5/2 Loose Lips

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Miriam and Putty (GA)

Member Since 2009
Good morning.

I cannot believe it is May 2 already.....I am still waiting for the warm weather.
The V on my keyboard does not work very well unless I pound on the key so if I post in a condo and the V is missing from a word you will know why. I cannot believe how many words have the letter V. :roll:
 
good morning!

rainy and cloudy here today - i'm going to meet one more new vet at noon when i go with a friend who's taking her cat in. Not sure how i'm going to sneak in a few questions when it's not my appt . . . not even sure what are the most important things for me to ask.

any suggestions on that? i was thinking about asking if she's familiar with the Rand Protocol and how many diabetic cats she has as patients.

time for breakfast for me - i'm in the tired monday morning mode! one kitty on the back of my chair by my head (anya) and punkin in his favorite spot under the coffee table, laying on one banana and aiming his furry belly to the sky.
 
Julie- I would say you are looking for an open minded vet. And that you heard good things about her from her friend that she is approachable. Say that you are following an internationally known protocol for tight regulation using Lantus. And even give her a copy of the journal article. That this is very important to you and you are seeking a vet that would be on board. That you don't need any hand holding or micro managing - you would not be a high needs patient. Good luck Julie.
 
thanks Karrie! my friend just called - she canceled the appt and is, ironically enough, going to my regular vet instead. she said she needs vaccinations for her 7 cats and my vet will be cheaper. she used to go to my regular vet anyway and they still have records on her cat. too ironic.
 
Hi All, The death of Osama Bin Laden leads me to reflect on 9/11/2001 and our experiences that day and on the aftermath of that day. Edward and I lived in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That morning he left early to teach his class at NYU and I had a doctor's appointment uptown and left a little later. The subway goes above ground for a couple of stops and all of us passengers saw the smoke from the first plane that hit the World Trade Center and people remarked that there must be a fire. Not until 1/2 hour later, upon arriving at the doctor's office, did I learn what had happened. I stayed there briefly to watch the TV, but wanted to get downtown to see if Edward was OK. At this point all of the subways had stopped running, so I walked from E. 95th Street to Washington Square (near 8th St.), being careful to avoid the area around the Empire State Building, which could have been a subsequent target. It was a beautiful, cool, clear late-summer day. I remember thinking how incongruous it was to have such lovely weather for such a tragedy. I was very worried about Edward (NYU is less than a mile from the World Trade Center and the first plane, flying very low, went right over his building). Telephones were not working. Some cell phones worked, but we did not have cell phones then. Meanwhile, Edward was very worried about me because my subway train would have passed directly underneath the World Trade Center. No one knew any details. As I walked downtown and got closer and closer to the WTC, I saw people walking in the other direction covered in plaster dust and debris. When I arrived at NYU I saw that everyone there was OK and they were very relieved that I was OK. Classes had been cancelled. We sat around all day and listened to radio broadcasts of what was happening. All transportation was at a standstill. The Brooklyn Bridge was closed, so we couldn't walk across it to get home to Brooklyn. But the Manhattan Bridge was open and there was a steady stream of people walking home. The Brooklyn Bridge was barely visible in a cloud of smoke. So we walked over the Manhattan Bridge and back to Park Slope, Brooklyn (about 5 miles) in a rain of office paper coming from the World Trade Center. That was surreal: to see all this letterhead, some of it pristine and not charred at all, come tumbling down onto the streets of Brooklyn. We got home, still not entirely clear on all that had happened, but glad to be together. The prevailing winds brought a cloud of smoke, ashes, stench over our part of Brooklyn for the next 3 months as the World Trade Center smoldered. Our local Fire Dept. company, which was a first-responder company, lost half of it's firemen on 9/11. Such bravery and such sorrow were unimaginable. We kept hearing stories of incredible bravery, of incredible luck, and unluck.

Fast forward to 9/26. Edward and I had lost our kitty Alice in Dec. 2000. We kept thinking about all the cats who would be homeless because their people perished in 9/11. So we decided to visit the ASPCA and adopt a cat already there so that there would be room for the orphans. That's how we met Stu, 4 years old, returned twice, and so handsome and athletic. He was in the "habitat". When we stood at the window to watch, he got up from his bed, climbed up on the "catwalk" (which stretched all around the top of the habitat), walked all around it, jumped down, looked at us, and went back to his bed. Needless to say . . .
We took him home at rush hour in the little cardboard carry box they gave us. We started out in a taxi, but half the streets were closed owing to 9/11 and after about 1/2 hour stuck in traffic in Manhattan, we got out and took the rush-hour subway. Poor Stu meowed loudly in his box on the floor with people standing over him like sardines in a can. He kept trying to push his paws out through the holes in the box. He would not be consoled. We finally got home, opened the box, and he emerged. He knew immediately that he was "home" and set to exploring every inch of the apartment, including Alice's box of ashes on top of the piano. He jumped up, was very still for about a minute, then took the small catnip mouse that had been Alice's and was next to her box, jumped down, and played with it. I like to think of this as a passing of the torch.
So that's my story of 9/11 and how we got our 9/11 kitty. Stu was with us for 9 years (FD dx 6 Jan. 2006; GA on 28 Sept. 2010).

