Sunday, June 28, 2020

Reflections - Cat-Escaping Craziness

Gilbert, Ande, and Rills in the Window
Spence opened the front door wide and hefted his steaming canning kettle. Wearing a muscle shirt for the tomato-canning heat rather than the mid September temperature, he lugged the five gallon porcelain kettle to the porch.

Six-month-old Gilbert dashed for the doorway.

Yikes! A coyote, fox, or raccoon could devour our adorable kitten. Adrenaline pumping, I ran after Gilbert, stretched my arms to snatch him, and tripped on the threshold.

Gilbert scooted out of reach.

My shoulder banged onto the porch floor, my forearm scraped against the cement, and my bad knee took the brunt of the fall.

Spence set the kettle on the cement and pivoted to me. “Are you okay?”

“Get Gilbert!” Sharp sizzles pricked my arm. Vice grips squeezed my shoulder and knee, but I hadn’t broken anything. “I’m fine.”

Spence pulled Gilbert from under the porch desk and set him inside. Then Spence helped me stand.

I wobbled to the bathroom and smeared ointment on the scrape. Shuffling to the great room, I plopped into the log chair and let my bones settle.

Spence handed me a cold pack for the throbbing knee. “You know,” he said in his serious voice, “falling is how old ladies die. BE CAREFUL.”

I didn’t die, but a massive brown, purple, green, and red bruise covered my forearm which, for a week, raised questions and eyebrows at the swimming pool. “The things we do for our pets,” muttered one sympathetic swimmer.

So when Spence took all three cats to the deck in March, Friday the thirteenth to be exact, I stared through the sliding glass door in disbelief. My stomach cramped. What if one of them ran away? The cat could catch a dread disease or get smashed by a pickup. Outdoor cats have shorter lives than indoor cats.

My inner voice interrupted the fretting. Don’t be a wuss.

Curiosity could lure them away.

Your old cats learned to stay on the porch and deck.

But the boy cats are eleven months old, not sixteen years.

Spence is watching them.

Spence sat on a wooden bar stool at the house’s southwest corner where the porch and deck intersect.

The cats crouched to get below the wind that tousled their fur. Six, pointy ears waggled at the sounds of clanging chimes. Three noses wiggled at Olympic speed to catch the outside fragrances.

The cramp in my stomach relaxed, and I switched on my laptop.

Before it booted up, Spence yelled. “Janet! Watch these two.” He hustled down the ramp.

I jumped up, slid the glass door open, and reached for Ande.

He darted away.

I giant-stepped after and grabbed his middle—without tripping. After putting Ande inside, I pulled Gilbert from under a wicker chair.

Spence returned with Rills. “He squeezed through the stiles. I caught him in the front yard.”

Throughout the spring, Spence took the cats to the porch and deck. Ande sat on the deck, gazed at carpenter bees, then rolled on his back. Gilbert explored cobwebs under the workbench. Rills pawed at his image on the glass door. And all three scampered down the ramp. Squeezing between the stiles or leaping off the railing, they escaped.

Again and again and again.

Spence retrieved them each time. The boy cats had a longer learning curve than our old cats. The boys also had more energy.

I admired Spence’s patience. The cats would have sat in time out for months if I’d been their outdoor monitor.

When summer came, Spence spent more time in the garden. Instead of prowling the deck, the cats sat on window sills and sniffed the outdoors through screens. From the guest bedroom, they had a view of the north garden where Spence and I worked on the large blueberry cage to protect plump green berries, tinged with pink, from hungry robins and raccoons.

Blueberries
Because the hand lawnmower is waiting its turn for repairs at Skippy’s shop, Spence had cut the grass near the cage with the brush hog he attached to his tractor. When he turned the tractor, the brush hog swung into the cage. The PVC pipe frame and chicken wire crumpled.

Wielding a sickle, I cut the grass inside and around the cage. Spence repaired the frame, and replaced the crushed wire. The wind helped us lift the cover cloth over the frame.

Spence left to fetch PVC connectors.

I secured the billowing cloth to PVC pipes with cable ties.

A catbird sang a melody combining the konk-la-ree of a red-winged blackbird and the cheer-up, cheerily of a robin. Tiger swallowtails flitted through the nearby asparagus patch.

Spence’s panicked voice cut through the bucolic scene. “The front door’s open. The cats are loose. Help!” He disappeared around the deck.

I dropped the cable ties and ran. 

Spence came to the bottom of the side yard. “Gilbert’s hiding under the ramp. Watch him!” Spence hustled up the slope. “I’ll get the others. They stayed on the deck.”

