Sunday, October 28, 2012

Yours, Mine, and Ours


I’ve never been a person who shares. It’s not that I don’t understand it, or that I was never taught the value of sharing. I’ve just always been of the philosophy that even though a Twix candy bar comes with two cookies, it only comes with one wrapper for a reason. I value my space. I value my things. I have both the way they are for specific reasons.
            Living in a city the size of Los Angeles, I’ve had to do a lot of involuntary sharing. A spacious driving lane that I think is mine will be overtaken by a number of cars many times. When I rent an apartment, the space is mine, but the sound space I share with traffic, hoards of neighborhood children, my pothead neighbor, his idiot friends, his television and music equipment, and one easily-surprised dog named Coco who waits for cars to pass by his yard and startle him. When I submit a piece of art, writing, or a performance into the world, it will have to fight for its space among thousands of others.  
            One thing I love about living in LA is getting to hate it. I’ve never dreamed of living in this place. I am not impressed by bright city lights and could care less about wearing the “right” brand of shoes, meeting a television star, or how my tan is coming along. I don’t even like the beach. LA is a filthy, insecure, beehive of a city with inadequate parking that threatens to turn me into the kind of person my mother would tell me not to be friends with. And if in the end, I don’t sell a single painting, screenplay, or short story, or act in a single film, I can say that well, I never liked the place, anyway, and I don’t know why people live there.
            Entering the 101 Freeway after 4pm on a weekday always reminds me of a war film, of the moment when the good guys look over the crest of the hill only find the enemy army already stretched out across the valley for miles and miles and miles. The difference of course, is that this army is equipped with Starbucks, cell phones, and organic potato chips, and said Valley is a terrible, mythical place that is famously, like, WAY hotter than The City. But once I commit to the on-ramp, I join the ranks of the miserable, and submit to occupying a strip of concrete with them for the next hour of my life. What it boils down to is this: there are sooooo many people here.
            After five months of living in a place with a view of the Hollywood sign, I now live outside the city, in a quieter suburb. Ike is happier here. I am happier here. We no longer are followed by homeless people when we go for evening strolls, and I haven’t had to look away from folks rummaging through my recycling. I can hear crickets when the sun goes down. My neighbors are a reasonable couple: a nurse, and soft-spoken guy named Finn.
            Ike watches visiting cats from the screen door without the previous threat of cigarette smoke wafting into our home. This is our sanctuary, this is our home, and we live here together in a harmony of mutual understanding.
            Her toilet training has advanced at an exciting pace. Another week or two, and the litter pan that just a few weeks previously had intimidated the both of us will be completely removed from it’s place inside the bowl. Her progress is such that she now squats with all four paws on the seat of the toilet, and I have removed three-quarters of the pan, leaving a two-inch strip of litter near the front. There are days when I come home from work to find what we have come to call “Victory Yellow” in the toilet bowl. It is an exciting time.
            Today, however, when I removed her pan so that I could use the toilet, Ike became irritated. When I lifted her pan from the floor (a bottomless litter box is considerably less useful once it’s removed from the toilet bowl) she began to meow as if not only had I inconvenienced her, but also offended her.
            “Look,” I said, “You’re going to have to wait your turn.”
            I may as well have told her to go outside. The meowing continued, and she eyed the bathtub threateningly.
            “Don’t you dare,” I said, knowing my threat was as hollow as that bottomless litter pan.
            Meow. MEOW. MEOW!
            She sniffed at the clean, white porcelain of the tub. Mercifully rejecting it, she jumped to the sink. Meow…
            I shook the pan so that the litter rattled against the aluminum. “kitty, kitty…”
            Her eyes surveyed the sink. What was it to her but just another porcelain bowl?
            “Fine.” I said.
            I hustled. “Here.”
            Ike’s face was smug as she perched on the seat. Aware of my commitment to positive reinforcement, I told her “good kitty.”  
            I gave her the privacy that she refused to afford me, and soon heard the tinkling of success echoing in our bathroom. After scratching at the seat a few times, she ran from the bathroom and swatted at my feet.
            I understand. I really do. The cost of another's company, or the company of ones goals, comes sometimes in making concessions. It doesn’t mean that I like it, or that tomorrow I will look forward to subjecting myself to masses of mostly inconsiderate strangers in this disgusting city. But I get it. I get it. 

