At any rate he was clearly a special needs cat and to
accommodate his bizarre behaviors we set up a large floor cage lined with washable
piddle pads for him to live in. Since he
spent almost all of his time sleeping, this worked very well. We confined
him overnight and left the cage door open during the daytime so when he wasn't
sleeping and wanted exercise he could come out.
But, as sad as his new behaviors were, they were not
life-threatening. And – as with many
geriatric cats – it would be kidney failure that would ultimately cause his
death. By last Wednesday he stopped
eating and on Friday with much sadness we decided it was time to let him
go.
Little is known of the first half of Simon’s life – TLC picked
him up from the local animal control shelter in 2003. A cat Samaritan had turned him in after
finding him wandering the streets of Ann Arbor, Michigan. The shelter estimated his age at 10 and so he
was too old for them to adopt out. They
also feared he was blind because his eyes were totally milky with no visible
pupils. Turned out the cause of their
milkiness was a flare up of the herpes virus – probably a condition he was born
with. It literally took a few years to
stop the periodic outbreaks and he required a series of daily eye drops for the
rest of his life.
Simon clearly preferred people to other cats – loving to sit
on laps and talking constantly. He pretty
much ignored other cats as they ignored him.
We often thought he was more
human than feline – and had the appetite to prove it. Where most of our cats ignore human food
Simon sought it out. By last January he
had morphed from cat food to baby food which wasn't great for his kidneys but
it was all he would eat.
Simon was a remarkable little guy – and one we will not soon
forget. RIP.
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