Wednesday, July 6, 2022

Let this radicalize you

 Since my last post:

Countless people have been slaughtered by guns.

Roe was overturned.

On a personal note, 3 out of 4 of my household came down with COVID. All are well today, but every day it feels like the walls are closing in.

I spend a considerable amount of spare online time crowdfunding for Abortion funds, I feel like it's the most I have to give right now. When my kids are older I'll likely train to be an abortion fund warm-line volunteer. 

I have a full-time job that demands so much, a toddler and a teenager who need so much, while I hurtle closer to menopause each day. I also joined the Board of my tiny little welcoming congregation, we're in a transition period where we're trying to figure out how to stay afloat. 

I don't think I have the bandwidth to describe what it feels like to watch your kids learn to navigate a world that is so cruel. That wants to steal their safety at every turn. 

My day to day life is one of comfort that's unimaginable to so many people. I have stable income, a comfortable house. A leafy green back yard to breathe in. Yet. I don't think I've felt so much anxiety since Celine. Maybe it's ptsd. Maybe it's living in a historical moment where you actively disassociate from your feelings because your trauma is no longer some hypothetical political exercise. You're watching the slowest largest wave of disaster unfold, as it swallows person after person.

One of the wisest organizers I have ever encountered has said something along the lines of the following: Hope is a discipline. 

It is not a natural impulse to feel hope right now, to connect to optimism. I have to work my ass off each day to find a shred of it. But my commitment to my loved ones is that I will actively seek it. 



Friday, May 13, 2022

Health

 We're all scrambling now, aren't we.

For those of my readers out there who are as concerned about the specter of long-COVID as I am, it's been a rough one.  No, I do not believe anyone in my family is at risk of death or hospitalization from COVID. But, yes, my family masks indoors because I'm 100% convinced that COVID is something we don't want to fuck with. I have too many friends right now experiencing chronic conditions after their "mild COVID colds" and I'm just sitting here numb.

I haven't talked about it a ton, but my forties have opened up a strange new world of autoimmune shit that I am navigating. IBS is the main one, restricting dairy and onions and garlic and cruciferous vegetables is helping.  Massive allergies are also in the mix. I go to bed with giant welts on my back, hives, inflammation and sinus infections are a regular part of my routine now. Would I like to add on some more intriguing symptoms to my daily routine, like brain fog and fatigue and joint pain? No thank you, I've got enough going on. I'll keep my mask on.

Meanwhile, I'm trying to figure out where I fit in supporting the front-line community members who are working overtime to expand abortion services. Right now I'm raising my voice on the crowdfunding we need. My state, Maryland, currently has one of the only clinics in the country that provides care for people who need abortions later in pregnancy. We're also expecting to see an influx of need as states pass their own versions of Texas SB8.

In response, a local OB/GWN and a Nurse Midwife are launching their own clinic, Partners in Abortion Care. Please spread the word and support them if you can!

https://www.gofundme.com/f/expand-abortion-access-in-maryland?utm_campaign=p_lico+share-sheet&utm_medium=copy_link&utm_source=customer

This weekend, I'll be volunteering at a rally demanding that our governor release millions of dollars in funding that was earmarked to expand services. When S is older, I will probably step up and volunteer for our local abortion fund's warmline. 

None of it is enough. We can't mutual aid ourselves out of this hole we're in.

Monday, April 18, 2022

Mourning

Ever grieve people who are still alive?  They are here in body and spirit and they love you and you talk to them and mourn what was, what they once were? Or at least, what you grew up imagining them to be?

My parents are unrecognizable from the people who raised me. They are down a rabbit hole of disinformation and hatred and it's a fucking horror story. Every now and then there's a glimmer of the people I recognize, but it fades into ether too quickly to grasp onto.

