Monday, November 24, 2014

Kira

I wasn't expecting Kira to be the next one to go on the critical list. After all, Arbee is the oldest, and Neelix has had cancer for a year. Even Chatterbox is older. But about three weeks ago, something completely sucked her personality out of her.

Three vets have no answers. Everything in her body checks out fine. So it must be a brain tumor. And she has all the symptoms of that, walking in circles, restlessness, bumping into things, just wanting to sleep and hide. She doesn't hear me go into the laundry room anymore. She doesn't ask to go out. She doesn't remember to eat unless you put the food under her face. She might use the litter box if you put her in it.

How could she have changed so much in just three weeks?

An MRI to detect a brain tumor is $1,000 or more. And there's really no affordable or humane treatment. When the last vet told me what she thought, I asked her what do people usually do? She said they reach a point where they can't stand the walking in circles part, sometimes it goes on all night, the pet never sleeps. And when you can't bear it any longer, you put her down.

She was such an affectionate cat, and had such a rough start in life, abandoned to live in the woods and kept having litters before she was even two. (We actually have two of her sons.) Finally, I just took her away from her so-called owner, catnapped her one afternoon. Between the parasites, fleas, July heat, and lack of food, she was about to die anyway. She was cross-eyed and losing her fur.

So I don't know. We'll see how much of this we can survive. Both of us will try.

(Jan. 2015 -- After two courses of Prednisone, she seems to be her old self again. She took her last pill of the prescription last week, so we'll see if the symptoms come back.)

The first week with us.

And she turned into this.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

The Two New Ones

BeeGee has been sleeping inside for nearly a year and a half now after a year of being just a neighborhood stray that came by for food. She summers in a cardboard box under my desk and winters in a walk-in closet. I can tell the seasons have changed because she moved into the closet recently. She still always thinks she wants to go out, but after an hour or two changes her mind and runs back to the door. I know she wants me to pick her up and bring her in when she turns her back to me and doesn't run away. She has not socialized with any of the other cats still. No confidence. Has yet to explore the rest of the house. Just knows how to get to this kitchen stool, the closet, the front door, or the box under my desk.

Mackie was the neighborhood stray who came for breakfast and dinner for nearly three years. Unless he's actually the cat we called Sylvester who was coming around since 2004, and then stopped. Is this Sylvester or a relative? Anyway, March 2014 I managed to grab him and cage him and get him fixed. After that success, I would try to grab him again on spring rainy nights and bring him in. He'd hide under the sofa. Then we got to the point where if I slept on the sofa, he would come up and sleep on it, too. Now he sleeps in our bed and doesn't care much for going out, and it's only been about seven months. He has not left our yard since he moved in. We think he used to live in the attic of a rundown garage across the street. He is a very affectionate cat. Lots of head butts and cuddling with his ear to my heart.

The Outlook Isn't Brilliant for the Catville Eight

Seven developed a hematoma in his ear, which required surgery, a drain, and actual buttons sewn into his ear. $288.00

Neelix has survived his cancer a year now, but his bimonthly checkups runs about $356.

Something has gone wrong with Kira. She's been lethargic for three days. But her temperature is normal, nothing seems to be amiss, but the vet I like the very least -- and the only one open until 7 p.m., wanted $422 to do bloodwork, test for leukemia, do some kind of cholesterol and vetscan, urinalysis, pancreatic lipase, cystocentesis, etc. It was late on a Thursday night. I just couldn't stand it. I need Kira to pull out of this on her own somehow. Or I need to talk to the vets I like first. We settled on a pencillin shot, dexamethasone, and a hydration for $156, which got done so quickly, I wonder how much fluid she actually got. She just wants to lay on the heat vent. She eats and drinks if you bring it to her, pees and poops if you put her in the box, but doesn't yell about going outside, doesn't prance around the house, doesn't do anything.

Meanwhile, Seven's cone, drain and buttons came off and he seems to have a permanently disfigured ear now despite all the buttons.

