Cat Dancing

Our relationship with Puddy, the stray cat, is pretty well established at this point. You would hope it would be, it’s been over three years since she had her kittens in the shed etc. etc. etc. Pretty well established, yes, but there are still elements that make Puddy and us a sort of a moveable feast. Our routine, though present, is always subject to reassessment and revision. Always, I might add on the part of the cat.

That’s why this entry is called what it is. Life with a cat, or at least our cat, is a constant dance of demand and requirement, veering from total contentment to gross displeasure. Ninety percent entirely predictable but ten percent completely not.

Just now, for instance, Sunday morning, I’ve been hanging clothes on the line when Puddy saunters around the side of the house, fresh from a night on the neighbourhood tiles.

“Good morning, Puddy, how are you today?”

Puddy rolls around under the clothesline, exposing her soft milky white belly. A portrait of undying love and total submission. Easy to assess, easy to deal with. But suppose I was to stoop down and attempt a little head stroke. Not a tummy stroke, obviously, that would be death from most cats. No, just a harmless head stroke. Puddy would immediately turn into Gladiator, bucking and hissing, wielding her multiple swords with unmatchable speed and agility.

I would be toast.

So Puddy and I express our enthusiasm for each other at a reasonably safe distance. When she’s hungry and keen for the food I’m bringing, she will twine in and out between my feet and do clawless paw-battle with my shoes. She will meow very softly, which is her only tone of meow and be a model of feline warmth. Just don’t touch, mate. Don’t even think about it.

Puddy spends the night indoors most of the time now. At least during the Winter. Last Summer, she largely went AWOL each night and came back in the morning, ready for the breakfast dance. This year will probably be the same, the signs are already there. But for the entire Autumn and Winter she has overnighted in the front hall, with her food and water and litter box (which she hardly ever uses). No cat dancing required here; it would seem. A straightforward B&B transaction. You would think so, wouldn’t you? But, no, there are nightly hurdles to be surmounted, gymnastic floor exercises to complete.

Puddy likes being indoors, particularly out of inclement weather, but she is an outdoors semi-feral cat through and through. Too long behind glass and she gets restless and tense. There are cats out there that have to be kept in check, other houses to visit and charm. We can’t just sit here all day and night. So, some nights, she simply doesn’t want to come in. At least she thinks she doesn’t… or maybe she thinks she does. Therein lies the problem.

Many evenings, round midnight, you may find me at my front door, tired and ready for bed. You may see me wearily addressing an indistinct furry bundle out in the garden gloom.

“Well? What’s it going to be? This is the final call, it’s now or never.”

The cat may come in. She may make biscuits for a while in her furry, familiar, basket. But when she’s in this humour, she will probably bugger off again, out into the night, and no amount of persuasion will bring her inside.

Other evenings, she’ll be waiting at the door for me to come home for work. She will hop into her basket and not budge again until the next morning. A hard day, I guess, up and down our little street.

So, the nighttime cat dance, as described, can be intricate and a little bit wearisome but it is made considerably more complex by the introduction of what we shall call ‘the living room factor.’ What was a simple three-step Waltz now becomes an intricate Argentine Tango of feline desire.

It’s simple, really.

We both like having Puddy in the living room of an evening. She apparently likes it too because she comes and sits on the window cill and presses her pink nose on the place where the window opens, perhaps believing that this act alone will gain her access. She mimes a Meow that I know would be silent even if the pane of glass was not between us. And we, being the soft touches that we undoubtedly are, let her in. I open the window and she slinks in, eying me distrustfully as she passes me. She bounds onto the carpet from the window with a surprising lack of grace and makes straight for her chair. She has her own armchair, with a purple blanket on it to try to minimize the shedding fur element. There she will stay for the evening. If I were being cute (I think I did it in an earlier post) I would say that she watches television with us, but she doesn’t really. She doesn’t give a toss about anything on the screen, dogs, cats, lions, tigers, Puddy doesn’t care. She preens and rotates and rolls and sleeps and sleeps and sometimes just sits imperiously and watches us as if wondering why we are still here, in her room.

Around eleven o’clock, the dance begins.

For our sins, we are not comfortable with Puddy overnighting alone in the living room. She is a scratchy, fur-shedding machine, and we are not natural cat people. We fear our nicest room might suffer for her overnight presence. Silly, perhaps, to you seasoned cat people but there it is. Puddy has her domain in the hall, and she is most welcome there. It is comfy and warm, and all the necessaries are in there. So, at around eleven o’clock, it’s a simple transfer from the living room to hall for Puddy. Nothing to it.

You know that’s simply not true.

At eleven, we open the window and open the front door. In pursuit of a few unignorable treats, Puddy goes out and around to the front door. She inspects her hallway domain. She makes biscuits and samples a few crunchy food items from her bowl. But damned if she will stay. Having seen, first hand, the wonders of the living room, has she decided that the hall is simply not up to scratch, or has she rested sufficiently during her hours in the armchair and now it’s time for late night street adventures? I don’t know. Nobody knows.

All I know is I’ll be standing at my front door, round midnight, doing that dance with Puddy the Cat yet again. Will she come in and stay? Will she go off adventuring? Your guess is as good as mine.

The overriding thought I have at these times is for my next-door neighbours. I picture them ensconced in their bed and glaring at each other in the dull glow of their bedside lamp.

“There’s that bloody eejit again, calling his bloody cat.”

Regretting the Hunger Gauge Idea

The other day, I was walking home from work for lunch. I do that. It sounds decadent but it’s a bit of a rush-job really. Twenty minutes to get there, twenty minutes lunch, with a good book, and twenty minutes back. It’s nice though. I know I’m lucky to be able to do it…

…which will probably become the theme of this post. So, watch out… just… watch out.

