Accidental Blogger

A general interest blog

Animals entered my life very early. Since I was about four or five years old until I was a teenager, a parade of dogs and birds came through our home. I would become attached to every one of them and their death or disappearance invariably caused me grief. Even though all the family members were involved in the care of the pets, my mother noted that I tended to become unusually close to them. I was always very fond of cats but except for the occasional stray cat that was fed fish scraps and platters of milk outside the home, in the courtyard or the verandah, a pet feline had never lived with us. That changed in 1974 when one afternoon in New Delhi, I brought home a beautiful ginger and white kitten (probably a couple of weeks old) handed over to me by a group of frantic children on the street who were trying to save him from a big dog. I named him Tuni and he charmed the entire household with his friendly demeanor and beautiful looks. Tuni disappeared one day and never came back, leaving all of us sad and helpless. Many years later, (Omaha, 1991) at the urging of my son, we adopted a pair of kitties. They were brothers and we called them Raja and Ali. Playful, loving, friendly, each with his idiosyncratic ways, they kept us and each other engaged for many years. Raja succumbed to cancer in 2005 at the age of fourteen despite many heroic efforts on our part and that of our cats' wonderful vet, Dr. Cheryl Stanley. For the last five and a half years his brother Ali became my sole feline companion. Ali died at home last Saturday (January 15, 2011) peacefully, gracefully – suffering  from no discernible illness, pain or distress. He had been steadily losing weight in the last one year but there was really nothing much else wrong with him. He had slowed down but continued to enjoy life till the very end. Four months short of his twentieth birthday, he just drifted away due to old age. His death came rapidly and although I was not prepared for it, it was probably the best thing for him. The following is a message I wrote to a friend soon after his death. It captures my immediate and spontaneous recollection of the last hours with Ali and needless to say, at a time when I was very, very sad. 

The house feels eerily weird. I have been functioning in a zoned-out way since yesterday. This morning was particularly hard when I got up from bed and Ali was not waiting for me to tend to him and serve him his breakfast.

Ali had been showing his age in the last year or so but had remained in good health overall. Last Thursday evening, he began to show weakness in his hind legs and started to fall down while walking. He still was able to go to the bathroom and to his water bowl on his own. Since Friday morning his condition took a steady turn for the worse and he was having great difficulty in walking more than a few steps. Although he continued to drink water, he did not eat anything at all. On Saturday morning, we took him to see Dr. Stanley, his vet of many years, for an emergency visit . His weight was a mere 4.4 pounds, down from the already low 5.3 just a month ago. (Ali had weighed between 12 – 13 pounds in his prime) He was fading fast. The doctor said that although he did not seem to be in pain, all his systems were shutting down gradually and she predicted that he would not last the night. She gave us the choice of either euthanizing him or letting him die at home in his own time. Since he was not in pain or in any obvious distress, we decided to bring him home. Sudhir and I kept vigil over him – he was by our side all the time. Gradually, he seemed to go deeper and deeper into oblivion. He seemed to stir only on hearing my voice.

Around 4:45pm, he stopped breathing and his heart stopped after a few long breaths. He was in my lap with Sudhir beside us. Amazingly enough, half an hour prior to that he had opened his eyes, raised his head, looked at me, meowed a few times and gently bitten my arm. After that he became completely quiet, except for his breathing which became shallower by the minute. I don't know what his final movement and meowing meant, whether he even knew me by then. But I will always remember that last gesture as his way of saying goodbye.

I had a hard time when Raja died of cancer five years ago. But Ali kept me going in his absence, forcing me to tend to his routine. Now Sudhir and I are feeling disoriented without a cat around us. Our human children left home a long time ago and the cats kept the home lively with their child like presence and playfulness. I think with Ali gone, we have now become empty-nesters in the true sense of the word. I know that we will adjust, focusing on other things. It will be a different kind of life. But that's okay. Ali died the way he deserved to go – surrounded by love. Over time, I am sure the painful thoughts of Ali's last hours will be replaced by memories of the good times we had together, just  as it was for Raja and Tuni whose death and disappearance too were devastating for me. 

I don't know how one takes an honest measure of one's life but if it is by counting the cats we have loved, it is probably as good a yard stick as any.

Raja-Ali-1 (From left to right: Ali and Raja)

Tuni-2 (Tuni)

(I rarely write anything so personal on the blog. My husband and son urged me to write it in order to come to terms with Ali's absence in my life from now on.  Our animal companions are some of the best people we know.)

