Her Royal Neediness.

This week while Terrence was at CTIA in New Orleans, Penny was more needy than ever. This usually happens when he goes away. For those of you that don’t already know, Terrence works from home and Penny is very attached to him. So when he’s gone and I work all day, she gets lonely. She either shows this by being overly needy or overly depressed. The day I took this photo was definitely the latter.

This particular day Penny stayed in bed from the time I went to bed around 5am (I don’t sleep well when Terrence is away), and didn’t get up until I scooped her at 2:30ish that afternoon. This is not normal Penelope Pussycat behavior, I thought she was defective. She didn’t like me very much for disturbing her, but I made up for it by letting her sit outside with me. She loves the back steps.

Tonight Terrence returns, we’re both oh so excited. Well, Penny doesn’t know she’s excited yet, but she is… trust me.

(Photo taken with Instagram)

A Dog, Interrupted: Part 1

It’s been a while since I’ve touched a computer, a few weeks ago our lives got a little side tracked and it’s taken me some time to find my routine again.

In the end of March a coworker told me about this “puppy” that had been sitting outside his house. The dog had been there all day and whenever anyone on the block opened their doors the dog would run up and try to go inside. No one knew where the dog came from or who it belonged to. Since the dog was a pit bull everyone was scared and several neighbors had called animal control to come take the dog away. My coworker felt bad for the dog but at the same time wanted it gone from his block, so after work (and several hours of him nagging me) I went over to investigate the puppy.

Driving up to his house I looked all around, but didn’t see a dog. I drove slowly up the block, still nothing, figuring the dog had moved on I began to drive back home. Something made me turn back around to check again, and on my second attempt passing the house there he was crouched behind a truck. I parked my car and sat observing the dog for a couple of minutes. I watched for myself as he walked up to every house and scratched at the front doors, pushed on their gates and barked when he heard someone stir inside. He looked like he lived in every house he happened upon, like he had forgotten his keys and needed some help getting inside. As I had suspected the dog was not a puppy, it was instead a full grown Staffordshire terrier (I guessed 3-4 years old). The dog had cuts on his legs and face and was skin and bone, but still quite muscular. He was also fairly dehydrated.

I walked up to him and he came right over and rubbed himself against me. One man who was watching from his window told me I was crazy and expressed his concerns and fears about having the dog outside his house. He told me he had asked around the block and no one claimed ownership to the dog, he also told me how upset he was that animal control hadn’t come yet. The dog was super sweet and in need of care. Not wanting animal control to inevitably put him down I called Terrence and explained the situation, once he gave me the okay I opened the door to my car and the dog hopped right in.

As I pulled up to my house I realized something, I had no way of getting the dog from the car into my apartment without either losing him or potentially getting one of the neighborhood cats eaten. I scoured through the trunk for a solution and was thrilled to find a bit of rope. Sometimes it pays to live with an ex Boy Scout, I’m always randomly prepared. After I got the dog into the apartment I didn’t know what to expect from Penny, so I ushered him into the bathroom for safe keeping while I devised a plan. I distracted him with a bowl of water while I dug out Dutch’s old doggy gate and treats. The dog had no desire for the treats so I went across the street and asked to borrow some dog food from Terrence’s mom. He didn’t bother with that either, he only wanted to drink. I began to slowly worry that I might have a sick dog on my hands. Once I started worrying about that other things started to quickly roll in after. I checked him for fleas before I took him into the car, but I noticed a flea-like bug crawling next to him on the floor of my bathroom and began to get even more worried. Oh no, what have I brought home to my cat? What if she catches something? If I kill the cat Terrence will never forgive me. I have to get this dog cleaned and checked out ASAP.

I contacted some girlfriends in the vet and grooming fields and begged for them to come to my aid. I quickly learned that grooming salons and vet offices will not care for a stray dog, so we were on our own. My friend Christina rushed over and drove to Animal Care and Control with me. While we were there they scanned him for any sign of a chip. They also supplied us with food, shampoo, bowls, linens, a harness/lead and a HUGE cage. They told me that as long as I found the dog a home I didn’t have to return any of the stuff they gave me, including the cage. Basically they’ll do anything to avoid taking in a pit (since they occupy about 90% of shelters and usually end up being euthanized within days or weeks of arrival), and will help you in any way if you agree to hold onto the dog and find it a home.

