Jun 12
Stray Fur
Posted by Diana in animals, life, memories, pets on 06 12th, 2010| icon32 Comments »

Our first stray was a cat. It was around Christmas-time and I was probably no more than 6 years old. It was customary in the family – back then – to deck the living room in basking glory (that means putting up a huge-ass tree that barely fits through the doorway and throw the boxloads of new, old and inherited ornaments on it … then, as an afterthought, plant the nativity scene – all old and stinking of mold – underneath). My mom tells that this particular year a cat started coming around. It was a dark colored cat, clean and well kept. It looked more like a lost cat than a cat born on the streets. I used to put out a tiny saucer of milk for him and pet him (or her?) for a while.

Then, one day, my mother had the brightest idea of them all: bring the cat in! And then go out. Yes. Leave the feline unattended … with a huge-ass fir treeeeeeee!

You know where the tree ended up, right?

And you know where the cat went, right?

After that, the strays that appeared were only fed, not brought in. I remember this black pup that came every afternoon to get his customary buscuit. This wasn’t a stray, he was a neighbor’s dog, but I liked to think of him as partly mine anyway. That’s why his demise under the tires of a car was a bit more painful than it should’ve been. His absence after that was my first taste of what happens when something you love goes away.

All the while, we’d been proud family to a small pack of white poodles. My parents started off with two (male & female), to pair them off and get at least one litter of purebred white poodles. At one point, there were about 6 or 7 puppies running around the house (additional to momma and pappa poodle). I was a very happy toddler, I had the best playmates ever! What else could I ask for?

Fuck playing with other kids! Dogs are AWESOME!

Things changed: we moved, my parents got divorced, time passed… eventually only one dog remained from the vast empire of curls: Laika, the original female (a sort of Eve). Then I brought in Sasha, handpicked by my grandfather to be our next canine companion at home. Some years after that, I got my first true stray: Lucky.

Lucky was a black kitten. I found her under a tree, mewing her lungs off. I glimpsed her mother’s body squished in the middle of the road. I couldn’t resist. I knelt on the floor, opened my arms, and Lucky came home. I took her to the ved, fed her, cared for her, and all was fine until the day one of my family members left the door open. After that she never came back inside (mostly because my father’s boxer wouldn’t let her). I was later told that she was sighted alive and well, in the wilderness of our yard (which was pretty expansive), nursing a litter. I guess muy job was complete.

That was 1999 and, after that, I didn’t get a stray for the longest while.Pets came and went: 2nd and 3rd generation litters from the pets we already had, adoptions, hand-me-downs. I had the most tragic deaths in 2003 – my 4 dogs, Sasha included, died in a fire that destroyed everything I had. It took me a while longer to realize I hadn’t been the best pet caretaker. Two adoptions later – both resulting in handing them over to someone better suited for the job – I finally had my first era of my life without a pet. And lord, did it suck!

Eze and I got a hamster to fill that void. Medea was the cutest thing – totally tame, 0 hamster bites in her year of life. She died a terrible death: tumors killed her off slowly. It was a painful thing to watch and I cried her death for the longest you can cry a hamster death. After that, I was certain I was ready to care for a dog again.

A few years later, Caprica came. A friend called me one night to tell me that her kids’ tutor had found two puppies abandoned in a park nearby. I asked about the approximate age of the pups: I knew I didn’t have the time to bottle feed weeks-old puppies. I went there next day, committed to at least help the woman out to find a place that would take good care of the pups. When I arrived, she said someone else had already adopted the male pup. Only the female was left: a tiny tuft of hair and mange, dotted with the teeniest ticks, still smelling of mother’s milk. My first thought was that I wasn’t ready to take on this. Hell, that was my first, second and third thought, for the next 3 hours. I brought her into my car inside of a small cardboard box, and I set course toward Humacao, looking for a no-kill shelter I had heard about. As it turns out, no one in Humacao knew about the shelter, no one could point me in the right direction. I drove around, lost, for the next few hours, and the puppy was so well behaved, she only voiced discomfort once, as I proceeded to step out of the car in a gas station to ask for directions.

I remember she woke up when I stopped the car, looked at me, and yelped twice loudly, as if saying “What the hell is taking so long?”. I fell in love right there and then. A pup that could withstand hours riding around in a  car without crying or peeing on my seat was a special pup. She stayed. We named her Caprica, after the home planet in our favorite sci-fi series, BSG. She made our lives more complicated, more expensive, more difficult… but also, much more pleasant. She was our first child.

..she spent her first 3 months with that startled look on her face. I guess she wasn't expecting to be rescued..

