Archive for the 'Cats' Category

LOVE TO LOVE

I was just sitting down on Thursday to write a post about how I’m all settled in LA and loving it — the weather, seeing old friends again, redecorating, learning about my new neighborhood — when I noticed that my cat Pub had been hiding away an awful lot. Twenty-four hours later, I was sobbing over a little bundle wrapped in a white towel at the vet’s office. He died suddenly, shockingly, of a feline leukemia I had vaccinated him against just a month before. He must have already had it — must have been in the late stages even — too late to fight it off. He was a close companion made closer from the fact that we had just done this cross-country move together. I was shocked.

Friends and family near and far have all done a lot through calls and emails and texts and invitations to come hang out and posts on the Facebook. A few ideas have been repeated: I shouldn’t feel guilty about moving him out of Texas; the sadness honors his memory; I shouldn’t feel stupid that I’m standing around crying over an animal when people are dying all over the place of wars and famine and otherwise ordinary people-reasons. The overarching sentiment is that I should remember the good stuff. With that in mind, I’m going to tell you the story of his first months.

baby love

In 2005, I was working a second job folding clothes and ringing up customers at Banana Republic to pay my way through school. One afternoon, the stockers were taking hangers out to the trash compactor out back when they heard crying inside the machine. Inside a big jacket box, someone had deposited two kittens — one tabby, one black. They were badly dehydrated, with their skin wrinkling up. Their eyes were barely open and they were covered in fire ant bites. They weren’t more than ten days old. My shift was ending so I scooped them up, box and all, and took them home.

At home, I opened the box to show them to my boyfriend Justin. When I saw the look on his face, I burst into tears. I am not a big weeper-at-situations but the situation was pretty bad: my bleeding heart had already led to the two of us raising a stray who gave birth to five kittens, and paying for their resulting ringworms and parasites and fleas had drained the meager bank account. We were down to sharing bags of frozen peas for dinner, and here I came with two more problems.

Fortunately, Justin had as much of a ridiculous idea about living as I did. We stocked up on kitten milk and made a call to the vet for a checkup. The vet told us how to care for them, how to bathe them in bowls to help ease the fire ant sores. The vet said: don’t name them, don’t be surprised if they don’t make it through the week. We named them Banana and Republic.

six weeks

Weeks passed. They grew up in their box, on a towel our friend Michael gave us. They drank kitten milk from syringes and had to be coaxed to pee with a wet washcloth. I heard Pub’s first purr after one of his warm water baths — it sounded like a tiny motor starting. Justin was in charge of surrogate cat-mom activities, teaching them how to play by kicking their feet and cleaning their faces after feedings. It was total surrogate baby raising, except I was allergic to the babies and the babies would eventually learn to poop in sand. Banana was my favorite at first because Pub would get his claws stuck in the towel and fall on his face and cry about it over and over again. But when our friend Lauren came in to give Banana a good home at 9 weeks, Justin and I knew we wouldn’t work too hard to give Pub away. He was already chasing Turk around, scratching the furniture to hell, causing a ruckus. He was family.

nine weeks

Justin and I would part ways a few months later. I got to have Pub on the condition that I take the slightly-less-compelling large-calico Turk as well. (Justin and I remain good friends, and the call I had to make yesterday morning to tell him about what happened was the saddest call I’ve ever made.) Pub grew up sweet and spoiled and had six good years of chasing lizards and terrorizing the large Turk and getting love from everyone. Maybe it’s good that he went fast and young, because this was the cat I’d have spent too much money on to keep alive for too long. Justin says he was “nobody’s problem and everybody’s baby,” and he was like that to the end.

pictured: one former location of energy currently coursing through the universe

Well so, I am sad now and trying to balance the time between loving on Turk and getting out of the house with friends. If you have stories of losing an animal you’ve loved and assurances that it won’t feel terrible forever, drop me a line or say hello in the comments. Or send me some good thoughts using your mind. It’s hard to be in a new place and have this happen, but I’ll find my way. Thanks for all the help so far.

SURVIVAL MEOW

The Denton reading went well. I’ve never been to Denton, but it felt like the arts district neighborhood I like in Houston. The reading was in a house gallery and was full of kind people. Susan came with me and we walked to a place and ate the fried foods, and then we came back to the house gallery and I got down on the grass and got a few people to get down on the grass with me and we looked at the leaves in the trees. At midnight I felt like it was time to go and so I tricked Susan to get into the car. We drove for four hours. I was itchy the whole way home from the grass. To stay awake, we sang along to the Rushmore soundtrack and then to a compilation of Cat Stevens songs, like maybe Cat Stevens’s Greatest Hits, and during the instrumental portion we said “meow” instead of singing the music, because we were getting road weird. I was making a joyful meow but afterward, Susan confessed that her meows were survival meows. Have you ever made a survival meow?

