The things we do for love
06 Jun 2009 4 Comments
in Animals, Photos Tags: adoption, allergies, Bonnie, cat, Flickr, love, marriage
Every once in a while we’re forced to do something that, while completely necessary, just breaks our hearts. I was faced with that moment on Wednesday. I had to give away Bonnie Cat.
I found Bonnie at one of the pet shelters that had set up shop in the entrance of PetSmart. We had only gone in to look at the fish, but the cute little kittens were calling me.
“Megan!” they cried, “Megan, come pick us up! We’re adorable! We’re fuzzy! We fit in your pocket! Resistance is futile!”
Poor Mike did his best to drag me away, but it was all in vain. He sighed heavily as the shelter workers sat me down and placed in my lap a warm ball of fluff that immediately began vibrating with the loudest purr I had ever heard. Within two minutes, it was asleep, curled up with its head pressed into my stomach. Without thinking, I heard myself ask the worker to explain to me all the particulars of the adoption process.
There were three main reasons for wanting to get a cat, and they all have to do with the particular stage of life at which I currently find myself.
- Babies. At almost thirty years old, my biological clock has been ticking ever louder these days, but my brain, knowing full well that I can barely afford to feed myself, convinced me that I don’t yet have the resources to raise a child. As Mike has said, babies can’t eat love. They need food. Hence the pet to coddle and smother with affection and temporarily satisfy the maternal instinct.
- Long distance relationships. Mike was afforded an incredible opportunity to study in a graduate program in the field he wanted. I had never seen him so excited about anything, so naturally, I was thrilled for him. The only problem was that the program was at a school far, far away, thus causing us to attempt the dreaded long distance relationship.
While I am a relatively solitary person, I am still human and get lonely when left by myself for long stretches. Hence the fuzzy pet to fend of the loneliness, because the fish and hamster weren’t cutting the mustard. - Dogs. To be honest, I’m more of a dog person. I grew up with dogs. I know how dogs’ minds work. Cats, to this very day, are still a relative mystery. Granted, I’ve gotten to know one dog-like cat very well, and now consider myself more “bi” when it comes to animals, but I’m still a dog person at heart.
Knowing what I know about dogs, though, I know that I don’t have the physical capability to take care of a dog right now. Dogs need to go out for walks. Dogs need to go out to poo. Dogs can’t be left alone for an entire day. My work schedule right now just won’t let me handle a dog. Hence the more independent cat.
Despite all these compelling arguments, there was one strong reason not to get a cat: poor Mike is allergic. I’m not talking mild, occasionally itchy eyes, here. I’m talking full blown wheezing despite twice-daily doses of Benadryl. Since we’re being married in a couple months, I didn’t think it would be fair to ask him to take allergy pills every day for the next twenty or so years.
However, eventually my soft spot for cute animals won over my sense of logic and I brought Bonnie home. The following nine months were a blast, but tinged with the knowledge that I wouldn’t be able to keep her.
I was really fortunate to find someone to take Bonnie when the time came. I was terrified that I would have to return her to the shelter, never knowing if anyone had adopted her. Her new people are a young woman about my age and her husband. We work together, and a friendship has been slowly blooming between us for the past couple months. She is a very sweet person, and I couldn’t think of anyone better to take in my cat.
Although I knew from the moment I signed the adoption papers that I would have to give her up before the end of summer, nothing could have prepared me for the gut-wrenching evening I spent packing her and her belongings and taking her to her new home. I bawled while washing out her food dishes and packing them in a box, while reaching under the couch to find her toy mice, and even while dumping the contents of her litter box. Every few minutes or so I would scoop up Bonnie in my arms, squeezing her until she tried to wriggle free from my clutches. I think she knew something was going on, but how do you explain something like this to a creature that doesn’t understand English? There was no way to explain to her that I was giving her up because I loved her and because she needed to be with someone who could take care of her.
When I got to Bonnie’s new home I managed to straighten myself out long enough to create the illusion that I wasn’t as bothered as I really was. I expected to start crying again when I turned out of the apartment complex, but instead found myself in almost a state of shock. I haven’t cried over her since that night until now, as I type these words.
I’ve learned a few things from this experience.
- Cats are definitely cooler than I used to think. With the exception of a couple I’ve met, they’re quite affectionate and friendly, and not nearly as jerky as I make them out to be.
- Cats are funny. Have you ever seen a cat chase its tail? Or play in an empty cardboard box? Hours of free entertainment right there.
- Cats are also very strange. They nap in the sink and bathtub, prefer ancient erasers to expensive catnip toys, and will run like mad back and forth from one end of the room to the other without reason.
- A cat’s purr will be amplified quite loudly if that cat sticks its face in an empty flower vase.
- Owning a cat has given me the confidence that I am capable of taking care of another living thing. The prospect of having children someday doesn’t seem as daunting as it did a year ago.
- I now know for certain that I would never be able to give up a child for adoption.
