Pandora’s Pawprint, and Lessons Learned

Got this from the vet in the mail yesterday. It’s Pandora’s pawprint, impressed into a plaster heart before her necropsy and cremation. We opted not to get the ashes back, so this pawprint suffices for a memorial.

Pandora's Pawprint

…and Lessons Learned for Future Cat Care

* Watch your cat’s phosphorus intake. While phosphorus is an important mineral for feline health, a lot of off-the-shelf cat foods contain additives with unhealthy levels of phosphorus compounds that disesased kidneys can’t filter efficiently. I fed Pandora Fancy Feast for a while, thinking I was doing her a favor with moist canned food. I didn’t know that Fancy Feast foods are high in phosphorus, which led to the blood toxin peaks that caused her seizure and subsequent decline. Fancy Feast is still good as an occasional treat, but not for daily feeding. With an elderly cat, opt for senior cat foods formulated with low phosphorus and higher moisture, to help maintain long-term kidney health.

* Hyperactivity and sudden weight loss despite increased appetite might indicate hyperthyroidism, which is common in older cats, and should be treated. Otherwise, the enlarged thyroid can cause later complications, including death from organ failure.

* Veterinary compounding is a great way to handle difficult-to-administer cat pills. I found a pharmacy in Vienna, VA that was able to convert Pandora’s huge Azodyl capsules to a tuna-flavored paste. She still found it unpleasant but it was far easier to feed it to her from a fluid syringe than for her to struggle with a giant capsule dropped into her mouth every other day.

* Crib pads: they’re not just for changing babies. When Pandora started having incontinence issues on the couch later in life (due to her kidney condition making her more susceptible to urinary tract infections, and her age-worn muscles making it difficult to stand up to go to the litterbox), these Target crib pads were great for protecting the cushions from urine while keeping the couch presentable when combined with expendable fleece throws. All machine-washable, which helped a lot.

* Finally, emergency vet care can be really expensive, especially if the pet has to stay confined in the facility for a night or two. There is such a thing as pet insurance, and I’ll look into it for the next kitten.

Recent Reading

Keystone — Esquire article by author John H. Richardson on the Alberta tar sands, the Keystone Pipeline, and the socioeconomic and environmental controversies swirling around this new, deadly, yet highly profitable oil field and delivery route.

The Story of Nokia MeeGo — a recent history of what would have become Nokia’s next-generation mobile OS before Microsoft came into the picture. (MeeGo development has shifted to Sailfish OS by indie dev offshoot Jolla.)

Pre to postmortem: the inside story of the death of Palm and webOS — Verge story on Palm’s downfall, from leading creator of personal digital assistants, to has-been maker of smartphones and tablets that could have been competitive with iOS and Android — if HP hadn’t killed them.

Skeuomorphic design (or, one reason we can be thankful Scott Forstall is gone) — on the “sewn leather” look plaguing iOS organizer apps and the departure of the Apple designer responsible.

An Alternate Universe — Marco Arment tries a Surface at a Microsoft Store.

A Brief History of the Teleprompter — Smithsonian Magazine on what began as a suitcase-based scrolling cue card system and became a technological phenomenon that defined politics and entertainment with its own strange cadence of speech.

The whale that talked — On NOC, a beluga whale at the National Marine Mammal Foundation, who learned to mimic human-like patterns of speech.

Goodbye, Pandora

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It is with great sadness that I announce the passing of our cat Pandora, due to complications from advanced kidney failure. She was 21 years old. (April 1991 to November 2012.)

Pandora first came into my life while I was living in Baltimore. My housemate Patrick’s cat, she was one of a pair of siblings from a litter descended from a tabby and a white Persian. The brother, Jasper, was a tabby after their father, and Pandora a white Persian after their mother. She had one green and one blue eye, and was 11 years old at the time.

jasper3 Pandora

A year later when I moved back to DC, Pandora joined me, while Jasper stayed in Baltimore. Patrick brought Pandora to my apartment in DC on a Sunday in October, with less than a day’s notice. I think she hid under the bed in panic for about 3 days before she came to terms with her new home. Then she settled in marvelously.