Monday, July 14, 2014

A Set Back - Cancer Cat Episode 11

Neelix weighed in at only 7.6 lbs today, which was shocking. That's almost two pounds less. The tumor has grown, so missing a week of meds in May and a week last week because of vomiting either made a bad difference, or the cancer is just progressing. So we are now doing four pills a week instead of six to give his stomach a break, and he goes in again in three weeks to have the tumor measured.

If it keeps growing, then we switch pills to something else. And if it keeps growing, it kills him. Or I have to make a decision. Meanwhile, he behaves like always.

The tumor is the mound under the right corner of the eye on the left.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Trial Run to the End - Cancer Cat Episode 10

I thought Neelix was getting ready to leave. July, after all, is only a couple of weeks away, and we have lost two cats in July. On a Tuesday night, he was dry heaving. Wednesday, he was listless and not interested in food. Thursday I was force feeding him water from an eye dropper, and he still didn't want food. Thursday night I called the oncologist, but it was 30 minutes from a three-day weekend for them and they said wait until morning and go to my regular vet.

I got an appointment for noon. He was furious at the blood test, the bag of fluids, and just being there, but everything came back normal and $310 later, it was determined the problem was gas on the stomach and a thickening of his intestines, which I didn't understand what that meant, but it was something that could be relieved with Metronidazole benzoate and some over the counter slivers of Pepcid AC. By the time we got home, he was ready to try a little food. Just the fluids alone must have perked him. The next day he was eating normally, but we haven't resumed his cancer treatment yet. I checked with the oncologist on Monday and they said 2-3 days after he resumes normal behavior.

My stomach hurts. 

Sunday, June 08, 2014

Mackie Becomes a Whole Different Cat

Mackie continues to surprise us at how well he has adapted to being a now primarily indoor cat. In fact, he doesn't like to go out at all unless one of us is outside, and then he comes back in when we go in. If he gets left outside, he seems scared and uncertain, as if his indoor life was a just a dream and he's back in his reality.

But no, the reality is he's an indoor cat now that sleeps in our bed with us, and adjusted to the litter boxes easily. This after being an outdoor cat for two or three years, coming from where we don't know. Who raised him as a kitten? Because it seems unlikely he would have broken to the house this easily if he had not had some human contact as a kitten.

The thing that finally won him over completely was treats! He was so excited about the taste and crunch of them, he stopped hiding under the sunroom sofa and reconciled himself quickly to being on top of the sofa where treats were more likely to appear.

And unlike BeeGee, he's let the other cats approach him and get a sniff of him, so now most of them -- except Seven who still doesn't care for any of the cats who came after him except for the return of his mother -- have adjusted to him and they can all sit together on the sofa.

BeeGee is going to be much harder to win over, and if she is anything like Arbee, who after 15 years still doesn't let us pick her up, she may never adjust.

Sometimes I think the spirits of the cats who were here and have since gone -- Red, Merly, Callie -- entered Mackie because some of his new behaviors mimics them, especially Merly.

Mackie napping on top of a chair instead of under a sofa.


Monday, May 19, 2014

Neelix Update -- Month 7 - Cancer Cat Episode 9

Neelix is back from his May 2014 visit with the oncologist and nothing has changed except his weight. He is down to 9 pounds. He was 9.4 at his March visit, so he is losing two ounces a month. The tumor still has not impacted his vision, breathing or the roof of his mouth. His prescriptions were renewed. Today's fee was $326.44, with an additional $45 or so to renew his Piroxicam. They switched the compounding pharmacy from Wedgewood to DiamondBack, which seems to be in Arizona.

He is looking a little ratty-furred these days, which is how Red, Merly, Niki and Yoda got as they got old or very sick.
Update: June 8, 2014: He went through a long stage where the eye over the tumor kept running and a maroon colored crust would form. I learned to gently wash his whole head with a corner of a warm, damp washcloth, hoping it would feel like a mother's tongue to him. Right now that episode seems to have ended, his appetite is back and he seems bright and energetic again.

Monday, May 12, 2014

Neelix Reaches 12 - Cancer Cat Episode 8

We hit a milestone this week -- two in fact. Neelix reached 12 years old and is still the same cat except for that little tumor on his nose, which is still not growing, at least not growing out. If it's growing in, it hasn't interfered with his vision, breathing or ability to eat yet. Seven months since the diagnosis.