Cooing in a comforting kitty voice, “Handsome Gilbert,” I walked under the deck and stooped to creep under the ramp. “Come here, Gil.” I crouched shorter until the overhead slant prevented further movement.

Five feet out of reach, Gilbert nestled on a mat of dried plant stems.

Spence’s feet thudded overhead.

Gilbert flinched and darted out the side.

“Grab him! He’s escaping at your end.” I backed out in time to see Spence—like a bald eagle swooping with claws open—pounce on Gilbert. 

Back in the great room, the cats circled napping spots. Spence and I stared at each other. 

Moving Rills, Spence sat on the sofa. “The wind blew the door wide open.”

“It must not have latched when the last person went out.”

He pulled at the end of his mustache. “You can blame me, and I can blame you.”

I wouldn’t have left the door open and endangered the likely-to-escape cats. Folks had reported two black bears roaming the neighborhood for goodness sake. Though we hadn’t seen the bears, we’d found piles of their fresh poop in our field and woods. But I might not have remembered to close the door. “We can blame Gilbert. He could’ve stuck a cat toy in the doorway.”

The next day, I checked that the latch caught when I closed the door. Twice.

The cats perched in the guest bedroom window.

At the blueberry cage, I secured the new chicken wire with cable ties.

Spence built a cage door so I didn’t have to step over three feet of chicken wire—remember the tripping and falling part? He used a new bungee cord to hold the door in place. Looping one hook to the door jam, he stretched the red elastic and touched the other jam with the second hook.

The bungee snap-boing-ed into the cage.

Spence chuckled, retrieved the bungee, and stretched it again.

Like an escaping cat, the bungee flew three more times.

Because I needed to learn to attach the cord for picking berries, I took the cord from Spence, hooked it to one side of the doorway, and stretched the cord. BANG!

The metal hook smashed against the base of my thumb and wrist.

A sharp, unrelenting pang—number ten on the rheumatologists’ one to ten scale—throbbed through my hand and forearm.

Clutching the offending hand with the other, I trudged to the house. “I’m going to get a cold pack,” I grumbled through gritted teeth and dripping tears.

“We can use a super twist tie,” Spence called to my back.

My feet crunched the gravel path then stomped up the porch steps.

The porch door stood wide open.

“The damn door is open,” I bellowed and slammed the door behind me. After fetching the cold pack and holding it against my wrist, I stepped back outside. No cats.

Spence hustled up the steps.

Cats Outside Composite
“They’re not on the porch or deck.” I flipped the cold pack from the plastic to the cloth side.

“Are they inside?”

We checked the first floor. No cats.

Spence sighed. “I did it this time. I came back last. You sit.” He left.
I swallowed a sob—for the hand not the cats—and plopped into the log chair. If they ran away, they ran away.

What about the diseases they’ll catch?

They have nine lives.

They’ll make a coyote snack.

Plenty of neighbors have indoor-outdoor cats. Those cats look healthy.

They might kill birds.

My conscience had me there, but my hand throbbed at a nine and a half level. Let the boy cats explore all they wanted. I wouldn’t chase them anymore.

The door opened, and Spence dropped Ande. Later, Spence would explain that Ande had wandered onto West Creek Road. When Ande spotted Spence, the cat dashed through the garden and leaped onto the ramp railing. Before he could jump to the side yard, Spence grabbed Ande and brought him inside.

Ande padded to the fountain and slurped.

Gilbert scampered up the ramp and hid under the coffee table supporting a huge pot of pink petunias.

Spence followed the runaway from the front yard and through the open gate.

We’d left the gate open too? Sheesh.

Spence grabbed Gilbert’s middle, carried him to the porch, and opened the door long enough to slide him inside.

Gilbert climbed onto the arm of the log chair and rubbed his head against my shoulder. Ande curled at my feet.

Spence walked down the ramp and yelled. “Here Rills. Where’s my Rillzie?”

Rills hid in the ferns at the bottom of the ramp. When Spence approached, Rills took off for the road.

Spence closed the gate and strode after the cat.

Rills zigzaged through the summer-green red bushes, around daylilies, and back to the ramp. He sat by the closed gate and waited for his buddy Spence.

Spence dropped Rills onto the sofa, got a can of carbonated water, and grinned. “We’ve got three cat explorers.”

For how long, I wondered.

This past Wednesday, when Spence left to shop at Giant Eagle, the cats acted more like supervisors than explorers. Ande swayed his head following each swipe of the broom. Gilbert jumped onto whatever piece of furniture I dusted. And Rills stuck his head into the plastic grocery bag where I’d dumped sweepings. Food comes in rustling bags. He knows.

