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Akanar,
The Miracle Cat |
The story is a bit long, but this
particular
cat had a major impact on my life
and was defiantly no ordinary cat,
as
you will soon see. Even now, many
years after his death he still
impacts my life greatly... Sadly,
I have no pictures of him...
|
Enter
the Cat |
I have Panic-Anxiety
disorder,
and at the time I wasn't doing very
well. My Doctor had threatened to
hospitalize me because of my high
blood pressure. Absolutely horrified
at this prospect (as Hospitals are
one of the things that can set off a
full Panic Attack for me) I sat down
and thought, what calms me down?
Did anything in my childhood do
this? Yes, I finally remembered... A
CAT. There was nothing better to me
than to have a cat purring.
Several days later, my best
friend and I
went to the West Hollywood Animal
shelter in search of a cat. The
perfect solution. A kitten would
be even better! Yes, defiantly
this
was the perfect thing to do.
On arriving though, to my dismay
there were
only a few cats! Three of them
stick out in my mind from that
day,
although I think there were one or
two more. (But not many more...)
On
one wall in a high cage was a BIG
Black cat with beedey yellow eyes
that just kept staring at me. On
the other side way in the back at
the
bottom was a mixed up alley cat
crouched in the back of his cage
with
HUGE eyes, growling! A sign on the
cage said in big red letters:
"ATTACKS!"
On the same side as the attack
cat at the
far end was a little calico
kitten, probably about 6 months
old who
PURRED and rubbed against the cage
when I came near. PERFECT! But she
wasn't yet up for adoption! The
Calico kitten had still a long
time to
go while waiting for it's rightful
owner. No good, I needed a cat
right
away. Not only for my health, but
I didn't want to impose on my
friend
to drive me to the animal shelter
again.
So it was either going to be the
one with
the beady eyes, or the attack cat.
I stood (or kneeled) in front of
both their cages and studied them.
Beedy just kept staring at me and
the alley cat hissed and took a
swipe at me from the back of his
cage.
I went outside to smoke a
cigarette and I
thought really hard. This, after
all, wasn't a decision to be made
lightly. I did realize that the
attack cat was frightened out of
his
wits, just looking at his dilated
eyes and fur sticking out in all
directions told me that.
I asked the attendant about the
attack cat.
They told me it had been found by
a veterinarian in West Hollywood.
Yes,
"IT" ... as they didn't know if it
was a male or female as they
couldn't get close enough to find
out. (OH, Wonderful, I thought...)
They also told me he was to be
destroyed at the end of the day.
His
time was up, no one had adopted
him in the alloted time. Hmmm, so
he'd
been hissing and lunging at people
for a couple of weeks and probably
hasn't slept or eaten either from
the look of him.
I went back outside and smoked
another
cigarette while I thought about
it. A really nice elderly and
rotund
lady joined me. She had noticed my
inquiry about the attack cat. She
told me that she had once adopted
a cat like that, an attacker, that
turned out to be the most loving
cat she had ever owned.
Okay, back in we go, let's see if
he will
let me hold him. The attendant
went to his cage and put on thick
gloves. Opened the cage, and poked
a stick at him. Well, there's the
problem, I thought. How would you
feel if a stranger with gloves
poked
a stick at you. I think I'll wait
to hold kitty, though; as he tried
to
shred the stick and the man right
then and there. I paid the fee and
off he went to have "the
operation" that is required and to
get his
shots.
Several days later I went to pick
him up at
the vet's office. Brought by my
friend and having a BIG carrier
cage.
(One normally for a small dog,
which I had just purchased for
kitty
figuring it would have more than
enough room.) The vet's assistant
was
a really nice young lady. I spoke
to her about the cat. She had also
noticed that he seemed frightened
much more than he should... and
that
he hadn't stopped growling,
hissing, spitting...or attacking.
She took the carrier and went in
the back.