And we got our first GoFundMe donor, which opened the page up to the general public! And even the Lord made a contribution by making one of my grandmother's knick-knacks sell on eBay for several hundred dollars, which my sister very generously shared with my brother and me. And Fetch a Cure came through with another grant, which should cover his next two or three doctor appointments and blood work. So his medical bills may not quite drive me into bankruptcy yet.




Monday, February 10, 2014

Just Maintaining - Cancer Cat Episode 7

Neelix lost 4 ounces from Jan. 13 to Feb. 10, even though it seems to me he eats about as much as he always has. The doctor suggested the body is diverting some of the calories to fight the tumor. I was able to talk them into going to six weeks before the next blood test, although I started the negotiations by asking for two months, knowing I might be able to get a compromise of six weeks. The tumor has not grown.

They were out of Palladia, so he doesn't get his pill today.


Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Catch 22 - Cancer Cat Episode 6

Maybe I didn't read the fine print, or maybe they don't tell you this part until you register, but I need $100 worth of friends before I can meet strangers who might want to contribute to Neelix's cancer treatment.

I set up a page at a fundraising website called something like Go Fund Me, hoping maybe there was a community of cat ladies with spare money in the world who could all help me out with Neelix's bills. My page turned out fairly well.

Except I can't have my page posted to their website until my own network of friends, who I was instructed to send the link to via my Facebook and Twitter accounts -- and you are required to have a Facebook account to participate -- contribute the first $100. Only then do you get promoted to the larger network where people you don't know, all the worldwide community of cat ladies, might see your page.

So, strangers, here's the link.

Help me out!

Saturday, January 18, 2014

January 2014 Check Up - Cancer Cat Episode 5

Neelix gained three ounces in two weeks.  His condition is stable. The tumor is not growing, but still there. He continues to take Palladia and Piroxicam, one alternating pill every day but Sunday. My husband has developed a method that usually gets him to swallow it the first time. With one, the blue pill, he has to wear chemo gloves. With the yellow pill, he does not.

I owe $1,315.25 to the Care Credit, the card I am charging my vet bills to.

According to one online chart I looked at, Neelix at 11 is equivalent to a 62-year-old human. At this point in a cat's life, every year is like approximately 10 human years, so when they tell me I am doing all this and paying all this to buy him maybe one year, it's kind of like 10 years, which is a lot. But not really.

Fetch-a-Cure was unable to do much more than cover the X-rays they required I get to submit a funding grant because I did not have a prognosis. The doctors cannot give me one because there's so little data on cat life expectation on these pills. Still, by accepting the small amount, I still have to volunteer 120 hours this year.

I have done five picking up holiday displays at vets and pet spas all over the north and west end of town. That was not difficult. I had taken the day off anyway because Chatterbox, the cat purchased to be Neelix's companion -- which did not work out -- had to have polyps removed from his ears that day.

Friday, January 03, 2014

The Story of Neelix


“Your son needs a therapist,” I told my husband, Bobby, when he came home.

“That’s what the vet said, he needs a therapist?”

“A behavioral therapist.”

It was no surprise. Just the previous week, Bobby had called me at work to tell me he could barely get into the house. “Your son knocked over the lamp and it blocked the front door like a barricade. I had to go in through the back door. And the stereo speakers were knocked off the shelf.”

Again, it was no surprise. He had also knocked a Pyrex tray of brownies off the kitchen counter, broke four sugar bowls, two glasses, a telephone, and a half dozen plates and saucers. If he can reach them – and somehow he does – he swings the photographs and bulletin boards on the wall until they come crashing down. Entire jars of spaghetti sauce have gone flying. I rush into the kitchen to find glass marinara.

I don’t know why he’s destroying our house when we have been the most superlative, doting parents to him. We took him in as an orphan when he was three weeks old and near death. We spared no expense to nurse him back to health. He sleeps in our bed, entwined in our hair.

He demands and receives three to four cans of whipped cream a week, and it cannot be a cheap brand. It must be the extra creamy with the blue top. What better life could a cat want?

