Monday, February 10, 2020

A timely poem & a cats-&-dogs question

 A Prayer to Talk to Animals
 by Nickole Brown
 
Lord, I ain’t asking to be the Beastmaster
gym-ripped in a jungle loincloth
or a Doctor Dolittle or even the expensive vet
down the street, that stethoscoped redhead,
her diamond ring big as a Cracker Jack toy.
All I want is for you to help me flip
off this lightbox and its scroll of dread, to rip
a tiny tear between this world and that, a slit
in the veil, Lord, one of those old-fashioned peeping
keyholes through which I can press my dumb
lips and speak. If you will, Lord, make me the teeth
hot in the mouth of a raccoon scraping
the junk I scraped from last night’s plates,
make me the blue eye of that young crow cocked to
me--too selfish to even look up from the black
of my damn phone. Oh, forgive me, Lord,
how human I’ve become, busy clicking
what I like, busy pushing
my cuticles back and back to expose
all ten pale, useless moons. Would you let me
tell your creatures how sorry
I am, let them know exactly
what we’ve done? Am I not an animal
too? If so, Lord, make me one again.
Give me back my dirty claws and blood-warm
horns, braid back those long-
frayed strands of every nerve tingling
with all I thought I had to do today.
Fork my tongue, Lord. There is a sorrow on the air
I taste but cannot name. I want to open
my mouth and know the exact
flavor of what’s to come, I want to open
my mouth and sound a language
that calls all language home.

 (“A Prayer to Talk to Animals” was originally published in 2017 by The Academy
of American Poets Poem-A-Day Project.  Copyright © 2019 by Nickole Brown.
All rights reserved.  Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission)


A cat conundrum

Crosley & Mitzi                                    Hildreth pic
For “cat people” -- those with one or more felines in the family -- a frequent question might be:  how do I introduce a new cat to the household so the resident(s) won’t feel threatened and so all felines ultimately get along?  The many answers to such a question often boil down to separate “old” from new, introduce gradually and give it time.

But is there another way to save resident cats from feeling supplanted?  hurt?  angry?  by a new cat in the house?  

Maybe.  How about bringing a different species into the mix?  A dog who also needs a loving home?

How would the cat(s) already there feel then? 
    
For “cat people” who are also “dog people” and “animal people” in general, why not?  Introduce the newcomer gradually, with all the safeguards built into an all-cat situation . . . and, maybe, bingo!

Or no? 

Do any readers have experience with such a situation: introducing a needy dog (I’m not talking puppies here – just as I’m not talking kittens either) to one or more resident cats.  Please share any advice you may have by commenting on this post!



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