Obituary: Deaf White Kitty

adventure cat, feline enigma dies at age 11

Kitty ponders mortality at the Mount Airy Blue Grass & Old-Time Fiddlers Convention in June 2021.

Deaf White Kitty passed away Feb. 5, 2022 – four years, two months and one day after a vet said she wouldn’t last a week.

Born on the Ides of March in 2010, Kitty was a sassafrass.  She took no shit.  She suffered no fools.  She gave no fucks.  Unless she wanted something, then she gave all the fucks.  She was a prawn. 

Deaffers (Doff, Dee Doff, Dee Doff a Loo La; Kotty,  Kott,  Kit Kat; Princess Prawncess, Prin Prawn, Prawn, Prawen; Didja prawn;  Djidhy peen, Didjy peen peen kott kott;  Floof,  Floofy; Paper-plate face, Catzilla;  and at the vet’s: Kitty) was deaf – but she could read lips.  She knew homemade sign language for “time for fluuds” and “I jove you Kitty.”  She did not care for fluuds.

Kitty enjoyed many passions:  watching things burn, knocking things off the counter, playing piano, bird watching, red velvet chair perching, interrupting  board games, lying on papers, backpacks, clean laundry and random piles of junk, getting into instrument cases, suitcases and Paulie’s laundry basket. 

She adored Christmas, butter, boxes, milky things and little a bacon as a treat.  She was a whore for Chick-Fil-A chicken nuggets.  She dabbled in space travel.  She was an avid hunter of hair ties.  She loved a party.  

She could be very sweet but would strike without warning.  She kept her djidjy sock feet sharp.  Snugs, on her terms, and only at night.   She had a strong resting bitch face. She would oft stare motherfuckerly. 

Kitty lived for the road.  She saw the Grand Canyon, Nashville, Dallas, L.A.  and San Francisco.  Route 66.  She won in Las Vegas.  She mined diamonds in Arkansas.   New York, Florida, Mt. Airy Fiddler’s Convention, MerleFest, Bookmarks literary festival.   She was always chill in vamper. She did not care for hotels.

Deaf White loved vacationing at Granny’s house on Cayuga Lake. She’d sit in the second story windows, fresh air blowing through the screens, looking down at her kingdom of birds and dogs and people.

DWK is survived by LBK, Little Black Kitty, or L.B., or Elbie.  She did not care for Elbie, or for contractors.   She is predeceased by a beta fish whose name we can’t remember, and who we suspect she murdered.

Feline Leukemia Virus was supposed to have killed her in 2017.  A second opinion showed she was not in the end stages of FeLV but rather suffering from IMHA.  Then came kidney disease and a couple of more trips to the ER.  She came home for hospice in January 2018.  Lots of ups and downs followed, but she enjoyed a quality of life that amazed her vets. We remain grateful for the extra time.

She went back to the specialist after a drastic weight loss in her last two weeks.  They suspected SCL, a treatable cancer with a good prognosis but that required an endoscopic biopsy to diagnose.  They thought she was healthy enough for the procedure, but her blood pressure dropped while she was under anesthesia.  She woke up ok but couldn’t stabilize.  They said her passing was peaceful. 

Before she died she tested negative for FeLV and had overcome kidney disease, IMHA and a devastating fear of the euphonium.  She had also defeated Paulie in the epic battle of the reclining office chair of 2018.

Kitty was a fighter in every sense of the word.  She made us laugh every single day.  We miss her terribly.  

R.I.P. Djidjy peen.  Rest in Prawn.

“Gatito Forever” – a video tribute to the life of Deaf White Kitty by Mikel Snow.

Editor’s letter: Do You Need Travel-Therapy While Planning a Trip?

