Category Archives: Vazra

Poor lass can’t catch a break

Vazra‘s lady friend Larenti continues to visit me regularly as she always has (since long before I met Vazra).  Because I’m an early riser, I still meet her outside long before dawn when she can enjoy some breakfast.  She also visits throughout the day (some days more often than others).

I awoke the other morning shortly after 5:00 and looked out the window to see if she was there.  Seeing she hadn’t arrived yet, I got out of bed and threw on some shorts and sandals, and then I stepped outside to the patio.  She often sits right around the corner and will make her presence known when she hears me.  That’s precisely what happened.

As soon as I saw her, I said good morning and asked her to wait a moment while I stepped inside for her breakfast.  Cats are quite fond of predictability and habit.  Because of that, she knows precisely what to do when I go back inside.  She stepped over to her normal dining spot and made herself comfortable while she waited.

I went inside and retrieved a small bowl of food before returning to the patio.  More and more she is comfortable with me, and this particular morning she actually sniffed my hand so closely she touched it several times, but she didn’t flee.  Significantly more distrusting (although I can’t rule out feral) than Chira, actual physical contact with her is something new to me.  Sure, she trusts me because there’s food involved and I’ve never acted in a way to make her feel anything other than comfortable, but that doesn’t mean she’d let me touch her.  She never has before.  That said, she has become trusting enough not to run away when I reach through the fence with her sitting right there (the handful of food undoubtedly helps, yes?).

Anyway, I was tickled with the brief and unexpected contact from her.  She didn’t even wait for my hand to move out of the way before she knelt down and began eating.  I stepped back to give her space and stood talking to her quietly while she ate.

After only three or four bites, we both snapped our heads around in response to the rapid approach of something (or multiple somethings) rustling through the ground cover right around the corner.  Undoubtedly better able to hear and smell whatever was coming, she responded immediately by preparing to flee.  That’s precisely what she did the moment three raccoons rounded the corner of the patio.

I stood there and sighed as she bolted.  Meanwhile, the raccoons found their way to the food.  She’d be back, I knew, and I’d make certain she got her breakfast once these little marauders were out of the picture.  While this realization occurred to me, the masked bandits made short work of the food that remained.  With nothing more to eat outside the fence, they turned their attention to me.  Actually, they turned their attention to the bowl of cat food sitting at my feet.

We then played our dangerous yet terribly entertaining and familiar game, one of cat and mouse (or, rather, raccoon and food and human) wherein I keep them outside the fence while they try desperately to get inside the fence so they can finish off the bowl of food.  I was busy addressing the first several attempts to invade my space when a strong wind blew the bowl over and spread kibble all over the patio.  Well, that’s not worth protecting, and I had no delusions of trying to pick it up in the dark.  Instead, I retrieved the bowl and went back inside.  Let the raccoons clean up the mess.

That’s precisely what they did.  Afterward, with the patio essentially vacuumed clean of all edible morsels, the three beasts climbed back over the fence and went on about their early morning routine.  I stood just inside the bedroom door and watched them.  As soon as I felt certain they were indeed gone and not just waiting around the corner for me to return (which, surprisingly, they’ve done before), I placed a few handfuls of food in the bowl and once again went outside.  As if on queue, the feline came back around the corner and returned to her dining table, seated herself like a young lady should, and waited patiently for me to serve breakfast—again.

I obliged her as much and put a couple of handfuls of food into a neat pile outside the fence right where she’s accustomed to dining.  She began eating as soon as the first bit of it was available and didn’t flinch when I snuck my hand in under her nose to add the second helping.  The satisfied crunching let me know she was happy.  I took a step back, set the food bowl down on the ground at my feet, and watched her munch her cereal.

As if living in our very own Groundhog Day, once again we were both startled by the approach of some creature or creatures scurrying through the underbrush.  She stood and looked, her ears at full attention and her nose sniffing silently, and I with my substandard human vision, especially at night, strained to see what might be coming.  As soon as a juvenile opossum rounded the corner, she glanced at it for but a moment before returning to her meal.  Raccoons are one thing; opossums, most especially immature ones, are another story.  She can handle those.

Not wanting a repeat of our earlier wildlife encounter, I stepped quickly to the other end of the patio and tried to halt the approach of this new interloper by leaning over the fence and making a wee bit of noise.  It was still early and I wasn’t about to make a big ruckus.  What I did was try to scare the opossum so it would turn and head the other way, and that would leave little miss kitty to finish her breakfast in peace.  I thought she deserved that much.

I stood leaning over the fence waving my arm and whispering loudly hoping to stop the approaching varmint, gyrations that ultimately amounted to an exercise in futility as the little creature just moved further away from the fence and continued its approach.  Then it came from above.  I glanced up to see yet another juvenile opossum come scampering out of the tree right above me.  We’ve played this game before as well, but luckily this time I wasn’t standing right under the critter and it didn’t just fall out of the tree.  I couldn’t help but laugh aloud at this predicament: one on the ground, now two on the ground, and both heading for the cat food my female feline friend was trying to eat.