I brought my daughters home to NYC to spend four days with them - we had the option for five, but honestly, I knew we wouldn't make it that long. My oldest daughter had enough after the night where their racism was in such full throttle that she had to walk away from them mid-sentence. I've never seen her so shook. I was able to make a graceful exit without acrimony because Sammi's terrible sleep habits in NYC gave me the excuse. Oh now, we have to leave really. Oh no, we don't need Dad to drive us home we'll take the train, because she's the worst on road trips.  All true. Just leaving out the "Oh no, we can't spend 4 hours in a car with you, or another night, because every other sentence out of your mouth is more unhinged and venomous."

I explained to Niblet that my grandfather was a racist who constantly used the Yiddish version of the n-word, and refused to stop even when as a teenager I asked him to stop. He generally said terrible things and I came to accept he would never change. I hold on to all memories of him. They guy who I liked to watch TV with in Montreal and listen to old jazz records was the same guy who was would say insulting things to my obese grandmother about her weight. 

I like to say the algorithm got my parents. But they're not so unusual. Look, there are maybe 70 million people in the US who view the world as they do. A world where economic equity is a grievance and fuck, the word equity is actually a Communist plot. What's difference about my parents is that until 2016, they viewed the world through an entirely different lens. They're not evangelical Christians. They've always supported abortion rights. But they're blinded into a hateful distortion of reality and they were captured by the algorithm as a result of deeply held racism that perhaps I was too eager to ignore or wish away.   

The Viking has tried to make me feel better by noting that his own father could very easily have gone down the same path - had he been a few years younger and more inclined to go into youtube spaces where mendacious podcasters propagandize and the algorithm bounces you further into a deep sea of disinformation.

So, no, my parents are not so different from tens of millions of Americans.  But, the betrayal I feel at their willingness to support the sacrifice the lives of the most vulnerable people in the country - such as the millions women who don't have their abortions covered by health insurance - it's just acute. It's the same betrayal that one of my trans friends feels when he visits his parents and they feed him and then say "we love you" and then vote for people who are trying to eliminate him off the face of the earth.

Did you know how many subreddits and online support groups there are for kids like me? Google "parents and fox news" oh, you'll learn. It's a comfort, I suppose, finding your people. My sister-in-law is one of them too. I recently told her I want her to come over here if she can ever get a day off, we'll relax on the back porch and stare at the trees and mourn our parents together.





I've got to admit, I hesitated to even draft this blog entry.  More than one of you readers has noted that this is a journal of sorts, a diary of love to my children. It feels wrong to write these words in this space. But after the awakening my 13 year old has been forced to grapple with, well, if I hold the expectation that they may one day learn about some of the horrors I had to experience, surely they can absorb this.

Monday, January 24, 2022

New year new circus

 I'm finally inspired to write again, as we near the close of January. what a month.

This is the month that I am truly grappling with the high and lows of aging.  

On the one hand, the wisdom, man, the wisdom. I am realizing that I am excelling in my professional life because I actually have a lot to offer. I'm up for a promotion, and I just received an appointment to a position on a City Commission because I earned it (no for real, someone addressed me the other day as "Commissioner"). Sure, I still have a lot to learn (don't we always?), but a decade at my current workplace has led me to a place where I can call myself an expert in my field. It's a heavy word, expertise, but I've fucking earned it. I don't relate much to feelings about imposter syndrome that some people I know describe. I know what I'm doing (at least, I know enough to ask the right questions when I don't know the answer), and I'm much more willing to hold myself out into the universe as an "expert."  No false modesty here. I cram all kinds of information into my brain on a daily basis to help healthcare workers assert their rights, and you bet your ass I'm going to do everything I can to elevate them while they're being eaten alive in a country that treats them as disposable. If being the expert gets me in the room to make any kind of positive change, that's how I'm gonna get in the room.

On the other hand, I feel physically more adrift than ever. My back is out again because I am not diligent about my PT exercises. My perimenopausal brain is foggy in all things not work (to the point where I freak out regularly that it will bleed into work). I've needed to lose the same 8 pounds for over a year. I don't drink enough water. I'm finally accepting that I'm lactose intolerant and possibly have some other food reactions that suck. With all of this I snap too easily.