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9 responses to “Some of my best friends …”

  1. RIP, Ali.
    Ruchira, I’m so sorry for your loss.

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  2. Sukrita

    It’ll be difficult, so difficult for the vacuum to be filled up. Be strong and yes, think of the good times you had with Ali. Thank God, he passed away without pain and after saying good bye peacefully.

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  3. narayan

    My condolences, Ruchira. I too miss the little buggers, and some not so little ones, who have passed through my life, all adoptees of friends and neighbors. Bess and Bishop were more loyal to me during their dog life-spans than my friends’ children have been, going beserk with recognition in appreciation of my occasional visits. Sam-I-am, my neighbors’ tiger, had a spot under my bed that he preferred to his own posh home. I let him into my life, despite an acute allergy, because I was captivated by the frankly human look in his eyes when he showed up at my door. Years after his death he still shows up randomly, as a screen saver on my Mac. His is the only framed portrait in my home.

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  4. “I don’t know how one takes an honest measure of one’s life…”.
    Ruchira,
    Someone told me, once, that the mark of a good person is being held in high esteem by little children and small animals. They are our de facto character references. No doubt, Ali would have confirmed how highly you were regarded. Peace!

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  5. Dean C. Rowan

    I read this yesterday, and it’s been on my mind ever since. So sorry, Ruchira, to read the sad news. But this is a lovely tribute.

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  6. Anna

    Sad news. The shorter life spans of cats and dogs presents a repeated source of grief. My son, Sam, six months old, is absolutely smitten by our cat, Monty, who is almost nine years old. Monty– a fierce stray I adopted in law school, loving, but independent and not afraid to use her claws on most adults– is uncharacteristically gentle with the baby, purring and butting him gently with her head, or flicking her tail across his cheek, much to his delight. I am delighted by their interactions, but have found myself entertaining the dark thought that their attachment means that at some point in his childhood, Sam will learn what it’s like to lose a beloved animal companion. I remember from my own childhood how painful that is. Still, the pleasure outweighs the pain, of course, and Ali’s life was both longer than most, and his passing more gentle. As Sujatha said, rest in peace.

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  7. Thanks everyone, for understanding.
    I am much more composed now although little things are tripping me up still. On entering the home, I automatically look at the kitchen chair where Ali usually used to sit most of the time. When I pass all the other spots in the house where Ali liked to hang around, I still expect to see him and am jarred back to reality when I don’t see him. The empty places where his food and water bowls were and that he doesn’t clamber up on my back when I sleep, are things that I am having a hard time getting used to. But as I know from prior experience, this too shall pass. The painful thoughts will be replaced by happy memories of his good looks, quirky personality and friendly spirit.
    Anna makes the point about cost – benefit ratio of the pleasures of living with a pet and the painful actuarial probability of losing them. As I have indicated, I have gone through this cycle several times. I wrote this unusually personal post partly to share my experience with like minded readers and partly to mark the end of a chapter in my life. I don’t think Sudhir and I will adopt another animal at this stage of our lives. We would have considered it if we had close family members living in town. But with advancing age, we realize that caring for a cat or a dog will require the kind of energy that is on the wane for both of us. As Ali grew older, I found that leaving him in the care of a pet sitter (she cared for both my cats for years and is extremely kind and dependable) and my neighbors to look in on him when we went on trips, was becoming an unacceptable option. He did not take well to prolonged solitude, not so much for his physical needs but emotional security. In fact, I was very uncomfortable when Sudhir and I were in Hawaii last summer for eight days even though Ali was in rather good shape at the time. I called my neighbor every day. Since that time, we have not taken a trip together, convinced that at least one of us needed to be with him at home.

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  8. Usha Nagpal

    So sorry for your loss Ruchira. Your comments struck home with force because my bitch, cuddly has been with me for 14 years and she is blind and old and emotionally very insecure. i tell myself every single day that i should be prepared for her passing away but the day she does not eat or if she has slept a long time without snoring, i am scared to touch her in case she has stopped breathing. I have been advised by many to keep another pet before something happens to her but i aways say–cuddly and i are running a race and both are near the finishing line–neither can afford to leave the other alone. Her son, scotty, who was closest to me having a child of my own died suddenly and i can still not talk about him without tears. Yes, the pain will pass the ache will remain.
    usha nagpal

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  9. I am really sorry for your loss Ruchira..I know it gives a lot of pain when we miss someone who is very close to us..And i would like to suggest you to get a new one in order to keep yourself happier..

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