treat time

Andy was a bit late for treat time this morning. I don’t know what happened. He’s as reliable as the atomic clock in Ft. Collins when it comes to treat time.

Oh well! I got up to stretch my legs and take some dishes to the sink from the cats’ breakfast. Andy heard me moving about, and ran over to his “hinting place”, a slice of cottonwood branch from a large tree that blew down in the city park a of couple years ago or so. For whatever reason, the boys love to sit on this piece of tree. Andy especially likes it, and runs over there to let me know he wants his treats, NOW!

Anything you say, Andrew! You’re the cat.

whatever…

“Blah Monday” struck today.

The antidote to this malady is simple: Change routine a little, just enough to sink the “Blah ship”. You know, the ship captured in the middle of the Pacific Ocean without wind for its sails.

Ice cream for breakfast might help!

Ice cream for breakfast might help!

Urg. Even a little change from routine takes motivation. “Blah Monday” is all about limp will, no plan, inertia. I can’t predict if I’ll even get through this post, I have so little…um…whatever.

I’ll try two things, though. I’ll turn off the news. Here in Rutlandia 2013, I can’t get excited about which undeclared Republican candidate is going to run against the undeclared probable Democratic candidate in 2016. Or if the predicted 99 degree Fahrenheit high for tomorrow is because of a natural process or me burning fossil fuel in my large, white American car. What I’d give for a man-bites-dog story just now! No spin, just a simple goofy story of no interest or impact on my life! Insert a “smiley face” here!

"Get a grip, man!"

“Get a grip, man!”

Oh, I said “two things” to beat the grip of “Blah Monday”, didn’t I? Turning off the news is a good start, but that just leaves time freed up for something else.

I could play with the cat brothers, but Dougy and Andy decided to break routine and find a place to sleep off their blahs. I mean, it’s time for the kitty treats and Andy – little Andy! – can’t build up enough energy to break the “Blah Monday” spell and trot over to my computer to whine and kitty-eye me into submission to put out the Greenies. How bad it that?

I think I’ll put on some light classical music and read a book, a light book. I know. If I turn off the news, too, that’s three things. Whatever.

!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!+!

UPDATE: I nearly finished the book, and played public radio instead of a CD. It didn’t start out very well. I no sooner sat down, turned on the radio, opened the book than the roar of the lawn service’s mower began. That went on for a long time, but, once it ended, I settled into a lovely day of reading and music! No more “Blah Monday”!

“The family requests no flowers….”

I like flowers and potted plants, but funeral flowers and potted plants are a burden I’d rather not have.

There’s a china doll plant in my apartment that started out as a healthy, bushy potted plant given the family at the time of my Mom’s February 2013 memorial service. Since I’m the only family member who lives in the state, let alone this town, all funeral plants come to me.

Everything I found on the china doll’s care says you shouldn’t move it once you put it in the ideal spot. The spot I put it after the memorial service was an available spot, not an ideal one. Ideal spots for plants are rare when you have two cats. The plant’s response – its decline – tells me the spot isn’t ideal.

I’ve watched it lose ground, not responding to my care. Each dropped leaf reminds me of how I watched my Mom slowly spiral down to her death, the feeling of hopelessness and pending loss I felt, and the recognition that this wasn’t a time she’d pull out of the decline because she was at life’s end.

Telling you that, I’m foretelling the fate of the china doll plant, too, I fear.

Of all the flowers and potted plants received from well-meaning friends when my Dad died in November 2008 and, now, my Mom’s death this year, only a Philodendron is alive and well. Of course, a Philodendron is a resilient plant even a person with a black thumb can grow to enviable size. The china doll is alive, for now.

Unlike for my Mom, I have no happy attachment to the plant. I almost wish I could toss it now and spare myself its slow decline. I won’t of course, but past results with funeral plants suggests that plant is doomed. It makes me sad because it is a funeral plant, one given by dear friends instead of a memorial gift to the American Red Cross, or the Presbyterian Women group at our church, or because I specifically noted in Mom’s obituary that the family requested no flowers.

If I could do it again, I’d re-word the obituary: “The family requests no flowers or potted plants.”

17 August: Black Cat Appreciation Day

DrNworb (also Doug) and his wife live in Vancouver, where they enjoy the company of their cats and regular foster families of cats found abandoned in that city. Aside from their good work providing a foster home till permanent homes are found for their cat families, they make charming, touching, amusing, great videos of their cats and cat charges, easily my favorite cat videos on YouTube!