I stepped closer to her dining spot and made a greater spectacle of myself by waving my arms like a mad man.  That stopped them.  Well, it did at least give them a reason to pause and reconsider.  In the meantime, she continued eating, but she was becoming increasingly nervous about the mayhem shaping up around her.  Each bite was punctuated with a glance over her shoulders in the direction of the two marsupial youngsters.  In turn, they were watching her closely while reacting to my hysterics.

Unlike raccoons, opossums generally are solitary animals and do not act in tandem or plan and plot together like their masked nocturnal rivals.  In direct contradiction to that, and purely by chance, I’m sure, the two opossums split up and tried to outflank both me and the cat by approaching from two directions.  This made it increasingly difficult to keep them at bay since I could only address one at a time.  That, in turn, gave the other one room and opportunity to get much closer to the target: that pile of cat food.  Likewise, the poor kitty was losing interest in her meal because she was spending more time watching the goings-on and making sure the little beasts didn’t get too close.  She even hissed when one came within swiping distance.  When that didn’t deter it, she promptly walloped it upside the head with a brief swing.  I couldn’t help but chuckle as the opossum recoiled in terror.

And then it just all went to hell.  A third juvenile opossum climbed down out of the same tree.  “How many opossums does that thing hold?” I joked to myself.  It would be impossible for me to keep all three of them at bay.  To prove this, one of the other little ones promptly reminded me they were not adults by walking effortlessly through the fence and attempting to get to the food from the inside.  “Damn it!” I said to no one in particular.  Turning my attention to the cat, I continued: “I don’t think I can stop them, sweetie, and I don’t think they’re as afraid of you as we need them to be.”

By that time, she’d stopped eating.  She was standing upright and watching—rather, trying to watch all three opossums as they circled the food and her.  And me.  When I chased one off the patio, another would try the same approach.  When I shooed one away from her and the food, another would come from a different direction.  I was laughing uncontrollably by then at the sheer humor of it all.  I was probably also laughing at how hysterical it all would look if someone were watching (or were they already and I just didn’t know it?). 

She eventually had her fill of all the drama.  With the sharks circling and me causing all manner of mayhem above and around her as I tried to draw them off, she kicked up her heels and made us eat her dust.  She was gone around the corner before I was completely aware of what had happened.  That made me laugh even harder.  The poor lass…  She can’t even eat her breakfast in peace without every creature under the sun coming to steal it away.  I’d run too.  Fuck that shit, right?

There was no point in my trying to keep them away from the food at that point, so I stepped back from the fence and watched.  I’d never before seen more than one opossum share a meal.  It was interesting.  If my suspicions are correct, they’re all siblings from the same mother, yet not one of them trusted the others to get close to that food.  There was an undeclared stalemate as they each took turns grabbing a bite and then stepping back to chew while keeping an eye on the others.  There were, in fact, at least a few spits and hisses and growls between the three of them while they vacuumed up the rest of the cat food.

Lacking a single remaining piece of feline fodder and obviously still hungry, they turned their noses toward me.  But not really me.  They could smell the bowl of remaining cat food now sitting at my feet.  And they wanted it.  Like the raccoons before them, suddenly I had three small opossums marching their furry little butts right through the fence in search of a free meal.  Very much unlike raccoons, opossums aren’t brave.  A scuff of my foot on the concrete, a sudden movement of my arm, or even a clearing of my throat would send them into reverse and retreat.  I was so thoroughly enjoying this morning for its annoying entertainment value.

Playing intercept with the munchkins rapidly became a chore and I wasn’t going to wait around for the bowl to blow over and spread enticing munchies all over the patio.  Instead, I reached down, picked up the bowl, and went back inside.  Let them eat somewhere else, I thought.  Eventually, they did.

‘Wow! You’re so gorgeous!’

The words really came out of my mouth like that.  Well, it was more an exclaimed whisper than a shout.

For perhaps two or three weeks, I have increasingly seen a new cat in the neighborhood.  It’s a large feline, certainly bigger than Kazon in height and perhaps equal or thereabouts in length, and also as solid as Grendel were the in-house sponge on a proportionally larger frame.  Having glimpsed this sizable and furtive predator skulking usually at early hours or in small glances at the last minute, I’ve not had much chance to see it clearly.  I assumed it was perhaps tortoiseshell in color based on these inconsequential encounters.  It appeared to be healthy (certainly not thin by any stretch of the imagination, but not overly plump either).  It’s tall, perhaps taller than any of my cats.  That’s all I could come up with.  I simply hadn’t seen it clearly enough to know more.  Until today.