We were living in a rented house surrounded by woods and I was employed in the job of my dreams, editor and jack-of-all-trades at a community newspaper. The work was a pleasure, the people in the office not so much. Many publishing jobs are not about producing a good, entertaining newspaper that equally inspires and enrages the citizens. Too many are about selling advertising and enriching the owners, and anything controversial in the paper that might lose a single advertiser becomes a crucible.

The first year, the managing editor who hired me was on my side. Then he left and I was fighting the good fight alone and suspected every issue would be my last. I survived one more year without him. As a comfort against the misery of knowing my days were numbered at the greatest job I ever had, I took home a cat who was hanging around outside the office. Lola was not the least bit attractive. Her coat had a little bit of every color in the cat hair universe, and the choice of colors around her face made her look dirty. But she had a great personality, friendlier than any of our three cats. She slept in our bed from the first night.

Before I realized how much I was going to like Lola, and how well she would fit in with our other cats, I wrote a story about her for the newspaper. Several people offered to adopt her. Then I got a call from a woman who claimed Lola was her son’s cat and actually named Harry, although it was a female. It seemed likely since they lived on the other side of the woods behind the newspaper office.

My heart sank when I returned Lola to them because it wasn’t a good environment for her. This woman and her small son were feeding a feral cat colony that lived in the woods. Lola, aka Harry, was the only tame cat in the colony and because the little boy could touch her, she was his favorite and mom wanted the favorite back. Lola had no chance of a good life in this environment, but I could hardly turn around and run off with her. The woman knew where I worked. I figured Lola would find her way back to the newspaper office and this time I would take her and tell no one. But she didn’t return until after I was fired. Employees I kept in touch with would send me emails about Lola-sightings from time to time. When I heard she was limping around and might have been injured, my heart broke, but I was still so humiliated at having been fired from the one job I was really good at, I couldn’t be seen hanging out there, waiting for Lola to show up. That was too pathetic.

All this set me up for Neelix, that and a charming little video of a fuzzy gray kitten falling asleep in a sitting position and then toppling over. Brenda, a co-worker at a former job, emailed it to me, with the note that she just happened to have a kitten that looked exactly like the one in the video and needed to find a home for it.

The kitten had the kind of desperate history that made it impossible for me to say no. Brenda’s son found a litter in the warehouse where he was working that summer. All the kittens were dead except for two. The mother was nowhere in sight. The boy brought both of them home, but Brenda already had two cats, so she carried them to the county shelter.

The next morning she had misgivings, so she called the shelter to retrieve them. One kitten had died during the night but the other was still alive, and barely. She picked him up and took him to the vet, got medicine for his worms and various ills and washed the fleas off him. When her husband put his foot down, she emailed me. (The next year she got rid of the husband.)

I met her in a shopping mall parking lot halfway between our houses. She handed me the tiny kitten, all his medicine, and wished me luck. He raced around in the cage all the way home, screaming to get out, until he had a small bowel accident, and then he settled down, confused about what had just happened.

We named him Neelix after a character in Star Trek: Voyager. There’s Neelix, a lizard-looking man, and then there’s another guy back on Earth who named his cat Neelix, and if you’re a Trekkie, you understand what I just said, and if not, then I’m sorry. I let my husband pick the name since naming privileges would make it easier for him to accept a fourth cat in the house. It worked.

I spent the next few weeks frantically calling vets to find the closest one opened at all hours of the day and night because Neelix was always on the verge of dying. His breathing was labored, his nose and eyes oozed green gunk. He slept either on my pillow next to my head or in a little bed full of Beanie Babies that were bigger than he was. Two different vets thought I was crazy trying to keep this kitten alive. There were plenty more kittens if I wanted one. And once the nasal cavity is damaged, it’s permanent. He would always be sickly, I was warned.

But we convinced ourselves that since Neelix has never felt fine, he doesn’t know he’s sick. If he could live this way, breathing noisily like Darth Vader, we could deal with it. Neelix had no idea how to eat and would stick his whole face in the food, and then open his mouth, so we were constantly wiping dried food out of his nose. The only food he would eat was the cheapest, a Wal-Mart brand called Special Kitty, so for the next few years, we were regular Wal-Mart customers, buying out their cat food inventory because Neelix had to eat every time he woke up and the food had to be fresh out of the package. If things weren’t perfect, he howled and knocked things over.

