A good decade ago (probably like 13 years) ago I met some great people at Ameri-Source Publications
It was a meh job for meh pay but the people were nice.
With every passing year I wonder what rabbit hole to never never land I fell through because while this is the same physical place.. it seems to be run by an actual circus.
Meanwhile, I got me some cats last year. Two, from a friend I'd made at that telemarketing scam.
We had a good year I guess, but one of them was more wild that the other.
They were buds though and kept their our company as I went to work or did whatever.
But what sucks is when you need to move and for whatever reason the new place doesn't accept pets.
This is now happening to me, and it had just happened to my friend. It broke her heart to lose 3 cats with the oldest one she's had for years. They become a part of you.. and who are you once they are gone?
So you say no, don't sign the lease and you find something else. This is what the guy at the SPCA echoed to me.. if you haven't signed a lease.. why are you even thinking about it?
Of course when the situation is more complicated than that.. what do you do?
I'm less than torn to have had to bring the troublemaking ring leader bane-of-my-existence cat to the SPCA. Not a meow, not a scratch, not a hiss.. just acceptance or whatever passes for a cat that knows he's being "abandoned".
They'll either find a way to tame him further, or find a home where the owners, who won't be unaware of what they are in for, will find a way to incorporate him.
It is the other one. They good one.. that can't deal with the situation. He's depressed. Eating and trying to play, but you can't when the wild man has left town. He just wants to be up in arms all the time.
It bugs me more that he'd developed an eye issue and needs another vet visit.
The girl that gave them to me said don't worry about it. The SPCA will stitch his eye and cone his head so it will have time to heal properly.
Either they will do it or his new family will. Even the vet wasn't concerned, she stitched his eye with just the other lady there unnecessarily to hold him down. He's ultra mellow.
My concern is they won't know he's a great cat, from a great mother cat, and a great grandma cat from what I've been told.
I'll move on but it would be hard to do that after, "abandoning" him.
It is hard enough to do that intentionally to other people much less a pet. How do people do it? and why with the trouble cat gone, and peace and sanity restored.. does it feel like I should have just released him right away?
It was a meh job for meh pay but the people were nice.
With every passing year I wonder what rabbit hole to never never land I fell through because while this is the same physical place.. it seems to be run by an actual circus.
Meanwhile, I got me some cats last year. Two, from a friend I'd made at that telemarketing scam.
We had a good year I guess, but one of them was more wild that the other.
They were buds though and kept their our company as I went to work or did whatever.
But what sucks is when you need to move and for whatever reason the new place doesn't accept pets.
This is now happening to me, and it had just happened to my friend. It broke her heart to lose 3 cats with the oldest one she's had for years. They become a part of you.. and who are you once they are gone?
So you say no, don't sign the lease and you find something else. This is what the guy at the SPCA echoed to me.. if you haven't signed a lease.. why are you even thinking about it?
Of course when the situation is more complicated than that.. what do you do?
I'm less than torn to have had to bring the troublemaking ring leader bane-of-my-existence cat to the SPCA. Not a meow, not a scratch, not a hiss.. just acceptance or whatever passes for a cat that knows he's being "abandoned".
They'll either find a way to tame him further, or find a home where the owners, who won't be unaware of what they are in for, will find a way to incorporate him.
It is the other one. They good one.. that can't deal with the situation. He's depressed. Eating and trying to play, but you can't when the wild man has left town. He just wants to be up in arms all the time.
It bugs me more that he'd developed an eye issue and needs another vet visit.
The girl that gave them to me said don't worry about it. The SPCA will stitch his eye and cone his head so it will have time to heal properly.
Either they will do it or his new family will. Even the vet wasn't concerned, she stitched his eye with just the other lady there unnecessarily to hold him down. He's ultra mellow.
My concern is they won't know he's a great cat, from a great mother cat, and a great grandma cat from what I've been told.
I'll move on but it would be hard to do that after, "abandoning" him.
It is hard enough to do that intentionally to other people much less a pet. How do people do it? and why with the trouble cat gone, and peace and sanity restored.. does it feel like I should have just released him right away?