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Like it or Clump it


My right hand is battered and marked, red with fresh wounds from earlier today when Ike’s misdirected aggression once again fired in my direction. A visiting cat meowed outside our door, and, being the coward that she is, she attacked me when she couldn’t reach him through the screen door. It is on days like these when our relationship feels more like a junior high alliance rather than the devoted-pet-and-caregiver one I had hoped for when I took Ike into my home four years ago. Like a thirteen year old girl sensing weakness, Ike plays her assets: She’s adorable. Charming. Your omg bff, like forever. And this seems sincere. It is sincere. We can have matching charms: I <3 my cat/ I <3 my human. We will agree to hate the same people and the same things and this will be the cornerstone of our relationship. But then without motive, the charade slips away and the creature that was lurking beneath the purring steps forward. Instead of receiving her pat on the head, she bites the hell out of me.

On page 18 of “The Toilet Trained Cat,” the author suggests that “toilet training is much easier if the cat wants to please you, and a cat’s not going to want to please you if she doesn’t like you.” This is under the chapter titled “How Your Relationship with your Cat Affects Training.” Before seeing this in print, it was a thought that sat in the back of my mind like a kid shooting spitwads in the back of a theater. It’s not that Ike doesn’t like me. She does. But I think she is also fairly certain that I am a Philistine, a moron that she must tolerate in order to continue receiving food. Like any good despot, she knows must abuse me to make sure that I stay aware of this. So as Ike and I approach a milestone in our toilet training journey (putting the litter pan in the toilet bowl its self) I worry not that Ike doesn’t like me, but that it would be beneath her to please me. Of course I want my companion animal to like me. I buy her the good cat food. The no-clay litter. My floor is littered with her toys. I laugh at all of her jokes, even the ones that aren’t funny, and tell her that of course she’s not gaining weight—she’s the prettiest one out of all of us. But now, with the moving of the litter box, the stakes are higher. If Ike refuses to use the litter in the bowl, it could turn into a messy few weeks.

In the last two weeks of training, there have only been two missteps. The first was a miscalculation on Ike’s part. It was the first day that the litter pan had been on top of the toilet seat, and perhaps Ike was feeling over confident. I came home to a yellow puddle on the back rim of the seat, and a clean box of litter. The second may have been an attempt to correct the first. I came home from work to find the litter box upended and litter strewn across the tile floor. I ran through the scene in my imagination: Ike perched coolly on the rim of the box, all four paws gripping the same edge. And then physics would have taken over. A ten pound cat on the edge of a three pound litter box yields disaster. The scene spoke for its self, and Ike had no comment on the embarrassing situation. I handled the event delicately, cleaned the mess, and within one day we were back on track. Which leads us to today, the premier of the litterbox-actually-inside-the-bowl phase.

The reason this phase is tricky is because it requires the kitty to sit on the seat herself, and accept the new, more hidden location of the litter. Some cats will refuse, others will find new locations to relieve themselves. My hope is that our prep training has paid off. My hope is for a clump of litter in the pan by morning.  My hope is that she trusts me enough, likes me enough, to give this a try.

When, in 8th grade, my best friend since 6th grade moved on to a more affluent social group, I didn’t fight her decision. It was a quiet friend break-up. There was no screaming match, no returning of clothes or even badmouthing one another in the junior high hallways. But she with her long blond hair and Sketchers shoes and I behind my braces and glasses could no longer find a place to meet one another. She liked 98 Degrees, I was a Beatlemaniac. Somewhere, I had slipped behind, and in the dust of our friendship, there was nothing left to say, except for a nod in the hallways in between classes. It wasn’t that she didn’t like me. And it wasn’t that I stayed angry at her. It was that perhaps she had outpaced me in the direction that she was traveling. I threw away the macramé necklaces and beads that we had made together and didn’t speak to her again until the final quarter of our senior year.    

Maybe I’m expecting too much to hope that this will be a kind of bonding experience for Ike and me. Sharing the same unmentionable space should be the kind of thing that brings owner and pet closer together. Not that I’m expecting her to like me more.  I don’t delude myself into thinking that this will end the biting, the cold shouldering, the looks of disgust and pity, but I do hope that somewhere between flushes, we can find a new common ground. I’ll leave the lid up for her.  

