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Hannah turns 10 years old today.

Hannah turns 10 years old today.

We met during a crisis - I was coming to terms with a life-long trauma; she was abandoned by an abusive owner. It was May 2, 2006 when she was dumped at my feet at Saint Meow’s shelter in Cambridge, Ma., at the estimated age of three. I stood there, stunned.

She looked up at me with her green eyes and let out one long cry. Before I could think, I told the shelter manager, “I’ll take her.” She was my first pet. Together, Hannah and I learned what it meant to love safely again.

Hannah, post-adoption, age 3.

Hannah, post-adoption, age 3.

Hannah almost died of life-threatening pancreatitis in 2008, when she was five, but today she turns ten, and she’s healthier than ever. When I asked what she wanted to do for her birthday, she said,”sunbathe.” So be it.

Happy 10th birthday to Hannah! We thank all of this blog’s readers for continuing to follow our story as it’s developed over the past three years. Stay tuned…

- TLS

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Hannah, the contented.

I still haven’t mastered the art of the vet visit.

This week was Hannah’s annual checkup. Last year, she was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease that affects the liver, and includes such symptoms as vomiting and a lack of appetite. After months of steroid treatment, in October her liver level tested at the higher end of the normal range, so Dr. Parker recommended a re-test in six months, before then if her eating habits or behavior changed. During these past few months, Hannah’s appetite has remained normal – although she won’t eat her entire meal in one gulp (in the fashion of her brother Sam), she does finish her food, most days. Of course, the night before her annual vet visit, when I took out the cat carrier, she refused half of her dinner, and, for hours, Sam hid under the bed.

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Sam, always the prankster.

Going to the vet holds a host of anxieties for the cat, but for the human, especially this human who has PTSD, it’s a whole production of mental and physical coordination. In years’ past, a vet visit would completely unhinge my ability to hold a thought in my head, and would send my mind back into the terror of my childhood. I’d have to refer to my pre-scripted (on a Post-It) list of statements and questions for Dr. Parker. Now, I manage to “keep calm and carry on” as well as can be expected when one is trying to get an unwilling cat into a carrier and transport her to a vet clinic in time for the appointment: layers of fur on one’s shirt, and some sadness and/or guilt for the inability to explain to the feline that she is safe and you’re not giving her away, will always be a given (for me, at least).

Five years ago, Hannah almost died of life-threatening pancreatitis and I’ve tiptoed around her ever since, fearing I might otherwise upset her to the point of psychosomatic-induced death. I worried about her wellbeing at times to the point of driving friends (and Dr. Parker) crazy. It’s taken a long time to work through my visceral fear of losing this being whom I love.

DSCN1224This year, on the verge of her tenth birthday, Hannah, at a trim 7.95 pounds, has received a clean bill of health. Dr. Parker says she has one of the best teeth he’s seen in a ten-year-old kitty (and I’ve never brushed her teeth, as I have to do for Sam). And, the great news: Hannah’s liver is functioning normally. She has exhibited a change in behavior – she has become quite insistent on cuddling on the garret chaise, during which time she rubs her wet nose and mouth, forehead and ears, all over my hands until my palms are drenched and my arms are covered with fur; she has also begun a practice of sticking her butt in my face for minutes at a time, which, Dr. Parker says, is simply her way of asking me to scratch her back near her tail, something she never liked before. I’d thought she’d been trying to tell me something was wrong, like she was the time she developed struvite crystals in her urine and kept running her tail (which was wet with pee) along my hand.

“Do you have any questions?” Dr. Parker asked.

For the first time in a long while, I didn’t. I felt suddenly relieved and happy, and my body relaxed. “I guess I just have to get used to the fact that Hannah is healthy.”

“Yes,” said Dr. Parker. “No more kid gloves for her.”

I tend to think of a cat’s lifespan – both physical and emotional – as reflective of a human’s, but at warp speed. Hannah has reflected to me the salvaged life of an abuse survivor, a kind of healing I never thought was truly attainable. I’ve always questioned its veracity. Now, I know such recovery is real, and to be trusted.

 TLS

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Hannah, after feeling the earthquake.

Where’d the last month go?

After my post about taking Hannah and Sam to the vet, life seemed to get a little more than crazy, beginning with Maine’s 4.0 earthquake on October 16, which caused the garret to shake quite noticeably.