I stepped outside just a few minutes ago and froze.  Something large and dark moved before I noticed it, and then it froze and became nearly invisible in my peripheral vision.  It took me a moment to locate the cat in the speckled sunlight that now trickled into the area around my patio.  It took me longer than it should have just to realize it had been sitting there eating some of the food I’d put out earlier to augment what was left from breakfast for Vazra‘s lady friend Larenti (more on her in a forthcoming post).  Whatever large beast now lurked in the mostly shadowed world a short distance away yet beyond the fence’s horizon had absolute control of the situation with stealth that, even after being identified, continued making it difficult to see clearly with my sunglasses on.  So I took them off.

Without my shades, I was increasingly aware the creature had perfect camouflage for its current environment hidden behind bushes on one side, a latticework fence on the other, and a tree blocking most of the sun.  There it stood.  It was a large and exquisitely beautiful cat standing just a few paces from the pile of food sitting on the concrete lip at the edge of the patio.  That’s where Vazra’s friend has grown accustomed to eating, so that’s where the food always is.  I wondered at this new visitor as I calmly said things like “It’s okay” and “You go ahead and eat that” and other drivel.  In fact, I’d swear that cat shook its head for the briefest of moments as any condescending person would.  It said: “Uh-uh.  Don’t do that.  Don’t embarrass yourself.”  I did anyway.

And it worked.  The cat turned and carefully stepped back to the pile of kibble and, with one last serious look at me to ensure I’d not fooled it and was now on the attack, it knelt down completely and again enjoyed the healthy food.  I wasn’t sure exactly how feral it might be, so to help it I stepped in the opposite direction while more cooing gushed from my open lips.  Why were they flapping like this…  I promise I got another look that said I was the most retarded and simple-minded animal this predator had ever seen.  Afterward, it went back to eating.  I continued to stare.  I also got the message and squelched my infantile gibberish (although I did not completely silence it).  The cat went on eating.

The more I looked at it, the more I realized this cat was colored exactly like Kako.  She’s a black tabby with duotone hair that is dark at the tips and almost white over the majority just below that.  It’s like ferret hair.  With a cat as small as Kako, that makes seeing her tabby stripes rather difficult.  She has to be turned just right, stretched just so, light falling on her just like this, and so on.  Experience helps me see her stripes more easily now.  With this large cat munching away on prescription cat food, they were far more obvious because they were drawn on a much larger canvas.

“Wow!  You’re so gorgeous!”  The words were hoarse in my throat, a whisper turned guttural from too much force.  Like faked sickness.  After that, all I could do was stare at it.  In response, the kitty ate and ate.  When I decided to slip back inside so it could eat in peace, it watched me carefully while demonstrating a bit more comfort by not stoppin’ the scarfin’.  I was happy it was at least comfortable enough with me to let me approach that short distance so I could step back through the doors to the bedroom.

I have to get photos and hope I can capture the wonder of the thing.  Mighty fine animal, that one!  Yes sirree!  Yessiree!

This angers me to no end

It made me cry.  It made me mad.  It strengthened my growing conviction to make all future employment mean something more than just supporting an arbitrary and selfish corporation interested only in what it can do for itself.  It is this about a cat:

This Persian was dumped onto Sharifah by someone who said he found her in a lift in Marine Parade. The rescuer was uncontactable [sic] after that.
Phyllis took the cat in and the Vet said this was not a young cat as thought but a very old cat with just a few teeth left. She was given the name Paula by Sharifah.
Paula was showered with lots of tender loving care. A kind person called JM is sponsoring the boarding fees and the vet fees as well.
Recently she has stopped eating.
Dr Robin Au saw her and administered an injection. He felt she was nearing the end of the road as a result of her age and chronic neglect.
She is now sleeping most of the time and she is comfortable. She is surrounded by people who love her and the sound of chanting from a CD player. The loss of desire for food is natural during dying.
You can send her your love during your quiet time.
You may also visualize her in a meditation practice called Loving-Kindness or Metta Meditation.

See the previous post about Paula here from just after she was rescued.  It includes a video of her.

In addition, you can see photos of her here and here.

Go now.  Read the previous post.  Look at the pictures and video.  Do it, goddamnit!

Now let me express a few things.

This is why I saved Vazra.  He deserves better.

This is why Kako and Kazon are both rescues.  It didn’t matter how much work or money would be expended on them; they deserved at least that much.  To live.

This is why Grendel and Loki are the last of my adoptions.  I will only do rescues from this point forward.  Can anyone give me a reason why all shouldn’t be offered a chance?  To live?

It is by the response to things like this that I judge people.  Did it make you weep?  Did it make you pause and consider how you might make a difference for the creatures given far less consideration than humans?  Especially considering how little consideration is given to humans?  Did it make you feel something strong enough to be important?  Did it make you want to help, even if you already knew such help could not save this life?  Even if such help could only make the last few days more comfortable without any other reward for yourself?