So my friends Christina and Amanda came home with us, Amanda convinced her boyfriend to come over and bathe the dog while Christina held him. Amanda and I set up his cage and put out some food and water. The dog drank non-stop, but also peed the very same and all over my apt, despite all his many walks. My friends had tons of fun playing with the dog, they took dozens of photos of him and tried all night to convince me to keep him. Having just lost my dog of fourteen years I’m in no mood to start over, yet. Eventually everyone went home and it was just me and this adorable yet co-dependent dog. He panicked and cried when I left his side and if I turned away for a second he peed on something. Exhausted and irritated I quickly began to wonder what I had just gotten myself into.

Got a package.

I put Penny in this box and closed it up so I could present it to Terrence as a gift. Once he was done being psyched about his awesome kitty, I took her away and returned the box to the floor so she could hop out. Instead of leaving the box Penny decided to camp out in it… because she’s adorable.

A nose by any other name.

Today I wanted to focus on one of my favorite parts of Miss Pussycat, her nose.  We believe our kitty to be the most beautiful of all kitties, and this teeny detail may be the biggest reason.  When she was a kitten she had ringworm on her nose, and even then it was still adorable. Disease ridden, but adorable. She only got slightly irritated by me taking incredibly close range photos of her today.  Penny let me know when she was done by putting her little paw on the camera lens, damn cute kitty.  I then stopped and played some games with her, then gave her a couple of treats as payment for her hard work.

Neighbor love.

Terrence’s parents and his sister live across the street. I didn’t realize how much I would enjoy living so close to his family, but they really are the best neighbors. Terrence has become obsessed with the idea of moving lately and one my biggest motivators for wanting to stay is our proximity to his family.

One of the nice things about our neighbors are they’re adorable pets. They have 3 cats (Bubbles, Buttercup and Sam) and a dog (Cali). Buttercup is an odd cat, she’s just about the most lovable creature on the planet. She constantly wants you to pet her and in return she’ll lick your hand raw as long as its near her. When Cali moved in about two years ago it was the perfect pairing for Buttercup. Finally, she had a friend that would allow her to cuddle all day. Its a bizarre love affair.

Attention whore.

While I was in the middle of shooting photos for this last style post someone got a little jealous and needy. Penny nudged her head into the camera several times and then laid in front of me, turned onto her back and began soliciting pets with her adorable meowing.

A look back in time.

I haven’t really been taking photos of Penny recently. I love her all the same, but lately we spend most of our down time cuddling, sleeping and crying rather than playing and snapping photos. Give us time, we’ll get back in the swing of things soon enough. But just to remind you how adorable Miss Pussycat is…

a teeny kitten.

!!! (For emphasis)

Irreplaceable.

I know it’s been several weeks since I’ve shown my face around here, I’m sorry for dropping off the web.  This post has been extraordinarily hard to produce.  If any of you have seen my most recent twitter updates you know that we had to put our dog, Dutch, down.  It was a very difficult time for our family and friends, Dutch was and is a very beloved member of our circle… he’s irreplaceable.

I first met Dutch when I was thirteen, he was my brother Marc’s friends dog.  When he was still a puppy he came to live with us, along with my brothers friend.  I initially didn’t care for Dutch, I had recently lost my dog to an illness and was in no mood to deal with an out of control puppy.  He humped everything, everyone… even small children. Thankfully that faze ended quickly.  Not long after arriving my brothers friend left, leaving his dog behind.  And that’s how we came to possess Dutch.  He was our family dog for eight years before we moved on and out into our own homes, at which point my brother took Dutch to live with him, Terrence and I took him for a week here and there.  My brother wasn’t home very often and felt bad leaving Dutch lonely all day, Terrence jumped at the opportunity to take Dutch permanently, and that’s how he once again became my dog.

