Maurice is sticking close to us since we got back. I know she likes Mark a lot because he spoils her and also, although she probably wouldn't admit it, because he is an imminently likable person with gentle ways and a kind voice.
She spent hours on Glen's lap last night while he sat in his chair in the Glen Den. The Father Human! Or however she thinks of him. And she slept with us, cuddled next to me last night. At around seven this morning though, she jumped off the bed and began scratching the under-mattress or whatever you call the thing the mattress sits on, with great enthusiasm while crying loud enough to wake the dead and since we weren't dead, we woke up. It wasn't even really light yet.
We tried to tell her to stop that nonsense and get back in the bed but she wasn't having it.
"What's wrong, Maurice?" I asked. "Is Timmy in the well?"
Glen and I both laughed and he got up which I was not well-pleased about, pointing out that he was doing a cat's bidding rather than staying in the warm bed with his wife.
Oh well. He was ready to get up. I wasn't.
I think Mark gets out of bed very early and when he's here, he spends some time with Maurice, sitting beside her as she eats the treat he fixes her. This is what I meant when I said he spoiled her.
But the biggest thing that happened, and I can still hardly believe this, a few minutes ago she came and stood by my laptop as she often does and where she's often fooled me by asking for petting only to then slash and bite my wrist and/or hand. But that's not what just happened today. She bumped my hand with her head, as a cat will do, and I almost unconsciously began to stroke her head and back when suddenly I heard something I really don't think I've ever heard before- the sound of purring coming from that cat.
No, seriously. She does not purr.
But today she did. And she didn't bite or scratch me! The whole thing only lasted about half a minute but it was an amazing thirty seconds.
I got out the Goodwill cashmere this morning. It was that chilly. Forty-something. Cashmere sweaters make winter bearable in my opinion. Can you imagine how poorly I would cope in a place where it really gets cold? But it is a shock to the system to be in a place one minute wearing a sleeveless dress and then the next in a place where cashmere and a jacket are required for outdoor comfort.
I needed to go to town to get a few things at Costco and at Publix but first I needed to get a few things done around here before I left. Of course those few things took me about four hours due to the number of but firsts that were required to get the things accomplished.
Jessie had to go to Costco too and so we met there and it was mighty fine to see my youngest. I felt like I hadn't seen her in a month. Neither one of us needed a lot of anything so it didn't take us long. I did linger awhile at a display of Tupperware that excited me a bit inappropriately. A set of 32 containers and lids ranging from a giant one that would hold a LOT of soup to smaller ones, perfect for that little bit of coleslaw you have leftover from supper. And they came in two color combinations.
Eh.
This coming week, he will be leaving for Canada. Yes. Again. And the same day he leaves, which is Thursday, I will be leaving to go to St. George Island with my nursing school friends. We have not been able to get together for a few years and I can't wait to be with these women. We are part of each other's bones at this point in our lives, even if we don't see each other often and when we come back together, we immediately fall into our places, our spaces and it feels like a sort of miracle and is always a joy, even though of course I am anxious as hell about it. I know, however, that I will be fine and far more than fine and this weekend will be one of the most deeply emotional and wonderful weekends of my life. That's just the way it is.
One of us has a very serious medical diagnosis and has had for years. As time progresses, she is learning to cherish that which is the most important, and to let go of that which is not. I feel so very honored that I am part of what she deems worthy of her time and effort. She is without a doubt, one of the dearest loves of my life.




I was glad to hear you all slept in your clean sheets in your bigger bed at least last night and then you’re off again to different places. So funny to hear about Your cat, who seems to have changed her attitude while you were gone.
ReplyDeleteShe's definitely been more affectionate. At least for her.
DeleteI like the blue and green Tupperware. It reminds me of seaglass. I wonder if Maurice's mood will last. It is kind of like a cat miracle.
ReplyDeleteIt really is a sort of cat miracle.
DeleteI think if I got the Tupperware, I'd get the blue and green.
Define "exorbitant". Here in Australia that set would easily run to a couple of hundred. And now I have serious tupperware envy. You can probably feel it pulsing across the ocean as I look at the blue and green set. Ho hum, life goes on.
ReplyDeleteI've had Lola now for 9 and a half of her 17 and a half years and she has only been purring for the last 3 of those years. I'm so happy that Maurice is now purring for you.
I think Costco had them for about sixty dollars for that set. I take it that would be about a hundred dollars Australian?
DeleteYes. Life does go on even without Tupperware.
I am so encouraged to know that Maurice may really start purring regularly at some point in her life. It must be so rewarding to you that Lola is showing her contentment now.
Glad the Palmetto theme park is being saved for future generations.Your reunion with your old nursing school friends sounds wonderful. I don’t have any groups like that to reconnect with. I can’t believe Maurice actually purred for the first time. Our cats continue to surprise us. I love that Tupperware. We have a hodgepodge of mostly poor quality containers. I’d go with the top colors. The blues and greens are beautiful but we’re not a blue household.
