WHERE IS 'MISTER?'
How come Mister doesn’t
purr? Isn’t that supposed to be one of
those automatic responses that defines the feline species? Highly unusual, said
my veterinarian. But on that recent visit to the vet, he was filled with praise
for Mister – his svelte physique – so sleek and trim for an indoor cat. He’s clearly running up and down stairs all
day, he said. I felt like such a proud
parent as he continued to extoll the virtues of my cat – his healthy teeth
(IAMS) and his curiosity. When I discussed how obsessed he seems to be with the
outdoors, he said Mister is from the jungle.
Mister is indeed enthralled
with the outside world and begs each morning for the “swindow” as I’ve written
about on day 2 of the SOL challenge. We
have kept him as an indoor cat, because I fear the potential dangers of the
outside world: too many cars, too many scary scenarios lurking out there. But
Mister has a past.
We used to let him out in the
backyard in the summer. It seemed close
to impossible and just not ethically justifiable to deprive him of the
beautiful outside world. I would garden,
and he would frolic. He’d roll around in the grass and chase birds and run
halfway up the tree. He’d meander in the brush and try to grab bugs around the
bushes. We would make a barbecue and eat dinner outside, and he was thrilled to
explore.
All was joyful until that
fateful day in September when we were outside after finishing dinner around
dusk, and we didn’t know where he was.
He had always been in our field of vision. But this time, he was nowhere
to be found. Mister, Mister! I begged: where are you? We searched all around the yard and beyond
but he was nowhere to be found. We went
inside and assumed he’d be at the door in the morning.
But Mister was gone – for two
weeks and two days! Over a
fortnight! Every day I would take walks
and search under cars and look in open garages and cry out for Mister. I begged the universe, I beseeched the
heavens to return Mister to us. We put
up signs and enlisted the aide of local kids on bicycles, and the neighborhood
was on high alert.
I believed after two weeks
that he was gone. He was 11 months old,
and maybe off to live with another family, or perhaps… I started looking at new
sofas thinking I no longer had a kitten/cat, and may as well replace the old
scratched up sofa. A consolation prize.
And then it was a Sunday, day
16. We had come back from food shopping, and I automatically opened the back
door, just in case, and I heard a meow – and there was Mister - at the back
door with turquoise collar in tact – and he walked in, as if “What’s the big
deal?” We squealed, we cried, we called my daughters… To hug him again was such
a gift!
I guess some long for the outdoors more than others. Our cats seemed content to sit in the sun near the window ...
ReplyDeleteI love this post so much! We have one outdoor cat and he has been on two Rumspringas, we are convinced. I could not bear to let the other 2 out. The pain of never seeing Mister again, like our, Ray, is so not right. I'm so glad Mister is home!
ReplyDeleteI have never had cats and find them to be so aloof; you capture his independence starting with the mystery of his physique and his lacking hiss. Pair this with the description of his adventure from your perspective, and it seems he is simply carefree, a bachelor of sorts. Wonder if a slice from his point of view might be in the cards. Would love to know where you think he could have ventured.
ReplyDeleteNever heard of a cat that doesn't purr...definitely unusual!
ReplyDelete"But Mister has a past." Great line to pull me in.
ReplyDelete