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

One Cat, Approved



“If you were looking for stability, this ain’t it.” I told her from the front seat of my car, which was loaded with the majority of my earthly belongings. By this time, though, already two years into our lives together, Ike didn’t need the lecture. We were skedaddling on out of a Cragslist room-for-rent situation that had turned really weird really fast.
            To be fair, Ike’s life began with instability. Named after the hurricane that literally blew her into my life, she had been a three week old kitten with fleas and a homelessness situation when I agreed to take her in for a few days.
            Four years, five states, fifteen houses, and thousands of miles later, Ike remains a constant in the hurricane of my life. For every new place I live, I mark a check beside the "Cat" confession on the rental agreement. One cat, approved. We’ve spent the last five years on the racetrack, while I keep her in catnip by galloping Thoroughbreds on some of the most famous tracks in the country. They operate in conjunction with one another, so when one racetrack closes for the season, another opens, sometimes a few states away. The trainers follow the purse money, the horses follow the trainers, and the workers follow the horses. Kentucky, New York, Kentucky, Florida, repeat. And so Ike has learned the art of riding shotgun, leaning into the turns and discreetly using her travel-ready litter box at the appropriate times.
            What she lacks in conversational substance, Ike makes up for by being a remarkable listener. Watching yellow stripes blink by on the asphalt always makes me apt to take advantage of a captive audience, so I take her silence as an invitation. “No te muevas, Ike,” I tell her. “Todo bien, bambina.”
            I speak a version of racetrack Spanish that is functional but still makes me sound like a cheerful yet pitiably optimistic village idiot. But I love it, because every Spanish word I have was a gift from a specific person in this whirlwind. I learned the words “dry” and “dead” and “rat” from a Guatemalan groom in one spectacularly unfortunate incident during my first summer in Saratoga Springs.  
The first of those summers, the year before Ike joined me, I rented a room from an English rider/equine dentist who had been on the track since he was a teenager living in Italy, England, and up and down the eastern United States. In his upstate New York home, he has footage of himself as a gangly teenager in a British television special, a dog from his first marriage, and a box of old coins he found on the beaches of Pisa. These are the things that tie his life together, no matter how broken the geography becomes. If these were his constants, his footholds, then Ike soon became mine.
But please, also understand this: Ike is horrible. She knows this, prefers this, and makes no apologies for the red lines she leaves on my arms or for the puncture wounds she inflicts on people she doesn’t like. Like most problems of this nature, her antisocial and embarrassing behaviors are rooted in insecurity. By the age of three weeks, Ike was already familiar with loss, self-reliance, and the art of playing a sucker. She finds comfort in her own box of familiar items. Given a choice, she would prefer to sleep in her pet taxi instead of on the pillows I set out for her. She quickly rejects gifts from well-meaning friends to play with a ragged set of mini-foam soccer balls she’s been batting around for years.  These are her constants, the anchors in her hurricane.
The winter after Ike tumbled into my life, her social awkwardness made it impossible for us to stay with any of my past roommates and their pets. The season had once again shifted, and we were headed south to Florida. That meant we were flotsam again, in need of a roommate and a room for the winter. When I told my prospective new roommate about Ike, she said she wasn’t worried. She had Moxie.  
Moxie was a sleek, beautiful black terror. Though usually kind, Moxie was cunning, agile, defensive, and quick to snap. Maybe it was because life hadn’t been fair to Moxie. She had been a sick orphan when my roommate had taken her in off of a cold New England racetrack. I had initially hoped that Moxie would be a kindred spirit for Ike, a fellow wandering soul. Instead, the two cats paced the apartment like gunslingers, filling our home with tension for the entire four months of our stay. I wondered at times if it was life on the road that had turned Moxie into the ruthless creature she was. My roommate was prone to occasional bursts of vulgarities that, had she the means, Moxie would have also employed. This lifestyle of constant upheaval requires an existential calm, and an ability to body-surf on the waves of a tsunami. Maybe Moxie had simply had enough of it, or maybe she had developed a different skill. She didn’t surf the tsunami, she raised an angry middle claw to it.    
She and my roommate moved on, the way racetrackers do, and by the following winter, Ike and I found ourselves back in South Florida settling into a converted garage I had found on Craigslist. Things had stared out normally enough. Laura, my landlady and housemate, was in her mid-forties, glad to have a comforting ear to listen to her troubles about getting her 22 year old Ethiopian boyfriend into the country. They had only met a few times two years ago while he was visiting Chicago, but this, she assured me, over frozen wontons and box wine, was real. Gil, down the hall, went to high school with Laura. Funny thing, he would say often and loudly, he and Laura weren’t even really friends in high school. Back then, you know, he was the school soccer star. Life had slowed for him lately, though, and he spent his days with a tanning screen and a gold necklace in the back yard. A sorrowful matted Persian cat roamed the house, and I spent much of my time apologizing for Ike’s antagonistic behavior towards him.
One month in, I knew it was time to cut my losses. I’d packed my things the night before, and by eleven o’clock the following morning, Ike and I were on the move. Once again, I found myself in a mid-size car surrounded by the things that give my life the illusion of structure. My entire life was packed around me, punctuated by a sarcastic cat in the backseat.
“Lista, bambina?” I said.
Of course she was ready. I turned the key, and we were off.