the ground is rocky
“Um, no offense, not saying anything, but you are
petting a dead kitten”
I told him I’m a bit strange. I think that energy
lingers a while after death, that sometimes it is a slow and delicate
transition.
And I kept patting the kitten, still telling it it
was precious, it was wonderful, what a good cat it was.
He’d brought it by a while ago, cold & barely
alive, rejected by its mother. But it had a spark; there was a strong pulse of
life still there. When the cat opened his eyes and complained as I tried to
massage it back to us, when he bit my finger trying to grab some wet catfood, I
thought…yes. Yes, you will fight. You will stay.
The kid did all he could. He warmed the kitten
against his chest in a pouch I hastily contrived of a knitted hat and some red
ribbon. He offered food and water, eyedroppers if need be. The cat got to visit
motels, carefully undercover, and pounce and play and be admired for his soft
fur and his blue, blue eyes.
And eventually, upon waking in seizures, on a day
with no vets open & no transportation, kitten and friend arrived on my
steps as I was starting the day of paste up and editing and hard deadline.
Sure I’d stop it all for a kitten, for just a scrap
of hope, for just one more breath.
Kitten learned to purr, and watch, and be
fascinated by light, movement, this strange quick world.
I always thought it knew me and felt safe in my
hands, and it was in my hands, to my murmurs of “you are a beautiful cat” that
he died.
You don’t give up till the end.
And even then maybe you don’t give up.
Kitten (his name, bestowed only a day or so ago,
was Joey Gizmo) is buried in my back garden, now with a potted Japanese maple
marking the spot. The kid and I talked of death and ceremony. What do you
do? I’d told him of my dad’s death (like kitten, in my arms). He told me how he
hadn’t wanted to go to his father’s funeral.
Were you close? Well, yeah, he taught me a lot
about ethics.
Sorrow and the scent of ripe, falling plums.
These mark the day. Hard to know what to say. The ground is rocky.
Almost every day of my life someone asks about one
passion or another, one cause, one struggle. They say pretty much the same
thing. “Isn’t it a done deal?” “You can’t fight power and money” “No way one
person can do anything”.
It’s kind of as if they are telling me I’m stroking
a little kitten whose eyes remain fixed on mine, whose breath has just faded
away, this mere handful of fluff & beauty. Why waste the time?
Well, you never know. And you can’t turn away. And
though I wish with all my soul for the power to save, cure, and transform every
hurting, dying, sorrowing bit of our universe I know what’s possible and what’s
not.
And what is possible, what is always possible, is
love. That’s what I’ll rest on and what I’ll keep on doing, in every breath and
every soft or sharp moment. Living, dead, transforming world—here’s my love.
It’s what I take from you and what I give back.
And Joey Gizmo, I was very glad to know you.
Labels: death, Joey Gizmo, kittens, life, love, what endures
4 Comments:
Yes. The ground is rocky. There is love. Thank you for your messages.
Thank you for still caring. :) What a sweet kitty. CC
Cool!
Rocky and stumbling along.
A touching, melancholy moment I could relate to.
I hope there's a return journey.
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