After that, we were pretty content. We had a run-in with a stray dove: fed her for a few weeks – a very complicated thing to do – and eventually realized Eze’s father could do a better job at it, so we took her to his house, where a stray cat promptly killed her with a swift swipe of the paw. We also got a second stray dog, bigger than Caprica herself. We quickly took her to Eze’s parents’ home, but she apparently had a taste for freedom, and she ran away successfully on her second attempt.

A year and a half after Caprica came into our lives, we got our last stray.  I was driving to the supermarket on a Sunday morning, and the tiniest cat crossed the road right in front of my car. I saw another car pass over him, I remember I yelped “Noooo!” and stopped dead on my tracks. Thankfully, the pickup truck on the next lane took my cue and stopped too, ‘cuz when we came around, we found the cat clinging to their front tire. He was a mess of oil-ridden hair and eye secretions. I grabbed him, got him in my car and took him to the nearest vet, thinking that they would take him in. No luck, except the attendant was nice enough to give me a box to put the cat in. I kept him that night, bathed him and cleaned his eyes, with the idea to take him to the shelter the next day. The next day was a holiday. The cat stayed – to Eze’s chagrin. And after that, I had already named named him. He was definitely mine.

Thing about strays is: in my case, these animals have proved to be the most thankful critters, capable of infinite affection. They both came into my lives with a slew of diseases and conditions that have cost me more money than what I have, but it’s been worth it. I’m not sorry in the leastest bit of having taken them in. They were born on the streets, but they have become family, and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Happiness is a bundle of fur and legs.

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May 24
Lostie Prom Night
Posted by Diana in animals, fiction, life, scifi, tv on 05 24th, 2010| icon31 Comment »

Prom never felt so right. Last night was the long-awaited Lost series finale. After years of Tuesday get-togethers at Pepe’s house, this would be the last official TV-crew gathering. Every Tuesday for the last few years we’d get together, bring popcorn, cupcakes, wine, beer, whiskey, chips, etc, and have a geek-out feast. We also did this for Battlestar Galactica and Heroes, but these series are long finished and gone (or have been horribly malformed! Sorry, Heroes!). Lost is the last of its kind, so this one finale brings with it a taste of sadness and nostalgia… much like prom, you’re saying good-bye to Lostie classmates.

So a number of friends, slightly more than the ordinary TV-crew, agreed to meet up for the last time at Pepe’s house. And, like we do in cases in which some of us are traveling from more or less the same area, a few of these friends decided to meet up at my house first so we could carpool to Pepe’s. This is where the fun starts.

First we had Cecilia (one of Eze’s coworkers, charming as a button) come to our house in dire need of a shower. She’s been camping out at the Río Piedras campus during the strike, so she had no cell phone to call us up and let us know she was there, so she proceeded to climb the condo’s fence and then call out Eze’s name like a madwoman. In the process she got a tear in her lovely sundress, and as soon as she came up laughing her head off (she was slightly drunk), I knew it was going to be an epic night.

We carpooled there: Cecilia, Lynnie, Josian, Katiuska, Eze & I, and when we got there, the house was already full! (as I used to say to my sister on those Saturdays of yore: “Caaaasa llena!”) We arrived with more than an hour to spare, so we did what we always do when there’s a lull or pause in our TV-watching activities: we ate and we drank, we sat outside to talk shit and smoke, etc… And then I see Ceci come out from the kitchen juggling three plastic cups full to the brim, and she offers me two (one for me, one for Lynnie). I think *Hey, that looks like a handful, I should help her out and grab those two in her left hand* … always follow your hunches. I went to grab one and the second one cascaded on me.

Let's tint those clothes red!

Oh, the contents? Calimocho: a delicious mix of Coca Cola and wine. Thankfully, the top I was wearing was red. Not so lucky that my pants were a beige-y tone of gray: now I had a map of burgundy continents down my legs. I walked in and headed to the bathroom, where I tried a few on-the-spot solutions for the wine stains: commercial spot removers, hand sanitizer, and ultimately took my pants off and washed them off with Ivory.  Suffice it to say, I spent the rest of the night wearing wet pants.

The Lost finale in itself: there’s not much I can say that hasn’t been said. The event has been a mediatic carnival: people have either loved or hated what happened there. The one thing that I can say without being biased: the series was 6 full years of buildup on a fan-base that was as hardcore as they get. People obsessed over the tiniest little details, and read into every single line uttered in that show. I think it would’ve been unreasonable to expect EVERY viewer to love the finale. So many expectations were on the line with those last 2.5 hours, that some of those had to fall through. Some people felt it was a cop-out (memories of likewise comments about BSG’s finale come to me). I think it was an unconventional happy ending in a time in which morbid cynicism is the expected norm, and that took guts. Lost shall be missed, to some extent as the compelling story we grew to love and obsess about, and then as the easy motive to gather around each week as a family to watch a narrative that gave us topics to pore over for hours and hours.

