sometimes i think time’s healing powers are highly over-hyped

One year ago today, our cat, L.G. Nermal, passed away. What’s remarkable it that, after all that time, I still feel incredibly sad when I think about him. Just picturing him there as he was dying almost brings tears to my eyes. In fact, writing this little post is proving to be just as difficult as writing this one was.

I don’t entirely understand why it’s still so painful for me. This isn’t like me. I understand and accept death and dying. This sort of thing isn’t the kind of thing I hang on to. Yet, there it is.

You’re still missed, Little Guy. I hope you can play out there, wherever you are.

just a cat

Yes. Nermal had four legs. A tail. Whiskers. He meowed. All of those things1 made him a cat.

But he wasn’t just a cat.

Four years ago today2 I met another cat. I was living in Cleveland at the time. It’d been very bitterly cold for a week straight and when I took out the trash on a Thursday night I found a skinny, hungry cat on the front porch of the house I had an apartment in. He got my attention, let me pet him briefly, and followed me around back and up the stairs.3 I fed him some ham4 and a friendship was born.

Well, okay. It’s wasn’t quite that instantaneous.

An hour or so later we had our first fight when he bit my hand. How was I supposed to know he didn’t like being pet on his belly?

A day or so later we fought again when he pooped on the carpet instead of letting me know he needed to go out.

Two weeks after that we were trapped inside together to two whole days when a moderate blizzard covered Cleveland and surrounds.

A few weeks later I had to ask a new friend to keep an eye on him whilst I left town for a few days.

And then I lost my job and it was just me and him for days on end. There were times in which I didn’t eat much because I needed to money to buy him food.

When I landed a part-time job, I bought him a new cat toy with the first money I made. Because I was grateful he hung around during a pretty dark period.

And when I had to move away from Cleveland, Randal came with me.

He’s a cat, yes. Just like Nermal was a cat. But cat or human, what we have with them are relationships. That’s why they’re not just cats. It’s a relationship that is built over time, one that lasts or doesn’t last just like any other relationship. They require understanding, forgiveness, appreciation and acceptance. In short, they require work, these relationships do.

And when you work at a relationship, it often becomes positive. And the person/cat on the other side becomes something more.

They become friends.

And they become family.

And I love them.

So here’s a thank you to Randal, for coming into my life. And for kicking it with me for four years now.

He IS playing.


  1. And more.
  2. As near as I can figure at any rate.
  3. This was pre-vegetarianism.
  4. My address at the time was blah-blah-blah north blah st., up-rear. Man how I loved that!

nermal: in memoriam, by way of a photo essay

L.G. Nermal was born on August 9th, 2010. We didn’t meet him until November 11th. Some people say that cats adopt humans, not the other way around. Nermal didn’t adopt us: he never once gave a sense of ownership or superiority to either of us.

But he did choose us, out of the crowd, as it were. The very next day we had him in our home.

L.G. Nermal - day one

He was pleasant to the other cats from the get-go. They, on the other hand…

Not pictured: Switters's sense of impending doom

It was Ashley’s turn to name the new pet, and it took her a few days to come up with something. She eventually settled upon Nermal, from Garfield, because he made happy little quasi-twittering-type-noises just like the cat on the cartoon. And because, well, he wasn’t quite normal.

I added the L.G., which stood for Little Guy. The idea was that the initials would change over time or whenever a couple of adjectives were needed to describe him or his behavior.

He never got the chance to be anything but a Little Guy.

He liked to hang out in whichever room Ashley and/or I were in. Even if he was just sleeping.

He also liked helping us with homework.

The other cats, in time, warmed up to him. Randal isn’t one much for other living creatures as all, but he liked Nermal because Nermal played with Switters, meaning that for the first time in over a year Switters wasn’t forcing Randal to play with him. Switters and Nermal played together a lot initially.

They even kinda became buds.

Nermal had three favorite activities.

Any time I did laundry he would play in the empty laundry basket, sometimes moving it from room to room. I’d set it down by the closet, put some clothes away, and I’d find it almost in the living with one L.G. Nermal inside it. He would playfully attack anyone – felis catus or homo sapiens – who happened to walk by.

He also would run into the bathtub just as soon as someone finished showering. He would sit in the still-wet basin and watch fascinatedly as the droplets ran down the shower curtain and the walls.