Several minutes of yowling later
she came back, cat in cage, Gloves
in hand. And bleeding from several
good sized scratches despite the
ribber gloves.. Oh my, am I really
SURE about this?
|
At
Home with Akanar |
That first day I put down the cage
in the
middle of the living room and opened
the door. I figured he'd calm down
and eventually come out exploring.
(HA!) I tried putting water and cat
food in the cage, but only got
scratched. So I put them just
outside
the cage. I slept there on the floor
in front of the cage.
About a week later I awoke to
find him
missing and strange noises were
coming from the refrigerator...
He'd
managed to get under it to hide. I
ended up having to chase him out
with a broom. MEOWWWWW, whoosh!
Through the
door and into the bathroom! "Nice
Kitty" PFFFFTTT! MEOWWW, whoosh!
Back under the fridge! After
several circles of this I figured
out to
chase him from under the fridge
then shove the cage into the
bathroom
door so he'd go back into it.
I waited another week and a half
and his
giant frightened yellow eyes were
still staring at me from deep in
the
cat carrier. This will never do, I
have to get him out of there. As
luck would have it, the carrier I
had bought was in two pieces and
could be disassembled for storage
and cleaning. As I hadn't heard
him
growling for a couple of days, I
slowly popped the clasps holding
it
together. I took a couple of days
to do it, and finally one day I
removed the top half. He couched
down, looked up at me and hissed.
He
stared at me for a whole five
seconds like that.
PFFFTTTT! WHOOSH! Off
in a panic
he
ran for the fridge, only to find
it now blocked up. He clawed at it
for
several seconds and then ran into
the bathroom. Okay, well, at least
he's out of the carrier. I put his
food and water next to the fridge,
where he could easily see it from
where he was.
My roommate related to me the
next day that
he had an interesting experience.
Early the next morning he went
into
the bathroom to get ready for work
and was greeted by PFTTTTT!
MEOOOOWWWW! GRRRRR!
|
A
Good Pickup Line |
He stayed there in the bathroom
for another
two weeks. He came out to eat when I
was at work and no one was home,
and I assume that's about as far as
he went. I was gladdened one day to
hear scratching sounds for it meant
that at least he knew what a litter
box was for.
His eyes were still huge with
fear, but he
was growling a lot less and had
stopped taking swings at us. I
decided
it was time to try actually
picking him up and holding him.
Not being
one for pain, I took a towel and
threw it over him. Right on cue,
he
hissed and fizzed and tried to
shred the towel. After about a
minute,
I carefully grabbed a corner and
took it off him. I repeated this
several times over the next few
days until he only hissed a
little.
Then I grabbed him. I was rewarded
with several scratches, but none
too
major. I just held on for a few
seconds then let go without
picking him
up. After a few days of this, I
actually picked him up and took
him
(kicking and screaming) over to a
large office chair I had and sat
down
with him on my legs, still covered
with the towel.
He only stayed a few moments, and
when he
wanted to go, I let him. After a
couple of days, he decided to stay
so
I reached carefully under the
towel and started rubbing his
back. It
took several days of repeating
this every few hours before he
stayed
more than a few minutes. But I was
noticing that he was trembling in
fear. I also started grabbing him
at bedtime. I would get him
wrapped
in the towel and put him next to
me. Always by morning, he'd be
back in
the bathroom.
After about four more days of
this, I heard
a different sound from him. A low
off key weird growl. It took
several
minutes for me to figure out he
was purring under that towel! Lets
see
what happens if I take away the
towel. Peel it back slowly and
there
are those big frightened eyes
looking up at me and PFTTTT! WHOOSH!
The next time I tried to pick him
up he was
ready. He squirmed around, grabbed
my wrist with his claws and bit my
finger. And REALLY hard, in fact,
even through the doubled up towel
he
made a big hole in my fingernail.
He wasn't kidding around! After
several minutes of hopping up and
down and yelling in pain I said
Nope! No cat is getting the better
of me and threw the towel at him
and
grabbed him. Then sat in the chair
shoved my hand in the towel and
rubbed his neck. He didn't run
away this time, He stayed with me
about
20 minutes.