So, there I am, walking home up the main street and there’s this guy lying on the street up ahead. Right in the middle of a busy lunchtime town centre street. And he’s got a sleeping bag which is covering his legs and he’s got a bulging rucksack tucked in behind him and his legs are stretched out so far onto the pavement that people are getting in each other’s way trying to get around him and not having to resort to stepping over him. And he’s got a handwritten sign on his sleeping-bag-covered knees. It’s a very carefully written sign, blue biro on brown cardboard box-flap. It’s saying:

“Please help me. I am very hungry.”

And, within the dusty confines of my own head, I get a bit annoyed.

I mean, look at this guy. Looking moderately well-to-do. Taking up half the street with his begging-ensemble. He’s obviously a member of one of those rolling groups who get ferried from town to town, landed in the town centre, and there get left to beg for what they can before being bussed back home again. He is playing us all, with his rucksack, and his beard, and his sad face.

But it’s the sign. It’s that sign that’s the worst of it.

You’re really very hungry, are you? It’s there, writ large in blue Bic on your cardboard flap. Very hungry, you say. But what happens when some kindly passer-by gives you money, as many already undoubtedly have, and you nip into the adjoining shop and score yourself a nice sandwich and maybe a latte? What happens to your sign then? Answer: Nothing. You come back and ease into your sleeping bag and hold up the very same sign that says you’re very hungry even though you’ve just had the full feed. Because that’s the con, isn’t it? That’s the game. You don’t have a series of alternative signs in your rucksack, do you? ‘I was hungry but I’m not anymore.’ That one isn’t in your repertoire, is it? No, it bloody isn’t.

Ideally, you would have some LED sign, which could be revised in accordance with how much food you had eaten. “I am moderately hungry, as I’ve just had a big bap,” it might say. Or “I am fully satiated now, food wise, you don’t have to worry. Shall I pull my legs in a bit?” Perhaps there could even be a gauge on the sign, an easy-to-read graphic indicating, on a scale of 1 to 10, how very hungry you currently are.”

I strode on, eager to get to my tea and my book. But, as I got near the town green, my pace slowed, my mind turned on itself.

Who in the hell did I think I was? Who in the hell was I becoming?

How many slips, how many trips would it take for me to be the person lying on the side of the road, begging for alms? Three? Two? One, even? How self-satisfied and insular am I, that I can mentally berate the person whose feet are marginally in my way or whose sign might not accurately reflect the state of his hunger-level? Make no mistake, Bucko, that could be you. That may well be you, someday. And not in some outlandish ‘Trading Places’ fairy tale scenario either. That could be you within a year if everything that could go wrong did go wrong.

And so what if that guy is part of some larger ‘bussed in’ money begging project. Is that what he envisaged for himself when he was a kid? Is this where his mother hoped he might end up?

I see it all over the place. People so wrapped up in themselves that they care nothing for the other person in front of them. Not only the ‘not caring’ but, more than that, the active resentment of the person who has slipped further down the ladder than the rung on which they currently sit. I’ve seen that all over, but I hadn’t seen it so much in myself, until now. And mark me, I didn’t like seeing it in myself. Not one little bit.

I don’t have to give the guy money. If I think he’s being exploited by some organised immoral system, I don’t have to support it. I don’t have to be that naïve. But, by golly, I surely do have to recognise that the man on the deck with the sign and the sleeping bag is 100% as valuable a human as I am.

And I have to remember to treat him accordingly.

The Year When Easter Falls on a Sunday

This year is one of those extraordinary years when Easter falls on a Sunday. For that reason, I thought I would-

Wait.

Stop.

What am I thinking? Easter always falls on a Sunday.

Well. There goes this week’s blog post…

*                                *                               *                            *

I’m kidding of course. Just pulling your leg gently this Easter morn. Except in a tiny way, I’m not. In thinking about what I might write for this week’s post, it momentarily occurred to me how Easter would be on a Sunday this year and that I should somehow reflect that. It was the splitest of split seconds but it’s still indictive of something, I reckon.

It kind of confirms that Easter has largely been lost to me, as a certain type of thing.

I’ve written about it before in these pages. How Easter was a big deal when I was small. And I don’t just mean chocolate eggs and treats, although that was definitely a thing. I mean the religious stuff, last supper, scourging, denial, crucifixion, large stones, resurrection, all that gear. As an altar boy and as a child in a good Christian family, all the rites were observed and attended. The weekend played out almost as if the iconic events of the season were playing out in real time. They occurred in a “It’s nearly midnight, Jesus will be waking up soon,” kind of a way.

These days, because I’m not into that anymore, and also, I guess because the kids are grown up and gone, Easter is a sort of a ‘Spring Long Weekend’ of forest walks and clocks-going-forward and mint sauce. But something lingers from the early years. Some feeling for the places of the world out there, where all the rites are still being enacted just as they always were.

Here in my home, I tend towards the more solemn music on the radio. I veer onto the old biblical epics on afternoon telly, where the Roman soldiers all had American accents and where John the Baptist was clearly Robert Ryan in a stick-on beard.

It’s not a wish to go back to the old ways. It’s not a probing of the space where the children used to reside. At least I don’t think it is. It’s just that we can’t really unlearn what we previously learned. We can grow to see what we believe is the truth and the fiction of it all, but the muscle-memory continues to tug at whatever passes for our souls these days.

Easter falls on a Sunday this year. Go figure. Let’s mark it as best we can. A walk by the lake, a hint of lamb from the grill, a small dark chocolate M&S egg.

We haven’t lost anything.

It just feels that way sometimes.

Happy Easter!