Angel Someone: How I lost my Dog and Found Compassion

Elegy for a Cat

Sparkles in 2007, cozy in a "Cuties" box.

I miss the sound of her toenails on the kitchen floor. When I told Asher that this morning, he said, I actually don’t.

I sit down at my desk chair and look down to make sure I don’t bump her, but she’s not there.

We watch a movie tonight and she doesn’t come bugging us to sit in our laps.

She’s gone in that way.

We buried her today, put rocks on top of the dirt, so red in the white snow.

I miss her, in the way that I miss a person when they’re gone. There was a dialogue I had with her that I didn’t have with anyone else, and it wasn’t verbal. It was rooted in family, it made sense in looks and heart. She knew how late I stayed up, she heard how I talked to myself when everyone else was out of the house, she understood my hurt, would find me if I was crying, and hiding. She made me honest and protective.

I miss her in that way, too.

I miss finding her sleeping in the middle of our bed, a curled ballerina, head to her toes, on top of the white down comforter.

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Sparkles, Gone Beyond

9:30p.m. Early this evening I sat down next to Sparkles where she was laying under the Christmas tree and washed her face for her, and her paws.

I took a warm washrag and lightly stroked in the direction of her fur, then took a dry cloth and did the same, making sure the heater was reaching her. Her coat and face shone when she dried.

I changed the towel under her head and tried to get the blood off of her chin as gently as I could.  I knew she cared about being fastidiously clean, and I knew it wouldn’t be long now. As I stroked her, I talked to her, telling her she was so brave and beautiful. She was able to squint her eyes at me, but not much else.

About 7pm, I was working at my desk right next to her, when she meowed three times. Three short, alert pronouncements. I was by her side in a flash. Her heart was beating faster than it had been all day, and all last night. I lay down next to her and stroked her to calm her. Every so often, a jolt would go through her, shocking us both. Gradually, she calmed down and I nearly fell asleep.

Just before 8pm, she began to cry. I sat with her to the end, and it wasn’t very long. Sparkles left us so gracefully, so regally, just as she lived her life. Her heart began to seize and she coughed and cried about five times. I started to cry then, too. I looked at Asher through the branches of the Christmas tree. Oh, she’s going! was all I could say.

Asher came and put his hands on her, too. For a second I worried he would freak out. But he is a compassionate soul, and almost 13, and he was very sweet with her.

I told her to be brave, and I hoped our touching her helped her through it. After her heart began seizing, her lungs stopped. She fully stopped breathing, but her heart, for maybe five minutes, would clench, like ringing out a washrag. She would be completely still, Asher and I thinking it was the end, then her heart would make another kick. Finally, her body completely stretched out twice, shaking loose her old soul, and she was gone. We could still feel some electricity in her body, and we stayed next to her until she was cold. She became minute sparkles of energy all around us.

Asher texted dad who said he wanted to know when she left us. I felt very emotional and began sobbing. I found a beautiful framed photo of her and Colin and placed it by her head. I lit a candle, like my aunt did when my grandfather died. I washed my face, feeling the lack of sleep hit me.

We pulled the blanket up to her shoulders and Asher sat with her while I went outside in the windy wet night. I called Talaya and let her know she was gone. And my friend the vet’s assistant, and Colin. I had to leave him a message.

I couldn’t walk very well. I was wearing someone else’s large snow boots and I had to take such short steps so they wouldn’t come flying off. She was gone, and hopefully without too much pain. I missed her bossiness, and her love when we were sick. Where was she now? Would we meet again?

I came back in and Asher was still sitting with her.  I made tea and he said he wanted to watch TV so we watched 30Rock and sat close to each other drinking our favorite Blackberry tea. During one commercial, I took off Sparkles’ collar and bell and set it in front of her photo, next to the candle. I wrapped her now stiff, skinny body in a bright green towel and closed it with a red ribbon still under the tree. I pulled some mums out of a vase and tucked them under the ribbon.

The TV jokes were funny but it all felt flat. We watched the Mentalist and in one scene, someone holds up a framed photo of a cat which looked a lot like Sparkles and was told the cat had died. Asher and I just looked at each other. His friends were texting him and he said he didn’t know how they all knew, but they did.