Thunderstorm with a scaredy cat
20 Apr 2009 3 Comments
in Animals Tags: Bonnie, lightening, rain, scaredy cat, thunder, thunderstorm
Me: Wow, it’s really raining out there!
Bonnie: It certainly is! I don’t think I like it very much, but since I’m an indoor kitty, the rain doesn’t bother me too much.
Lightening: FLASH!
Thunder: BOOM!
Bonnie: What in the wide world of sports was that?
Me: That is a thunderstorm, Bonnie. Lightening lights up the sky and thunder crashes, and rain pours down in heavy sheets. I like thunderstorms.
Bonnie: Well, I don’t think I like it one bit. Do you mind if I sit with you while it passes?
Me: Not at all! Have a seat, and we’ll snuggle in the comfy green chair.
Lightening: FLASH!
Thunder: BOOM!
Bonnie: Oh dear, I definitely do not like this. I think I’ll dig my claws into your leg for protection. Do you mind?
Me: I’m afraid I do, Bonnie. That hurts quite a bit. Would you please retract them?
Bonnie: So sorry about that. Here, is that better?
Me: No, I don’t think so. You see, you’ve released my leg, but now you’ve dug your claws into my stomach. You’re doing the same thing, just in a different place.
Lightening: FLASH!
Thunder: BOOM!
Bonnie: Oh my! I think I’ll be safer if I climb up on your chest.
Me: You may be, but I’m afraid your claws are now digging into a much more sensitive place than before. I must ask you to let go.
Lightening: FLASH!
Thunder: BOOM!
Bonnie: Perhaps you were right. Your chest isn’t nearly protective enough. I now see that the safest position for me is to be wrapped around your neck.
Me: You know, this is getting a bit out of hand. I don’t think you will be any safer from the storm by moving up a couple of feet.
Bonnie: No, no, I think your neck is best. Look, my foot fits nicely on your shoulder, and your cheek is the perfect place for my armpit.
Me: True, but your body is not exactly on my neck. It’s more on my face. I’m having a bit of trouble breathing through your fur.
Bonnie: You know, your ear looks like a good thing to hold on to. I think I’ll grab that.
Lightening: FLASH!
Thunder: BOOM!
Me: Ouch!
Kitty crack
17 Feb 2009 12 Comments
in Animals, Photos Tags: Bonnie, canned tuna, cat, Food, kitty crack
When it’s time for a normal meal, Bonnie will sit nicely beside her placemat, meowing gently as I pour a bit of food into her bowl.
If Bonnie has been especially sweet to me that day, I will give her a bit of canned tuna.
She knows the sound of the can opener, and the second I place it on the can, I hear her bounding in from whatever corner of the apartment she might be hiding in.
Badumbadumbadumbadum…
Unlike her normal meals, Bonnie does not sit politely whilst I dish out her snack. Rather, she will try to climb up my leg, meowing hysterically, reaching for the plate before I have even gotten the fish out of the can.
Somehow, I manage to get the plate to the floor without tripping over the cat. Bonnie quickly wolfs down the tuna, licking every last speck from the plate.
When she is finished, she turns to me, rubbing against my legs, purring violently. I pick her up, and she nuzzles against my chin, as if to thank me for my infinite kindness. She looks into my eyes and…
…and then the change happens. Her pupils suddenly dilate. She begins to squirm, so I let her down. Without warning she tears out of the kitchen.
Badumbadumbadumbadum…
While I go about my business, Bonnie runs back and forth across the length of the apartment. She leaps over chairs, she skids around corners, she attacks my sneakers. She lets out these weird meows in a timbre not usually emitted from her throat. She has become a wild cat, and no walls can contain her.
Badumbadumbadumbadum…
I try to ignore Bonnie as she races with wild abandon around me, but it can be difficult when she uses me as a springboard to fly across the living room onto the couch. At times like these I feel like I should sew her a little cape.
Finally, forty-five long minutes later, she is passed out on the floor beneath the coffee table. Her tuna high has worn off.
Canned tuna is like kitty crack.
Feline mind tricks
07 Feb 2009 11 Comments
in Animals Tags: Bonnie, cat, damp sheets, jedi, midnight bathroom run, mind control, spilled water
I can’t remember the last time I slept all the way through the night without getting up in the wee hours of the morning to pee. I’m not eighty, folks. I’m just a poor soul cursed with a small bladder. Although, having to pee every hour or two has its advantages: I know where every public bathroom is in every mall in a thirty-mile radius. But, I digress.
I have this weird thing where I don’t like to turn on lights in the middle of the night. If I do, I can’t get back to sleep. Remaining in darkness somehow keeps me in a safe sleep bubble. So, every night around 3:00AM I stumble out of bed, trip over my slippers and, half asleep, blindly make my way to the bathroom, groping for walls and doorknobs. It’s only about three feet from my bedroom door to the bathroom, so pitch black maneuvering isn’t usually a problem.
