“either love me or don’t waste my time”

I wish they made cat food for humans. Seriously.

I am not what you might call a “foodie.” My mom did most of the cooking in our house and she’s got a pretty bland palate. Most meals at home everything was seasoned with garlic salt. I didn’t try things like kalamata olives or brie until I was in college – actually I was well into my twenties before I gave brie a chance.

Anyway, there are a few days or a week of each month that I’m either too busy or distracted to think about food. I don’t have what you’d call an appetite; no type of food is tempting. I actually resent leaving my desk to go get lunch because I don’t want it. But I know that I need to eat, because if I don’t I get light headed and spacey.

I remember reading somewhere that by the year 2000 we’d have pills that contained all of our daily nutrients and just pop a pill a few times a day and be done with it. this might have been a pretty old book, but the concept is genius.

It’s at that point that I actually envy Zelda Fitzgerald, who eats half a cup of the Science Diet every day. Neither one of us put much thought into her diet and she does fine. If there was kibble for humans, I would probably be the target market for it.

Word does not like the construction of my next to last sentence. Instead of “Neither one of us…”, Word would like to suggest “Both one of us put much thought into her diet and…” I’m totally writing Bill Gates a fan letter after I finish the spreadsheet I should be working on right now.

“from the moment i sleep, to the moment i wake”

I am not having a good week.

What I am having is one of those weeks that makes one question the wisdom of getting up and leaving the apartment in the morning. Yesterday, one of my colleagues got off a phone call and announced to the room in general “I’m tempted to jump out the window, but we’re on the first floor, so what’s the point?” and I knew exactly what she meant. When jumping out the window isn’t worth the effort, you’re in trouble.

I’ve had houseguests all week, and while I have no objection to houseguests, Zelda Fitzgerald takes exception to them. Perhaps if they hadn’t shut her up in my bedroom Monday night, she’d be feeling more gracious. Instead, she has decided to retaliate by going completely and inexplicably bear-sick between 2 and 4 a.m. Last night she was on a mission to kill the bathmat for about half an hour. When I got up and shut her out of the bathroom, she decided to run laps through the apartment like it was the Indy 500. She finally settled down exactly 10 minutes before my alarm went off.

I’ve been getting up earlier this week anyway – three people are sharing my one bathroom – and arriving in the office at 8:30 a.m. It’s amazing what a difference half an hour makes. By that I mean I’ve realized I should probably get in at seven in order to get everything done.

This weekend is already packed with volunteering for NARAL (Saturday) and interviewing people (Sunday). When they said “no rest for the wicked”, I thought they were kidding. Fuck.

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Enter the ICHC online Poker Cats Contest!

[drawing a blank in the title department.]

I love me some NPR.

Zelda Fitzgerald and I listen every morning while I get ready for work and she follows me around the apartment. It’s the only time of the day or night that she does not meow obnoxiously at the top of her lungs. I can only assume this is out of concern for the international situation and that my cat is as much of a political junkie as I am.

Anyway, Morning Edition always includes some lighter news, I guess to balance out the latest updates from the occupation of Iraq. This morning, the news was about the Girl Scouts. You might know the Girls Scouts from their ubiquitous yearly cookie sale. It’s the one where the 6-year-olds put on their tiny caps and stand in front of the grocery store, exuding adorableness and shilling cookies.

The first thing I’d like to point out is that the cookies are not that great. I mean, they’re cookies. The only thing that makes them special is that you can only get them once a year. And the adorableness.

But the sales themselves are cutthroat. Having been on the inside (I was a Girl Scout from age 5 through age 9), I can tell you what I have seen. These ladies are competing for prizes, and they take the shit seriously. There’s always a few girls whose parents take their order forms to work and muscle their underlings into ordering boxes and boxes – they freeze well! – and just blow everyone else out of the water. These girls go door to door, they table everywhere that will have them…if we could stock them with clipboards and voter reg forms, November would be a piece of cake.

Anyway, everyone has a favorite cookie, but every few years the Girl Scouts switch things up a little. During the early 90s health conscious period, we rolled out a low fat oatmeal cookie, which was pretty gross.

For the 2008 pseudo-health-conscious period, the Girls are offering cookies in convenient 100-calorie packs.

