Mindful Monday – What Cats Bring From the Other Side

When we lose a cat it’s heartbreaking. Some of us decide never to have another cat again. Others can’t wait to bring home another one or two—not to replace her, but to fill their home and hearth with a new kind of kitty-cat energy. Have you ever felt as though the cat you brought home learned a few habits or mannerisms from your previous beloved cat? Or is it your imagination? Is it that you miss your kitty so much you only imagine that the new cat has some similar traits? A cat is a cat is a cat, after all.

I’m not convinced that’s the whole truth. Are you? I mean, sure cats have many things in common with each other. They all eat, take lick-baths, sleep a lot, play as if they’re in hunting mode, and so forth. They spend time staring at nothing in particular, some beg, some like to snuggle. But these things don’t speak to a cat’s personality.

When we brought ten-week-old Sophie home, she saw Winfield, our elderly white odd-eye cat from across the room and immediately ran to him and rubbed against him as if she recognized him. Was that because he was a cat and she was happy to see another cat? Did he remind her of a cat she once knew? Or…did she remember him when she lived here in a different cat body? Are you freaked out, yet?

We adopted Lily when she was a mere six-weeks-old. We were told she was eight-weeks. We’d lost Winfield by then and my beloved Himalayan, Katy. She brought back their memory in a couple of different ways. Winfield loved water. He drank a lot and he liked playing in his water fountain. Lily does too. Katy stuck to me like glue, especially in her last few years. Lily wouldn’t let me out of her sight and for her first several months, she’d even sleep on my feet when I worked at the computer. Winfield went crazy for cantaloupe. So did Lily, but a lot of cats do.

So the question is, do cats reincarnate and return to us? Does a kitten destined to be mine communicate with one that I’ve lost while they’re on the other side? Is there some sort of telepathy transmitted to a new cat from me or from a cat who has passed? Or do I have an active imagination?

I don’t know about you, but I adore the similarities that remind me of cats I’ve loved. But I find it refreshing and lovely to discover the unique things a new cat brings into my life.

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Frivolous Friday – Your Cats’ Favorite Toy

Does your cat have a favorite toy? What’s her favored way of playing with it? I find that even cats raised together can have very different ways of playing and expressing their joy and their silly-self.

Lily, as many of you know, loves small stuffed toys. She has quite a collection of stuffed animals, including a baby possum, owl, lamb, eagle, kitty, moose, bunny, bears, and her newest, a baby otter. But she doesn’t play with them. She captures them from her toy basket and brings them to me one at a time, until I’m surrounded by an army of little critters. With each delivery, I get a “Prrrrt!” I’m not sure if that means, “I love you, Mommy,” “Here, take care of my kids,” or “I’ve told you a million times I don’t want these things in my toy basket!”

Sophie loves toy mice with tails. She tosses them into the air and pounces on them. She’s at her most delighted when she’s playing with a tiny toy mouse.

Max used to meet me at the door when I returned from the grocery store, eager to see what I brought him. Boy did I have him spoiled. Usually, I’d unpack a new mouse for him—I had to keep buying new ones because as soon as I’d hand him one, he’d chew the ears and tail off. Then he’d rip the little pompom nose off the mouse and play with the pompom for hours. I think he purposely pushed it under the refrigerator about a dozen times a day. He’d let me know where he’d hidden it by his kitty dance and I’d get a flashlight and dig it out with a yardstick. All the while, Max would lie next to me on the floor, cheek-to-cheek, eagerly waiting for the little red pompom to appear.

Smokey, my model for Rags, likes his hanging toy better than any of the toys in his basket. He’ll often pull his basket from the shelf and dump it. Sniff around for a moment, then walk away and spend several minutes batting at a toy that hangs from a doorjamb. That toy has to be replaced fairly often because his brand of playing means shredding it so it’s unrecognizable.