I had hoped one of the female cats would adopt him, but none of them would have anything to do with him, so whatever kittens learn from their mothers, Neelix didn’t learn. For a sickly kitten, he was a dynamo of destruction, as if he had to represent for his entire doomed litter.


Prior to being fixed, Neelix developed an intense relationship with a stuffed orange pig doll about the size of his head. He would carry Orange Pig around in his mouth, howling at the same time through clenched teeth. Then he would hump whatever pillow or blanket was available, holding on tightly to Orange Pig. We thought this would cease after his operation, but he and Pig still carried on, especially at bedtime. As soon as we shut down the house for the night, Neelix would find Pig and carry it up the stairs and join us in bed, humping the blankets in a manic little dance. Sometimes Bobby would get aggravated and wrest Pig out of Neelix’s mouth and toss it across the room.

We miraculously found a second, identical Orange Pig at Target, but Neelix made it disappear, probably by dropping it into a wastebasket. Pig was his sexual release and he took care of it. He’d leave it in his empty food bowl, or in his old Beanie Baby bed. Sometimes he’d put it in my purse or the bath tub. Pig is still with us, years later, always available for his next anxiety attack. At night, when we suddenly hear him making that strange yowling somewhere in the house, we’ll say simultaneously, “He’s got Pig.”

As for getting on the kitchen counters and knocking everything off, there was no cure. We kept water pistols and spray bottles at hand, but they only distracted him for the moment. Loud noises didn’t bother him. He was the only cat who didn’t run from the vacuum cleaner. In fact, he ran toward it. He followed it along as I vacuumed from room to room. I thought maybe he was deaf, but every time I brought up the possibility, Bobby would make a noise and Neelix would turn his head to look. I think he just feels the noise. You can sneak up behind him and grab him. He never hears you coming.

Sometimes when we are cleaning up yet another mess he made, we speak the unspeakable. Maybe we should find another home for Neelix, but how could we knowingly inflict him on anyone? It would be like giving a weapon of mass destruction as a gift. And the next unwary owners might not be so accommodating. I’ve heard of people putting cats down because they sprayed, which Neelix does.

But he is the only one of our rescued cats that lifts his front legs up when we come home and literally hugs us around the neck. Until the second crowd of cats came, he was the only one who slept in the bed with us, wrapped around our heads, purring like a motorized fur hat. You wouldn’t give away a bad child, and the cats were our children.

Neelix has no sense of direction. Whenever he managed to get out of the house, he’d take off for the woods, and then had no idea how to get back. When he was tired of exploring, he’d just sit wherever he was and look sad.

So an escaped Neelix was always a disaster we needed to attend to right away. Finding a small gray cat in an acre of dense underbrush and woods is no easy task, especially when he won’t answer you or come when he’s called. One day while I was searching the woods, I noticed the cars on the highway in front of our house had all come to a stop for no reason and were honking. I ran out to find Neelix sitting in the middle of the road, not moving, sad, lost, and oblivious to the line of cars waiting for him to get out of the way.

Another time, we searched for hours and found no sign of him. I put a transistor radio on a chair in the woods, hoping the music would draw him back toward the house. (Yes, I know. I do stuff like that even though I think he’s deaf.)

“Well, maybe it’s for the best if he’s gone for good, he’s so much trouble,” I sighed, which upset Bobby. He didn’t want me to see him cry, so he went back inside the house to take a break from searching.

I stayed outside and prayed that wherever Neelix was, my guardian angel would pick him up and drop him back into our yard because even though he was an ordeal, I didn’t think Bobby could stand to lose him. It would traumatize him and our relationship. Things would change between us, like a marriage goes sour when a child dies. One person is always harboring blame against the other.

I said my amens, and just then the motion detector light on the shed turned on. I turned around and there was Neelix, in the center of a pool of light, crouched down and looking sad, as if an angel had just picked him up and dropped him in our yard.

If you would like to donate to Neelix's cancer treatment, go here.