And he loved it when we came home with groceries. Not because he was interested in the new foodstuffs. No no. He loved the bags.

He was a gift to us, and especially to Ashley. The other cats aren’t as friendly with her as they are with me, for reasons only they know. Nermal, though…Nermal loved her and wasn’t afraid to let her know. Any time he cuddled up to her, she was happy. He would sometimes wake her up in the middle of the night just because he wanted her to pet him for two minutes. Then he’d let he go back to sleep.

Christmas Eve. Ready to go.

Not long after the above picture was taken I noticed a sudden change in Nermal’s behavior. Normally in the morning before work I’d put some food in his bowl and he’d eat it like there was no tomorrow. (He was the loudest eater I’ve ever heard, especially for a cat. Sometimes it was just gross to listen to him.) Then he’d go over to the big boys’ bowl and eat their food.

On this particular morning – a Monday about a month and a half after he brought him home – he ate about five bites of his food and then started scraping the floor next to his bowl. When I came home from work later that day, there was food still in his bowl. This was unprecedented.

This behavior continued throughout the week and into the next. We’d battled some fleas right around the time that Nermal’d come into our home, so my guess was he had worms. The next day, though, was when I noticed his belly.

See how small his head is? That's because his tummy is huge.

Two weeks ago today we learned that he had F.I.P., something for which there is no cure. We chose to take him home and care for him rather than having him put down. These last two weeks were rough. He stopped playing with Switters. He stopped running into the bathtub when I got out of the shower. He slept more. His stomach got bigger while he got smaller.

We tried not to hold out hope, but at any sign of normal behavior – even just eating solid food instead of the Ensure we were told to give him – we both secretly and silently hoped that he was getting a bit better. I tried not to tell myself that maybe he’d just learn to live with his big belly, that maybe he’d achieve some type of homeostasis with it and he’d be the first-ever cat to survive F.I.P. It sounds crazy, but then again…I live with a woman who was not supposed to live past ten.

And I think this was especially hard for Ashley. More than just losing her buddy, Ashley knew what he was going through and how it felt. Back in the summer of 2007, her lung-function dropped enough that she didn’t have energy to eat. She couldn’t find a way to get comfortable that would allow her to breathe. She felt like she was suffocating constantly.

The problem with F.I.P. is that it dumps nourishment from the veins into the belly. The belly swells, unable to drain. In time this begins to compromise lung-function.

Ashley hated that he was suffocating. She hated that he was going through what she’d gone through.

But that was why he chose us. Whether he knew it then or not, Nermal had an anomaly in his genetic code that would eventually cause him to die. In Ashley, he saw a mother who would be closer to him in a fundamental way that his own feline mother would never be. He saw a mother who would understand.

There’s another reason he chose us, but I’ll save that for another time.

Last Sunday was when I knew Nermal wasn’t going to make it. He’d developed a wheeze to his breathing and he couldn’t sleep for lack of comfort.

And he stopped looking happy.

I didn’t think he’d last the day. Late in the evening he climbed onto my lap and as I watched him lie there unable to sleep, the tears started. Ashley and I began our mourning then. We were up very late that night, neither of us wanting to be asleep when our little guy couldn’t fight anymore.

But he made it.

None of us slept well at all this week, especially after he began to behave erratically.

Finally, he was capable of little more than lying around.

We moved his box from room to room so he could still hang out with us like he liked to do so much.

Saturday night, around 7:30, I knew somehow that it was time. I scooped him into my lap and sat with him on the sofa, swaddled in one of the fleece blankets he loved so much. I kissed his little face and told him that we loved him, that we would miss him so much, and that it was time for him to go. He lied back in my arms and went slack. He cried out once or twice and Ashley and I moved him to the bed, where he could be warm.

Ashley told him then that it was okay to go. She said, ‘Go play.’ She bent over him and combed out his fur, fur he’d been too tired to clean for the last week. She cleaned him up and made him soft again and that is was brought him peace enough to let go. Inside his little shallow-breathing body, Nermal fell asleep.

Four hours later, L.G. Nermal exhaled for the final time. I was right there with him, holding his little paw. When I heard the final exhale, I knew it for what it was. I put my head on his little side and listened as his tired little heart stopped beating.