The big Orange cat sits on my lap as I write this. I take a break and put my hands on the empty package that was Sparkles. We’ll find a good spot to bury her tomorrow, but tonight I want to touch her one more time. Cats get so much of our love, we connect so physically with them that when they are gone, our hands feel empty.

But my heart is full. Sparkles had a good life with us. And I only wish that I will be doing everything I want to do up until the day before I die like she did.

Before I go to bed, I’ll bring her into my office, cover her with flowers and close the door, giving her cat energy some space to fully leave. And keeping her safe from Orange who wants to play with the Christmas bow.

As Asher went to bed, he said, Goodnight Bear, as he often did to her. And I will finish my vigil, too.

(Above, Dad and Sparkles, last Christmas, 2008.)

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Waiting for Transformation

12:00 noon. I slept for about three hours. Back up and I walk into the living room and to my office door and look at Sparkles, watch to see if she is still breathing. I can’t tell. My eyes are so tired, I’m not sure about what I’m seeing. I kneel down and look closer, into her face and the line down her nose that shows black fur on one side, orange on the other.

She sees me, or senses my presence. Her whiskers twitch. Dear girl, are you still here? Her eyes squint just a fraction. I stroke her paw, her skinny shoulder. Her whole left front leg stretches out to greet me. Big girl, why are you hanging on?

I lie down next to her for a bit. She hasn’t moved her position in ten hours. Each breath is so small. I want her to stop breathing and be at peace. How long can she go on without eating, moving, drinking? I try to force her mouth open to give her water but it is solidly shut. And when I do put water on her lips, the smell is foul.

You take your time, I tell her. But I wonder if she is waiting for something. And I wonder at how strange it is that she got so bad yesterday, as I am in this week-long push to get my “Angel Someone” eBook ready for the Web. Could she be waiting for me to finish it? Or could she be waiting for an empty room, for privacy, as my friend suggested she might? While I napped, my husband was up, and I woke up just as he was leaving to go into town. So there’s always been someone nearby.

It’s hard to type on so little sleep; my fingers forget the keys.

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Today’s Sunrise Sparkles

8:30a.m. Dying takes concentration, like birthing. Sparkles is very still, very focused. Her left paw and shoulder reach out and I lie next to her for a long while, holding her paw, feeling the sudden jerks in her body that started at dawn.

Asher got up for school and came and sat by her. I made oatmeal with raisins, cinnamon, brown sugar. The black world turned blue, then pink. I let Asher know that if he wanted to, he could stay home from school, but he decides to go. He doesn’t want to stay for his after-school science club, he says. He goes out the door a few minutes after 7, then texts me: Come outside and look at the sunrise. I bring my camera and don’t even take off my slippers. The eastern sky is a colorful bruise.

I come back in and get some pillows and lie down next to this quiet, intense cat. I look into her eyes for a long time. She is so human to me, something about the loss of control of her cat body has made her spirit even more obvious. I watch her eyes focus then unfocus. Her whiskers are almost completely hanging down. Her eyes squint a little when I talk to her, but her ears don’t move at all. I stroke under her chin and she can’t respond. I tell her, You were so good in this life, you should ask for whatever you want in the next one. Don’t forget you were a nurse cat, a bear, you were Sparkles. I’m going to miss you. We’re all going to miss you. Let’s meet up again some time.

Then I started to cry, thinking that we should bury her under the big spruce tree in the back, so I could always look out the window and see her under the tree, like she was sitting under it in the summer for shade, like she was sleeping under the Christmas tree in the winter.

I watch her chest move ever so slightly with her breath and wait for her last one, but I may fall asleep before she goes.

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Nurse Cat

6:30a.m. I pick up Sparkle’s head and she has no strength left to hold it up herself. Are you gone, sweet one? I ask. Her eyes are open, wet and black. But she’s still in there. Her breath continues to lift her rib cage up and down. So close now. She made it to sunrise, but I’m not sure it will be much longer.

In the middle of the night, I sat down next to her to spend some time and the Orange cat decided my lap was a nice, warm cushion, especially in front of the space heater at 3am. We sat for awhile, and when I got up, he sniffed at Sparkles and sat down on her blankets with her. She couldn’t complain. There was never any love lost between them; Sparkles was always the alpha-cat, and if she hadn’t been so sick, a hiss, a look would have sent him skittering away.