Hannah was on edge for hours, anticipating an aftershock, while Sam simply went back to playing.

Mother nature struck the east coast again two days before Halloween with Hurricane Sandy. Fortunately, the garret never lost power, nor did it sustain any damage, though it did sway quite a bit due to the high winds. I was saddened to see so many places I knew as a girl growing up on Long Island ravaged by the storm, with some areas obliterated. Many of my friends in New York and New Jersey are still without power. We’re hoping for a speedy recovery for all who’ve been so badly affected.

When what we’ve always had is taken from us, our lives are shaken. Our sense of how the world works, our daily routine, is turned upside down. It’s during disorienting and grief-laden times like these that it’s important to remember what we do have, what we can hold onto: our connections with others, both human and animal.

This past week, after getting the flu shot, I became quite ill, which meant I was stuck in the garret for many days. Hannah and Sam kept me company: Hannah hopped up beside me on the garret chaise, where she curled up for hours, purring and nudging her head and paws into my arms. Sam, on the other hand, provided comic relief, entertaining himself (and me) by dashing back and forth through a toy tube. For the video, click here.

As these November days bring us closer to Thanksgiving, I’d like to express my gratitude to the family and friends who are a part of my life, to Hannah and Sam for teaching me every day to appreciate the little things, and to all the readers who keep tuned in to the Hannah Grace blog. Keep your comments coming.

And for another Sam video, click here.

 TLS

Please share what you’re grateful for in the comment box below!

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Who doesn’t dread the annual vet visit? This morning, we had Sam’s. And Hannah came along for her three-month liver level blood test re-check. Ten minutes in, my shirt was covered with a full coat of orange tabby fur.

I removed the carriers from storage yesterday evening to reinforce a “we come in peace” vibe, but Sam didn’t buy it. He hid behind the cat tree for hours, from time to time letting out a few tiny mewls that sounded like “no, no, I won’t go.” He came out of hiding only when it was time for his nightly dessert of crunchy duck and green pea kibble, and even then he was wary, snatching a mouthful and then dashing into my room and under the bed. Hannah, on the other hand, hopped up beside me on the chaise and purred to her heart’s content. I don’t know if that was because the carrier didn’t bother her, or because she was happy Sam wasn’t bothering her.

Sam: “I’m NOT going to the vet.”

This morning, I knew Sam was going to sound like a human being who was in the throes of bloody murder. But somehow I thought it wouldn’t be that bad. I put Hannah in her carrier first, backing into the bathroom and lowering her down into a soft over-the-shoulder bag she fits in quite prettily. Because Sam, when confined, tries to ram his body to freedom with a running leap, the hard plastic carrier with the metal door is reserved for him. This morning, he whimpered and cried when I approached, and, although I spoke to him quietly, he took out his hind claws in fear. I had to scruff him in order to prevent injury to myself and to him from all his flailing of limbs. Then he began to scream.

His tones were blood-curdling. As quickly as possible, I went down the Alfred Hitchcock-steep no-railing garret stairwell with them both, hoping the neighbors weren’t thinking I was actually murdering someone. When I got them both and myself into the car, I took a few rounds of breaths before turning the key in the ignition. Such screaming triggered the adrenaline rush and thought-racing symptoms that characterize my PTSD.

The garret living room furniture, during my attempts to get Sam into the carrier.

“It’s okay, Sammy,” I said. “We’ll be home soon.” Then Hannah began to whine. “I don’t like this either,” I said, as if they could understand. Then I shifted the car into gear and drove the few blocks to the clinic.

I’d brought a sample of Sam’s stool in a couple days earlier, having found a suspicious worm on the garret bathroom floor and again where Sam had been sitting in the living room. It wasn’t roundworm, that I knew (from having seen one of those last year when he tested positive), but I needed to be sure it wasn’t another kind of parasite. Thankfully, the results were negative, though Dr. Parker, our vet, said it might be a false negative if the infestation weren’t yet too far along. For precautionary reasons, he gave Sam a dewormer. Now I get to watch for (more) worms. If I see any, Hannah will have to be pilled as well.

The vet tech came and went with Hannah, and returned her while Dr. Parker was examining Sam: all was well. Sam climbed up on my shoulder then, and tucked his nose into my neck and wailed while we discussed his at times aggressive behavior with Hannah, and how to manage it. I told Sam he could go back into the carrier then, and he started to climb the walls (literally), and scream. For a moment, however, he found comfort in the scale, which stated he weighed a healthy 11.3 pounds.

