Walnut Room this way

Walnut Room this way
Rio.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Rest in Peace, Felix

Felix was the kitty we saved in the winter of 2010.  She and Oscar were great buds in the beginning, though Felix had not been around during the time I was in South Africa.  I went out last Monday morning to go to work and she was over in the woods, though, so I fed her.  She looked pretty skinny at the time, and I had not seen her since.

We found her last night at the bottom of the driveway.  It was not possible to know if it was due to being hit by a car, having died a natural death, or at the hands of a predator.  Given the risks of feline leukemia in outdoor feral cats, I thought it the more likely verdict, but there is no way to know, nor does it really matter in the outcome.

It was sad--it always is to me--and you would think I would be used to the comings and goings of stray cats and dogs since my hill seems to be a favorite dumping ground for unwanted animals.  I am not used to it, though, and always feel a great burden for not having done more.  I feed them, try to seduce them to allow human interaction, but once they are older and have not been socialized to humans, it is pretty much a task beyond my skills apparently.  All I know is that they can eat regularly, have fresh water, shelter from the rain and cold, and not be in danger from the humans and animals who occupy this hill.

I have been sick for 3 weeks now: the final two weeks of my South Africa trip and the week since I have been home.  It makes me feel more despondent than I might otherwise.  There is always the toll that international travel takes on the body, and when I am in South Africa--in spite of the many wonderful experiences and the love and joy I experience there--there is an emotional toll as well.  I simply cannot look at the vast need there and not experience a sense of overwhelming emotion--not so much because the need is there, but because humans have intentionally created it and many seem oblivious to its presence or feel any sense of responsibility that it is there.

It always is hard to re-adjust to being back home again, and things seem a little dimmer at times those first few days back in the routine.  Couple that with illness that just doesn't seem to get better, and then finding Felix, and it makes for a sense of helplessness that I know only a few more days will heal.  I think what hits me at times like this is that sense of mortality: that there are finite limits to what I or we can do, and that all of our days are numbered.  I know it will pass, and soon I will be back standing in the possibilities that are all around us.  But for today, I mourn.

4 comments:

frank_ezelle said...

Sorry to hear about Felix and that you've been under the weather for several weeks. Sometimes events in life just pile up to the point where being in a funk in unavoidable. Fortunately, things always seem to get better with time.

Frank

Suzassippi said...

Thanks, Frank. It does always get better.

Gigi said...

Oh, this makes me sad. So sorry about Felix and it is definitely harder to cope with things when you are not feeling well. Hope you will soon be feeling better. And thanks for taking care of all the strays. You always do more than most people would (in many areas of life, as a matter of fact). You are appreciated.

Suzassippi said...

Thank you for your kind words, JP. It is better today; I am on the path to recovery.