Unless there is a cat sitting in the hallway.
Bonnie Cat is not allowed in the bedroom. This rule is in place because a member of the household is very allergic to her, so the bedroom is a cat-free sanctuary into which he can retreat for a peaceful night’s sleep.
The first few weeks I had her were pretty excruciating. Every night she would sit outside the bedroom door and meow. I’m not talking howling, but crying meows that sounded like a child asking, “Don’t you love me anymore?”
Fortunately, I learned that she would stop after a while and that my guilt was only temporary. It’s an arrangement that works well for us: she gets free range of the rest of the apartment at night, and I get to sleep without a cat on my face.
However, in the midst of my blind middle-of-the-night bathroom runs I don’t always think to close the bedroom door behind me. Naturally, Bonnie Cat takes the opportunity to dart into forbidden territory, sniffing at everything she can before I snatch her up in my arms and kick her out of my chamber of slumber.
Usually, her intrusions are uneventful: she hides under the bed and I coax her out with some Kitty Greenies. But sometimes, just sometimes, disaster strikes. And last night was one of those nights.
Bonnie Cat had jumped onto the bed and, for some unknown reason, taken an intense interest in the glass of water that sat atop my dresser. From the bathroom I heard it: Clink! Clunk! Sploosh! Spatter! Scuffle! Sighing, and now totally awake, I swept into the room to assess the damage.
The glass had been tipped over, its contents spilled not just on the floor, but also on my bed and pillow.
“Shame on you!” I yelled, pointing a scolding finger in her direction. She knew she was in trouble so I didn’t even have to coax her out of the room; she just bolted, fearing my wrath.
Fortunately, my state of wakefulness didn’t last long. Two beach towels and a fresh glass of water later, I was sound asleep.
This morning I awoke well rested, but still a bit cheesed off at the cat that had made me sleep on the tiny corner of bed that was not damp. She spotted me from the living room and bounded towards me, rubbing against my legs and purring loudly. (She’s still a fairly young cat, so she bounds most everywhere she goes.) Sighing, I squatted down to pick her up.
For a brief moment our eyes met. A faint squeak of a meow escaped her mouth. I could feel the purring rumbling through her body. She nuzzled her tiny head into my neck, and was asleep within two minutes. Suddenly, I realized I was no longer angry with her.
What the hell just happened? I am not usually susceptible to the “cute treatment.” I hold grudges for years. I am fully aware that pets are like very small children, not knowing what they are doing is wrong. But this cat knew what she was doing. So why was I no longer peeved about the still damp sheets on my bed?
I think Bonnie Cat was secretly trained in Jedi mind control before I got her. In the split second that we looked into each other’s eyes, she must have said in that meow, “You forgive your cat. Knocking over that glass of water was no big deal. You like sleeping on damp sheets. Bonnie Cat is the sweetest cat that ever walked the earth. You will feed her tuna tonight.”
That’s my only explanation.
Siesta
21 Oct 2008 2 Comments
in Animals, Photos Tags: Bonnie, cat, life, nap, sun
Bonnie is smart. She finds the best of both worlds: a sunny spot on a comfy chair directly below a heating vent.
I think I’ve let myself slide into a state of mind in which I’m not supposed to enjoy the simple pleasures of life because they interfere with productivity. My life has become so dictated by a sense of obligation to things that really don’t matter that I feel guilty if I allow myself to take a ten-minute nap. My body speaks to me, telling me to slow down, but I ignore it, afraid of the consequences of pausing for rest.
After a couple of very draining weeks, I’ve decided that I must try to live my life more like Bonnie does, letting myself sleep and play when my body tells me to do so. Screw the consequences.
What good is living life if you don’t allow yourself to enjoy it?
Caption contest #2
07 Oct 2008 5 Comments
in Animals, Photos Tags: Bonnie, caption contest, cat, Chinese dwarf hamster, hamster, Tiny Bob
Rather unappreciated
19 Sep 2008 5 Comments
in Animals, Photos Tags: Bonnie, cat, sink
I buy her a scratching post, but she would rather scratch my furniture.
I buy her high-end catnip toys, but she would rather play with toys from the dollar store.
I buy her toys from the dollar store, but she would rather play with my toes.
I buy her good food, but she would rather snack on my house plants.
I buy her a soft bed, but she would rather nap in the sink.
I am starting to feel unappreciated.
Bonnie
04 Sep 2008 4 Comments
in Animals, Photos Tags: Bonnie, cat person, dog person, frog person, kitten

I’ve always found it interesting how people categorize themselves as “cat people” or “dog people.”
My cousin wrote: “I lived in a house with 14 dogs. I am a cat person.”
My mother could very easily say something similar: “I lived in a house with 8 cats. I am a dog person.”
Personally, I am a dog person with a fondness for cats, who has recently adopted a cat with the personality of a dog and an unhealthy fondness for the resident hamster.
What kind of pet person are you?



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