He never met anyone that didn’t instantly love him, mine and my brothers friends, Terrence’s friends and family, even strangers on the street and from the internet, he was incredible that way.  Sometimes when I’d mention to people that I had a pit bull they would instantly shudder, not understanding the breed itself and only going by their media soaked opinions.  Sometimes they’d have to fortune of meeting Dutch and having their minds quickly altered, he had that affect on people.

Dutch loved the snow, he’d run and jump into mounds of it and enjoyed snowball fights.  He loved when children were around and kissed their faces and let them tug on his ears and attempt to ride him as if he were a pony.  We shared a fork, it made Terrence squirm with disgust but I adored sharing meals with my pup.  In the mornings he would roll over to his back and play, sometimes I thought he had an itch he was desperately trying to satisfy, but it was probably just for fun.  He fetched sticks and balls, once we even tried to teach him to carry the mail in his mouth.  He learned to play dead at ten, even though everyone said you can’t teach an old dog new tricks.  He loved his sister Penny, although he was often jealous, he’d play tag with her and they’d chase each other around the apartment.  She’d cry at the door or window when we took him on his walks, once he came through the door she would jump up onto him or kiss his face, as if he’d been gone for years.  He played dress up with us without putting up a fight.  He would curl up with us during movie nights and steal the popcorn.

People say pit bulls have a life expectancy of nine to ten years, Dutch far surpassed that.  In February we learned that he had a life threatening tumor, he survived that too.  In the end he simply lost use of his legs from arthritis.  Climbing the stairs became a challenge for him, my mother suggested giving him a small vacation at her apartment.  She has a yard and lives on the first floor.  The day we were set to pick him up he had fallen, my mother called us in a panic, she wasn’t able to get him up.  Terrence rushed over assuring me that it was okay and that he was going to get him up and bring him home.  With no such luck we took him to the vet, she essentially told us that it was futile to keep him going and that he legs didn’t have much left.  She asked us if we were ready to say goodbye.  I looked at my dog, my best friend of fourteen years and said no, today was not his day.  She lowered the table and he walked right off of it, as if he were playing a trick that had gone terribly wrong.  I left Terrence with the vet to discuss his new medications.  Dutch walked right out of that office and down the block and in circles, just to prove he could.  The rest of the day he played with Penny and paced around my mothers apartment soliciting pats from all her guests.  Sadly that night he lost his mobility again.  After three long days of Terrence rubbing his legs and changing his warm compresses, carrying him in and out of the apartment so he could sit in the grass, sleeping with him on the floor and feeding him by hand, we decided it was time.  We cried and we begged for him to get up, but he was done now.  He refused to eat, he’d just lay there on the floor moaning.  It killed us to make that choice, but I feel that he may have made it first.  We called our closest friends and family and hung out on the floor with Dutch that last day, then like a procession we drove to the vet.

I sat with him in the back seat on the ride over, he looked me in the eyes the entire time.  He was calm, more relaxed then he’d been in days, he knew… this time was his time and he and I were okay with that.  I hugged him tight and held on to Terrence’s arm… and then he was gone.  I held onto Dutch and inhaled him deep, then I walked out the door and could barely breathe.  I went around the side of the building and let it all out, all the strength that I had for Terrence and my family, I let go, I grieved for my loss and for my dog, for my child, for my best friend.  I screamed, not because it wasn’t fair… but because it wasn’t familiar, it wasn’t normal, it was completely empty… surreal.

Two days later it was his fourteenth birthday, we were set to have a party for him and we didn’t cancel it.  We celebrated the life of our dearest friend with all of the people that loved him.  We laughed and told stories, we cried and hugged each other, Terrence got drunk… he says that’s how the Irish grieve.  I let him have that.  Sometimes the cat still cries at the door, sometimes I think I hear him or see him from the corner of my eye.

People have suggested that we replace Dutch, that that will somehow erase the pain of our loss.  Personally I feel that it’s insensitive to say so, but I understand that it’s not uncommon and its what a lot of people do.  These people have obviously never had a dog as uniquely awesome as mine.  So we’ll be doing this the old fashioned way, we’re going to cry when the mood hits us and as time goes by it’ll happen less often… until it stops.

*This video was originally intended for his birthday, after his passing it began to take another tone. It was tough, but I had to finish it.