pots of African Violets on the table at the big window near your chair when she has had enough of prayer.

I never called her but cats like routine they can depend on. Sometimes I sat in the big recliner. At the sound of my voice she appeared from wherever she had been in the house and claimed the crook of my left elbow to rest her head. If I sat in her favorite chair, the platform rocker near the window, she did not jump on me. She sat on the floor at my right and waited for me to pick her up, especially as we grew older and more arthritic. She liked rhythmic prayers, like the rosary or psalms. Sometimes she purred. As she grew more ill I had to help her onto the window table. It was touching to see her come slowly around the corner towards me to do what she considered her self-appointed duty. Yes, she was a companion.

One day she was much puzzled. Two young men were leaving. They had doted on her and now they were going away but there was no car. She accompanied them to the head of the driveway and sat down to watch them go down the road toward the bus stop on foot. Very strange.

There was something else bothersome about that doorbell Keisa never did understand. It rang when nobody wanted to come in. We would both be standing there with the door open. Poor Keisa, who had to understand everything. What she did not know was that I was causing the bell to ring because I could seldom avoid it. The bell button was in the door jamb between that and the mail slot. Had I had Keisa’s pantomime skill, I could have thought of a way of explaining it to her.

That is my story of four cats. Thank you for listening.

-- Veronique

*****

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS:

Thanks especially to my Webitor who transcribed all of this for Keisa’s Blog and to all the kind personnel of Green Mountain Animal Hospital, Chittenden County Humane Society, and Dr Gary Sturgis for home care, and to all who visited Keisa’s Blog and especially those who made comments.

Thanks to my niece pictured left holding Keisa, #4 cat [c. 2000]. She supplied any pictures of Keisa that I contributed, because I cannot find my copies, but more important is the fact that she and her husband were the owners of the monogamous cat, Twinkle Toes, who waited for the same big white tomcat who produced my big white Chip. Without them there would have been no Chip to be the counterpart of Keisa.

--Veronique

Keisa watching for the mail Posted by Hello

Webitor

Text and graphics on this site are copyrighted. All rights reserved except where otherwise noted.

Webitor, twanda: gapperserve@comcast.net

Truck Accident Lawyer
Truck Accident Lawyer