Tag Archives: children

Polyfelinophile No More

I’m a wee bit soused right now, so if this is occasionally incomprehensible, forgive me. I shall correct it tomorrow.

About a month ago (or so - as I said, soused, and cannot remember details) I made the decision to get rid of my cats. Yes, cats. I had two. First was Earnest, who I had from his kittency (that is, kitten infancy) and second was Chester, who I took in for the sole purpose of preserving the shreds of sanity which Earnest daily shed. My sanity, not his. All over the apartment. Earnest was wild, vicious, and much beloved. But it was his time to go. No, I did not bury him in the backyard, although I occasionally wished I could. My apartment does not have a backyard and that was therefore not an option. Earnest was given to a dear Boisean friend and his roommate who love the wild little creature, and who are in posession of a lovely backyard (though not for burial purposes, I hope). Chester, the cat obtained recently, the Leah to Earnest’s Rachel, did not fulfill my utilitarian desires. Earnest and Chester fought, and peed and shed all over, quickly obliterating my lovely dreams of peace and quiet and feline amicitial relationships, and also my dreams of a lovely, clean, apartment. So, the cats had to go. Earnest, as mentioned above, journeyed to Boise. Chester was a bit trickier. I know very few people in this area, and my desire to be rid of him was quickly trumped by my inability to find a good home. I first tried Craigslist, which yielded several strange encounters of people who wanted him! Now! He is perfect! Let’s talk! I’m very serious! Which rapidly devolved into, Oh, I’m not sure! I know I haven’t seen him yet, but I’m not interested! For these people I have only a few words: double-ewe tee eff.

Chester (GK Chestercat, for those theology - or Christian mystery fiction - buffs) deserved better, but in the mean time, I had grown increasingly frustrated with his neediness. Which is to say, I did not like that he wanted to cuddle. I have limited amounts of love, and I’ll be damned if I’m going to waste it on a cat. Yet here he was, after my long, hard day at work, rubbing up against my legs, purring and kneading, and (worst of all) NEEDING me, like a desperate puppy. If I wanted a dog, I’d get a mother fucking dog. So, here’s the truth: I got rid of Earnest because he was unhappy, but I got rid of Chester because I’m damn near soulless, and I don’t like being reminded of that by a cat.

So, I called the Seattle Humane Society, and (after ascertaining that they were a no-kill shelter, my one stipulation) I made an appointment to relinquish the Chestercat. I said I was allergic, but I didn’t specify that I was allergic to love. After a few increasingly tense weeks, the day (yesterday) finally arrived and I drove up to Bellevue with Chester. He waited in the car while I filled out paperwork, and, as I completed the personality profile, I found myself thankful that his one major flaw was that he was TOO friendly and cuddly, and silently hoped that he would find a home with someone with more affection than I, my singular consolation being that that would be a relatively easy task. After I signed the final documents, the girl at the front desk cooed at the cat, and said abruptly to me, when she saw me hesitating, that we were finished. I walked out to my car and, to my surprise, started bawling. I didn’t cry at all when I said goodbye to Earnest, and he was my baby, but for some reason THIS goodbye really hit me. Or perhaps, it was the latent guilt that I had housed and fed this creature, but never given him a home. Never loved him.

I am sometimes frightened by my lack of even a semblance of maternal instincts, not because I think that it makes me an evil person, but moreso because I feel deficient. I watch my female peers cooing over babies and wonder what the draw is. Sure, babies are cute, and I occasionally enjoy being around them, but I certainly don’t want one. The best part of holding someone else’s kid is giving it back. This disturbs me, because in the not-too-distant future I will most likely find myself a mommy (or something very like a mommy) and I’m told the Humane Society does not accept children. Meaning, I will have to put up with the peeing, and the crying and the wanting to be loved. Oh god.

At least babies don’t shed.

Wherein Megsie Engages in Narcissistic Explication

Don’t look so surprised. It’s a blog.