After what seemed like forever, the visit was over. As I stood at the checkout counter to pay my bill, I thought I smelled something foul. Was it Sam’s breath? Dr. Parker had said I was brushing Sam’s teeth well. Perhaps it was a wet dog. When I got into the car, I smelled it again. It was raining outside, I told myself, it could just be my musty old car. But I knew: someone had pooped.

Back at the garret, I let Hannah and Sam out of their respective carriers, and there I saw Sam’s panic-induced diarrhea in the darkness of the large plastic crate. He somehow managed to pile it all deep in the back, under his leopard-printed foot rug.

I’m sure Sam will forgive me… at least by dinnertime. Hannah, meanwhile, nudged her forehead into my leg a few times when I collapsed on the living room floor. We’ll find out her liver test result tomorrow. For now, it’s nap time.

 TLS

How do your pets react when you bring them to the vet? How do you cope? Share your experiences and comments below.

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My days tend to be crowded with “productive” things to do: preparing for the upcoming teaching term, going to PTSD treatment, working out at the gym, paying the bills, picking up cat food, revising my new book. So I decided August would be the month I would finally get myself a “fun” project: clicker training.

Clicker training is something I’ve tried once before – a few years ago, as a volunteer at the Animal Rescue League, I went to a one-time seminar on the subject, specifically geared towards training cats for adoptability: acceptable behavior as well as cute tricks. Dogs are known for doing quite well with the clicker; cats are a little more difficult to train, but it’s done. At the time, I brought home my complimentary clicker to see if I could train Hannah to sit on my lap. As soon as I depressed the clicker, however, Hannah flinched at the sound. Some cats need a few clicks to get used to it – pair the sound with a delicious treat and they’re supposed to associate pleasure with the clicker. Not Hannah. So I tossed the clicker, and let Hannah be.

This past June, one of my writing mentors in Washington, D.C. emailed to tell me she was successfully clicker training her two cats. She taught them not only to sit and “come here,” but to do tricks such as standing on their hind legs and raising their front paws. She described how much fun it was for both her and her cats. I thought about Sam, how he cries for me to feed him an hour before mealtime and tries to steal Hannah’s food, and how he gets territorial and aggressive at times when I’m brushing Hannah. I’ve tried to ignore him, put him in a “time-out,” and otherwise not reward the behavior, to no avail. So I thought I could train him and as a result alleviate a growing tension in the garret household.

I bought a new clicker and the training book Naughty No More!, a publication put out by Cat Fancy, which my writing mentor recommended. (Of course when I typed in the title on Amazon, it came up with rather pornographic literature before I finally realized I ought to type in the additional word, “cats,” along with the name of the book.) I also bought two bags of treats, which I tested out on Sam before the arrival of the clicker and training materials – he thought they were scrumptious.

Once the clicker and book arrived, I read the instructions from cover to cover, excited to begin. The book’s foreward discussed the idea behind changing unwanted behaviors through positive reinforcement: “”Clicker training is actually fun for both you and your cat. …It’s a win/win situation for the cat and [his] human family.” Unfortunately, Sam did not make it even to the first trained behavior titled “Please Touch The Target,” because he was terrified of the clicker. When I clicked the clicker and tossed him a treat, he ran faster than I’ve seen him run since he was a kitten, and hid under my bed for the next hour. I thought, ok, perhaps he needs to get used to the sound. No – Sam’s reaction got worse. After the fourth total click (spread out across three days), he acted as if I’d administered an electric shock. As a sort of post-script, the book does say one can use a retractable pen for a more gentle “click” sound, should the cat be “shy” around the clicker, however when I took out a pen Sam took one look at it and ran away to hide for another hour. Hannah, on the other hand, simply sat there watching, as if she was bored.

The next time Sam began to cry for his dinner, I took out the clicker and clicked once. His crying ceased for thirty minutes after that. So I decided to keep the clicker and to use it for the complete opposite reason for which it was made: to deter behavior, not to reward it. I’m not sure how long this will last. Honestly, I hate depressing the clicker, because Sam seems so chagrined when I do.