By the time I’d finished the first floor cleaning, the exhausted cats napped together on the sofa. Taking the broom, I pulled the front door tight behind me and batted at cobwebs hanging from the porch ceiling. Bird poop dotted the railing. I popped inside for a wet rag.

When Spence returned lugging groceries, I had cleaned the porch and swept all but the ramp. Finishing that, I helped him unpack.

The cats swarmed the kitchen table, sniffed each grocery bag, and made a general nuisance of themselves.

“You know,” Spence said putting a can of black olives into the cupboard, “you left the front door open.”

“What?”

“Only a crack, but the cats could’ve gotten out.”

Sheesh. When I’d gone back for the rag, the door must not have latched.

“Next time I’ll twist the doorknob before I pull.”

If I remember.

Gilbert climbed onto my shoulders and perched like a parrot.

Rills rubbed against my legs.

Ande brought me a paper ball and paced—watching to see which way I’d toss it.

With my pain level down to a two and the recent purplish-brown bruise fading, the threat of losing our precious cats took its rightful priority. Of course, I’ll chase after them when they escape.

Despite cat-escaping craziness, the blueberries are safe from the birds, and the birds are safe from cats—at least for now.
Inside the North Garden Blueberry Cage

Sunday, June 14, 2020

Reflections - Lessons Relearned

Justice Flag

While Spence and I ate breakfast the last Friday in May, the internet blared unwelcome news. George Floyd murdered in Minneapolis. Protests against police brutality and institutional racism turn into riots. Oatmeal glued my throat shut. Not again. Not again and again. Tragic news of injustice and oppression kept recycling through my life.

Enough is enough.

I sipped rooibos tea to ease the lump. “What can I do?”

Community organizer and tenacious fighter against housing injustices, Spence answered in a soft, sad voice. “Nothing.”

“Maybe I could write something? I’ve kept controversial topics out of my blog, but—”

“You’ll come off as a white liberal.”

Duh. Of course I have a white viewpoint. I grew up in Titusville, a small town in Western Pennsylvania, then moved to Mount Lebanon, a white suburb of Pittsburgh. I rarely saw blacks.

My first encounter with racism came when Dad drove the family south for a Florida vacation. When he stopped for gas, I jumped out of our station wagon first and raced to the restrooms. My ten-year-old bladder seemed weaker than anyone else’s in our family. But the labels on three closed doors lining the outside wall of the building halted my run. 

Women          Colored          Men 

My gut pricked as if an angry porcupine rolled around in my stomach.

Aren’t all people created equal? The Presbyterian Church, the Declaration of Independence, and my parents had told me so.

Dad rounded the side of the building, and I reached for the knob on the door labeled Colored.

He placed his hands on my shoulders and turned me toward the Women door.

I glanced over my shoulder. His eyes surveyed the area around the side of the building. “But, Daddy, it isn’t fair.”

“You’re in the South now.” He gave me a push and watched until I opened the socially expected door.

Concluding racism was a Southern problem, I decided I would live in the North when I grew up.

My Skin is Not a Weapon by AlwaysBreaking, Creative Commons
Then Mom took me along to find a house for our move from Titusville to Pittsburgh.

The Realtor, wife of one of Dad’s co-workers at Cyclops Steel, waved purple fingernails past her creamy white face toward a house with a for sale sign.

Mom, who baked three pies and one cake a week in addition to sewing clothes for three children, squinted at the house then turned to the Realtor. “Why are you working, Phyllis? Chuck makes a good salary.”

The Realtor’s chest pushed against her fitted suit coat. “Any [n-word] can clean a house.”

Mom covered her mouth and tittered.

Bile rose in my throat. I turned away, watched a squirrel flick its tail, and swallowed hard.

Why did the Realtor consider herself better than Negros? Racism lived in the North too.

I kept silent like Mom expected, ignored the rest of the adult conversation, and resolved never to hire anyone to clean my house.

In our Pittsburgh house, I pushed the painful pricks and burning bile into the back corners of my mind. Nurtured in a community of white privilege, institutional racism seemed to disappear.

Following my heart, I married Spence and joined VISTA with him. Our assignment took us to Hough, an inner city neighborhood in Cleveland. Outside my safe world, racism had festered and grown. We had a front row seat for the riots in neighboring Glenville that summer. Poverty, discrimination, and the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King made people desperate. The anger and hate glaring from some of the black people’s eyes clawed at my white privilege, but the antics of the friendly black children, with so much energy and potential, captured my heart. Uneasy yet enchanted, I became a teacher who subscribed to Ebony magazine so I could make teaching materials picturing children of color for my Hough students.

The children and their parents accepted me. I relaxed and pushed ugly racism back into its habitual corner. 

