…and I had to let her.” I found this quote from Gail
Caldwell’s memoir on the loss of her dog poignant and sweet, and I knew that I would
soon be in a similar situation. Millie, my feline companion of 17 years, had to
go last Wednesday. And I had to let her. According to the vet’s chart she would
have been 19 yesterday, which in people years is nearly 92. She’d had a good,
long life.
With my first cat, Spiffy, I learned about feline leukemia
during his short life of 5 years. His successor, Kimberly Katt, was diabetic
for the last 10 of her 18 years, and required daily insulin. She was quite
healthy and active until she had a seizure. Miss Millie had thyroid issues and
it was senility and gastric problems that finally brought her down. When it
comes to health, the animal world is not so different from our own.
While Spiff was a stalker, hunting for prey in the form of
spiders and imaginary enemies, and Kimberly would thunder through the house as
we played fetch, Millie was an engineer. Her favorite recreational activity was
watching a string pulled under or through something. She could calculate where
it would end up, and that’s where she would pounce. Her accuracy was un-catty. When
it comes to skills, the animal world is not so different from our own.
All three of my cats have been affectionate and
communicative. Spiff was ok as long as some part of him was touching some part
of me, Kimberly would spoon next to me at night, but Millie was the most cuddly
and verbal. In the morning she was anxious to tell me about her nighttime
dreams and when I got home from work she had to inform me about the happenings
of the day. Her meow is on my home voice message. When Millie was in need
of special attention she would sit with her back paws on my lap and her head
under my chin. Last Wednesday, as she told me it was her last day, we had our
normal morning routine as she curled up with me on the couch while I meditated.
Even in loving, the animal world is not so different from our own.
I picked Spiffy from a litter delivered by a colleagues’
well-loved pet and got him when he was newly weaned. I found Kimberly at a
shelter when she was 6 months old, and was introduced to Millie by the staff at
the Cat Practice who had taken her in as a young teen mom. They thought she and I might make a good
team. When it comes to creating a family, how we include an animal is not so
different from how we add humans.
One blog last October gave tribute to things I have learned
from Millie. It began by sharing that even when she miscalculated her jump, she
would get right back up and try again. It ended with the fact that she would
let me know when she wanted attention, that it is ok to ask to be noticed and
acknowledged. I will end this blog with the fact that in our last months together she
taught me to keep on living even as you prepare to die, and that we need to
pay attention to know when it is time to let go. Even in death, the animal
world is not so different from our own.
This is truly beautiful. I hope that when the time is right, you will consider sending it to publishers.
ReplyDeleteYou have a wonderful talent for writing. Such a beautiful tribute to your obviously beloved pets.
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