I have trained Sam to sit, but not with the clicker. When I’m carrying a dish of kibble, Sam meows and quacks and dances around my feet. I tell him “sit” and he circles my legs and taps my calves with his tail. I say it again, “sit” and he lowers his rear and looks up at me, continuing to quack. “Shh,” I say, “no meowing or quacking.” He can hardly contain himself. Finally, when he’s sitting and quiet and almost bursting with delight, I deliver his reward: dinner.

– TLS

Have you tried to train your pets? Share your experiences and other thoughts in the comment box below.

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Hannah & Sam consider the garret chaise.

I’ve been saying for a long while that I’ve wanted to move out of the garret, but, at this time, circumstances are still such that Hannah, Sam, and I must remain residents of the infamous abode for another year. So, instead of moving, I’ve shifted our internal place: I’ve bought a chaise.

I’d been thinking about it since I moved into the garret three years ago, but I didn’t know how I could make it possible. The garret stairwell walls stand 26 inches apart, and while at times I felt like swinging a sledge hammer through the wood (and all the walls of the apartment), I came to accept the space for what it is: narrow and small. I searched the web for “miniature furniture,” and came up with baby-sized chairs; I googled “couches for small spaces” but the smallest they came was 28-36 inches on all sides, without the ability to disassemble. I considered putting two chairs together and calling it a couch, but the arms got in the way. My friend Delia, who has an eye for interior decorating, suggested I buy a fancy bench and find pillows to attach to the wall: a makeshift couch. But I didn’t want to settle. Ikea was an option, but then it wasn’t – I didn’t find the styles appealing.

A few weeks ago, I went with Delia on an excursion to Home Goods and TJ Maxx in a wealthy part of town to see what “leftovers” I could find. They had several small chaises, but they were for cats. Why couldn’t they make one of those for humans? I pondered.

I perused Target’s and Walmart’s websites, but worried the one assembly-required chaise I viewed online would be cheaply-made in real life. Then, I happened upon Overstock.com, where I ended my search. The reviews were good. And if I purchased their inexpensive but nice-looking chaise within the next one hour and thirty-eight minutes, shipping would be free.

It arrived on Wednesday while I was at the Animal Rescue League, spending time trying to soothe a couple of frightened cats. When I arrived home, the chaise was there, in two large boxes, waiting for me on the front porch. Knowing my landlord would not lift a finger to help, I took the larger 45-pound box by the horns and pulled it up the garret stairwell in one upward motion. Joy filled my chest when it passed through the doorway, unhindered. I galloped down the stairs and outside once again to retrieve the second box, which weighed in lighter, at 16 pounds.

With the boxes safely in the garret living room, I wasn’t ready to open them for assembling just then, partly because I feared I wouldn’t like what I found, but mostly because I was too busy handling my late mother’s affairs to begin. Hannah sniffed at the box edges while Sam simply began to eat it. I covered the cardboard with a sheet, tucking the larger box in like a mattress.

On Friday, I (and Sam) could wait no more. I broke open the boxes and assembled the new garret chaise within an hour, with Hannah and Sam hiding in the bedroom for the duration. When all was quiet, they gathered around, peering at the chaise as if it were an alien species to be watched warily. I was surprised to not hear any growling or hissing. I think they were stunned. Sam was born without a couch, and so never knew of its possible existence, and Hannah had, I believed, forgotten about the idea itself, since it was three years since we moved into the garret, when we were forced to leave the loveseat behind. I’d hoped they would hop on top of the new chaise with glee. Instead, they preferred the floor.

Sam, posing as an adonis on the garret chaise. He even matches the fabric.

I don’t know, perhaps it has a “new” smell they do not trust? Hannah has snubbed her nose at the thought of sitting on it, though she used to adore the loveseat. Sam has tried his hand at it, twice, looking quite regal in his pose, but mostly he seems terrified of the thing and hides out with his back to the wall, underneath. I hope some cold day they will think to cuddle up with me, but at least now I have appropriate seating for my human guests.

*

My apologies for being a bit absent from the Hannah Grace blog lately – I’ve had a difficult time juggling my life while wrapping up my late mother’s affairs. In the process of cleaning out her condo, sifting through her belongings, and my memory, I’ve begun work on a new memoir about my relationship with her, her death, and writing. To learn more, click here.

TLS

Did your pets instantly cuddle with you on your new couch, was it an ‘acquired taste’? I’m eager to hear your stories…share them below!

