One bitterly-cold winter night, this friendly little black cat came to our door. Meow...meow....meOW....MEOWWWWW. This went on for a few minutes before we couldn't take it anymore and started rummaging through the pantry for something to feed the little guy. (Or girl; at this point, we didn't know.)
This cat was not exactly a stranger — he'd been spotted cruising around the apartment building for at least a year or so. Rumor had it someone had abandoned him when they moved out of their unit, leaving him to fend for himself. He'd allow himself to be petted and fed, then disappear into the woods, and occasionally stalk small birds and the evil attack Canada geese that roost annually on the roof, honking, hissing, and making a mess. So we'd seen him before.
Anyway, I popped open a can of tuna, scraped it all out onto a paper plate, and carried it to the sliding glass door, where Mr. Kitty was still meowing pitifully and staring in at us, all warm and cozy and watching Survivor. When I opened the door, he blinked up at me, and my husband said, "Aww, it's so cold out...let him come in for a few minutes while he eats."
You cat lovers out there can probably guess what happened next.
Fast-forward to that weekend, when he was allowed to spend Saturday night and Sunday afternoon hanging out with us. All the rest of the next week, he'd be waiting by the door as soon as we came home from work, ready to eat. (I finally had to break down and buy some Nine Lives on my weekly shopping pilgrimage.) By the time a week had passed, I was out shopping for such feline necessities as a litter box, a huge plastic vat of kitty litter, a collar (with bell, to give our pet birds some fair warning), a little pink kitty brush, fish-shaped kitty treats ("now with more tuna!"), and of course the required squeaky mouse and little bag of catnip.
Yes, this little black cat had claimed us as his family.
Kitty appeared very healthy, with one exception. Well, two. For one thing, he'd randomly drool for no apparent reason. Secondly, it was pretty likely he hadn't had a shot for anything in years. I knew what I had to do...take him to the vet. While I'm glad now that I did, I am also glad that the ordeal is now over. (I'm still not sure who it was worse for, me or Kitty — I mean, at least he got to be loaded with some really great anesthesia!)
In addition to jabbing needles in him for rabies, distemper, and kennel cough, they determined that he had a pretty bad infection in the gums on one side of his mouth. Not only did I have to take him to the vet for shots, now I had to bring him back for dental work! Up until now, the ideas of "cats" and "dentistry" had never seemed to go together. So I took him, and they pumped him full of drugs and ended up having to extract two teeth. I know he must feel a lot better now...but I still feel pretty guilty.
This being my first cat (I've always been a dog person), I'm now finding out a lot about felines, including the fact that cats are masters of the art of the guilt trip. Let's just say Kitty's been gulping down a lot of those fish-shaped tuna treats lately....
Thursday, March 03, 2005
Thursday, December 09, 2004
Alarm Clock Guy, Chapter 2
OK, this is getting ridiculous.
Alarm Clock Guy (a.k.a. guy in the apartment above me) is out of control. I've gotten used to his stomping around first thing in the morning (almost) and barely even wake up anymore when it happens. But last night was totally insane.
4:00 a.m.: The pacing starts. And not just back and forth, back and forth, in one room. No. This was one end of the apartment to the other, heavy footsteps, obviously ruminating over something very troubling and anger-inducing.
4:30 a.m.: ACG settles down a bit. Now it's just creaking, but still one end of the apartment to the other. I'm able to doze when he heads to the living room, which seems to be directly above our living room.
5:00 a.m.: Creaking stops. Aaaah. Sleep....
5:30 a.m.: The usual! He flops out of bed again (BOOM, BOOM!) then walks to the bathroom. (step, creak, step creak, step creak, squeak (that's the door)). How could he possibly be getting up now? He just went to bed half an hour ago!
On the plus side, ACG's antics make my snoring seem like a minor inconvenience. We have GOT to get our own place...somewhere where all the floors belong to us, and if the kids (the kids we might or might not ever have, depending on if we decide we're not happy without rapidly-filling diapers, binkies, and upholstery encrusted with pulverized Cheerios) start pounding around up there, I can scream up the steps, "I know you don't want me to come up there!" and then they'll knock it off. Maybe.
Well, until next time. I'm going to go ear-plug shopping.
Alarm Clock Guy (a.k.a. guy in the apartment above me) is out of control. I've gotten used to his stomping around first thing in the morning (almost) and barely even wake up anymore when it happens. But last night was totally insane.