Here’s the most recent video in their series, an in depth look at Panther, their black cat, and a reminder that the 17th of August is Black Cat Appreciation Day! Take a look:

In celebration of the day, here’s a link to other people involved in cat rescue, specifically black cats: https://www.facebook.com/blackcatrescue?hc_location=timeline

Technically, Andy and Dougy aren’t black cats, something that is readily obvious when they plop down and take a belly up snooze: The boys are greyish cats with black faces, ears, legs, tails, and… maybe I should think of them as black cats! Never mind. For this one day, they are honorary black cats. I’ll treat them like little princes. Oops! I already do! No celebration there. I’ll have to think about how to ramp it up a bit for the boys on this big day.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

The Indonesian national flag.

The Indonesian national flag.

Today is Indonesian Independence Day, too. Though the Dutch regard a later day as the day of Indonesian Independence, 17 August 1945 is the date the Indonesians themselves celebrate. It all began with this short announcement from Sukarno, their first President:

soekarno
Bung Karno (Brother or Comrade Karno) was Indonesia’s President from 1945 through 1967.

I used to write an Indonesian boy when I was a kid. We carried on a 35 year correspondence.

donations for the museum

One thing fun about volunteering at the military museum is I sometimes get to receive memorabilia to add to the collection.

Yesterday, a fellow, Myron W., brought in several items he thought we might like, though he wasn’t too sure. Like a framed copy of the famous photo of a sailor kissing the nurse in Times Square at the end of WWII. A Seabee pennant. An equator crossing certificate dated August 1943. A handbook the US Navy gives to new seamen to help them learn the things sailors need to know to be good sailors, this one a 1940 issue. Three war bond savings books, two for 10 cent stamps, and one for 25 cent stamps.

I wrote down each item on the sheet used to receive items into the collection, and each one gave evidence of the challenges people endured in WWII, both as members of the armed services and as civilians. Myron and I had a long talk about each item and how it would enrich the collection held at the museum.

Sallows Military Museum [The Sallows Military Museum.]

He seemed relieved. His late wife was the collector in his family, he noted. She didn’t throw away anything, especially if it had a history behind it. She loved history, and she cherished each of these items, preserved them in pristine condition for decades. Then she died.

“It’s just clutter to me,” he said, “but it meant so much to my wife. None of our kids is interested in any of it, but I don’t want it around.”

He pointed to his head with both hands, “This is where I keep my wife’s memory. I keep our family history in here! I don’t need things to remember.” He noted “things” just made him sad. He hoped the museum could use the items, a tribute to his wife’s care in preserving them all those years.

I reassured him he’d just donated some of the nicest items of those I’d received from people for the museum, because they’d been so well cared for, but also because they told so many stories about a specific time and people in our country’s history, a time where it wasn’t certain we’d even survive as a free people. Darn right, the museum was glad to accept them! How else, how better to inform young people about the process that saved this country and the world from brutal regimes? How else, how better to honor the memories of the people who fought those battles, survived that time, and helped create the world we enjoy today?

The Sallows Military Museum isn’t a large institution. It gets scant funds from the city to stay open. It isn’t even open every day because of lack of volunteers. Until recently, it only had one paid employee, a part time curator who put her heart into running the museum and making the exhibits meaningful. I rarely have a lot of people show up during my time there on Thursdays as a volunteer, and they rarely stay very long. It’s not fancy. In fact, it is in an old city property – the 1930s swimming pool bath house – that was refurbished and refitted to become the museum. Lots of volunteer help made it happen, many small money donations. No less important, maybe even more important, are people like the man who brought in the donations yesterday. The museum is a community project that empties closets and basements of “useless” stuff taking up space and makes it into meaningful displays that personalize the history of some of the country’s toughest challenges and our community’s role in it.

Myron, of course I was glad to accept your donations for the museum! Thank you! And bless your late wife for her foresight to save the items you donated in her and your family’s name! I don’t get paid to open the museum for three hours on Thursday afternoons, but thanks to people like you, I definitely feel rewarded!

So Apparently I’m a Person of Color

What would you tell this young person? It’s an interesting conundrum, but one hopes the day comes when “race” or skin color or ethnicity aren’t used for good or ill to define a person. I call myself American, though I am happy to have Scottish, Dutch, French, Welsh, English, and Irish roots. I call this young person an American, too. Much simpler that way, and it’s true. All the forebears give us their genetic and cultural heritage. That we can celebrate, but they all ended up in America for a reason.

Donner und Blitzen!

FLASH!! Ker-BOOOOM! Crackle!

I swore I’d just been struck by lightning, the 20 megaton blast of thunder followed so soon after the flash that lit the sky!

“Whatever Ye Gods have in mind for me tonight, it will be fast and dramatic. That one was too close,” I thought. Then I noticed two scaredy cats at my feet. (“At least I’m not the only one scared ‘snotless’ here,” I told myself. “That was dang close!”) [I cleaned that quote way up!]