And as crazy as it may be, under that sad sound I also heard him purring. I knew he was gone, but the purring sound outlasted his heartbeat by about thirty seconds. I wouldn’t believe I heard it except that no scientist anywhere can tell me how it is that cats purr. Let alone if a cat can purr after his heart stops.

Nermal did.

Once he was gone I moved his paws closer to his body. I wrapped his tail around him. I held his eyes closed. I scooped him up, kissed him a final time on the cheek, and put him in his favorite blanket so that, as Ashley’d said, he wouldn’t be cold. Wrapping him in it, I placed him in his box.

L.G. Nermal died on January 30th, 2011. His was not yet six-months old.

And I cried. I cried and cried and cried. I’m crying again.

But that’s okay. I love our Little Guy Nermal, and I know I’ll miss him for a long time. I’ll think of him every time I get out of the shower. Every time I do the laundry. Every time I use one of the fleece blankets he loved so much.

I know how you were when you died, little buddy. But I’m going to choose to remember you differently. I’ll remember you like this, which was the third day after you’d come into our lives and the day I knew I loved you.

Goodbye my friend. I hope you’ve found a way to be able to play again.

if you just smile

WordPress is trying to get bloggers to blog every day in 2011, and to that end they’re posting prompts at The Daily Post. While I’m not committing to this course of action, per se, yesterday’s prompt is something I can easily blog about:

Share something that makes you smile.

That’d be this:

Nermal's helping Ashley with her homework.

I took this picture about a month ago and it makes me smile every time I see it. Or even think about it. Nermal truly makes me laugh at least once every day. I know all cats are weird, but he happens to be weird in a way that’s funny.(1)

But what really cracks me up about this picture is something I didn’t even think about when I took it or when I posted it. Maybe you’ve already noticed…

That giant jar of Nequik.

Ashley is a chocolate milk fiend. While she goes on various and numerous craving-binges throughout the year, chocolate milk is a constant. The only variation is whether it’s Nesquik or store-bought chocolate milk.(2) She happens to be on a Nesquik binge right now, and it made it into the shot.

But like I said, I didn’t think about it. Giant jars of Nesquik are simply part of my daily life now. There’s pretty much always one on the table or the counter, or in the cupboard.

When I posted this pic on Facebook, I captioned it exactly as I have above. What makes me smile when I think about this picture is that one of Ashley’s friends, one she’s known for years, wrote a comment:

“Lol. So is Nesquik.”

That’s someone who really knows her. What makes me smile is that I know she and her friend used to be roommates, and I can hear in that comment someone else who discovered Nesquik to be a part of her daily life, who always had it on the table or counter, or in the cupboard.

What makes me smile is that as different as we become, we’re still the same.

Sure, maybe sometimes that’s not so great.(3) But what I love about things is how we carry them with us through out life. Ashley has loved Nesquik long enough that an old roommate picked it out of a lineup and made a joke about it. She’s in a different home in this picture, with a different hairdo and different glasses and even different lungs…but the Nesquik-love hasn’t changed.

As different as we become, we’re still the same. And that makes me smile.


  1. The exact same thing can be said of Ashley.
  2. I prefer he Nesquik binges because then there room in the fridge for things other than gallons and gallons of milk.
  3. Reese Witherspoon, for example. One marriage. One divorce. Another engagement. And an Oscar. Yet she still sucks as an actress.

janus-ing it up

Stolen from Adam.

1. What did you do in 2010 that you’d never done before?

I enrolled in and completed a graduate-level course. I assisted my friend in proposing to his ladyfriend. I sang lead at a gig. I rode Tower of Terror 14 times in a row. Went to a parade in Chicago.

2. Did you keep your new year’s resolutions, and will you make more for next year?

Yes, and yes.

3. Did anyone close to you give birth?

Yes. My friend Carissa had a baby boy. I haven’t met him yet, but I hope to very soon.

4. Did anyone close to you die?

Not that I’m aware of, but one of Ashley’s CF friends passed away shortly after transplant. She is the first CF/Tx person I’ve met who has passed away. Also, Eva passed away, and though I never met her, I cried.

5. What countries did you visit?

Uhm…The U.S.A.?