And then there are non-toys that cats seem to see as toys—like shoe laces. Do you get help when trying to tie your shoes? And the cords on blinds. Now, you know those can pose a serious danger to a kitten, right? Always tie cords up out of the way of a kitten because they can become entangled in the cords and hang themselves. We learned the hard way that some cats like to chew the cords off. Sophie ruined a few pair of blinds in our house when she was small. Thankfully she outgrew that habit.

What are some of your cat’s favorite toys? Have they ever claimed something of yours? In our house, Lily has taken a few things out of the grandchildren’s toy box for herself. And she took some of my own small stuffed bears. I think that’s what started her large stuffed animal collection, which now numbers around twenty.

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Thoughts for Thursday – Five-Star Reviews for Meowmoirs

Until a couple of days ago, all of the Amazon reviews for Klepto Cat Book 29, Meowmoirs of a Klepto Cat, were five-star reviews—all 14 of them. Today I noticed a new review. While the reader says it was GREAT, she gave it only four stars. But that’s okay. Sometimes authors learn more from the less positive reviews than the rave reviews. And believe me I listen. However, I can’t say that four stars means anything other than this reader loved the book, only not as much as, perhaps, another book she read from the series or another author’s series.

Oh, I don’t pay any attention to those mean-spirited reviews an author sometimes gets or a silly criticism about the way a character wears her hair. But when I get legitimate critique, I listen and I sometimes make changes. That’s as it should be.

Have you read the Meowmoirs? It’s an overview of the Klepto Cat Mysteries for someone who hasn’t delved into them yet, but staunch fans of Rags also enjoy reading it and reminiscing about some of his antics and adventures. Maybe you haven’t even read Catnapped (the first book in the series). Catnapped has a solid 4-star rating at Amazon with 247 reviews. Seventy-three percent were 4- and 5-star reviews.

If you haven’t taken time to read one of the Klepto Cat Mysteries, I invite you to do so. I think you’ll enjoy getting to know Rags and his human and furry friends and family. http://KleptoCatMysteries.com

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Wild (and Sometimes Crazy) Wednesday – Cats of a Different Color

It’s always a crapshoot when you decide to bring a new cat or kitten into the household. You wonder if this cat will get along with the resident cat(s) because not all cats will create a harmonious bond. Generally, it’s recommended that you separate the new cat from the resident cats so they won’t tangle. You want them to get to know one another gradually, through their scent from under a door, for example. Once the cats are brought together, it should be with supervision. And only when they’re both accepting, should you leave them alone together.

Some cats never establish a harmonious relationship. One might bully the other and sometimes their aggression is dangerous. But generally, the two cats find a way to get along either by ignoring each other or interacting like devoted siblings would. In our household, Lily and Sophie are cordial. They seem to like each other, but they don’t dote on one another. And they occasionally have a minor standoff—probably just for fun.

I’ll never forget the time I brought little Katy (a sweet Himalayan kitten) home to meet Daisy (an almost year-old calico). Katy so wanted to be friends and Daisy didn’t want anything to do with the cute little intruder. As I wrote in my book of true cat tales, Catscapades, Daisy reduced Katy to dust-ball status. Katy hid under furniture for much of her first week at home. When I wanted to spend time with the kitten, I had to drag her out from under the bed or a side table.

Max and baby Lily

One night Katy had the courage to join Daisy and me on the bed, only Daisy was not happy. She growled at Katy, but this time Katy growled back. I was glad to see she was getting a backbone—good for Katy. The two kittens slapped at each other a few times and growled even more loudly. I needed my sleep, so I attempted a technique I’d used a time or two. I imagined each kitten enveloped in pink light (depicting love). I visualized the light going from one kitten to the other and back again. After just a few minutes, they both settled down and went to sleep, each on one side of my legs.

The next morning, when I awoke and found them gone, I felt a sense of panic. Where were they? Was Daisy picking on Katy again? I was very pleased to discover the little darlings in the kitchen eating kibbles from the same bowl. And those two turned out to be best-friend cats. They came to adore one another. Don’t you love a happy ending?

