21 July 2013

Cats


MARIE: I meant to write about one of the subjects I briefly trailed last week, but you’ll have to wait for that. Because foremost in my mind this week is that our cat has died. He’s been sick with chronic kidney disease for years, only he didn’t know, so carried on regardless almost up until the last moment.
 
Weirdly, Jon and the cat got their diagnoses at roughly the same time. Jon’s came first, and although it’s obvious in hindsight how naïve we were about Parkinson’s, that naivety helped us to handle the diagnosis calmly and sensibly. But when a few months later the cat had an ultrasound (which involved shaving his stomach, and let me tell you: a cat with no stomach fur looks and feels pretty damn silly), the vet said he’d never seen a cat functioning so well with so little normal kidney tissue – and told us to expect a lifespan counted in months rather than years. That broke the dam for me, and all the angst and despair over Jon’s diagnosis came flooding out over the cat’s prognosis. I guess it was less scary to allow myself to be upset about my cat than about my husband.
 
As it happens, both the doctor and the vet were wrong. As you know, PD meds did not help Jon to live “an almost normal life” for years after his diagnosis, but the cat was still going strong six years after his death sentence. Nothing good lasts forever, though, and this week was the end of the line for the cat. As predicted, he went downhill suddenly and fast, which was a relief. When the time came to call on the vet one last time, there was no doubt in our minds that the decision was the right one.
 
Jon was at the Oak House when I realized that the kindest thing would be to take the cat to the vet, but I just couldn’t face doing it on my own. I waited for Jon, and as soon as he came home, we set off. In the car, Jon said to me that he was glad he was at least useful for something, which was really such a very sad thing to say. It is true, I do (or farm out) all the practical jobs around here, and our conversations no longer have the intellectual playfulness or depth of the old days. But I depend on Jon for emotional support (and also for laughs and physical affection, but that’s a different story). In a weird way, it was good to have the cat crisis to demonstrate that to him.
 
We took the cat home with us afterwards. I had chosen a spot under our walnut tree, and the physical work of digging the grave did me good, one last thing I could do for him. Jon didn’t have the balance to help me dig – standing on one leg and pushing down on a spade with other was way beyond him – but we did bury the cat together. And Jon has been so sweetly solicitous of me these last few days as I’ve moped around missing my kitty. Many hugs and a fair few tissues have come my way. I know it’s “just” a cat, but we had 11 funfilled and cuddly years together, so there.
 
He wasn’t a cat person when we met, but Jon now agrees that this house needs cats – in fact, I believe that cats make the difference between a house and a home.  We are thinking of getting two kittens this time, and (typical!) I’ve already started worrying how they’ll treat Jon’s constantly twitching diskinetic toes. They look like prey to me!

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