6. What would you like to have in 2011 that you lacked in 2010?

A lightsaber.

7. What dates from 2010 will remain etched upon your memory, and why?

Well, 10.10.10, for obvious reasons. Also 8.9.10 for pretty much the same reason.

8. What was your biggest achievement of the year?

Getting an A in my grad class.

9. What was your biggest failure?

I tried to poop once but only farted.

10. Did you suffer illness or injury?

I had a cold once or twice. As far as injuries, only some scratches from dust-ups with the cats.

11. What was the best thing you bought?

Two things:

We adopted a cat, Nermal. He makes me laugh at least once every day.

And Ashley and I bought ourselves a Wii1 for Christmas. It’s only been a week or so, but I love it. Interestingly, I love playing the old-school Nintendo games more than anything new.

12. Whose behavior merited celebration?

As always, Ashley’s compassion and kindness constantly astound me. She deserves the 2010 Full-Time Buddha Award.2 Also, a fellow CF-partner I know from across the pond. Her husband has had a rough time post-transplant, and I find her behavior through the whole thing commendable, even down to her anger with the whole injustice of the disease.

13. Whose behavior made you appalled and depressed?

Pretty much every single person I encountered in any parking lot, but especially the lot at the local grocery store.

14. Where did most of your money go?

Rent. Food. New car.

15. What did you get really, really, really excited about?

I can’t tell you that yet.

16. What song will always remind you of 2010?

Uhm…I tend not to associate songs with years, but with emotions. Since this was a fairly emotionally-even year for yours truly, I doubt any song will strongly remind me of 2010.

17. Compared to this time last year, are you:

a) happier or sadder? Happier.
b) thinner or fatter? The same.
c) richer or poorer? Pretty much the same.

18. What do you wish you’d done more of?

As always, I wish I’d spent more time writing. Also: your mom.

19. What do you wish you’d done less of?

Being negative. Thinking negatively.

20. How did you spend Christmas?

With family.

21. Did you fall in love in 2010?

Yes. Every day, as cheesy as that sounds.

22. What was your favorite TV program?

Lost. But Raising Hope is also really good.

23. Do you hate anyone now that you didn’t hate this time last year?

No….well, all the people who have the know-how to build a lightsaber and haven’t, you’re all on my list!

24. What was the best book you read?

I re-read Infinite Jest. If you want to count new-reads, that’d be Mason & Dixon by Thomas Pynchon.

25. What was your greatest musical discovery?

That singing lead takes guts and is way more work that singing backup and/or playing any instrument.

26. What did you want and get?

Ashley.

27. What did you want and not get?

A FRIGGIN LIGHTSABER!!!

28. What was your favorite film of this year?

The Social Network. Though Red is also awesome.

29. What did you do on your birthday, and how old were you?

I turned 35, and it was the first Sunday of the NFL regular season. So after I played a little gig at the town festival, I went home, made chili and watched football.

30. What one thing would have made your year immeasurably more satisfying?

A LIGHTSABER A LIGHTSABER A LIGHTSABER A LIGHTSABER A LIGHTSABER!!!!

31. How would you describe your personal fashion concept in 2009?

Apres-garde.

32. What kept you sane?

Ashley. My friends. Music. Books.

33. Which celebrity/public figure did you fancy the most?

Not a year goes by – not a year – in which I don’t wish I’d have made out with Naomi Watts.

34. What political issue stirred you the most?

Both candidates for Ohio governor went negative right out of the gate. I voted for neither of them, and sent them both emails telling them why. A close second: the Tea Party makes me nervous, but not for the reasons you might think.

35. Who did you miss?

I miss David Foster Wallace.

36. Who was the best new person you met?

Several of the people I met in my class are pretty cool.

37. Tell us a valuable life-lesson you learned in 2010.

The house can be messy for a little while. Cleanliness isn’t as important as happiness.

38. Quote a song lyric that sums up your year.

The book of love has music in it.
In fact, that’s where music comes from.
Some of it’s just transcendental,
Some of it’s just really dumb.

But I,
I love it when you sing to me.
And you,
You can sing me anything.


  1. The Nintendo Wii is a patent and registered trademark of Nintendo, Co., Ltd., founded in 1889 with headquarters in Kyoto, Japan.
  2. Said award doesn’t really exist.