 

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Newsday Tuesday – Cats Who Give Back

We’ve all read sweet stories of cats helping other cats and even dogs protecting and nurturing kittens and cats. I saw a story this week about a dog who plays referee between two cats who can’t seem to get along with each other. Those cats are not going to hurt each other on his watch. Cats have been known to help other cats in a variety of ways. I once witnessed a life-saving gesture between cats when our sweet Himalayan-type cat, Maggie, adopted an unwanted kitten.

Maggie was already nursing her beautiful, plump litter of three colorful kittens when my daughter showed up with the scrawniest, nondescript (bordering on ugly) kitten I’d ever seen. No! The tiny dull-grey kitten was not a pretty sight. My daughter found the three-week-old kitten all alone in an orchard while jogging. We thought maybe she’d been snatched by a hawk or an owl and, for some reason, dropped far away from her mom and siblings. My daughter wondered if Maggie would feed the little thing and keep her warm.

I’d heard of nursing mother cats accepting unrelated kittens, but I’d never seen it and I wasn’t sure how to approach the possibilities—blindfold Maggie? Put Vaseline on her nose so she wouldn’t smell the strange intruder? We ended up just placing the kitten with Maggie and hoping for the best. Thankfully, the best is what happened.

The tiny being eagerly nursed and Maggie immediately accepted her. It was beautiful to see. The little one, I think we called her GrayGirl or something like that, well she thrived, but certainly not to the degree that her step-siblings did. Talk about the ugly step-sister… Even when she reached what should have been the cute kitten stage, GrayGirl was still homely. But she was as sweet as could be, she was healthy, and, when she was old enough, she won the heart of a friend and was given a forever home. Don’t you love a happy kitty-cat ending?

Max and baby Lily

We’ve read about cats who adopt kittens and become sort of surrogate grandparents for an abandoned litter, for example. And there are stories of cats that have saved other cats from harm. But some cats go above and beyond for their fellow cats.

Do you have a cat who has given back in some way? Ever thought of offering your cat as a blood donor for other cats who need a transfusion? There are cats who do this. Here’s an article about such cats. It explains the process of cats giving blood: https://icatcare.org/advice/cat-health/blood-donor-cats There are also kidney donors. Yes, veterinarians can do kidney transplants on cats who were, perhaps, born with kidney disease or who nibbled on a seriously poisonous plant or substance and their kidneys failed. Learn more here: https://www.veterinarybytes.com/feline-kidney-donors/

My favorite cat rescue story features a grumpy, nasty-tempered, older male cat who landed in a shelter. He was not happy until a litter of abandoned kittens showed up. As I recall, when the kittens walked closer to the ornery male, volunteers rushed to their rescue. They didn’t trust him around these vulnerable kittens. As it turned out, he began to nurture them. He let them crawl all over him and even seemed to enjoy it. In that moment, everything changed for this misfit male. He became the shelters surrogate grandfather to homeless kittens. Sorry, I couldn’t find a link to that beautiful story. Maybe you know the one I’m talking about.

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Mindful Monday – It’s Getting Dark Out: Do You Know Where Your Cat is?

How often have you wondered where your cat goes and what she does all day when she’s out of your sight? I think we’ve all had indoor-outdoor cats and some of us still do—my mother, for example. Her cat, Smokey, is my inspiration for Rags, the star of my Klepto Cat Mysteries. He’s an interesting fellow—loves being out-of-doors. Mama envisioned Smokey growing up to be a total inside cat, but he had his own ideas. He loves to roam the neighborhood. He equally adores lap time and just lounging in the middle of the room when there are visitors sitting around. I’m convinced that he thinks we’re all there just to admire him.

A major topic of discussion where Smokey’s concerned is where does he go when he disappears during the day. When he doesn’t respond to my mother’s soprano trill of “Here, kitty-kitty-kitty,” where is he? Does he hide just out of sight and purposely refuse to obey or is he far, far away exploring? Some cats lead a double life. They might have a second adoring human who dishes out treats, petting, and even food. My mother actually fed such a cat for several years. Gibbs showed up day after day for a handout and Mama obliged.