How much of this is the pandemic, how much is it being on the darker side of my forties? Unclear. 

I don't think humans were ever built for the kind of information consumption required of us right now. Excuse me if I can't respond to your email right away, I've had to become an armchair epidemiologist to keep my family alive.

In the midst of all of this, tonight we took a trip to a PETCO to look at kittens that we learned were up for adoption. They were fuzzy and soft and playful and we fell in love and submitted an application. On the one hand, this means more creatures to keep alive. On the other, my love for Princess still leaves open spaces I need filled BY KITTENS.

 

Monday, December 6, 2021

Yes the sky is falling

 Last week I attended a rally at the Supreme Court of the United States in DC to stand up for abortion. 

Look, I'm in my 40s now, I have been attending these things since I was a teenager in the 90s. I need everyone who still reads my words to understand that this one was different.

Yes, we have a conservative majority in the Supreme Court that will likely overturn the viability standard of Casey vs Planned Parenthood and the rights afforded by Roe v Wade. But what I am here to report on is the crowd.

For decades, you could reliably count on pro-choice women to outnumber religious zealots at a protest like this, like 2:1. 

Not so last Wednesday. The crowd was "evenly" divided between sides, allowing for the media to present dumb-ass narratives about how "divided" we are as a country. Bullshit. Voters in the US overwhelmingly support the right to an abortion. But you wouldn't know it from the optics of this event and that's bad. I know too many people - lawyers even - who had no idea that the SCOTUS was even hearing oral arguments on an abortion rights case.

Furthermore, the opposing side was truly, insanely mask off. I had a guy yell at me with my little handwritten "Abortion is Healthcare" sign, about how I was a devil whore. There wasn't a whole lot of rhetoric around protecting women from this crowd, it was full-throated religious zealotry. 

Y'ALL. 

Don't get me started on the 6 foot signs with photoshopped pictures of fetuses that were held by these creepers - I call them creepers because they would creep behind you when you were just chatting with someone, then get in your space, demanding, "why do you think it's ok to murder babies?"

I know people who showed up who felt so uncomfortable, like, physically uncomfortable. Well, now imagine yourself as a scared person who needs to enter a clinic. You're uncomfortable with crazed people shouting at you, invading your space, with the explicit goal of making you turn around to get away from them, in a public space surrounded by law enforcement? Well, put yourselves in the shoes of someone seeking an abortion in the deep south or midwest.

Things are bad. Worse than I could have ever imagined, and I am someone who actually follows organizations who track dwindling abortion access in states. The fire is burning right now.

We have to be honest about what we are facing: These motherfuckers in attendance absolutely included the kinds of terrorists who murder doctors and bomb clinics. This crowd was hateful, and let me repeat, filled with zealots.

I don't have any answers.  My union - we represent healthcare workers - were out to show our support, and I think it was appreciated. I saw too many grandmas, fuck, they were great-grandmas, tiny little nanas who had been fucking marching for too damn long. 

What do I ask of you? The only coherent plan I have, is to donate as much as I am able to abortion funds. These funds help women who can't afford to cross state lines, who need to book hotels and planes and busses. These funds pay for visits to the clinic, or god forbid, the hospital if they need an abortion that is farther alone.  https://abortionfunds.org



Monday, October 11, 2021

desperation

Last week I had a colonoscopy and aside from the fasting and prepping of my colon, it was the most relaxation I've had in months. A bag of fluids and then sedation? Sign me up for more, please.

This month shit is heavy. October. Celine. Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month. Debt.

That last one is hitting me hard. I no longer have the expense of a nanny, we are in a much more affordable stage of nursery school. But:

I am now trying to pull myself out of a double-digit hole of credit card debt (employing a nanny with benefits and paying for everything else by credit card has caught up to me). It's slow-going, if my car breaks down again I'm completely fucked. 

Just breathe. We will be ok.

What feels unsustainable on the other hand, is the new sleep method I've had to employ on S these past few months. Singing to her until she goes down, lying on the floor waiting to hear her heavy breathing... it's a long night.  Niblet really was one of those babies that we perfected the "leave the room and shut the door when they're drowsy but not completely asleep" advice of sleep trainers.  