So he perched his big orange fur-ness nearly on top of her skinny legs, now covered with a blanket to keep the warmth in. I had to push his big butt aside more than once. Don’t squish her, I told him.

And it was then that I remembered Sparkle’s other role in our home; she was a nurse. She had an uncanny sense of knowing when to dispense compassion. Whenever anyone got sick, she would come right up to you and sit as close as possible, insisting you partake of her catness. I remember several occasions of extreme sadness when I would have my head in my hands, only to feel her wet nose and find her right in my face, looking at me intensely.

The sunrise is heavy with clouds. Sparkles is more than halfway in the other world.

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A Cat’s Life

Asher and Sparkles from December, 2006.

Asher and Sparkles, Dec, 2006

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Resting Quietly

1:00a.m. Sparkles’ head feels so cold to me as she lies under the Christmas tree tonight. I’ll leave the small space heater on, though I don’t think I’ll be going to bed.

I sit by her and ask her if she remembers the mice she caught and brought into the house, how the air smells outside, how the grass felt. I remind her that her nickname is “Bear” because she is fearless, and brave and big.

I pet her head and stroke her body, but she lifts her paw and puts it on my hand, just as if she were telling me to stop. I hold her paw for a while; she doesn’t mind that.

Shudders pass through her body. She doesn’t close her eyes. When she looks at me, they are deep and black. I try to give her water with an eyedropper, but she won’t open her mouth. She looks at me as if to say, This is far beyond drinking anymore.

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Vigil for Sparkles

Sparkles7:00p.m. Little did I know that when I started this website to promote my eBook, “Angel Someone”, that just as I was putting the final touches on it, my old, dear cat would decide to leave this world.

Sparkles came to us 12 years ago and was a mature cat, so we can only guess at her age being between 16 and 19. For the last year, I have been on guard, watching as her weight and strength slowly ebbed away, as the vet told us it would.

But this afternoon, I noticed she was hanging around in the hallway, not following the sun through the house as usual. I brought her water to her but she didn’t drink it. She made retching noises, but didn’t throw up. I knew then that her time was coming.

I picked her up and brought her to the living room where we had a heating pad for her on the couch, but she didn’t like that. Instead, she camped out in front of my office door, right in the middle of traffic.

When I broke for work in the afternoon, I put my red down vest over her old bones. It had been under the Christmas tree since before the holidays for her to lie on. She squirmed out from under the vest and sat on top of it instead. I brought her a special treat: tuna juice, but she turned her head away. That’s when I noticed her tail was wet, that she had peed on the jacket. So I knew she was really near the end because she couldn’t make it to the litter box.

I called a good friend who was a vet’s assistant and asked her what I could do. She told me to take a cloth dipped in warm water and ring it out well, than going in the direction of her fur, clean her legs and tail, because she would want to be clean, even if she can’t do it for herself. Then using a dry cloth, slowly dry her off. Keep her warm by putting the heating pad behind her. Stroke her from between her ears all the way down her spine in a long, slow, gentle rhythm which will calm her heart. And keep old towels nearby because it could get messy in the end. She also suggested putting a little bit of water on her lips.

So I used a warm, wet rag, like a big mother cat’s tongue which I could see she appreciated. I made her a bed of towels which she instantly climbed into under the Christmas tree. And I turned the space heater on and placed it several feet away.

Her tail and legs are dry and clean now. Her breathing is shallow. Her eyes are open and far away. I called my daughter who just adopted her first cat this weekend and named him Schopenhauer. She was sad to hear about Sparkles and whispered in her ear over my phone, her big grey cat talking in the background.

Asher made us a dinner of bean burritos and salad, but I couldn’t eat much of it. I went back to stroking Sparkles, telling her she could turn it all around if she wanted to. But that if she decided to go, I would be happy for her on her journey. I told he she was brave and fearless, that her nickname, Bear, attested to that. She tries to get up, but wobbles and falls down.

I called Colin, too, and let him know. He was out with friends, I could hear them laughing in the background.

The one thing my friend also said was not to take it personally if I get up to eat or go to the bathroom and she dies, that she may want the privacy.

For now, Asher and I take turns sitting by her, petting her slowly, and loving her.

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