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New medication = Hungry Hannah

Last I wrote, Hannah and I were becoming acquainted with the pill gun I was administering antibiotics in the hopes that her liver inflammation was caused by an infection, which the antibiotics would cure. Unfortunately, this past week we found out her liver inflammation has continued to increase.

On Thursday, I brought Hannah to the vet for her annual checkup, including a re-test of her liver enzyme level. Dr. Parker suggested I bring Sam in as well, for a weight check, his first since his annual checkup in October, when he was put on a diet. I knew this was not going to be a fun morning for any of us.

My cats always know when I’m going to take them to the vet; even if I try to hide it, I know they sense it in my body language, or in the way my breath shortens with my own anticipation: I saw Sam peering at me from the corner of his eye as I quietly walked to the kitchenette to retrieve the cat carrier. He knew I was about to trick him and his sister into going into the confined locked space, so that I could remove them from their cozy home and take them to some strange office with foreign animal smells, to be poked and prodded he knew instinctively. So did Hannah.

I always leave an extra half hour to get the cats into the carriers, but this time it took me less than five minutes. I started to think I’d become a pro when Sam began to scream. Nothing I said to calm him made his screaming cease (I reminded myself, cats do not understand English). So I rushed to take him, and Hannah, out of the garret, and into my car, before anyone else in the house could consider that such sounds were some mass murder or other kind of torture in progress. By the time I got behind the steering wheel, with Hannah and Sam in the passenger seat, my limbs were shaking. I took a few deep breaths to ward off my PTSD-induced anxiety, so that I could be calm enough to drive to the clinic.

At the exam, Hannah’s vitals were in very good condition  in fact, the vet no longer detected her heart murmur. And Sam had lost 1.3 pounds. All in all, a very positive visit, except for Hannah’s liver enzyme level, which had risen. We’re now treating her with Prednisone, a steroid, to help reverse her liver inflammation, which may very well be caused by an autoimmune disease. There is a small chance that she has cancer, however at this point I’m trying to stay positive. Two week trial, then re-testing.

Sam

Lucky for Hannah (and me), the Prednisone comes in soft chews, flavored in tuna, chicken, and liver/venison. She meows for it before I’ve even unwrapped the package, then gobbles it up. The challenge is keeping Sam from dodging for it himself. One side effect of the medicine is an increased appetite, and Hannah has certainly developed one. She now meows out of hunger, something she’s never done before. Sam, of course, has always cried an hour before dinnertime. I’m working on not caving in.

TLS  

Have you ever invested in an automatic timed feeder? What kind did you purchase, and was it useful? I’m considering getting one, vet’s idea, to disassociate myself with “keeper of the food” and to help out during times when I am away from the garret. I would love to hear some of your recommendations and experiences. Please share in the comment box below!

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In my last post, I was just starting Hannah on a liver pill, known as SAMe, a derivative of her little b(r)other’s name. I’m here to give an update:

Hannah has, over the past weeks, shown her smarts, eating the pill pocket all around the pill and leaving the glistening pink medication on the floor. I’ve had to lock Sam in the bedroom to block his ability, and desire, to go at the SAMe like prey, to gobble it up for himself. After all, it does have his name written all over it.

One evening, I spent almost three hours trying to cajole Hannah into taking her SAMe. She simply stared at the lump I left on the floor in front of her, shrugged her shoulders, then left the room. Finally, I opened a can of tuna. On a hypoallergenic diet, Hannah is not supposed to eat tuna, but I got the “ok” from the vet to douse the pill pocket with tuna juice. Hannah ate it up quickly. However, a few days later, the novelty of tuna juice wore off. After another three-hour session of pill-giving tries, I lightly dabbed the pill pocket with organic tomato sauce. Success: Hannah ate the pill in one swallow (I wonder, is this the cat’s equivalent of pizza?). Let’s hope this lasts for the rest of the pill pack. Later next week, I’ll be bringing Hannah back to the clinic to have her liver enzyme level checked. I’m hoping for positive news. If not, I will probably have to learn how to use a pill gun.

Meanwhile, Hannah’s little brother Sam has begged for his own daily treat. Since he has grown tired of his new mouse toy, I purchased a smiley-face laser light. Here’s a video glimpse of him (and, for a small part, Hannah) playing laser tag for the first time (click here). Be sure to watch until the end, when that frown turns upside down.

