pinkindiaink.com
personal essays, profane rants, and the occasional penis in a window.





Monday, November 15, 2010

Asscattery; or, If I Have To Deal With This, Then You Have To Read About It

Last Sunday, I stepped out of the shower and nearly collided with Brad. He was standing stock-still in the kitchen doorway, his back to me, staring fixedly at something in the next room. Even from behind, he looked deeply disturbed.

"Um," he said.
"Yes?" I said.
"Well," said Brad, "the cat just sprayed blood out of her butt and onto the living room wall."

Which is to say: can I read my husband's body language, or what?

And also: EWWW OHMYGOD WHAT THE FUCKING FUCK HOW IS THAT EVEN POSSIBLE.

The good news, as a quick Google search revealed, is that bloody butt-spray is not the cause for dire concern when it's coming from a cat that it would be if it came out of, say, your grandmother. (Unless your grandmother was a cat, in which case your problems are much worse than mine, and not only that, you can't even read this.) Apparently, Vivian had managed to get herself some sort of a UTI and was trying to signal us, by spraying butt-blood on our wall, that she needed medical assistance.

Well, awesome.

The problem is, this is only a marginal departure from the way that Vivian normally behaves. Yes, that's right: when it comes to the, y'know, process of elimination, our cat prefers to think (hurrr) outside the box. Which is bad enough as it is, what with having to constantly smell my shoes before I put them on just to make sure that they're not full of cat pee, but becomes extra-embarrassing when we take her to yet another vet who just can't believe that we actually live like this.

"So, there's blood in the urine?" said the fresh-faced and perky veterinary assistants, as we sat in the waiting room.
"Yes," I said.
"And has she been displaying any other symptoms? Loss of appetite, crying? Or how about urinating outside the box?"
"Well, yeah," I said, "but she does that all the time."

Fresh-Faced and Perky stared at me.

"All the time?"
"Yes."

More staring.

"Like, ALL the time?"
"Yep."
"Have you tried--"
"Yes."
"But--"
"No, really. Whatever it is, we've tried it."

And it's true, we have. Nothing works. Which means that at this point, we had no choice but to adopt "If you love someone, you must accept them as they are" as a motto applicable to pet ownership as well as human relationships, and to take vague, macabre comfort in the fact that Vivian will eventually stop peeing on everything we own... when she's dead.

And also, to be vigilant about checking ourselves for any evidence of Vivian's bad habit before we go out in public. In some ways, it's even become a bizarre form of marital bonding. Some couples ask each other, "Does my hair look okay?" or "Does this tie go with this shirt?"; we say, "Hey, do I smell like cat pee?"

The appearance of the vet yielded a repeat of the above conversation (the vet, directing his full attention to the cat, clucked disapprovingly and said, "That's not a crowd-pleaser, Viv!"), along with the information that Vivian had not only a pee-related problem, but also fleas and dental disease -- the latter of which isn't all that surprising, because devoted as I am to my pets, I draw the line at brushing the teeth of anyone who's just going to turn around afterward and devote a good fifteen minutes to licking her anus. Like, I'll take the cat's dental hygiene seriously when she does, okay.

Brad, on the other hand, was mortified. As we walked out with our thoroughly-demoralized pet and a plan to scrub our living room wall -- and, if possible, our memories -- with bleach, he worried that Vivan's UTI, unbrushed teeth and flea-bitten hide all added up to the impression that we were terrible, negligent pet owners.

To which I responded by pointing out that the last people to own Vivian were going to kill her, so no matter how you look at it, we're doing a hell of a lot better than they did.

Although, as I smell my shoes every morning and walk through the living room with my eyes closed, it's not like I can't kind of understand why they wanted to.

7 comments:

Shannon said...

Oooh poor kitty :(

I'm big on brushing my dogs' teeth and for whatever reason they love it. Yes, my two dogs love dental picks and peanut butter flavored tooth paste. I try to do it every couple of days. For two reasons, health, and because I don't want to smell bad breath when they surprise kiss.

I suppose cats don't surprise kiss.

Whiskeymarie said...

I guess I'll just count my blessings that all I have to deal with is the occasional pile of cat vomit in the basement.
I occasionally brush my dog's teeth (otherwise his breath smells fishy- yuk), but I've never even heard of brushing cat's teeth. Isn't that a good way to learn about severe facial disfiguration?

dull boy said...

haha...i suppose it's just another thing to do in the morning before work...check shoes to see if cat has pee'd on them

Monster Girl said...

And I thought my cat (who sometimes gets confused and thinks the bathtub is a toilet) was bad. Yikes. *sympathy hug*

See Kate run. said...

Bwaha! I mean...

...

...

*sympathy*

(But Lordy is that awful yet funny.)

Karen said...

Poor Vivian. I hope she feels better soon and understands the friend she has in you. Give her a nice head pat for me.
I must relate this story because it's appropriate and well, this story's never appropriate, so...
The first time my husband went to my parent's for dinner their cat, Bailey, walked over to Eric's seat at the table, looked up, cocked his head and without pause or warning, Rorschached the dining room wall. We sat there in stunned silence. Bailey then climbed atop Eric's chair via Eric's torso. For several minutes he sat behind Eric, flicking his tail in and out of Eric's face until my Dad physically removed him. I knew right then and there, my husband was a keeper. My parents were mortified, but still managed to host a lovely dinner for us at which we all got pretty tanked. We had to put Bailey down soon after. Not because he shit-up a wall, but because he had cancer. Sad. He was a good cat.

Mac said...

This is awful and awesome all in one. I feel for ya, my TWENTY year old cat just bit the dust about a month ago :( Too soon to say bit the dust? I don't know. But I, like you one day will be, sure as HELL am glad I no longer have to smell every one of my worldly possessions, including my BED, for pee before I use it :)