Memoirs of a Cat Mum

I don’t care what my breeder friends say, raising a kitten is just as challenging as having a baby. Possibly  more so.

Sure, I didn’t have to expel this adorable foundling from my nether regions. My breasts haven’t gotten all huge and uncomfortable and leaky. And I don’t have to change any nappies because cats are superior beings who are litter trained practically at birth.

But human babies can’t jump two feet in the air while play fighting with resentful siblings.  They also can’t jump on the kitchen table and lick the frozen lasagne you just heated up for dinner. And human babies don’t attack your hand when you try to break up said fights.

The kitten known as Pip Squeak Festivus Brian Dumbledore is here to stay (for a physical description see my last post). I’ll spare you the etymologies that make up his name, and 98% of you probably deciphered them inside a nanosecond anyway.

My cat Maggie is nine years old and for most of her life she was the baby of my small and changing family. And for the past year and a half she has been an only cat and my closest companion. Naturally, my sweet girl feels threatened by the presence of this adorable but obviously evil little punk. And Pip does not soften the blow when he jumps on her head, even though he means no harm.

Pip is a typical kitten in the sense that he’s cute and charming and has no boundries. But I don’t remember Maggie being this bitey when I first brought her home and she was almost exactly the same size.

Emotionally I’m somewhere in between awe over how Maggie is holding her own against the little rapscallion and worrying  that she thinks her mummy is punishing her by brining the tiny nut home.

True, there are no bags under my eyes and I’m not worried about how I’m going to lose my kitten weight. But I am pulling off a rather tricky balancing act these days (rather shakily). How do I make the little guy feel welcome while still making sure that my eldest still knows she is very much loved?

Much like human babies, cats don’t understand why the world is the way it is and why it does not revolve around them alone. Actually, they don’t really understand the second concept at all.

But I am a little sleep-deprived. Perhaps that’s why I sound a little weepy and might be worrying a little too much–oops, must go and give Pip a time out.

Pictures to follow!

Published in: on December 30, 2009 at 12:19 am  Comments (2)  
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In a show of seasonal self-restraint

Today is Festivus, the holiday for the rest of us.  The time of year when we battle our heads-of-household in Feats of Strength, stare at an undecorated pole and participate in the Airing of Grievances where we let everyone know how much they have pissed us off this past year.

And many have pissed me off in various degrees. But I’m feeling sentimental so I will air but a single grievance this year.

As I write this, a little gray and black tiger striped kitten lays all tuckered out on my bed.  Or lies. I’m not sure which.

He has been hanging out in my room for the past few hours. My nine-year-old cat Maggie keeps looking at me as if to say “and when is his mummy coming to take him away?” No, she is not amused. But at least she’s stopped hissing at him for a while.

But even if Maggie will have nothing to do with him, at least he is stretched out all warm and safe indoors with good holistic kitten food and clean water.  About a week ago, this was not the case. My friend Becca found him shivering in the street by himself.

The grievance I need to air is with everyone who is responsible for him being there.

Everyone who has decided they cannot be bothered to spay or neuter their cats should kick their own arses for being so bloody ignorant. Everyone who has ever abandoned an animal in their care in the streets should spend the night freezing  in a dumpster fighting with countless other cats for a bit of garbage.

And those individuals (who for now shall remain nameless) at The Toronto Humane Society whose atrocities against those they were paid and entrusted to protect resulted in the whole operation shutting down and have resulted in the needless deaths of countless animals.  I hope you are shown the same compassion and mercy when your fates are decided, be it by the law or by karma.

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/toronto/story/2009/12/22/ths-warrant-search464.html

All right, grievances aired somewhat. Happy Festivus!

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