I'm so fucking tired. I'm so unhinged by the precipitous drop in estrogen surging through my body. I get irrationally angry and cry with little provocation.

Mothering a tween and a toddler while perimenopausal is not for the faint of heart.

Friday, October 1, 2021

Mothering In the Menopause

One day I’m gonna emerge from the pit I’m in to tell the tale of mothering a toddler and pubescent tween while in the midst of perimenopausal depressive episodes. 

Today is not that day. I’m on five hours of sleep, just wept for 45 minutes and have to erase my Google searches because I know my kid will find them and freak the fuck out, as one might when the encounter the word suicide. 

(I am not suicidal. I have had fleeting thoughts of imploding off the earth which my Google search validated as pretty normal in my current hormonal state)  

Golly, do I miss Princess. She would have totally understood.

All of this is to say that I need to take a melatonin and melt into sleep. 


Thursday, September 2, 2021

Buoy

I took a summer hiatus from writing because after we lost Princess, I wasn't sure I had anything left i me to say.

And here I am. Staring at the Handmaids Tale in Texas that's headed to roughly 15 other states in the next year. My close friends in New Orleans have fled for Marietta GA with their 11 year old because who knows when they'll have power restored. Philly and Hoboken are underwater. Niblet is back at school, masked and vaxxed and waiting to be quarantined anyway because it's inevitable.

We are saying good bye to our Nanny today - she's moving on to a new family, Samantha will move on to full day nursery school. C will always be in our lives, but it will surely be a massive upheaval for Samantha. With this, my childcare expenses will be cut by roughly 3/4, I will eventually pull myself out of the massive credit sinkhole I am in. I am not one of the millions of USians about to be evicted. Our 107 year old house is still standing. We live on a hill overseeing the tributary that will surely wash away the cars below one day.

Some of my closest family members have been propagandized to believe that masks are signs of an impending crush of freedoms and that critical race theory is teaching my white daughter in a predominately black public school to hate herself. If I don't numb myself to what we are facing I can't function. 

It is with this last sentence that I pour out the following: the ONLY thing tethering me to sanity, to the ability to get up every day, are my daughters. They are the buoy that is saving me from downing in my rage and tears. I hate the burden that I am placing on them, they don't deserve it. No child does. But here we are.



Friday, June 4, 2021

A boost and a conflict

 Today I had a little boost.

I shared the medium essay with Princess' former owner - a dear friend who also happens to be a prolific - and highly published - non-fiction writer.

She asked that I remove the essay from medium and try to get it published in the NYT Modern Love section.

It's hard. Mr. Viking is not in favor of my going any more public with "our personal medical issues." For what it's worth, I am confident that my parents would feel the same way. I posted the Medium link on my somewhat more anonymous twitter page, but not on facebook, where ironically, I know it would reach more readers (for demographic reasons, and because my twitter account is pretty limited to union and labor related things, with a little bit of Baltimore community stuff thrown in).

Writing about your miscarriages is hard, and writing about your miscarriages in a way that doesn't pull your family into your story can be even harder.

One of the reasons I'm always hesitant to discuss Samantha being a donor egg baby is that her origin story is hers to tell. Personally, I am at a place of comfort with her origin story, I would shout it to the hilltops if I could.  'Samantha is biologically mine, but genetically not mine! And she is the most tremendous gift we have ever been given!" 

My TFMR is still entwined in my grief. Not sure I could go there amongst strangers. I am hugely vocal (and generous) with my support of the reproductive rights movement. Going public about Celine? I'm not there yet.

But the miscarriages, these are in many ways the easiest to disentangle from my fertility story. I want to write about them so badly. I want to make women feel less alone. SO. BADLY. I want to validate the grief of women who are hiding in their showers. I want to be a voice for family leave policies where woman can use sick leave and bereavement leave if they're fortunate enough to even have it in the US. I want to take my activism and expand it. 