My aunt reminded me tonight that July 23rd was quite a long time ago and hinted, not terribly subtly, that I ought to write another blog. I have decided NOT to simply recount the events of the past month (MONTH? Christ, I’m so far behind) by waxing eloquent on my recent heroics, or delving into the inevitable narcissism of my supremely unstable emotional life, or regaling you with tales of my kitten’s antics (he caught and ate a moth the other day), or telling you about my brother, his wife, and her relatives coming to visit me, or how work is stressful and exhausting but good all at once, because you could just follow me on Twitter for all of that.

Instead, I’m going to tell you about the various creative projects I have undertaken in the limited time between working, sleeping, and maintaining my busy and enthralling social calendar (i.e., refreshing facebook every five minutes). I’m somewhat hesitant to even discuss this, since, inevitably, some well-meaning person will make an attempt to hold me accountable for the completion of these projects, and I will, inevitably, be inclined to chuck things in their direction. I will complete, or not complete, these projects at my leisure. Do not question me. Much like the indomitable deity of Christian mythology, I move in mysterious ways.

Very generally, these creative projects fall into a category that I have affectionately termed “Nihilistic Children’s Books”. It’s a bit of a misnomer, in the sense that most people take the term “nihilistic” to mean hopeless, which is not my intention. Of course, most people are idiots and also think that atheists are necessarily amoral and that “irregardless” is a real word.

Much of the children’s literature I have encountered is disgustingly cheerful, clean, wholesome, and inevitably, inane. I don’t mean that I’m intending to write smut for children (although it would put a whole new spin on the term “child pornography” wouldn’t it?), but rather that I believe children are far more capable of understanding complex ideas than we give them credit for. Anyone who has taken a 100-level Social Sciences class can tell you that the idealistic view of childhood we now hold was invented in the Victorian Era, and anyone who has watched a Disney movie can tell you that childhood is rainbows and ponies and one-dimensional villains. Children’s lit. is and always has been propaganda, and really, I just want to disseminate my evil, atheist-satanist-lesbian-liberal-pro-choice views to your children. I WILL DESTROY THEIR MINDS.

My three projects are as follows:

Nightmare Waking - A Picture Book
The title is subject to change because it’s a fucking stupid title and sounds really emo. The inspiration for this story came from the concept of a Möbius strip, where, when you reach the end, the story repeats itself, creating a sense of perpetuity. Of course, my story will not be nearly as awesome as simply taking a strip of paper, twisting it, and taping the ends together. However, once it is in book form, it will be a compilation of pages which could easily be made into many, many Möbius strips, making it not altogether a loss. Also, there are bunny rabbits featured prominently in the story.

These Four Winds - A Novel
Anyone who considers herself* a writer inevitably begins writing a novel and never finishes it. It’s disgusting. Starting a novel is quite possibly one of the most narcissistic things a would-be writer can do, superseded only by said writer’s perpetual references to “the novel I am writing” WHICH WILL NEVER BE FINISHED. That said, I have been writing this novel for nearly four years now. I have maybe ten pages. Partially because every time I start to write something I become frustrated because I have a beginning and a middle, but no end. However, I believe I have conclusively solved my endless issue. And not by being adorably punny, either. This book will be a post-modern re-telling/re-working of Dante’s Divine Comedy, in the sense that I am borrowing many of the master’s plot devices, if not his subject matter.

Eggs - A Novel About Rape and Abortion
A classic fairytale. And I do NOT refer to the Disney concept of the fairytale. I really don’t know what to say about this story without giving it away. My main goal is to avoid being excessively heavy-handed and/or cynical.

I frequently find myself wishing that I had hours of free time to devote to these projects, but I am wise enough to know that I am no more likely now to actually utilise that time than I was a few months ago, when I had days upon endless days of free time. That said, being cooped-up in an office all day has it’s benefits: my creativity, thirsting and desperate for attention, has spurred me to set aside time daily to write and ponder my projects. Creative expression keeps me sane. Well, saner than I would be without it.

*Ooh! Look at my subtle undermining of patriarchal pronouns! I’m such a liberal whore.