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Pandora later achieved some minor Internet celebrity as “Serious Cat” (aka “Business Cat,” an entrepreneurially themed spinoff from an older “serious cat” meme).

Pandora Are Serious Cat

As Serious Cat she even managed to cameo on the British Comedy “The IT Crowd” (Series 3 Episode 6), briefly appearing as a background printout pinned to a door.

Roy from IT Crowd in front of an office door labeled Relationship Manager, decorated with a picture of a cat atop a stack of books saying I am Serious Cat, please you step into my office now

Pandora was later diagnosed with hyperthyroidism, and had lost about half her considerable weight to the disease before she started on medication. This proved to be something of a blessing in disguise, as the condition actually brought her down to about average weight from what had been an unhealthy state of obesity.

IMG_7874.JPG Pandora Sitting on the Couch

Pandora would later develop kidney disease and hypertension, conditions common to older cats — and by this time she was quite old indeed. She lived her sunset years in relative comfort on the couch, with a regimen of daily pills and subcutaneous fluid injections.

Pandora Yawning on Couch
Suddenly alert cat on couch

Pandora even discovered late in life that we have a balcony, and spent many hours enjoying the sun and breeze outside, which she had never experienced in Baltimore or DC.

Sleepy Pandora on the Balcony

She rapidly declined in the last two months, suffering a seizure in September, and getting diagnosed with heart murmur and hypertension at the veterinary cardiologist. None of this was too surprising; she was an old cat, and her brother Jasper had just recently died. I knew the end was coming, though I did what I could to keep her living comfortably.

Cardiologist examining Pandora

Last week, Pandora crashed, hard, just before we left for Norfolk. We left her at the vet for intravenous fluids and medication, but her condition continued to worsen. She had progressed to Stage 4 renal failure and had lost over 90% of her kidney function. Severe anemia and low blood pressure followed, with her red blood cell count dropping to half of normal, even as her blood urea and creatinine levels peaked dangerously.

Tired Pandora Pandora at the vet

By Sunday she had lost so much weight that the vertebrae of her spine formed lumps in her skin. She lost the use of her hind legs, and had stopped eating and drinking altogether. Her breath and fur stank as her toxin levels shot up, and anemia and dehydration made her weak and listless, barely able to even raise her head.

A Last Look Outside

I decided it was time to euthanize her, to avoid further suffering. Home euthanasia was the kindest solution, and our vet was nice enough to drive over with a tech to put Pandora to sleep. Once injected, Pandora went very quickly and quietly, falling asleep without a struggle, her heart stopping within seconds. We cried over her body for a bit, and I closed her eyes. The blue and the green were gone, and she was still.

Goodbye, Pandora

I said one more goodbye, wrapped Pandora in a fleece throw, and the vet took her away. I’ve donated her remains to veterinary science, so the doctors at the animal hospital can perform a necropsy and learn something about renal failure and its complications in older cats. It’s my hope that in death Pandora can provide some insight into helping other living cats enjoy similar longevity, even with old age diseases such as those she struggled with.

Pandora X-Ray (side)

I weep for her loss but I’m thankful she lived as long as she did; 21 years is a formidable and venerable age for any cat, and when it came time to go she faced it with courage and peace. Though she is gone, Pandora leaves us with many good memories — and over 700 pictures on Flickr. Goodbye, Pandora. You were a sweet, affectionate, beautiful cat and we’ll miss you dearly.

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Norfolk, VA

We were in Norfolk for a few days while Amy attended a VAEA conference, where she gave a presentation on “Artful Adventures.” Meanwhile, I ventured out around Norfolk’s Downtown and Waterside areas to see things. We stayed at the Sheraton Waterside, just a short walk from a bunch of downtown landmarks, and right across the harbor from an awesome naval shipyard with a massive drydock.

Continue reading Norfolk, VA

Hurricane Sandy

Hurricane Sandy in the Atlantic

Sandy was an epic storm: a tropical cyclone interacting with a strong Northeaster, a kinked jet stream, warm Atlantic waters, and a full moon, all combining into a massive tropical — and later post-tropical — cyclone that veered west from the Atlantic into the East Coast, hitting the northeast US hard with strong wind, heavy rain, and massive flooding. Cities, homes, and lives were devastated. People were killed, trees fell on cars and houses, beaches and boardwalks were destroyed, and whole swaths of New York and New Jersey were submerged.