4:00 a.m.: The pacing starts. And not just back and forth, back and forth, in one room. No. This was one end of the apartment to the other, heavy footsteps, obviously ruminating over something very troubling and anger-inducing.
4:30 a.m.: ACG settles down a bit. Now it's just creaking, but still one end of the apartment to the other. I'm able to doze when he heads to the living room, which seems to be directly above our living room.
5:00 a.m.: Creaking stops. Aaaah. Sleep....
5:30 a.m.: The usual! He flops out of bed again (BOOM, BOOM!) then walks to the bathroom. (step, creak, step creak, step creak, squeak (that's the door)). How could he possibly be getting up now? He just went to bed half an hour ago!
On the plus side, ACG's antics make my snoring seem like a minor inconvenience. We have GOT to get our own place...somewhere where all the floors belong to us, and if the kids (the kids we might or might not ever have, depending on if we decide we're not happy without rapidly-filling diapers, binkies, and upholstery encrusted with pulverized Cheerios) start pounding around up there, I can scream up the steps, "I know you don't want me to come up there!" and then they'll knock it off. Maybe.
Well, until next time. I'm going to go ear-plug shopping.
Friday, November 19, 2004
Alarm Clock Guy
I am dreading waking up tomorrow morning.
Not because it's early. (I've gotten used to that part.)
Not because it's Saturday and no self-respecting lazy person wakes up before they're gosh-darned good and ready on Saturday.
And finally, not because there's anything I have to do on Saturday, besides shop for groceries and pretend to obsess about cleaning the house and/or bathrooms, depending on whether there's enough of that cling-to-the-underside-of-the-bowl blue cleanser stuff to buy me valuable time sitting on the couch, watching DVDs while thinking to myself, "Just a few more minutes till that stuff has a chance to kill all the germs lurking under that rim."
No, the reason I dread waking up tomorrow morning is that I know I will be up too early.
This is because of Alarm Clock Guy.
My husband and I live on the ground floor of a three-floor apartment complex. The guy above us is a person we have never actually personally met, but I can honestly say that I hate this person's guts. Every morning (even on Sunday, for those of you who are thinking I'm exaggerating), we are subjected to a ceiling-rattling ritual in which, from the sound of things up there, this guy heaves himself out of bed and jumps to the floor as hard as he can, then proceeds to juggle bowling balls (badly) on his way to the bathroom. I'm seriously not kidding here. Sometimes our ceiling fan actually starts making a different noise after he rises.
Alarm Clock Guy would be a godsend if he got up exactly two and a half hours later than he normally awakens. Unfortunately for us, he is what the proverbial proverb-writers had in mind when they came up with that whole "early bird" thing.
I'd better get to bed...the later I fall asleep, the more susceptible I am to "ceiling rage." More tomorrow, especially if I fall victim to the temptation to play The Sims in the morning before grocery shopping. That always makes me extra sensitive to the idiotic things human beings, including myself, do.... :)
Not because it's early. (I've gotten used to that part.)
Not because it's Saturday and no self-respecting lazy person wakes up before they're gosh-darned good and ready on Saturday.
And finally, not because there's anything I have to do on Saturday, besides shop for groceries and pretend to obsess about cleaning the house and/or bathrooms, depending on whether there's enough of that cling-to-the-underside-of-the-bowl blue cleanser stuff to buy me valuable time sitting on the couch, watching DVDs while thinking to myself, "Just a few more minutes till that stuff has a chance to kill all the germs lurking under that rim."
No, the reason I dread waking up tomorrow morning is that I know I will be up too early.
This is because of Alarm Clock Guy.
My husband and I live on the ground floor of a three-floor apartment complex. The guy above us is a person we have never actually personally met, but I can honestly say that I hate this person's guts. Every morning (even on Sunday, for those of you who are thinking I'm exaggerating), we are subjected to a ceiling-rattling ritual in which, from the sound of things up there, this guy heaves himself out of bed and jumps to the floor as hard as he can, then proceeds to juggle bowling balls (badly) on his way to the bathroom. I'm seriously not kidding here. Sometimes our ceiling fan actually starts making a different noise after he rises.
Alarm Clock Guy would be a godsend if he got up exactly two and a half hours later than he normally awakens. Unfortunately for us, he is what the proverbial proverb-writers had in mind when they came up with that whole "early bird" thing.
I'd better get to bed...the later I fall asleep, the more susceptible I am to "ceiling rage." More tomorrow, especially if I fall victim to the temptation to play The Sims in the morning before grocery shopping. That always makes me extra sensitive to the idiotic things human beings, including myself, do.... :)
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