To be continued…

TLS

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Hannah

Two weeks ago, on the cusp of February, Hannah, who had grown increasingly constipated in December and January, left her litter box empty. Still coping with the death of my mother, I became worried that this might be the start of the feline slippery-slope towards death (it was also the four year anniversary of Hannah’s life-threatening pancreatitis). I gave in to my PTSD-induced anxiety and brought her to the vet.

“Oh she has a heart murmur?” Dr. X said, after struggling to hold Hannah down on the exam table and placing the stethoscope to her chest. Dr. Parker, our regular vet, was out for a few days.

Hannah hid her face in my arms. “A heart murmur?” I repeated. What did this mean? I wasn’t sure if I trusted the opinion of this vet, who was a stranger to Hannah. I decided I would follow up with Dr. Parker after he returned.

In the meantime, I took the advice of my friend Stephanie and fed Hannah pure canned pumpkin, which she loved, and then I chased her around the garret (my own idea) until, finally, she went to the litter box and did her business. Unfortunately, three days later, she stopped loving the pumpkin and snubbed her nose at the tablespoon-full. Luckily, Dr. Parker had just returned. He recommended 1 teaspoon of Metamucil daily mixed in her wet food, and an echocardiogram for the heart murmur.

I bought a carton of Metamucil – the smallest I could find was itself the size of Hannah (I think this will last us for more than nine lives). Struggling to make ends meet each month on a part-time teaching wage, I admit I debated whether or not to skip the echocardiogram, which cost a few hundred dollars. But, if Hannah had a heart condition, she could die if I were to leave it undiagnosed and untreated. So I went forward.

Two days later, I awoke earlier than usual to bring Hannah in for the echo. As I removed the carrier from its hiding spot next to the refrigerator, in reflexive reaction, Sam fled under the bed. Hannah seemed relieved to have the living room to herself, finally. I picked her up, held her close to my chest, placing a towel over her paws to prevent her from straddling the top of the carrier (and thereby preventing entry), and lowered her in. When I opened the garret door to carry her out, she began to whine, and then her throat opened with crying meows that echoed and tore at my heart.

“I know, sweet girl,” I said. “You love living in this apartment much more than I do.”

“Hmmnh,” she responded as I turned the key to lock the door.

Sam refused to come out from under the bed, even for his favorite "cat dancer" toy.

I hated the idea of leaving Hannah at the clinic for the day, but that was the procedure. Drop off the cat at 7:30 a.m., pick up the cat in the late afternoon. The doctor would call when the results were ready. I left a plastic Ziplock bag of her duck and green pea kibble, in case she got hungry after the test: comfort food.

“This is the plan,” I talked to Hannah as I drove, my injured tailbone hurting without the donut pillow beneath it (in my anxiety I had forgotten it inside the garret). I knew she could not understand my words but I hoped my tone would somehow communicate to her that I was not giving her away. I was not giving her up. “I’m going to drop you off,” I began, “and you’re going to have this test so that we know what is wrong with your heart, and I’m going to go to work while you do that, and then, this afternoon, I’m going to come pick you up and take you back home, ok?” Hannah shuffled around the carrier as I spoke, meowing intermittently. “I love you, sweet girl.”

With my mother’s recent death on my mind, I wondered if this was the beginning of another end. I did not think I could tolerate losing my best feline friend, who had been with me through three apartments, four jobs, two brief relationships, and almost six years of PTSD recovery. She had been my one constant while my life fell apart and I worked to build it back up again.

Standing in the lobby of the clinic, watching the vet tech take Hannah out of my grasp, the scene from four years before flashed in my mind.

“This is not then,” I told myself firmly. “This is not then.”

In fact, it was not. Hannah’s Auntie Stephanie was here now, with new cousin Gabby-cat. Four years ago, I did not even know Stephanie. There was some comfort in having a familiar human – and her cat – present. It was, in some small sense, kind of like having family, which distracted me from feeling too much of the ache that spread across my chest and throat as I caught a glimpse of Hannah’s eyes, her gaze veiled with confusion, as the vet tech carried her away.

Seven hours later, Hannah was diagnosed with a heart condition labeled “dynamic right ventricular outflow tract obstruction” and “diastolic dysfunction significance unknown.” This was due to a benign cause, Dr. Parker said, however it could progress to heart disease quickly, or never in her lifetime. A blood panel would be a wise thing to do at this point, he added, to rule out any underlying disease in other organs that could be causing the murmur. The results showed that Hannah’s liver enzymes were elevated, which indicated inflammation, and her thyroid level was borderline. Testing for hyperthyroidism would be prudent. I agreed to this, despite the accruing bill, because knowing the answers could save Hannah’s life.