I need to get my husband on my page.

Friday, May 21, 2021

Published

Welp, there goes nothing. It's up and nothing left to do but the crying.

https://claudbalog.medium.com/princess-and-the-ghosts-eab6b9877ba7


Princess and the Ghosts 

When Losing Your Pet Opens up the Floodgates of Grief 

 

“Do you want us to bring her home?” 

My daughter responded with giant eyes and a vigorous head nod.  

Our little family of three was sitting in the guest room of our friends’ rowhouse, the cat looking at the child warily. My daughter was five. The previous year she had begged for a baby sister, she’d even created an imaginary one for a Pre-k “My Family” assignment. The toddler was curiously named Kathleen, and the Pre-k teacher was shocked when I explained at our parent-teacher conference that she didn’t exist. Maybe this cat was what my daughter needed. 

Princess was two-years old, taken in off the alley by our friends who also homed some boy cats. The boys were jerks, they bullied her and ate her food. During our first introduction to Princess one of them shoved his paw under the door trying to get in, an attempt to interrupt our quiet moment. A fitting illustration of the kind of nonsense this girl had been forced to deal with. 

She was very sweet and very calm. A great fit for a household with children. Maybe she would be happier living with our small family as a solo cat? I was a New Yorker raised in tiny apartments and never had a pet; I didn’t have the first clue on how to care for her. But my husband had grown up with a cat, he could lead this adventure and deemed Princess a good fit. 

Lurking unspoken in the background of this decision: I had just lost my fifth consecutive pregnancy in two years. I no longer believed I could successfully bring another living human into the world. The last baby survived into the second trimester, losing her was more devastating than any of the previous lightening-strike blows of my earlier miscarriages. She should have lived. I gave her a name. 

Small wonder then that my daughter’s pleas for a sibling felt stabbing. I had been warned by friends that all kids might go through a stage where they loudly proclaim the wish for another baby, but this no longer felt like a run of the mill childhood request. “Mommy, I hate being so alone. 

Oh, my love, what you don’t know. Or do you? Amid my grief, my daughter’s cries for a sibling took on creepy, metaphysical characteristics. Did she know? Could she tell something was awry based on my mood swings, this never-ending rise and fall of hormones? At my most desperate moment I sought out a medium, a bridge to the spirit world. I began to believe that there was a person(?), a soul(?), who was supposed to join us in our home and they (No, she— I believed it was She) couldn’t find her way.  

Perhaps the pretty Tabby with the big yellow eyes and thick striped coat belonged in our home. Perhaps she could have the peace she deserved. Could her love fill the empty spaces for my five-year old? 

A few days later our friends brought Princess over. My daughter and I sat with her in the kitchen by the back door, acclimating her to the house in one enclosed room, stroking her fur, gently cooing. That night we learned how much she loved to be scratched on the softest fur by her ears, and on her cheeks. We learned to avoid her belly.  

The first evening in an unfamiliar home. 

Over the next two weeks we opened the rooms of our house for her to explore. Meanwhile, each day brought a new purchase that solidified her status as a member of our family. A bulk buy of her favorite dry food. A cat tree. A scratching post. A new and improved feather stick. 

Tucked away in my mind, one important piece of health information: Princess was spayed, but not before she went into heat. She has an increased risk of breast cancer as a result. 

Then the unexpected happened: I became Princess’ designated human. She tolerated the louder, skittish smaller person for whom this whole experiment was designed. She accepted the snuggles of my tall husband who would gather her into his arms. But I was the one she chose to curl into every night. So I dutifully read articles on caring for her. I studied her tail movements, I tried to mimic her blinks (weren’t they smiles?), I threw myself into believing I could learn all the things that made her tick. I became a cat mom.  

My own mom, never a pet person - but always a proud grandmother - would send me texts with pictures of cats that looked like Princess on bags of cat food. What a super-model she was. My mom mailed me a stunning framed shot she took of Princess — the kind of picture that looks like it came with the frame. I placed it on my office desk next to pictures of my daughter. 