"help me"

Night list

  1. On the Weather.com homepage, the tabs read Maps, Tornado, Tragedy, and World Cup. This is relevant to my interests.
  2. I’ve been reading Lydia Davis’s collected. It’s a good writer who makes you stop reading and check your cabinets for cockroaches.
  3. A couple click beetles keep getting caught in a spiderwebs next to my bookshelf. They make click noises and freak the cats out.
  4. With the cats shedding for summer I’m sweeping every day.
  5. Reorganizing the book. I’ve got a map with things scratched out and arrows.
  6. Kind of enamored with the idea of Carolyn Chute. Illiterate husband and an AK-47. Haven’t read her.
  7. Review of one of Chute’s books on Amazon: “I can’t believe this thing was a bestseller. I read this because it was featured in the book How To Write A Breakout Novel and sounded interesting. I was wrong.”
  8. How To Write A Breakout Novel
  9. Mushroom stroganoff night. Too much flour made it very thick, but otherwise it was fine.
  10. Tour rumblings. Teacups jitter off the table.

I bet ghost cats like Vermin too

Will you be in Denver on April 8th? You should come to this reading. Whether or not you come, you should see this excellent poster by Goodloe Byron:

click for large marge

Elisa Gabbert wrote about my last post in terms of online marketing, Web analytics, and using questions in search queries to generate leads. These are things I must think about when I’m doing my day job and it was cool to learn more about it. High fives, Gabbert.

On Thursday night I broke a deadlift record at the gym—a pitiful 115lbs, due to the fact that I hate deadlift plus the fact I am a whiny baby—and I am still paying for it in terms of overall soreness. Deadlifts get your back, arms, legs, stomach. It makes me want to float in the Gulf of Mexico for three days straight. Alas! It is Winter.

A strange thing just happened: First, the neighbor cat meowed at its door downstairs, which I heard clearly from the open window. Directly after, one of my cats attacked the closed door to my room. This gave the impression that a ghost cat had transmuted through my home and was simultaneously present. It’s hard to express how unsettling that was. It made my heart beat up in my inner ear. I’m giving up on reasonable thought for the night.

An egg is nothing like a poem

I feel worse eating the pretty eggs from the farmer’s market. Those chickens in factory farms are de-beaked and so drugged up that they don’t even realize they’re laying eggs. Meanwhile, these little guys are the product of a chicken that was hugged by a child in Fredericksburg. Maybe that chicken started thinking something better would come of her eggs, like they’d hatch and become presidents or at least moderately successful in business.

My bedroom is now a cat-free zone. The bed is no longer a spot for all-day naps and Turk can’t make it to third base with the laundry rack anymore. The apartment is weird and small with one door closed and it makes me think about how much a familiar space becomes a part of you. Try moving a chair from one side of your room to the other. Things get weird.

Anyway, I’m sleeping with earplugs now because the cats scratch at the door all night, but I think this is an important part of Becoming a Functional Adult. My allergist, if I could afford an allergist, would be proud.

If you like poetry, you should check out Nick Courtright’s Elegy for the Builder’s Wife, online via Blue Hour Press. If you don’t like poetry, screw you, get out of here.

I’m sorry, I didn’t mean that.

I found a venue for my Dzanc Day workshop. Proceeds go to bring creative writing programs to kids in need. If you’re in the area and you’d like to eat nilla wafers and rap flash fiction with me for four hours, check it out.

Tonight I’m reading some Salinger at the Ransom Center along with ZZ Packer, Betsy Crane, AE Ward, Nick Flynn, and John Pipkin. I hope this one is as illuminating as the David Foster Wallace show. I’m into this reading-party thing.

Listen. At the end of the day, an omelet’s just an omelet.

Republic in plain sight

123

Hearts

I sautéed a chicken heart for my cats: they were not interested. (It occurs to me that not everyone might want to see a sautéed chicken heart first thing in the morning. 1, 2. Don’t say I never did anything for you.)

Reading through one of my favorite magazine moments of every year, DIAGRAM‘s fiction issue, with winners from the $5 innovative contest. So far I’ve read Michael Agresta, Kristina Born and Jenny Zhang, each knocking it out of the park. I hope somebody is testing these kids for hormone-enhancing supplements. Perhaps women concerned with the idea that they see gender-based discrimination from editors should spend more time submitting anonymously to contests? The playing field seems level, if that small but respected sample size is any indication.

Just realized you can’t spell “supplements” without supple.

I bought a small bag of cherries for $10 at the grocery store the other day. Not even the fancy grocery store. I’m missing the easy berries of the Pacific Northwest. They grow on trees out there.

Featherproof’s TripleQuick app is coming soon, and a story of mine with it. I can’t wait to read all of the little eggs.

Funny essay on hipsters as fertilizer at the MostModernist. Worth a click if just for the image caption at the top.