You might be familiar with these in Wheat Thin and Oreo form. The idea is that you no longer have to count out a reasonable portion of food for yourself. You just eat what’s in the pack and know it is only 100 calories. “No counting or over thinking things,” according to Nabisco’s website. Mindless eating. Just what the doctor ordered.

It seems a little weird to me, however, that the Girl Scouts, whose mission is to empower young women, should jump on the “skinny or die” bandwagon. Yes, the cookies will sell. Yes, the Girls will make money to go camping or put on plays or whatever it is Girl Scouts do these days. But it seems weird to expose impressionable children to pressure to be thin, and to teach them about self-deprivation – 100 calories is like half a cookie – rather than eating a reasonable amount of normal food and getting exercise.

I probably don’t need to mention that these cookies will be primarily marketed toward women. The Nabisco website is crawling with svelte and satisfied looking women, but no photos of men daintily consuming their 100-calorie packs of anything. How empowering is it to teach girls that women should be concerned with their bodies and not eat delicious cookies, but that there is not a similar concern for men?

Perhaps the powers-that-be in the Scouting world should go back to the boardroom and reconsider what they’re selling the troops, and whether it’s worth it to move a few more boxes of cookies.

“everyone is here but you’re nowhere near.”

You know that story about the man on the beach? He’s walking along and he sees masses of starfish washed up onto the shore. Hundreds, maybe thousands of starfish. And he’s walking and contemplating these thousands of dead and dying starfish and he sees a little boy. Little boy is picking up starfish, one at a time, and flinging them back into the ocean.

And the man says, What are you doing? You can’t possibly throw back all those starfish! It doesn’t make a difference!

The little boy, in his innocent childish wisdom picks up another starfish, and flings it overhand into the water. No, he says, but I made a difference for that one.

I fucking hate that story.

I once interviewed a girl who told that story as an example of why social change is important. She mistakenly substituted seahorses for starfish, which is a slightly less picturesque. She didn’t get the job.

Also, the boy would have been infinitely more effective if he’d canvassed the neighborhood for other people who were upset by all those dead starfish and organized them to strengthen pollution laws in their little seaside town. You have to think big picture, little boy.

So I adopted a cat a few weeks ago. (A non sequitur like that probably deserved some kind of disclaimer. Sorry.) And the cat adoption process works something like this: you answer a few questions about yourself and your lifestyle. You tour the cat barracks where 60 or 70 cats are sleeping and write down the ones you find appealing. Your adoption counselor facilitates your meetings with a few cats while you decide which one to take home.

So that’s how Zelda Fitzgerald came to live with me. And hide under my couch, meow all night, puke on my bedroom floor and get a $183 ear infection.

She’s my starfish, right? No matter what happened to all those other cats, Zelda has a couch to shred, a trash can to spill and her own, private box to poop in.

Except that I don’t feel that way at all.

I love my cat. I have no doubt that we made the best possible choice. But I keep thinking about how unfair life is for all those other cats. I mean, yeah, there were a lot of people looking to adopt pets that Saturday. But the shelter was running a “buy one, get one free” special on their cats. Actually, it was “buy one, get one of equal or lesser value,” because if you got a kitten (more expensive) you got an adult cat free. This is generally a bad sign. “Buy one, get one free” is retail code for “jesus h. christ we can’t get rid of these things fast enough!” If your grocery store ever runs a “buy one, get one” sale, check expiration dates.

I think about these other cats a lot. Maybe I should have gotten two. Or three, you know? Cats are small. So is my apartment, but that’s not a big deal. I still remember their silly shelter names. KitKat was super fluffy and had a weight problem. And a cold, so she snuffled and purred on my lap. Foccacia was apparently depressed because he’d been in the shelter so long. There was Sophie, who Dan liked but we did not even get to meet. And a grey cat whose head was too big for his body. Buster was an orange tabby.

This is partially a function of my conviction that everyone in the world is an idiot; therefore, no one is really qualified to give these cats a home except for me and maybe four people I can think of. I don’t feel this kind of guilt toward homeless people. And I imagine the cats at the Dumb Friends League are better provided for than the average resident of a homeless shelter in Denver. At least the cats get regular veterinary care.

I don’t think Zelda Fitzgerald feels guilty. At this point she probably can’t remember the shelter or the other cats or much besides the fact that we played with a ribbon five minutes ago and that was fun.

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