I was sitting at the kitchen table this
morning, trying to remember the last time in my life that it was usual and
customary for me to go to the bathroom alone.
Certainly not since my first baby learned to
walk, so about thirty-nine years. The kids outgrew that, but by then we had
dogs and cats, and if you have lived with dogs and cats, you know that they
have their own ideas about boundaries, and the bathroom door is not one of
those boundaries.
The last cat standing is Mellow, the tuxedo
cat, and this morning he came in and flopped down at my feet and stretched out
like he was luxuriating in the summer sun, not on the bathroom vinyl flooring
in mid-winter. It bothered me a little bit that he looked like he was settled
in there for the long haul. Okay, okay, I do a lot of daydreaming and reading
and playing games on my phone while I’m in there, but it seemed kind of
high-handed (high-pawed?) to me that he assumed I wouldn’t be moving any time
soon.
It also gets my attention when a cat gets
comfortable in a cold, hard place.
Years ago we had a long-haired tabby named
Miss Kitty who gravitated to cool, hard surfaces, and seemed happy to sleep
there. I had never seen a cat that preferred hard and cold to soft and warm,
but that’s how she rolled. Maybe it was that long hair.
She was the queen of the cats here until
Beanbag came along. By that time Miss Kitty was getting on in years, and
Beanbag, a tuxedo cat, arrived with a belly full of kittens (hence her name),
so she really was a Queen. She gave birth in a box that Rick put on the back
porch, after checking us out for a couple of weeks. I guess she decided we were
okay. She was with us until she died, and she ran a tight ship. A cat of a
lifetime.
We had a lot of feral cats in the yard that
we fed in those days, so she had plenty of cats to herd. We only kept one of her kittens, a
blue-gray tuxedo cat who was named Playfully by my older son.
When the kittens were old enough, I tried to
drop them off at a VIPP adoption day, held at McFeed’s at that time, but I
burst into tears as I drove away and had to turn around and go back and get
them. The kittens may have been ready, but I wasn’t.
Playfully was the favorite of Rick’s and
mine, because one day our younger son, in the spirit of scientific inquiry,
tossed her into a wheelbarrow full of water. Rick spotted this and came running
out to save the kitten. “Cat floats, Dad,” our son said. Rick was furious, but
he rescued the kitten and brought her inside after telling our son not to throw
cats into water.
She had inhaled water and became ill. We put
her in a box, with towels and a heating pad, on a chair at the kitchen table
that was next to the baseboard heater. Rick would occasionally carry her around
in his shirt. It was touch and go for a few days, but then she turned a corner
and recovered – almost. Her lungs were permanently compromised. She had
gargle-y breathing and respiratory problems the rest of her life.
You can’t give away a kitten after bonding
with them like that.
We found homes for the rest of the kittens
individually. There were times in later years I wished we’d kept them all, but
that would not have been practical, would it?
Would it?
Beanbag was the smartest cat with whom I have
ever lived, with the biggest personality. She ruled around here for years. She
even intimidated Sadie, our 85-pound Doberman/pit bull. Beanbag would stick her
head deep into one of Sadie’s ears, and lick, while Sadie stood there cringing,
afraid to move. Beanbag would put one paw on Sadie’s head, and if Sadie tried
to pull away, she suffered the wrath of the paw.
But where was I? Oh yes – going to the
bathroom with company. Mellow will come right in and lie down, as he did this
morning, and sometimes he’ll jump up on my lap and proceed to my shoulder,
where he snuggles in and purrs.
My late beloved AmStaff, Marley, usually
would not come in, but she would stand outside the door looking in at me,
checking on where I was and what I was doing, and seeming a little worried. Did
the dog want to be part of what was happening? Usually, no. Sometimes she did
come in, to give me a nose touch and then head back out to the living room,
assured all was well, I guess. I really don’t know what went through her pitty
mind.
When he feels like it, he’ll jump in my lap and climb up to do a neck snuggle, then walk around and jump down from the other shoulder. When I’m on the couch or in bed he’ll come and lie on my nice soft stomach, or, sometimes, lie next to me. Then, according to some schedule known only to him, he will suddenly “chirp,” and stand up, and leave, to go tend to whatever occurred to him.
His only real downside is that he drools uncontrollably when he’s lying on me, purring and happy. I try to keep a kitchen towel handy to throw under his drooly mouth. If I don’t have that I can end up soaked.I suppose when Mellow is gone, I’ll be able
to go to the bathroom in solitary splendor.
I’ll miss him, though, like I miss Marley
now.
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