 

A few months later, my inevitable. I was pregnant again.  

All apologies to my husband, but from here on in Princess was always the first to know. She had superpowers when it came to my fertility. Whenever I wasn’t pregnant, she slept at my feet. When I was, she curled into a ball by my abdomen.  

And then the day would arrive when I would come home from another terrible visit to the doctor. Another heartbeat undetected. Another threatened miscarriage. Another likely D&C. Another series of sharp and fast breakdowns in the shower. That late morning had begun with an invasive ultrasound wand capturing the deadly silence in my uterus. I took the rest of the day off from work, drove home and crawled into bed while my daughter was still in school. Only this time, Princess met me at the door. She waited as I kicked my shoes off, followed me up the stairs, jumped on the bed with me and curled up into the crook of my arm.  

Oh. So, this is what pet owners were talking about all my life, what unconditional love looked like. This is what everyone meant when they casually tossed the word therapy around. Princess was my companion. Surely, I wasn’t a living breathing graveyard, if this primal creature led by instinct deemed me worthy of her attention. 

On the day I returned home from my fourth D&C, gutted and raw, the house was not empty. My husband was at work, and my daughter was at school, and one of my only friends who knew I was pregnant had driven me home from the hospital. But as soon as I put the key into the lock on the door, Princess appeared.  

More time passed and everyone settled into the composition of our family: Mommy, Daddy, Daughter and Princess. The household new normal may have included a cat, but I was doomed to be perpetually tilted off my axis. I had officially given up trying to conceive. I was in therapy and working to move on. And still, I would get pregnant without even trying. When the dust settled after my 8th consecutive loss, someone was still missing. Princess was my comfort, and yes, my baby. But the spirit was unsettled. My super-fertility was a sick cosmic joke. I lived each day casually haunted by ghosts.  

Two years after Princess joined our family, with the help of my parents and a home equity loan, we made a drastic change. A new team of Reproductive Endocrinologists was assembled. This time everything would be different. This time a pregnancy would involve lab technicians, medications and an endless daily array of needles piercing through my skin.  

The next pregnancy -my ninth since the birth of my one light- was different. Week after week, Princess watched from the floor as my husband delivered injections and ice packs to my backside. Afterwards, she jumped on the bed to curl up at my slowly growing belly.  

My pregnancy calendars hadn’t been marked by adorable size comparisons to fruits in years. This one was a clinical series of goalposts. Blood labs for rising HCG. Ultrasounds for proper implantation, then later heartbeats. Early graduation from my RE to a Maternal Fetal Medicine specialist. Genetic Screen. More weeks passed; a sharps cup filled to the brim with used needles that delivered progesterone. An18-week anatomy scan that I finagled from 20 weeks, so we could hopefully share good news with our daughter during a family vacation. At 20 weeks, my bump now visible, I shared with my boss that I might be planning for a maternity leave. There was work-travel at 22 weeks where I realized how preposterous it was to try to hide her existence with giant scarves. Then a fetal echocardiogram. 

Princess curled by my belly, every single night. 

When we made it to my third trimester, I began to breathe a little. Viability. A picture with my daughter in dance clothes — featuring my now large round stomach in a ballet leotard —  was my official social media announcement to the world at 32 weeks. At 34 weeks we finally decided it was safe to assemble a nursery. Only during the last six weeks of my pregnancy did I truly believe that she would come home. 

Three years after Princess’ arrival we brought our newest daughter home from the hospital. Maternity leave was a joy, despite being an endless blur of nursing on demand. Our newborn was often found curled on the pillow on my lap, with Prin at my side. She always managed to nudge her way onto the pillow with her.  

 

The PTSD of recurrent loss would still creep up on me in the quiet moments — regularly around the 2am feed — but over time it dissipated. I was so terrified those first few months. I constantly checked to make sure my daughter was breathing while she was sleeping, but eventually my responses to grief evolved. Any lingering metaphysical inquiries into the spirit world were put on pause by the day-to-day reality of mothering a precocious tween and a tiny ball of pure energy, nine years apart in age. 

