It’s been a year now. A year without the cat. I don’t check the perimeter anymore.
Checking the perimeter. I should explain that. The cat was already living here when I moved in. Every morning, I’d get up, start the coffee, then I’d go stand by the sliding glass door that led out to the deck and the back yard to see what the weather was like. At some point, the cat decided to join me. And that became our morning routine.

Almost every morning for years. Once or twice a month the cat would decide to sleep in, but usually she’d hear me getting up and would meet me on my way to the kitchen. I’d start the coffee, then we’d stand at the door and look out. Nothing special, really. It was just a thing we did.

The cat would usually lean up against me when we did this. Sometimes she’d sit on my foot, which couldn’t have been comfortable for her. We’d look outside for a minute or so, then the cat would either suggest I feed her or she’d quietly slide off to some other part of the house.

Almost every day, we did this. Some mornings, if I had my phone with me, I’d take a photo of the cat beside me. I don’t know why; it was always the same basic photograph; my feet, the cat, the door. Some photos were in color, some black-and-white, some square, some with the standard 3:2 format. It would depend entirely on which app I opened on my phone (yeah, I’m the sort of guy that has a dedicated b&w app on my phone). Usually I deleted the photos shortly after I took them. Usually. Not always.
Periodically, I’d post a photo on Facebook or Instagram of the two of us at that door and caption it ‘The perimeter is secure.” My friends found it amusing. So did I. It became a thing, checking the perimeter. It turned into an accidental photo project.
The photo below is the last photo I shot of us checking the perimeter. I don’t think I posted it. A couple of weeks later, she was gone.

You do something together every morning for years and then one day it’s just you. It leaves you off-balance. For a week or two after the cat died I’d step over to the sliding door after starting the coffee and I’d check the…and I’d look outside. It wasn’t checking the perimeter anymore. It felt wrong. It felt wrong, and it just hurt too fucking much. So I stopped.
It’s been a year now. If I want to know the weather, I look out the window. Some mornings I still expect to see her waiting for me. Every so often I still get weepy, thinking about her. It still hurts. I hope it will always hurt.
It’s been a year. I miss her so much.
It never stops hurting, it just lessens a bit with time. I know how much you miss her. I loved her, and I love you too.
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The hard part are those moments when you forget; you hear a sound and look up expecting to see the cat doing…I don’t know, something…and then you remember she’s dead. It’s like a gut punch.
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Another creature that needed and wanted just you to spend a quiet, precious moment in time each day.
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It was a weird thing to do, but it felt right and normal.
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They do leave a cat-shaped hole in your heart when they go…
Hugs to you, Greg
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I feel you, brother! It will never be the same again without her.
But I believe – no matter how naive it might sound – that in another time continuum we all will meet again. And then she’ll let you know how much she loved those moments together, checking the perimeter every morning.
Aloha!
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It’s a nice thought–not necessarily naive. Wishful, maybe. But I’m afraid I don’t believe in any sort of afterlife.
That said, i’d be delighted to be wrong about this.
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Yeah. I know what you mean. It’s been a year now since YodaBobDog died in my arms. I miss your photos of your cat, and the sense of peace and companionship they evoked.
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YodaBobDog wasn’t just a great doggo, he had a premier dog name. I’d have loved him without you ever posting a photo or a comment about him, just because of that name.
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I love the understated devotion of cats. Still waters run deep; that kind of love grows without assistance and resounds in slow waves.
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January 2, oh my! That hurts.
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I really miss the photos. Every one the same, but different in so many ways. It was a record of 2 lives shared and well lived.
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