(Rusty came home with us on 28 Nov. 2010, but many of you know that story from the posts on FDMB about Rusty's journey.)

Ella
 
I had just arrived at work that morning at a hazardous waste recycling facility and chemical plant in Cleveland. The transportation director came to my office and asked if I had heard about the World Trade Center. I hadn't.

As I turned on the radio to an AM station the voice came across yelling a second plane into the second tower...

At the time I was the Environmental, Health, and Safety Manager. I wasn't really thinking too clearly, but my gut told me this wasn't some air traffic control accident. I went back over to the transportation director's office and told him there was a second plane. I told him to recall all our trucks...then said...I guess we better check with the company president first.

We went to the president's office together. All three of us then went to the training room and turned on the TV's. The rest of that morning was a bit of a blur, between calls from the Mayor to evacuate the city, closing schools, getting staff released to go get their kids, to suddenly realizing I couldn't get home because Cleveland Hopkin's Airport was closed along with several miles around the airport. I live within those closed off miles. So when it was finally my turn to go home...I stayed...no where to go.

I recall walking the yard and notifiying the workers of what was happening, we heard the church bells of St. Francis Church on the hill start wildly ringing in a call to prayer when the first tower fell. I saw fighter jets fly faster than I've ever witnessed head out over Lake Erie...and we watched one lone passenger jet circle the Terminal Tower and head back east. I recall Mike saying, "I thought they were all grounded." We later learned that was Flight 93. (wow, I'm crying as I type that ...even today).

I also had my first pet sitting job at that time. My neighbor's cat. They ended up stranded in South Africa at the time.


My nephew at the time was just a sophomore in high school. Today he is a career United States Marine. He's been to Iraq, Afghanistan, and Yemen. He is currently based in California.

PS. My Aunt and I had planned to take a safari a few years before 9/11, but Osama blew up the embassy's in Kenya and Tanzania at that time. We never did make it ...
 
ella, thanks for sharing that. so Stu was your 9/11 baby! evidence that from great evil good can spring forth.

i was home that morning and had sent my kids off to school. turned on the tv and with horror watched the tale unfold. i sat riveted to the tv all day, weeping, feeling there was nothing i could do except stand witness to this terrible tragedy. my heart broke as the days went by with people holding signs up looking for their loved ones.

today i thought that i could not cheer for Bin Ladin's death. The tragedy on 9/11 multiplied by more and more, and each one a loss driving us further from understanding each other. more anger, more wishes for revenge . . . until the whole world is blind and toothless. i'm sure you know the saying. i wish only peace, especially for those who have lost people they loved in the midst of this hateful striking back and forth between our cultures.
 
Ella you have brought tears to my eyes. I'm so sorry about 9/11 but what a wonderful way to honour Alice and for Stu to have gotten his forever home. He was waiting for you and Edward that day. Serious heart tug. And the connection to Rusty also. Like it was meant to be. Sending hugs.
 
Thanks for sharing your 9/11 stories. I was at my doctor's office when I heard that a large plane had crashed into the World Trade Center. I knew that there was no way that that could have been an accident, and I rushed home to turn on the TV in time to see the second plane hit and the rest of the tragedy unfold.

I am an air traffic controller in Toronto, and I went in to work for my scheduled midnight shift at 11 p.m. on Sept 11. There were airplanes parked everywhere, which had been forced to land at the nearest airport. What I remember is the eeriness of something I had never seen before - the sky completely empty of airplanes, except for the military jets and tankers which circled overhead. I did not make a transmission to a single aircraft on that shift.
 
Ella: That post brought back many memories. I had just driven across country and my friend, who accompanied me, had left for WA very early on the morning of 9/11. When it flashed on TV, my first thought was of my daughter. She was a DEA agent and her headquarters was the World Trade Center. As the day progressed I learned that a very close friend lost her only son in the World Trade Center. I was very thankful that my daughter, whose posts were Kennedy Airport, Port of New York and Newark, was not on duty that day. So much sadness and heartbreak. It is wonderful that you got Stu due to the tragedy and he had a forever home and made room for some of the orphans. Those are the little bright spots needed in the face of so much sadness and tragedy. Thank you for sharing you story of 911. It must have been a terrifying experience.
 
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