Continue reading Hurricane Sandy

NYC Art Walk

Did an art walk with Amy and her classmates around New York last weekend, mostly in Chelsea. Her class took an early “Art Bus” up from school but we skipped that and took a train up to NJ and stayed with Amy’s family a night earlier, then took an NJ Transit train into the city in the morning.

Continue reading NYC Art Walk

Recent Reading

50 years to orbit: Dream Chaser’s crazy Cold War backstory — Fascinating Ars Technica article on the esoteric history of Dream Chaser, Sierra Nevada Corp’s upcoming commercial spaceplane.

Project Icarus: Laying the Plans for Interstellar Travel — Atlantic Tech article on Project Icarus plans to build a 100-year starship capable of interstellar travel to nearby exoplanets.

Computer Love — Looking back at Star Trek: The Next Generation on its 25th anniversary — a fun cultural retrospective on ST:TNG by Brian Philips for Grantland (which oddly seems to be more of a sports publication).

Hollywood’s Spacesuits — interview with Gray Westfahl, author of The Spacesuit Film: A History, 1918–1969, on a specific genre of 20th Century science fiction that he has dubbed the “spacesuit film.”

Space Suit: 1949 — on a related note, a look back at what the British Interplanetary Society of 1949 thought spacesuits would need to be like, by D.S.F. Portree of the retro-what-if blog Beyond Apollo.

Caves of Nottingham — Exploring the vast natural cavern system under Nottingham, England with Geoff Manaugh of BLDGBLOG.

Inequality and Its Perils — Jonathan Rauch for National Journal on growing evidence that the large gap between rich and poor produces socioeconomic instability and slows growth, hurting society at all levels. (Could have told you that just from experience in the Philippines.)

This Presidential Race Should Never Have Been This Close — Rolling Stone’s Taibbi again, pointing out the cultural and journalistic dysfunctionalities which produce the illusion that a vulture capitalist like Romney is in any way a reasonable pick for the Republican candidacy.

Real Loudoun: Mike Farris and the Lyme Disease quacks behind Loudoun’s “initiative” — enlightening article on unsound medical conspiracy theory surrounding long-term Lyme Disease. The lasting nervous system impact of a Lyme infection is untreatable by antibiotics (outside of placebo effect) — but a certain sector of practitioners stand to profit from persisting in the long-term IV antibiotic approach.

How the GOP Destroyed Its Moderates — Jonathan Chait for the New Yorker on the ongoing marginalization of voices of reason by dogmatic extremists in the Republican Party.

Suddenly everyone wants New Yorker style content. Only one catch: Who is going to write it? — Sarah Lacy on fresh needs for writing and editing long-form journalistic content.

Stop Pagination Now — Yes. We can scroll just fine. Artificially inflating pageviews with pagination just makes me leave a site sooner.

It’s okay to be a hater because everything is bad.

Stewardship Testimony

I was asked to deliver a stewardship testimony at my church, First Baptist DC, last week. I threw together this statement about why I tithe and pledge at church. Apparently it was good enough to move a few people to give more — and the pastor forgot the order of service and jumped straight to offering, so my point about having a sermon and a hymn to fill out pledge cards was rendered moot. Also, I’m not sure Siri does repeating events the I describe it, as I only have an iPhone 3GS running iOS 5.1.

Continue reading Stewardship Testimony

Recent Reading

In the Land of the Juggalos — VICE Mag explores the lurid subculture of Insane Clown Posse fandom.

LARP Harder — another VICE Mag subculture profile, this one into the world of fantasy Live-Action Role-Play.

This Is a Game: A (very) Brief History of Larp Part 1 — Rhizome article on LARP, but with a more generous and inclusive definition of the term to cover other activities not normally associated with the more popular fantasy categories of LARP.

Revisiting Magic: The Gathering as a grown-up nerd — part of Onion AV Club’s “Memory Wipe” nostalgia series.