Andy ran when I leaned over to pick him up. He chose a spot under the table, dark and secure by his reckoning, safe from the storm. Dougy let me pick him up to soothe him with petting and words. He wasn’t so eager to get down this time! I felt a bit calmer myself, thanks to the blood pressure-lowering benefits of petting a cat.

We may or may not have been in danger inside the house, but we each found a way to feel we were safe. Any port in a storm, so to speak. When I went to bed, I had two cats join me, and they slept a little closer to me than usual. Honestly, I felt better because of that, too!

Fancy this!

You know you are a cat person when you receive your first issue of CAT FANCY magazine. Yes, I subscribe!

I enjoy the cat health information, the photos of all sorts of beautiful and exotic cats, information on grooming, new cat toys and furniture. I don’t read CAT FANCY, I absorb it through my skin.

"What else is Dougy hiding from me?" I wondered.

“What else is Dougy hiding from me?” I wondered.

The only thing missing from my favorite cat magazine to date has been NO FEATURES ON PERSIANS, clearly a terrible oversight, negligence, an affront to all Persian human companions and their Persian cat buddies.

Then the October issue arrived in the mail yesterday, featuring a very handsome fellow on the cover with an arrow pointing him out as a “black Persian”!

I thought Dougy’d slipped away without my knowledge and posed for a CAT FANCY cover, I tell you.

See the "horns"? No wonder I thought I was looking at Dougy!

See the “horns”? No wonder I thought I was looking at Dougy!

Audrey Pavio, writer of the CAT FANCY article quotes South Carolina breeder Susan Youngman, who says, “They are loving, attentive and want to be around you or near you or on your lap.” On top of that, we (Audrey, Susan, and I) all agree black Persians are stunningly beautiful cats. That’s not bull, it’s the Gospel truth!

Thank you CAT FANCY! The wait was worth it. We Persian cat people can put away the voodoo dolls now.

dried blood

I like to pet my cats, of course, but I also use petting time to check for lumps, matted hair, or other irregularities that need my attention.

This morning, while rubbing Andy’s nose, head, and ears, I felt something hard on the end of his right ear. It was dried blood. Worse, his ear now has a notch in it. Poor Andy!

While the notch doesn’t disfigure Andy’s beauty, it is there. Did it come out of a tussle with Dougy? I do hear some caterwauling during their play some days. Recently, I had to break up “play” that got a bit rough when Andy managed to pin down his brother under a chair. The chair helped Andy keep Dougy in the perfect position to terrorize. Andy definitely made his brother squeal like a little piggy till I stopped the rough housing.

The boys play well together almost all the time. That characteristic is why the woman who gave me Andy asked if I wanted Dougy too: They are best buddies, and have been since kittenhood.

Thanks to my cluttered home, the boys have plenty of hiding places from each other if they need quiet. They can climb high in every room if things get rough in play. They “play chase” each other through the house every day, an activity they enjoy a lot since they often trade places being predator or prey. The place is a mini peaceable kingdom, where my little guys can lie down with a lion or another lamb, depending on their moods and how much one wants the lounger by the door, for example.

That ear notch seems an odd business. Did Dougy do it or did Andy damage it on a loose staple on the new cat tree? If there is a loose staple, I need fix it. If it was excessively rough play, I need to supervise the boys a bit more closely. Speaking of which, Andy is sharpening his claws even as I type!

purr-purr-purr

Andy has a lusty purr. Even though he is a small cat, it sounds like a low rumble, something I hear even when he’s on my right (deaf) side. It’s something else!

On the other hand, Dougy, the bigger of the two, has a very soft purr. I barely can hear it.

Today, following the advice I gave myself to do nothing, I stretched out on my bed for a snooze or some television (similar results, same venue). After a little rest, I got up, almost stepping on Dougy in the process.

“Oh, I’m sorry Dougley! I didn’t mean to step on you!” (Dougley is another nickname I gave him when he was a kitten.)

He was surprised, but unhurt. I picked him up the same, and held him with his front paws on my shoulder, his wee rump under my arm.

As usual for either cat, he struggled to get down. I pet him and reassured him I wasn’t planning on taking him to the bathroom to give him a bath, something neither boy will ever forgive me for though it’s been at least 10 months since the last time I had to do it.

Then I started to put him down, but stopped. I thought I heard something in my left ear. I leaned my head toward the struggling Dougy.

He was purring!

“You little fart,” I scolded, “You act like you are upset to be up here, but that is a happy purr, buster!”

When you are deaf, even partly deaf, to hear a kitty’s purr is a sweet thing indeed!