Over time Princess also had to adjust to her new normal. This baby was … a lot. She shrieked she cried she chased she grabbed, she needed constant reinforcement of the word gentle. Princess often took to hiding during the day, a completely rational survival instinct, and would re-emerge only after I put my daughter down, curling up on my lap to watch TV or by my side in bed.  

After the first year into this new life, with a little bit of guilt, I put a gate up in my bedroom doorway. Princess’ 4am wakeups for attention were ratcheting my exhaustion to new heights. So, when in March of 2020 our entire family started working from home all day, I like to imagine that Princess was having the time of her life. She had many hours of the day by my side, and for a full year she made regular appearances on zoom meetings. Like my embarrassed older daughter, she had to put up with me scooping her into my arms to show her off in front of a camera.  

And despite being immersed in the nonstop daily news of loss and death, my personal ghosts remained at bay. 

At her nine-year annual visit to the vet this past March, Princess was given a clean bill of health, with some standard warnings about her blood pressure and entry into middle age. But one day, less than two months later, she started only nibbling at her food. When she stopped eating entirely my husband took her to the vet. They called us two hours later with the terrible news. 

A mass had developed near her mammary glands, and lesions had spread to her lungs. This cancer was aggressive, and she would live at most another 1–2 months. We could try to give her painkillers and appetite stimulants but losing her too soon would be inevitable. She wouldn’t grow old by our sides. Our oldest child would no longer have her beloved cat see her off to high school. Our youngest child would likely have little memory of her at all.  

I needed more time. “Please bring her home, I’m not ready to say goodbye,” I cried to my husband. We chose to medicate her and closely watch her behavior for signs of pain. Princess returned slightly sedated and on her new painkillers. The appetite stimulant helped her eat a little dinner and she appeared to rest comfortably for the remainder of the day in our attic office. That night, after we put the toddler to bed, we sat down with our 12-year-old to cry and create an end-of-life plan for our beloved girl. 

Princess’ final days were brutal. At first, she seemed to rally a little, but with each passing day we realized that she was painfully dying. I sat with her every day, watching her little abdomen heave, her resting breathing rate that I learned how to take was now a pant. Her little body was working so hard to function that her distress was visible to the naked eye. Her original owners came to visit her, did she know they were saying goodbye? Just a few days after coming home from the vet she took to hiding in the basement, her instincts to protect herself from predators kicking in. She knew she would not survive. We brought her food and water, but she would only stare at it. Her spine became pronounced. 

Exactly six days after we learned that cancer was ravaging her body, we gathered her into her carrier to take her on a final trip to the vet. Our eldest daughter, the motivation for our bringing a cat into our home, came with us. The three of us snuggled with her in a tiny, sunny room, each of us telling Princess how much we loved her as tears fell down our faces. How we understood that she wanted to go. How it was okay for her to go. We watched together as she fell into a final deep painless sleep. For a moment in time during the car ride home we were once again a family of three. 

That night — for the first time in years — the ghosts returned. My protector was gone. I curled into a weighted blanket on my bed desperate for warmth, feeling the acute pain of losses that I somehow hadn’t felt in years. 

Princess is buried in our yard. Slowly, the remnants of her life in our house are disappearing, the tangible evidence of her happiness(?) fading away. “Kitty is sick and gone?” was the closest my toddler could get to comprehending her death. The water fountain and litterbox have been washed; they’re out drying on the back deck. One by one her catnip toys are being tossed into the trash as they’re discovered throughout the house. But I have yet to do a deep clean, we haven’t yet washed the furniture and blankets of her fur and dander. Have I mentioned that I was allergic to her? Every night despite her being gone, my back has continued to burst into hives. I sit here typing this ode and the marks of her life are still impressed upon me, raised welts on my skin. 

Oh, my sweet girl. You’ve joined the ghosts but you’re different. I knew you. I held you countless times in my arms, warm and breathing. This isn’t haunting, is it?