…however, why the FUCK can’t dogs go to heaven!? C’mon, Damon & Lindeloff! What gives!

Vincent, we will miss you!

Vincent, we will miss you!

He’s probably hanging out with BSG’s Jake in a place way cooler than the island or Jack’s heaven.

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May 20
While I wait, a riot begins.
Posted by Diana in academia, animals, life on 05 20th, 2010| icon3No Comments »

Getting mentally ready for the snip snip on Gallifrey’s balls. I was instructed to withdraw his food since 8pm tonight. That means withdrawing his food and Caprica’s food – and their water –  as well (Gallifrey is not a very discerning cat, he’ll eat dog food as happily as his own cat chow). The house feels a bit empty. Vero is at work and Eze is out and about recording for #EnProfundo. I think Caprica knows something is not right.

..she knows something's amiss..

I’m almost sure Caprica would go into a depression if Gallifrey ever went missing…

On another note, this is the new turn on things going on in the UPR strike:

The police of PR spending our dollar so well...

Students and other interested parties went to protest at the Sheraton Hotel. Governor Fortuño was holding an activity in this hotel in which people were paying $1000 per plate… this in a system in which we’re being told there’s not enough money to uphold a functional budget for the public university. Protesting students were approached by the riot police… and you know how these things go. Next thing we know, they’ll be heading towards Río Piedras campus…

Things are getting out of hand…

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May 12

..look at the crazee eyes..

Gallifrey started acting strange a couple of days ago. It’s not a constant thing, not like going apeshit on things and people 24-7. But the other night he started getting specially close and personal with my face. And then he bit. Not a hard bite, which made it the more odd. It was playful, but insistent. I didn’t think much of it until I saw him doing it to Caprica (our female dog). He nibbled at her neck, and next thing I know, he’s trying to mount her like she’s Nikki the Sexy Kitten! Interspecies erotica my ass!

Of course, Caprica thought it was all games, and being way bigger than he is, she shook him off and pounced on him. Poor Gallifrey looked more confused than a guy that just paid $100 in girlie drinks and then got left at the bar cuz the chick took off with her “best friend”.

But I realized that it was time, what I had put off because of money issues, time issues… Gallifrey has to be neutered. Last night he woke up Ezequiel with his loud and insistent meows. The feline Casanova is going through a male heat of sorts, I guess, feeling frisky and all that. Which is fine and dandy, until he starts trying to bite my wrist into submission. It’s the same bewildering and humiliating feeling as when your female dog starts humping your leg.

... sorry!

My main concern was money, but hey, apparently my cat can smell money as well as any car! I just got paid for the one day I worked at the Census office (long story…). I get $60 in and $45 out, leaving me with $15 which are going nowhere, ‘cuz I can smell it: that cat is gonna need a special medicine or special food or something. He’s the goddamned money-sniffer.

I should take him to the beach, maybe he’ll help me dig up next month’s rent…

Yo, dude! Your cat seems to be a bit on the skinny side...

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May 6

summer-sunSemester is ending, and the fact that I haven’t posted here regularly has been nagging me like a tiny fly in the back of my mind. Some would say that school is to blame for the lack of blogging, but in my case, I think it may be Twitter.:-/ Microblogging killed regular blogging. Sad.

I have 2 final exams to contend with: I’m not quite ready for either, and being sick (again!) hasn’t helped much. I’ve missed more classes these past few weeks than I did the rest of the semester. Bad move on my part, but I couldn’t help it. However, I’m confident I’ll be able to pull through and pass both courses with good grades.

Another time-consumer has been Fotutos y Cuchufletes: my latest project – I’d say my first organized and money-making project. It’s been slow on the takeoff, but I’ve received great feedback mostly. On Monday, I’ll be taking the merch out for a spin at an artisan’s faire in the Hospital del Maestro in Hato Rey. We’ll see if that can help me gather up enough funds to pay for the car and the marbete this month.

There’s also the arrival of the cat, Gallifrey. Two weeks and a half ago, a kitten crossed my path, quite literally, to results very similar to Caprica’s. He had his eyes entirely covered with secretions due to conjunctivitis and couldn’t see where he was going, so he ended up crawling up a truck’s tire. He could have died, but instead he burst into my life with his toilet-paper-wasting ways. He’s much better now (conjunctivitis is gone, his respiratory tract infection is still being taken care of, and stomach parasites have been erradicated!), and making our lives more … interesting.

So, summer is arriving and it looks promising, to say the least. Possibilities of a summer job have arised, let’s see if they materialize. If they do, I’ll have the strangest job in my life yet, and it will most probably be fun too. No more details until I know for sure.

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