“She was very cuddly the whole time,” the vet tech said when she brought Hannah to me.

When I brought Hannah home, and opened the carrier door, she galloped around the garret, from room to room, checking to see if everything was still in its place – the living room, the water bowl, the mouse toys, and Sam – Sam looked at his big sister but he stayed under the bed. Not even his favorite “dancer” toy could lure him out. When he did finally emerge, he remained very quiet, refraining from his usual somersaulting over mouse toys and throwing his body off high ledges. He approached Hannah delicately, sniffed her tail, and made a face as if to say “ewww, you stink!” and backed away. To a cat’s nose, Hannah smelled foreign, like the clinic. She spent the next hour giving herself a bath and chewing off a patch of skin on her hind leg where her blood pressure was taken.

That night, Hannah cried, waking me. I turned on the light: 3:30 a.m. I got out of bed and followed the sound, found her sitting in the middle of the living room floor. She let out long mournful cries every few minutes. What she in pain? I wondered. Hungry? She hadn’t cried this way since the day I adopted her. I ran my palm across her back, and she pushed her head into my hand. I sprinkled some kibble in front of her, which she gobbled up quickly. Sam sat a few feet away, looking anxious. I gave him a pat, then got back into bed. The crying went on intermittently for the rest of the night, and nothing I did made it stop. I came to the conclusion Hannah was distressed from her day and needed to get it out of her system. Crying was her release, her way of returning to herself again.

Three days later, hyperthyroidism was ruled out and Hannah was placed on a prescription of feline SAMe to bring down the liver enzyme count. Dr. Parker asked if I could “pill” Hannah. I reminded him that it took two vet techs to hold Hannah down to pill her when she was deathly ill four years before – and even then she spit out the pill. She was a fighter. Dr. Parker said SAMe had to be taken on a empty stomach but using a pill pocket would be okay. I was skeptical about whether or not Hannah would be tricked by a pill pocket; while SAMe had her little b(r)other’s name in it, it was known for having a bitter taste, one I was sure Hannah would detect upon licking. I imagined she would eat all around the pill and leave its tiny pink face glistening on the floor.

When I opened the package of duck-flavored hypoallergenic pill pockets, Hannah arrived at my feet, sat, and looked up at me expectantly. She wanted the pill pocket. Quickly, I stuffed SAMe within the malleable “treat,” and placed it on the floor. In her usual cautious manner, Hannah first sniffed, then sampled a brief taste, then ate the rest, pill included.

“Good girl!” I praised her and repeated, hoping she would not spit out the pill. “Good girl.”

Having ingested her medicine, she walked away happily to perch on the back garret window and sun herself. Twenty minutes later, however, she vomited up the pill pocket, and the pill. So I took out another pill pocket and placed the (undigested) pill inside, and fed it to her again. This time, thankfully, she kept it down.

Soon, Sam caught on and wanted a pill pocket too. However the package only had 40-count and with 30 days of pills for Hannah, anticipating having to do it twice should there be vomiting, I could not afford to give out free samples. So I bought Sam a new toy: a large mouse stuffed with catnip. I tossed it on the floor and he went for it as if it were prey. He held the toy mouse in his mouth, sat and growled, then scared himself with his own growling and ran into the bedroom, where he kept the mouse beside him as he watched the traffic go by the window. Later, he buried it in the water bowl in the hallway.

Last night, as I sat down for the first time to relax after the long week, Hannah and Sam began to play a game of “cat hunt.” All of a sudden there was a blur of orange tabby and calico cat rolling on the floor in a ball, Sam on the bottom, his mouth open, Hannah towering over him (even though he stands an inch taller than she), pounding him with her paws…more tussling…then a scream (I’m still uncertain if it was Sam or Hannah), and then both were on all fours with Hannah blowing a tremendous hiss in Sam’s face. Sam’s eyes watered from the play-fight. He blinked and licked his lips and began to caterwaul with a baby voice. Hannah stood her ground as the alpha and hissed again, inching her body forward, putting her paw in the air as if to say “don’t make me hit you.”  Finally, Sam backed off and, a moment later, all was calm.