Do you wonder where your cat spends her days? You might be surprised to learn that keeping tabs on your cat is as easy now as looking at your iPhone. Here’s an article you might find interesting. https://www.forbes.com/sites/annatobin/2018/09/07/cats-are-losing-their-secret-private-lives-to-this-tech/#18f9f61119a3

Yes, there are tracking devices designed for cats. They’re easy to use and not all that expensive. During my research, I located cat-tracking devices for anywhere from $3.99 to $150. There’s even one with an alarm that reminds the cat when it’s time to come home and eat. Say what? I wonder if that manufacturer has ever owned a cat. Well, in case you’re interested, here’s one of several sites that sell tracking devices for cats. https://pawtrack.com/

I wouldn’t be surprised if I start getting hate mail from your adventuring cats telling me to mind my own business and let them roam in peace.

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Frivolous Friday – Happy Cat Month

No one wants a grumpy cat or one that’s unhappy, ill, angry, or fearful, right? We all delight in our cats being relaxed, healthy and happy. The CATalyst Council, a nationwide council of several organizations, has set aside September as Happy Cat Month in order to help cat owners create an atmosphere and a demeanor that will most likely support and encourage happy cats in our home.

They suggest that if your cat hasn’t seen a veterinarian for the last six months, it’s time for a well-check. Do you notice the condition of her fur, eyes, ears, mouth? Do you pay attention to what she leaves in the litter box and any changes to her litter box habits? What about her eating habits? Any changes there? Have you checked her claws lately? Do they need to be trimmed? Happy Cat Month is a good time to catch up with her veterinary care, like I said, if it’s been over six months since she’s seen her veterinarian.

The Catalyst Council recommends other things you can do to insure that your cat is a happy cat. Is she maintaining a good weight? If not, with your veterinarian’s help, consider a new feeding routine. Is she regularly stimulated by new toys, changes in the location of her cat tree? When’s the last time you added something new for your cat—an empty box, a cozy cat tunnel? You can even spread a blanket over an arm chair or sofa for your cat to cozy under. They especially enjoy a “tent” in cooler weather. What about a water fountain for your cat? Many cats find running water quite a fascination.

What about play time? Is it time to revive a game they used to love or come up with something new to entertain her (and you)?

Let’s all come up with something that will make our cats happy and share it here at this blog. Our girls have had their well-check within the last six months and their eating habits and food quality was discussed and adjusted at that time. So, for Lily, I think I’ll save used paper, crunch them into wads, and throw them across the living room for her to chase. She especially loves leaping for the paper wad.

For Sophie, I’m going to purchase a container of cat grass. She’s on a grass kick, lately, and all we can bring in for her to munch on are weeds as here in this drought-stricken area of CA, no one supports a lawn any more.

While I’m at the pet store, I think I’ll see what they have in innovative toys our girls might enjoy. What about you?

Here are some additional ideas for you and your cat to celebrate Happy Cat Month. http://www.catalystcouncil.org/newsroom/?ID=160

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Thoughts for Thursday – Why I Consider My Two Purebred Cats Rescues

When we talk about rescuing a cat, we think of plucking feral cats from the streets and domesticating them. We adopt unwanted cats from shelters. We take in strays that are roaming free. We might save a lost cat after a disaster. I’ve done a lot of that. But I’ve also inadvertently rescued two purebred cats.

The first time I bought a purebred cat was in 1972. I wanted a Persian, so I went to a local breeder and chose the sweetest shaded silver Persian ever and named her Crystal. What a dear being. By the time Crystal was a year old or so, I knew that I’d probably actually rescued her. Anyone buying her for breeding or showing would certainly have put her down once they discovered Crystal’s deadly secret.

When Crystal became ill, she wasn’t diagnosed correctly—in fact none of the veterinarians she saw could tell us what the problem was. There was never an actual diagnosis, just a whole lot of treatment. Looking back, it’s pretty clear that she either had feline leukemia or feline aids, which were not very well known in those days.