On maternity leave, I took an evening seminar in child development at Cleveland State University. Soon after the small class bonded with each other, a substitute arrived at the beginning of a session and announced our professor would be delayed. The substitute passed out squares of colored paper.

With a friendly grin, she waved her arm toward the front of the room and said cheerfully, “People with blue papers, push your desks together to make a table over here.”

While our desks scraped against the linoleum, she used a stern voice to instruct the others scattered in the back of the room. “Complete this assignment without talking.”

She turned back to us, grinned again, and helped one woman move her gear. “Work together to answer these questions about communicating with students’ parents.” She handed each of us three stapled sheets of paper. “You have forty-five minutes.”

We set to work.

When someone in my group asked the substitute for clarification, she rested her hand on the back of the chair and leaned in. “Don’t worry. I’m sure you’ll come up with some great ideas to answer all the questions.”

As my group chatted and worked to get the short answers, I peered over my shoulder at the other students. Silent. Their bodies slumped over the papers on their desks.

I glanced at the substitute.

She beamed at me.

One of the silent students raised his hand.

“What could you possibly want?” the substitute scolded. “Can’t you read? Get back to work.”

Angst curdled inside me. Why didn’t our professor show up?

After a half hour, I couldn’t take any more. I raised my hand. 

The substitute flashed her friendly grin.

“I’m not feeling well. I need to leave. I have to nurse my baby anyway.” Shaking, I gathered my gear and hustled away.

BLM by AlwaysBreaking, Creative Commons
In the hall, I met our professor.

Half of the angst drained. I chattered about a project I had in mind for the class before I admitted the truth. “I don’t like what’s going on in there. I couldn’t stay any longer.”

Later I learned that after I left, one of the silent students stood and announced that the way the substitute ran the class had upset me and things needed to stop. The seemingly insignificant color of the papers had been a clue. Blue slips and brown slips. The class had been a blue eyes and brown eyes experiment for us, all white teachers, to experience discrimination. The experiment worked on me, and I wasn’t in the discriminated group.

But that discomfort got filed away too. Spence and I moved to Cleveland Heights, an integrated neighborhood we picked after cruising around playgrounds to check the diversity of children. We raised our family in a safe, comfortable cocoon.

I’d been socialized like my dad. If someone made a racist remark, I stayed silent like my mom. If things made me uncomfortable, I moved to another place. I became adept at going along, staying silent, and running away.

Decades passed. After the alarming news broadcasts at the end of May, a disturbing email arrived from Darlene, my long time friend since our daughters became buddies in middle school and our sons became friends in high school. When our children grew and moved away, our relationship continued and strengthened. Cain Park concerts were favorite girls nights out. As a black woman with black children and black grandchildren, her email reflected the present, not our happy times. Her words pierced my heart.

I tried to write today, have the skeleton of my 100th blog done, but the words wouldn't come . . . so much sadness, anger and fear raging through my brain. Haven't slept well the last several nights worrying about the safety of my son and grandsons.

I couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t move.

Her son Curtis had come to visit on a trip home from his freshman year at Ohio State University when my son was a senior in high school. The fellas chatted with me in the living room of our Cleveland Heights house. When I asked Curtis what was new, he said, “A policeman stopped me on Public Square. He said I was jaywalking.”

“He stopped you for jaywalking?” I snorted. “You’re kidding, right?”

His face glowing with merriment, Curtis chuckled. “I thought so too. I said, ‘You’re joking.’ But he wasn’t. So, I said,” Curtis tucked his chin to his chest and lowered his voice to a deep respectful tone, “‘Yes, sir. I’m sorry, officer.’”

We laughed at the time, but after years of Black Lives Matter protests, the memory of his story terrified me. The incident could have had a tragic end.

And I’d watched Darlene’s three grandsons—Tiree, Xander, and Riley—grow from newborns to special young men.

White liberal viewpoint or not, I’m going to follow the advice  that Professor Kathryn Russel-Brown gave over On Point June 1. “White people have to talk to white people about white people.” She admitted the conversations would be uncomfortable, but we had to do it.

So, acknowledging my white privileged background and a lifetime of pushing the pain of racism into a back corner, I’m determined.

I won’t go along with immoral social norms.

I won’t stay silent when racism creeps into conversations.

I won't run away from uncomfortable situations.

Writing this blog is the first step. Now I have to work at changing seven decades of old habits and face uncomfortable truths. Inspired by Fredrick Douglass’s method’s for fighting to abolish slavery, I can “use my voice, my pen, or [and] my vote.” Remembering the faces of black children with so much potential will help.

Justice Now

White Silence = Black Death

Family Protest by Always Breaking, Creative Commons