ReplyDeleteOne of the ladies did not go to nursing school with us but was a very good friend of two of the women who did. There are such tight bonds between all of us. I was so lucky to have my girls when I was in school and am so lucky to still be able to feel that with them again.
DeletePretty startling news about Maurice for sure.
And I do like the top set's colors a lot. But I'd probably go for the blue and green.
It's good that at least some land is preserved from "developing". It's many years since we went driving all over Florida, mostly farms, maybe sugar? Bramah bulls, countryside. I expect a lot of it's now houses.
ReplyDeleteGuess who the largest private land owner in Florida is.
DeleteThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, i.e. the Mormons. Most of the land they own is agricultural and timberland. I find this creepy as hell.
Yes. Growing sugar cane takes up a huge amount of land in Florida too. Something like 440,000 acres. That operation has destroyed great swaths of the Everglades as the land was drained for farming. It's a sin.
The largest residential single site development in the US is also in Florida. The Villages. We drove past miles and miles of those houses, crammed together like teeth in a jaw. I can't even imagine the damage done to the environment when those houses were built.
But yes- we still have some beautiful, wild land although it is getting rarer and rarer. Our state parks are very important. And we still have Brahma bulls around! And let us not forget our Florida Cracker cattle, which have been here since the Spanish introduced them. They have evolved to suit the environment over the many years since them. I love seeing them graze.
Wow. I sort of went off there, didn't I?
Sounds like Maurice had an epiphany while you were gone about how much she really loves you!
ReplyDeleteThat could be true!
DeleteHow nice that you will be seeing your nurse friends soon. I remember how you enjoy each other's company so much.
ReplyDeleteIt's always so very, very special.
DeleteThat thing under the mattress is a box spring. And miracles never cease...Maurice asking for affection and purring for however short a time. Twin has never slashed or bit me but he was the hardest to woo. Most recently he has let me pick him up enough to put in my lap and pet for a few minutes and I swear he was purring, not loud but I could feel it in his throat.
ReplyDeleteHumans are destructive creatures and the dominance of christianity has given people the idea that all this beauty is here for us to use instead of enjoy and nurture. And by use I mean destroy.
On our bed it's not exactly a box spring because we have a memory foam mattress and there are no springs involved at all. So I guess it would just be a base?
DeleteYes. I think I felt Maurice purring before I listened for it. It wasn't very loud but it was definitely purring!
Oh yes. God gave man dominion over the earth to do with it as he saw fit and mostly he sees fit to destroy it.
Who said God gave man dominion? White males. It's not true. We are prey to some animals. Try explaining to a tiger that you have dominion! It cracks me up that some people believe we're at the top of the food chain. Not you, I think you were being ironic
DeleteI was being deeply sarcastic. And yes, ironic. Yet another instance of how religion has screwed us up.
DeleteMaurice purring- dear lord, what next- the second coming? I wonder if cats realize consequence- for every action there is a reaction? I wonder if cats have intent other than to murder, playfully, little rodents that may be delicious, draw blood to the hand that feeds them. Cats move in mysterious ways- they are god,s I guess. They certainly have the pattern down!
ReplyDeleteCats certainly do view themselves as gods and the lucky ones have owners who treat them as if they were. I always think about how horrific it would be if what we call domestic cats suddenly grew to the size of lions. WE would be the mice those cats played with, I think.
DeleteMautice missed you. The purring was a nice surprise. I'm glad she did not bite... at least this time. No guarantees, going forward, but you know that.
ReplyDeleteI hope the FL Nature Reserve is under some kind of conservation restriction to protect it from development. It is a beautiful piece of property.
We have lots of conservation land. Vernal pools, streams and woodlands are protected. We even protect our beavers when they build a home and change the flow of a stream (causing flooding), we install a diverter water pipe under the beaver's den.
Safeguarding the flora and fauna and co-existing with nature is key. I also love walking woodland paths and trails.
Yes. That land is a state park and as such, is protected with very strict rules. I am grateful for that.
DeleteI agree that our job here on earth is to protect all of the land and its animals we can but unfortunately, that just doesn't seem to be the viewpoint of many, many humans.
Maurice! What got into you?! Maybe it would be a good idea to have Mark come by now and then to be Maurice's "cat whisperer"!
ReplyDeleteLike you, I love those piney flatwoods with palmettos and pine lilies and goldenrod and all the other plants that make the REAL Florida home. Just think -- pretty much the whole state used to look like that! (Well, except the more cypressy parts.) I'm glad to see that property on the Sebastian River has been set aside as parkland.
Good idea about Mark!
DeleteOne of the things I love most about MK Rawling's writing is that she describes so perfectly the different areas of native growth in her area of the state. I learn new things every time I read The Yearling.
Can you imagine the early explorers and pioneers trying to make their way through miles of scrub land?
Another great blogpost filled with a love of life and so intimate in its details. Why! This time we even got Tupperware to drool over. Not something they fantasise about in Sudan or Gaza.
ReplyDelete