I flipped through an issue of Condé Nast Traveler for the first time recently and wound up in an imaginary argument with the magazine’s editor-in-chief, Pilar Guzmán. I did most of the arguing.
This photograph features the September 2018 edition of Conde Nast Traveler sitting on a library rack.
The flipping occurred in the library.
                  Pilar had brought up and delicately shit on one of my favorite aspects of traveling – why we go and why we go where we go. “Over the years of helping to plan trips (including our own), we’ve learned there is often a gulf between the places that stick in people’s minds and the kind of vacation they’re actually looking for in that moment,” Guzmán wrote  letter that opened the September / October 2018 issue. Interesting, I thought replied.  You don’t just want to talk about travel but how it plays out in people’s minds and hearts.  Cool.  That’s what this blog is all about.  I’m in. Shit or no shit, not everybody thinks or cares or about that kind of thing.  I just like it.  And so does Pilar. So at first we bonded.  Her fox to my hound; her couture to my Goodwill; two imaginary martini glasses clinking in the night. Ms. Guzmán was writing about a friend – a newly separated friend – who was planning a summer trip to Tuscany with her two teenage sons. “What started out as a ‘Can I pick your brain?’ call quickly developed into what we at Condé Nast Traveler call a travel-therapy session,” the editor wrote. This therapy session concluded, as therapy often does, with some tough love. “…as it emerged about half an hour into our conversation,” Pilar wrote, “the impetus for her trip was actually an Eat, Pray, Love-style second-act fantasy that really had nothing to do with her boys.  She quickly realized she would be setting herself up for disappointment, trying to get her kids excited about shopping for pottery and linens for the fictional Tuscan vacation home she was renovating in her mind.  To say nothing of the palpable absence of the fourth family member at dinner each night, at least in those raw, early days of separation.” Pilar straightened out Friend, told her to spend a couple fast-paced days in the city and then retreat to an island where the boys could do things like jump off rocks into the ocean and walk to places to get pizza. That sounds perfectly lovely.  It makes perfect sense.
Photograph of cliff diving at Sarakiniko Beach on Milos, Greece taken by Matt Hranek appeared in the September 2018 issue of Conde Nast Traveler.
Um yes, that looks forking awesome.
But I still call bullshit. For starters, it’s a condescending, shitty way to characterize your friend in a national publication. But mostly, what’s wrong with an Eat, Pray, Love-style second-act fantasy? Nothing.  There’s always a fantasy.   The fantasy is the best part.  Who cares what it is. You seem a little defensive, imaginary Pilar said. I am, I thought replied.  I love this stuff. I’ve never actually read Eat, Pray, Love or seen the movie.  But my sense of it is that one reason it has resonated so strongly with so many people is at least in part because it celebrates travel and the possibilities we dream travel holds.  And I love that. I think it’s cool that a book – or a movie or a song  or whatever – can inspire someone to get up and go.   I love how places stick in our minds because they’re in books and songs and movies. And I love how it works in the other direction – how places and adventures get put in songs and movies and books because they’ve stuck in someone’s mind. The fact that someone had a journey and then wrote about it and that inspired someone to go off on their own journey is something to celebrate.   It’s not something that should be squashed out like dancing in Footloose.
Mmmm, kind of picking up on a know-it-all vibe in this editor’s letter, but I like their spirit.
              Condé Nast Traveler gets it; the editor’s letter just rubbed me the wrong way.  They do things like publish cool locations found in movies.  Think that music venue was cool in A Star is Born?  Want to go see it?  Condé Nast Traveler has your back.  Pilar does too. “Here at the magazine,” she wrote, “we are believers that sometimes the juiciest trip inspiration comes not from long-held fantasies whose polished cinematic standards may be unattainable for our unedited lives but from those small but powerful images and anecdotes we see or hear, which somewhere along the line have seared themselves into our imagination.” I agree – small but powerful images and anecdotes should not be ignored. But let’s not toss out long-held fantasies with polished cinematic standards – especially when you are a magazine pedaling polished cinematic standards. In steering her away from an Eat, Pray, Love fantasy Pilar merely steered Friend toward a different fantasy. The “unattainable for our unedited lives” part is key. There’s always a fantasy, it’s always unattainable, lives are always unedited.  And that’s awesome! Unedited is where you find the good stories.  That’s where a road trip to Wally World becomes Vacation,   That’s where a vacation to Italy becomes Eat, Pray, Love. The best travel-therapy I received was from friends who told me not to be disappointed if we didn’t make it all the way to Los Angeles on a cross country trip, to make sure we enjoyed the journey.  They didn’t tell me not to try.  We did make it to L.A., but I took that advice to heart, and I used it.  Everyday. By all means, get advice, get tips from Pilar Guzmán.  Absolutely.  Don’t limit yourself to Tuscany because it’s the only place you know about.  But let the travel itself be your therapist.  And go wherever, however and whyever the fork you want.