So I was back home after working out of town for three years, only coming home weekends.
My beloved cat died last February and the idea of another seemed impossible. She couldn't be replaced.
On another note, she used to throw up all over the place. Cat litter is a pain and I didn't miss it. I liked being free from having to worry about a pet.
But since I've been home, the house has seemed colder somehow.
Then Kara, a high school friend of my son's, posted pictures on Facebook of two adult cats for whom she was trying to find homes. She's one of those fairy godmothers to animals, holding Saturday pet adoption fairs in the office of the apartment complex she manages in Grand Rapids. A boy and a girl cat of about 5, Pasha and Wilson came to the Humane Society together from a couple who had a baby and didn't want them anymore. She couldn't stand the idea of having them put to sleep and brought them into the office, where they had been living for three months and counting.
At every adoption fair, she tried like mad to get someone to take them, but no one bit. Fully grown cats aren't nearly as cute as kittens. And they came as a pair.
Well, I saw the pictures and began to think about it. I'm on a tight budget and couldn't take on the expense of spaying/neutering. These two were already fixed and declawed.
And my daughter has been saying for a couple of years now that if I got another cat, I needed two. They keep each other company and don't get as squirrely as our last two have, being home alone a lot of the time. They weren't squirrely to me, of course, but they weren't social to guests.
So I reached out. I didn't commit to anything, just inquired. Kara wrote back, sending more pictures.
I finally told her I was pretty sure I would take them but wanted to wait until after Christmas, when things would be calmer. Then she sent a picture of the cats in the apartment complex office, each one in an office chair in front of the office desk. That did it. While they were lucky to still be alive and living in that office, I wanted them to be alive and living in a home.
And so I went and picked them up last week. It was tough on Kara, who had hoped to keep them but already had several pets — and a baby — at home. The people in the office had become attached to them, too.
So I've had the cats at my house a couple of days now and have been sending pictures back to Grand Rapids to make them all feel better. Straightening up and putting things away, I belatedly noticed a framed poster that Kara had sent along with some cat treats and the adoption paperwork. It must have been hanging in the office, as part of the effort to find the cats a home.
It was a fill in the blank form, and read: Dear Santa, for Christmas this year, I want A FEW TREATS. I need A WARM LAP. I'll wear A SANTA SWEATER. I'll read THE NEWSPAPER WITH YOU. And I'd really love you to bring us A FOREVER FAMILY. Love, Pasha and Wilson.
Now, they have one.
Archive: Sunday
Kathy Gibbons: Kittens get 'forever family'
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Oryana celebrates 40 years in business
In the early 1970s, a small group of Traverse City families got together to drive to Ann Arbor and purchase the grains and beans they couldn’t find locally.
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Leelanau Birding Festival runs May 29-June 2
Robert Parsons has traveled to Texas, Arizona, Florida and even Costa Rica to seek out unusual birds. Now Parsons is adding Michigan to that list.
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Editorial: Airport should give vets prominent recognition
The issue: Cherry Capital relegates veterans sign to luggage area. Our view: Either do it right or not at all.
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New TC manager earned his gray along the way
Jered Ottenwess described himself during his interview for Traverse City manager as soft-spoken, lacking years of experience and perhaps not the most charismatic person.
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St. Francis rolls to regional track crown
The St. Francis girls set two school records, won 10 events and qualified 10 to the state meet en route to capturing the 17-team Division 4 regional track title Saturday at Brethren.
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Chamber View: Multiple opportunities for learning
The people who make up our local business community often wear many hats – boss, line worker, ambassador, bookkeeper, mentor … the list goes on.
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Sand in his veins: Mountz has 38 years at Sleeping Bear
Tom Mountz is the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore’s longest-serving employee. He can’t think of one other place in the world he would rather work.
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Benzie extends track championship streaks
Benzie Central’s seniors kept their regional streaks intact Saturday at East Jordan.
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Ex-oil exec sees perilous energy future for U.S.
America is headed for an energy crisis filled with power blackouts and gasoline shortages, making today’s gas prices something to fear for in coming years.
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Letters to the Editor: 05/19/2013
Franz unresponsive; No Russian roulette.
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Kathy Gibbons: Time to say goodbye — once again
It’s been three years since I’ve actually lived here full-time in the summer. This year will mark the fourth.
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Beach Bums fall in Joliet, 6-3
Catcher Grant DeBruin went 3-for-3 and drove in three runs Saturday night as the Joliet Slammers made it two straight over the Traverse City Beach Bums, 6-3.
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Townships settle 12-year-old lawsuit with Cherryland
Three holdout local townships finally settled a drawn-out tax dispute with Cherryland Electric Cooperative prior to a full hearing before the Michigan Supreme Court.
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Forum: Clean energy, energy forums crucial
Developing a long-term energy plan and investing in clean energy is crucial to Michigan’s future. Gov. Rick Snyder’s recent energy forums are important first steps in developing such a plan.
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Antrim officials make headway with meth convictions
Antrim County authorities answered a spike in methamphetamine activity with a series of arrests and convictions that they believe should send a message to meth producers and users.
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Jack Lessenberry: Pleasing voters not a priority
Once upon a time, legislators felt they had to try to give voters the laws they wanted. True, once in a great while. some took stands on principle that risked angering their constituents.
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Prep Sports Roundup: Trojans defend home diamond
Ron Dohm pitched a one-hit shutout Saturday as Traverse City Central captured its own baseball tournament with a 4-0 win over Muskegon Oakridge. (Plus more)
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Benzie drug death leads to heroin charges
Authorities filed drug-dealing charges against a suburban Detroit man after a suspected heroin overdose death in Benzie County.
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Terry Wooten: One poem leads to another — and friendship
I was watching my own kids ride a miniature tilt-a-whirl, when I heard this old man yell, “MIMI SIT DOWN!” I looked around to see who Mimi was, and there was this little carney girl slouched on a plastic chair on a merry-go-round.
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Students recognized for math club performance
Thirty math-hungry East Middle School students recently made history. The group of seventh- and eighth-graders was the first at the school to achieve national gold level status for a club called MathCounts.
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Business Memoranda: 05/19/2013
Custer Workplace Interiors has added Emily Heilig to its northern Michigan sales team.
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Business in Brief: 05/19/2013
Become a contractor; Solar projec tbeing offered; MMC joins Spectrum. (Plus more)
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Births: 05/19/2013
MILLER — A son, Elijah Thomas, to Tom and Amy (McNeil) Miller of Lake Ann, March 28.
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Local Sports Events: 05/19/2013
Golf outings and sports camps across northern Michigan:
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Building Permits: 05/19/2013
Building permits issued in Grand Traverse County:
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Oryana celebrates 40 years in business