Let me finish with the words of the Buddha as quoted in the first link above (Sutta Nipata I.8 : Karaniya Metta Sutta):

This is what should be done
By one who is skilled in goodness,
And who knows the path of peace:
Let them be able and upright,
Straightforward and gentle in speech.
Humble and not conceited,
Contented and easily satisfied,
Unburdened with duties and frugal in their ways.
Peaceful and calm, and wise and skillful,
Not proud and demanding in nature.
Let them not do the slightest thing
That the wise would later reprove.
Wishing: In gladness and in safety,
May all beings be at ease.
Whatever living beings there may be;
Whether they are weak or strong, omitting none,
The great or the mighty, medium, short or small,
The seen and the unseen,
Those living near and far away,
Those born and to-be-born –
May all beings be at ease.
Let none deceive another,
Or despise any being in any state.
Let none through anger or ill-will
Wish harm upon another.
Even as a mother protects with her life
Her child, her only child,
So with a boundless heart
Should one cherish all living beings;
Radiating kindness over the entire world:
Spreading upwards to the skies,
And downwards to the depths;
Outwards and unbounded,
Freed from hatred and ill-will.
Whether standing or walking, seated or lying down
Free from drowsiness,
One should sustain this recollection.
This is said to be the sublime abiding.
By not holding to fixed views,
The pure-hearted one, having clarity of vision,
Being freed from all sense-desires,
Is not born again into this world.

And you wonder why Buddhism is the only philosophy comparable to and greater than any religion for which I have far more than just an appreciable level of respect…  It doesn’t focus on what is best for you.  It focuses on what is best.

Call it a blooper reel

I was capturing some video of Vazra who was sitting at the patio door in the bedroom.  As luck would have it, he was doing absolutely nothing but sitting there looking outside.  With less than 20 seconds worth of video of him doing just that, I was ready to give up and stop the camera.

Never one to miss an opportunity to steal the spotlight, Grendel shows up right as I hit the button.  That’s how it ends.  Hence, it’s a blooper reel (I assure you, I wind up with a lot of these!).

Grumpy

Let me precede this entry with a caveat.  I am steadily developing a better understanding of Vazra as time marches forward.  I’m learning more about his personality, his temperament, his moods, and his overall approach to life (which, in some respects, is rather bizarre, but more on that later).  I knew enough about him to rescue him from certain starvation and death (due to his dental problems alone), so it’s not as though I was ignorant of his persona before I brought him inside, but, as with all living things, there’s still quite a bit about him that remains a mystery.  What I don’t know is what I would have learned had he grown up with me.

This process lends itself, as it has with all pets both current and past, to the development of nicknames.  In his case, however, I am presently unable to call him by any such monikers while focusing on teaching him his real name.  Without knowing what he was called when he was abandoned here at the lake, it’s my responsibility to help him learn that “Vazra” refers to him and not some other or ethereal entity hidden in the shadows.  I’ve already developed two nicknames for him based on how he acts and looks, but it will be some time before I’m able to use them as easily as I do with the rest of the feline inhabitants of our abode.  Given his age, in fact, it may never be that he will know and respond to any nicknames, although I strongly suspect that time and effort will help him associate with his new name.

One of Vazra’s nicknames is Grumpy.  It’s not that he’s a grumpy cat.  Well, he can be from time to time when he doesn’t get his way, but that’s true of all of them.  No, Vazra is called Grumpy because of his Persian features.  Take this photo for instance.

Close-up of Vazra's face (150_5081)

It’s the down-turned mouth, the smashed-in face, the overly large eyes, and the general structure of his phizog that all conspire to make him appear less than hospitable.  These are typical Persian traits and not unique to him.  You’d find as I do, I think, that all Persian cats look like they’re forever constipated.  Or something.  They just tend to look uncomfortable and unapproachable, as though they’re always having a bad day.

Even when Vazra is skipping about the house demonstrating his insane antics, one might wrongfully assume he’s a breath away from going postal.  At minimum, you might conclude you shouldn’t reach out to him for fear of pulling back a bloody appendage in return.

I won’t deny he has his moments of meanness.  As I’ve said before, not having raised him from kittenhood means his personality is not as predictable as the others, yet it’s increasingly predictable and subsequently indicative of a bit of defensiveness on his part that I’m quickly learning to anticipate and intercept.  That aside, he’s a very lovable cat who is dearly sweet and people friendly.  He just doesn’t look like it.

[pardon the quality of the photo; I had to lighten it up to ‘try’ making his facial features more apparent; unlike the other cats, his black fur is solid and absorbs most light, and that makes photographing him a wee bit more difficult if I’m looking to capture something other than just a black mass of fur]