How much love would Crystal have received from someone who purchased her for breeding or showing purposes? How long would they have treated her? As it was, we had to let her go when she was only about six years old. If only we’d known—if only there’d been a vaccine by then. But we can’t go back, we can only move forward.

Fast-forward to 1986. It was a pretty summer day when I walked into a pet store and fell in love with Himalayan kitten. Yes, I was guilty of supporting a kitten mill. Her papers showed she was born in Missouri and shipped to a California pet store. Needless to say, I bought her and named her Katrina (Katie).

When Katie was around a year old, she developed a serious infection in the uterus and it had to be removed. Yes, she had a hysterectomy. Now if she’d been purchased by another breeder or an individual who paid the fee because they wanted to start a breeding program, what would have happened to Katie? I’ll tell you what did happen to Katie. She was absolutely adored. (I’m tearing up as I write this.) She was a beautiful creature and she had a beautiful life with me for 18 precious years.

I’m grateful for the time I had with those two sweet beings. But, as we know, there are equally lovely cats that have been abandoned, become lost, are neglected, and who need a home. My rule now is to rescue in the more traditional way—by supporting a shelter rather than a breeder. I just thought you’d find it interesting that there may be other ways to rescue a cat whether it starts out that way or not.

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Wild (and Sometimes Crazy) Wednesday – Silly Moments With our Comical Cats

You’ve probably seen that Twizzler commercial where grumpy or serious people are tempted by a Twizzler and have trouble keeping that straight face. Cats (especially kittens) have a similar affect. Just try to be melancholy, angry, or stoic when a cat is at play. I mean, what other animal has the sense of humor of a cat? They’re the clowns of the animal kingdom and their whole world is a circus.

Just think about what they can do with the simplest item—a wad of paper, for example. They might attack it, play soccer with it or hide-and-seek. They’ll chase it, leap for it, and even take it for a swim in their water bowl. Give a cat a box and you can see their imagination soar. They become swashbuckling buccaneers, explorers of the bravest kind, or maybe the king of the jungle as they take on imaginary adversaries in and around that box. Throw a toy mouse in the mix and the cat’s antics escalate.

Lily becomes a comic on catnip. And Sophie sometimes entertains us with her athletic prowess when we give her a toy mouse—especially if it has a tail. Like any accomplished feline huntress, she tosses that mouse in the air, then pounces on it. She flings it and chases it; lays on it, rolls over it a few times, then tosses it across the room for the chase.

When it comes to Lily and catnip, she turns in place meowing excitedly when I pull the catnip package out of the freezer. She’s practically beside herself as I approach their cat tree where I dispense the “drug,” and she releases all inhibitions upon her first scent of the stuff. She eats it, rolls in it, and otherwise fills her body and soul with it until she becomes a limp dishrag. I’m sure she must see psychedelic images or something for a while after the treat as she seems to have no backbone—she’s a wet noodle and she delights in staring at is from upside down.

What does your cat do to entertain you and make you laugh?

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Newsday Tuesday – Clear the Shelters Day

This is a wonderful story of adoption sponsored by NBC and Telemundo TV. And it was a huge success. Over 1,200 shelters participated and over 70,000 animals were adopted. You should see the pictures of the happy pets and excited new pet owners. See them here: https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/clear-the-shelters-adoption-photos_us_5b7879b5e4b05906b4144567

For a period last month, shelters discounted their adoption fees—some actually waived them altogether—and thousands of cats and dogs who might, to this day, still be waiting for someone to love are happy in loving homes.

From Chicago to the Bay Area, Tulsa to Boston, in Detroit and Dallas, beautiful and not so beautiful animals were saved from euthanasia by such sponsors at the Bissel Pet Foundation who seriously supported this event. And it appears that this even occurs not only in August, but on other dates throughout the year. If you know someone who would be a loving, responsible pet owner, but who can’t afford the adoption fees, encourage them to participate in the next Clear the Shelter Day and save an animal from death or a life in a cage. Here’s the official site. http://www.cleartheshelters.com/

 

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