All quotes should hereby be appended to include exclamation points. As Louis Pasteur said, “Let me tell you the secret that has led me to my goal! My strength lies solely in my tenacity!”

Deadlines!

EI1208_Rigatoni-with-Creamy-Mushroom-Sauce_medYesterday I made rigatoni with a creamy mushroom sauce for dinner. It used mascarpone cheese, which was a neat way to do a cream sauce. It marks the first time I have eaten mascarpone outside of dessert. Recommended!

I wrote 4,125 words today, all freelance. When I was done, I lay down on my bed and watched my cats clean one another. I feel like a robot!

Manuscript deadline on the new book got pushed up to Saturday. I was worried at first, but I’m enjoying the chance to throw my weight into it. This collection includes some of my favorite stories and I’m looking forward to sending it out into the world!

I ordered some books: Europeana, In the Blind, The Wavering Knife, The Complete Butcher’s Tales!

In crime blotter news, there is no longer a killer on the loose. It turns out that the kid the killer killed was a mid-level drug dealer of some sort and the killer owed the drug dealer a lot of money. On the bright side, nobody thinks it’s a shame any more!

It’s great to keep busy! “In the depth of winter, I finally learned that there was within me an invincible summer!”

Catching my breath in Chicago.

First things: three new little stories up at dispatch. Thanks to PHM for his work. Secondly, I’m reading tonight at The Book Cellar with Patrick Somerville, Achy Obejas, and Derek McCormack. Looking forward to running at them with flaming branches in word form.

It’s hard to express my feelings about being done with the tour. I’m not quite done done yet, since I don’t get to be home until Monday. Meanwhile I am staying with wonderful creative friends in Chicago and talking in half-sentences about gophers and Sprinters and one-eyed cats. I wrote up a brief account of the tour while I was in the van, just the bare details (we ate breakfast at the Waffle House, we read at the Booksmith) and the thing is still ten pages. That’s how I feel.

Anyway it was wonderful to meet so many kind and generous and funny people on the road, from those who put us up in their homes and let us use their towels, to those who took us out after readings and bought us drinks and food, to those who slipped bills into our raffle bag and helped us pay for all the gas we used on the entire trip, insane, plus a surplus of $12. I learned many new names; incredible guest readers in all cities, hosts that gave us peanut butter pretzels or took us to Bourbon Street or found flowers to make our walk a little pinker, kind friends who smiled while we tried to string together a complete sentences after twelve hours on the road. I found myself in cities and states I had never been before, accompanied by the kindest hearts. I’m being blurry and vague. Once I start putting names to things I’ll start feeling it all. Let’s wait on that.

Lots of work to be done. A freelance project kicks into high gear the minute tires touch the tarmac in Austin. I’m working out the final order on Museum of the Weird and making the final edits. My Five Things co-host has been invaluable in deciphering my half-emails from the road and pulling together an exciting roster of readers. I’m looking forward to one last weekend in Chicago, one more drink with friends, and then home.

Good morning (real talk).

My fat cat Turkish woke me up before dawn this morning by throwing herself at the closed blinds and wailing. I opened the blinds and she sat and looked out the window for a while and had a wheezing fit and left the room. I rolled out of bed and bought four blackout curtains on Overstock before I knew what I was doing.

Damn you Turkish

Damn you Turkish

The fellows at HTMLGIANT are always on the lookout for interesting things. Of note, McSweeney’s is holding a contest for a new columnist. The top three selections will each receive $500 and a one-year contract to write your column (twice a month or thereabouts) for McSweeney’s Internet Tendency. (Also of note.)

I think someone could write an interesting article about Twitter. You could quote interesting or funny Twitter feeds, like Shaq‘s feed or that senator who can’t spell words. You could write about how Twitter is good for newscasters to talk about on CNN, because they get to say fun phrases like “Tweeting the News” and still get paid. You could talk about how interesting it is that 10% of all Twitter users create 90% of the content and how 99.5% of that content is made up of stuff nobody cares about ever.

In later columns you could start suggesting that Twitter makes a low buzzing sound when left alone in the dark. You could write speculative fiction about what the world would be like if Twitter was the only way we could communicate. Maybe you could write a column composed entirely of what Kafka would Tweet.

boycott tacobell (please RT)
1:09 PM Jun 8th from txt

wtff taco bell dosnt sell steak burrito
1:08 PM Jun 8th from txt

1st sign of begn. of understanding = wish to die
12:45 PM Jun 8th from txt

@heykim shhhhh dnt tell nobody
11:05 AM Jun 8th from txt

This week, I am writing short articles for children. I’ll be writing about rare flowers, Kobe beef, a magician named Juliana Chen, and the Rockettes. I bought all my tickets for travel this summer, including my first train ticket (Seattle to Portland). If I had a Twitter you’d best believe I would be Tweeting about all of this.




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