Tag Archives: cats

Lessons from the Lizards Tail

The black-and-white cat was paying rapt attention to something in front of the

Crouching house cat, hidden lizard

fireplace. He had that ears-cupped-and-tilted-forward look, and was holding absolutely still, eyes wide open. He does this only when there is something of great interest to him, and that is almost always something that is about to become part of his toy repertoire.

I got up, and looked at the spot on the tile. It looked like a stick. Suddenly, almost all of the stick shot across the room, leaving a wiggling piece behind. Nature works really well. The thing was a lizard, and it had dropped its tail, which wriggled appealingly, allowing my cat to focus on it, while the rest of the lizard scrambled to safety away from the cat.

Picking up the now-tailless lizard with a paper towel,  I stepped out the door and shook the paper towel out gently, close to the ground by the fig tree. The little lizard body tumbled out.”Must have picked it up too hard,” I thought, feeling guilty. I thought I’d killed it, after the cat had missed it. Just as guilt waved over me, the lizard pulled out of its frozen position, and shot, tailless, up the fig tree to safety.

Some lizards drop their tails to save their lives, leaving their prey interested in the wiggly, but not vital to life part. I’d never seen it work so well. The cat was perfectly happy to let the business part of the prey escape if he got to keep the  funny, wiggly part.

It seems like such a good idea to be able to drop a non-vital body part to save the important working parts. We don’t come equipped with convenient tails, but we do drag around burdensome “tales”–the stories we drag around as baggage. The sad story of how our parents didn’t give us what we needed. The mean roommate in college who was so thoughtless. The boss who wasn’t a mentor we’d hoped for, but gave us all the drudge jobs.

All those stories pile up and slow us down. They make us prey for anger, stress, decisions based on revenge and stored-up resentment. We can drop our “tales” of hurt and pity, leave them wiggling for someone else to become fascinated with. Because they aren’t helping us. No doubt, it’s hard to give up the story we live, the perspective we have on them, how we make choices based on past hurts and injustice. And those stories of injustice get us a lot of attention as our friends condemn those who hurt us. That’s what friends do. They think it’s helpful, although often attention simply encourages clinging to behavior.

Recasting our past is hard work and not appealing. The work of letting go of the past means admitting that our perspective isn’t working and deliberately looking for a new perspective, one that allows us to live a less-burdened, less blame-riddled life. It won’t be done in a single day, but the small steps and work is certainly worthwhile. My clients have experienced it, and not a single client regrets the work of re-invention.

We can’t change how our story began, but we can change how it continues and build for a happen ending.

Quinn McDonald is a creativity coach and author of the book Raw Art Journaling, which helps people choose the story they want to live. Yes, the book can be used for re-invention. It’s a multi-purpose book!

Theme Thursday #3: 5/21/09

Here’s how it works–On Thursdays, you pick a topic you love and know a lot about. Share the information-find at least three links that are great. Post them to your site and let us know about them in the comments. You can also put them on Twitter (#Theme Thursday) or Facebook.

This week is about clever ideas:

I cringe at making a video, but I like to watch them. Here’s a really well-done, sharply-edited video on cat yodeling. Don’t have coffee in your mouth while watching. Use as an excuse to learn skills on video-learning.

Your business card is what people use to remember you. Advertising leave-behinds need to be useful to your audience.  Make it memorable.

Krista is a photographer. She took a lot of pictures of objects shaped like letters. Her home page lets you  spell out our favorite word, name or message using her photos.  You can purchase it as a framed piece of art or greeting card.

If you’ve seen (or read) Dan Brown’s Angels and Demons, you know about ambigrams–words written in such a way as to be readable both right-side up and upside down. John Langdon created them for the movie and on his website. He gives you tips on how to create ambigrams, too.

Previous Theme Thursdays:

Creative Play 5/14/09,

Creative Play 5/7/09

The Multiple Cat Box

Veterinarians will tell you that each cat needs a kitty litter box. Some even recommend an extra box, so two cats need three boxes. I don’t know how big your house is, but mine will not hold four kitty litter boxes for my three cats. On the other hand, one of my cats, who was abandoned in a closet, will only use the cleanest box. If it’s not clean enough, he will find a clean spot on the floor. So I’ve had to keep the boxes meticulously clean.

kitty litter box for 3 cats

kitty litter box for 3 cats

Now, once we moved, the boxes are lined up in the laundry room. I was using smaller boxes, the space is small. One of the cats, a hefty 20-pounder, can pee squatting down, but for some reason, he began to stand on his toes and pee over the edge of the box. I was lining the floor with painter’s tarpaulin to protect the floor. I could not move the boxes any place else–the guest bath didn’t have enough floor space, and the master bath is carpeted. Don’t ask.

I went to a local big-box (pun fully intended) pet store to find the solution. And there it was–a giant kitty litter box. With high sides. I decided that one box suited me, and if the cats could get used to it, it would be a big improvement. I purchased “World’s Best Kitty Litter,” although the name did not impress me. The litter is made of corn, is absorbent and has almost no dust.

World's Best Kitty Litter is just that.

World's Best Kitty Litter is just that

And I bought something that embarrassed even me–a box of kitty litter box wipes. They work. One of the things that makes a kitty litter box smell is the urine that dries on the side of the pan. Once a day, I use a wipe to clean around the walls of the kitty litter box, and toss the wipe out with the scooped material. Because the box is in the laundry room, it’s easy for me to scoop often, and important to keep the small room smelling clean. The combination of the litter, the big box and the wipes works.

I installed a cat-door on the door to the laundry room, and all three cats are learning how to use it. One big box is much easier to clean, and the World’s Best Kitty Litter doesn’t smell as much as the clumping stuff, doesn’t make nearly as much dust, and the cats don’t mind stepping into it as much as regular litter.

All of this seems trivial unless you own multiple cats. I’ll admit that three cats is the outer edge of sanity. One more, and I’ll have to grow my hair in a bun and line my hat with aluminum foil. But for now, for all three of them and one of me, we are happy. And that’s saying a lot.

—Quinn McDonald owns three cats who love living in the Phoenix area. She is a writer and a certified creativity coach. (c) 2008 All rights reserved.

Suitcase cats

When I left DC to move to Phoenix, I left my three cats behind with my husband. Luckily, the place I’m staying has another two. They have decided to like me–they sleep on my bed and want to be scratched, often and thoroughly. suitcasecats.jpg

When I came back from running a seminar in DC, both of them immediately climbed into my unpacked suitcase and made themselves at home.

I’m back home, happily brushing cat hair from my clothing!

—Quinn McDonald runs seminars and trainings on business communications. She seems to collect cats in her suitcase. (c) 2007 All rights reserved.