But I noticed something was
wrong. As I was
rubbing his neck and the back of
his head, I was feeling a large
number
of bumps and protrusions that
didn't belong...
Several days later after he was
with me
about 5 minutes I took off the
towel and held on until he settled
in
and started purring. The following
day, I was going to toss the towel
on him and he cringed. So I worked
up my nerve, and slowly put the
towel aside and reached down to
pick him up. He growled a bit but
settled into my left arm as I sat
in the chair. I decided to try the
cat brush I had bought, which he
didn't like at first, but a few
tries
later we had something going.
|
EYE,
CAT! |
We had been doing well for several
weeks. I
had bought a number of those little
colored balls which he discovered
he loved to chase around. He was
just getting used to playing again,
although he was still very
frightened and suspicious.
I decided it was a good idea to
try a more
"cat" approach, that maybe he
would respond to a feline social
gesture.
The cat equal of a hug between
known friends is rubbing ones face
against the face of the one you
are greeting. I had learned this
as a
child and my mother's cats loved
it when I did it, and decided to
try
and see if he would understand.
There we were on the bed playing
with the
little colored balls and I thought
of this. So I leaned in close and
rubbed my beard against his
whiskers. I've have never seen a
more
shocked expression, not even on a
human.
He stared at me for a good 15
seconds with
that shocked expression on his
face, then he flattened his ears
and let
me have it. Lightning quick he
reached up with his left paw and
tried
to put my eye out, and he was
quite serious about it from the
depth of
the slash. PFTTTT! WHOOSH!
Luck would have it that he's a bad
aim, but not by much. (I still
have
a small scar about 1/8 inch below
my left eye from this...)
I knew that he had understood the
gesture
though, there was no doubt about
it. After I managed to stop the
bleeding I picked him up (he was
cowering in the bathroom) and took
him
to the chair. I patted his paws
and said "bad claws" then held him
up
and again rubbed my face on his.
It took a few tries, but
eventually he
returned the gesture.
This episode set something of a
standard for
us. The next day when I came home
from work he met me at the door as
usual, then RAN into the living
room and jumped up on the back of
my
big office chair and started
meowing and swishing about in the
manner
of a "normal" cat that wants to be
petted. As I approached I bent
down
to pet him he rubbed his face
against mine. From that day on,
Every day
when I came home from work he
would jump up on something and
expect to
be "properly" greeted...
|
The
Awful Truth |
Fully three months after I'd
gotten Akanar
I decided I'd better take him to see
a vet. In all that time, his eyes
were still wide as ever, and there
were the bumps I had found on the
back of his head. I figured he
should also have a checkup since he
had
surgery... I wanted to make sure he
was okay.
Akanar had a fractured skull. He
had
apparently gotten into the care of
the shelter after having been in a
car accident or something. And he
was bleeding internally, in his
head.
He had apparently already had
surgery, and the Vet didn't think
another
operation would help. He gave
Akanar less than six months to
live...
I tried my best to make what life
he had a
comfortable one. Although the
shelter has a "guarantee" on the
adopted
animals, I was far too attached to
him.
Since his eyes were dilated,
bright light
wasn't good. (It was kind of
obvious once I knew what was going
on to
notice that he didn't like it when
I opened the drapes or turned on
the
light.) I put large sheets of
black construction paper over my
windows
to block out the sun, and replaced
the light bulbs with 30 watt ones.
This didn't bother me as I worked
graveyard shift at the time and
slept
in the day. So blocking the
windows was fine by me and very
much helped
him.
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The
End
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Akanar
outlived the Veterinarian's
prediction, He was with me for
about 3 years. I came home one day
from
work and knew instantly that
something was terribly wrong
because he
was not on the back of my chair
waiting to be greeted.
A few minutes later he crawled out
of the closet and tried to get to
the chair, but collapsed in a pool
of blood.
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