{Postscript: Just after posting this blog entry today, Hannah refused to ingest her SAMe pill. She ate all of the pill pocket around it, then left the pink pill. I tried again. No luck. I’m going to wait an hour and try again. I welcome any and all suggestions, readers….Post-Postscript: Ok, two hours and four pill pockets later, I shut Sam in my bedroom and gave Hannah some extra-special brushing by her favorite window seat, and then offered up the pill. She ate it, finally. Now let’s hope she keeps it down!}

TLS

How do you deal with a sick pet? Share your stories in the comment box below!

My essay, “Writing Taboo: Speaking the Unspeakable,” has just been published in the anthology Women on Poetry: Writing, Revising, Publishing and Teaching, available at your local bookstore.

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{Writer’s Note: I’m pleased to announce that my nonfiction story, “The Wreck,” has been nominated for the upcoming Pushcart Prize. Winners will be announced in April.}

Yesterday, I did something I’ve never done before. I injured my coccyx. Was I doing something heroic when it happened, such as saving a cat caught high in a tree? Or exercising my athletic prowess by doing a deadlift or squat, or climbing a mountain? No. I was teaching a humanities class.

I left the garret early in the morning, with Hannah and Sam meowing “stay home, stay home,” ready for the first day of my new professorial gig at Lesley University, where I am teaching humanities and creative writing classes this semester. When I entered the classroom, I saw a sea of quadrangle tables linked together to create ten separate clusters of octagons. With an attendance list of fourteen in a room made for 100, I quickly began to rearrange the tables to form a horseshoe-shaped “desk” to fit my students into more of a shape conducive to discussion. Still nursing a torn ligament in my wrist, I forgot to think about the rest of my body, and I backed myself into one of the quadrangle tips. Hard. Within a few hours, I developed a large bruise on my butt. In the evening, I sat on a tray of ice.

This morning, Sam climbed up on my bed and began to tiptoe over my body, from my feet to my legs to my hips, paw after paw, his face inquiring. So I got up. It hurt to sit, walk, laugh, sneeze, and bend over.

Because the garret stairwell is not large enough to fit the loveseat to which she grew so accustomed over the years, Hannah has made the living room floor her petting palace. This morning she nudged my calves but I was in too much pain to lower myself to the ground. “I’m sorry, sweet girl,” I said. “I can’t bend down.” Hannah looked up at me, then whined.

I went to the doctor, whose office is located at the local hospital, a place I was trying to avoid. Ever since my mother passed away a few months ago, hospitals aggravate my PTSD: I tried to breathe deeply and to not look at patients and gurneys and death, so as to avoid dissociating. After the examination, my doctor told me I definitely bruised my coccyx, also known as the tailbone. She told me the story of another patient, a woman my age, who came in presenting a bruise the size of one full buttock, swollen into a raised triangle. “You’d be surprised how often this kind of thing happens,” she said. “You’ll have to buy a donut, you know, one of those butt pillows.”

To rule out fracture or misalignment, she ordered an X-ray. I had to travel down to registration for that, at which time I had to update my emergency contact information (I had listed my mother: “She’s passed away,” I managed to say, then swallowed and tried not to think). I was directed to a waiting room, where I was to change into a gown and sit for twenty minutes amidst people who were fully-clothed. I googled “donuts” to pass the time. I wanted to see my options.

Finally, I was called by a young tech, who had an intern by her side. “How’d you do it?” the intern asked, then covered her mouth as I almost tripped over an unconscious man on a gurney. “Oh, you don’t have to say.”

I told her that’s okay. I’m an open book. “Do you have a donut?” I asked, trying to get one for free, not wanting to have to endure the pain of walking to the store.

In the end, I had to take the bus to a medical device outlet, where I bought my donut, from an actual donut salesman. I have to sit on this thing for the next four-to-six weeks. Hannah and Sam are afraid of it. Sam has tried to sniff it a few times. Hannah simply won’t come into the room. She’ll forgo petting, she says, until this thing is gone.

I have a feeling Hannah and Sam will come around. They’re cats, afterall. It’s the humans that concern me. I’m going to have to bring this thing to class, in the car, on job interviews, and dates. I asked the salesman if he had a different color, perhaps something less conspicuous, or inflatable, but all he had was a big black square, which he said was for someone with a larger rear. This is going to make for some great introductions, I know. Perhaps I’ll stand until spring.

TLS  

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