Growing Edges

alexa lopez

Archive for Pets

You’ll Either “Get” This, or You Won’t

My dad was a dog guy. I mean, while he never kept any dog for long before getting tired and wanting a “better” one, dogs were all we had. I always heard him say that cats were stupid, or inferior to dogs, or cats were this or that….Too independent. Not loyal. Manipulative. Affectionate only when they wanted something. Horrible pets. Blah, blah, blah.

I didn’t know (how could I?) that I was the only one in our family of eight who did not have a cat allergy. Didn’t matter…we’d never have a cat. And based on what I’d been taught, I didn’t want one. I was a dog person, too.

The cat Richard had when we met scared me. Her pupils would dilate when I visited and she sometimes charged at my face/head/hair. Richard said she wanted to play, but I perceived her playfulness as aggression, and I wasn’t going to let her maim me. This cat didn’t fit the lazy, aloof stereotype. She scared me. She wanted to kill me. ;)

My dogs never tried to kill me.

I was buddies with the Shepherd mix my dad had in my senior year — smartest dog I’d ever known; he kept her longer than the usual year or two. She and I played hide and seek a lot and I really believe she smiled when she found me.

Richard and I wanted to get a dog after we were married, but our apartment wouldn’t allow dogs, so we searched the animal shelters for a kitten. One 4-month-old kitten in particular worked really hard to get our attention as we passed and paid no mind to the other ten or so passers-by, so we adopted him. Shelter employees told me that cats don’t like change and that he would need time to adjust to his new home. Yeah, right. After napping a short while in our room, this spotted tabby FREAKED ME OUT when he entered the living room, postured me, sideways, with his back arched, ears back, his pupils dilated and his striped tail bristled to four times its normal size. Richard was in the kitchen.

“Richard! He’s going to kill me!” At which Richard had a great laugh and said, “No, he’s just playing.”

Mr. P.C. got the evening crazies and ran throughout the apartment for a good hour. I started chasing him around and hiding from him, then he hid from me. This became part of our nightly routine; he always did the “gotcha” grab when he found me. He slept on our pillows and hung out with us wherever we were. He did that until he died at age 11.

A fluke, you suppose? Any cat we’ve had since then has been the same way. I discovered that cats are incredible companions. If you interact with them, play with them, appreciate their uniqueness rather than simply cohabitate, they respond with deliberate affection.

While my mind changed in a big way about cats, I know better than to expect that to happen for most people. It gave me immense joy, then, when my friend, Liz, blogged about how her hubby began to show their cat some kindness rather than torment it.

We would have a dog if we could, most certainly, but we’ll never NOT have a cat.

© Alexa Lopez, 2008

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Istas’s bald mouse

Creepy, Bald, Non-rattling, once-upon-a-time pink toy mouse

Meet Istas’s favorite toy.

It’s kind of creepy looking; it is naked and has only the pink ears and the nose still attached. But she’s very attached to it.Cute, still brand-new toy mouse

 

It used to be cute, like this:

 

It has long been her favorite. Over the years the “fur” has come off piece by piece. The parts inside that make it rattle are gone, having fallen out one by one since the bottom cracked open.

She carries it around in her teeth, throws it with her mouth, chases it, bats it across the room only to sneak up on it and torment it some more, then meows loudly when she bats it out of her reach under the oven or the dryer.

I feel so badly for her when I walk into the kitchen and she is lying on her side, looking into the dark gap under the oven, that I grab my flashlight and long narrow stick and save the day (or her mouse).

And sometimes it just disappears.

Then I can’t find it because, bright LED flashlight or not, a little black piece of plastic is a lot more difficult to spot than a bright pink anything.

Without fail, a few weeks after I give up looking for the strange little mouse I happen upon it in an unexpected place…which this time was under a desk in one of the kids’ rooms.

Istas was sleeping deeply on the chair when i tossed the “long-lost bestie” downstairs onto the kitchen floor. She jerked her from her slumber and she began reacquainting herself with that thing, carrying it in her teeth and throwing it with her mouth, chasing it, batting it across the room then sneaking up on it again.

When I’ve been unable to find the one thing that keeps her active, I have resorted to finding pink rattling toy mice exactly like her favorite and peeling off the fur, thinking she would find them equally as entertaining; it’s not entirely a failed effort since she does play with them a bit, then ditches them quickly.

It’s just not the same. But WHY??? I really want to know….

I admit that I spend more mental energy than necessary wishing I could understand her affinity for this particular mouse. Does it have a smell she prefers? Does its cracked plastic body make a certain sound that is unmatched by the counterfeit, peeled look-alikes I’ve tried to give to her? Is it primal or is it more?

What do you think? Do you have any ideas why this mouse remains her favorite?

I almost feel like I should name it…

© Alexa Lopez 2008

 Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Older entries »