Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/01/29

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Subject: [Leica] My kitty - Seth's cat story
From: telyt at earthlink.net (Doug Herr)
Date: Sat Jan 29 20:32:50 2005

The story Seth posted gives me a rare opportunity - to pass a great story
along to my boss, instead of the other way around.  Thanks Seth. :-)

Doug Herr
Birdman of Sacramento
http://www.wildlightphoto.com


on 1/29/05 6:41 PM, Douglas M.Sharp at douglas.sharp@gmx.de wrote:

> Seth,
> The story is absolutely brilliant (and so fantastic that it must be true)
> Thanks very much for posting it, it's already stored in the "best of"
> directory.
> Douglas, now warily eyeing Posy the cat, at present asleep (about 60cm away
> from my wedding tackle).
> 
> Seth Rosner wrote:
>> Jerry's back-and-forth with Doug and Douglas compels me to forward to
>> the list an hilarious email rec'd yesterday from Ken Rankin, a senior
>> American Airlines exec and a high-end Leica purveyor of Leicas and Leica
>> gear on eBay. With apologies to those with sensibilities:
>> 
>> THE CAT
>> With everyone stressed-out and over-worked  - this will take some of the
>> stress away.  As Dr. Phil says it's good for the soul!  Here is some
>> poor man's experience with his wife's cat.
>> 
>> Calling in sick to work makes me uncomfortable.  No matter how
>> legitimate my excuse, I always get the feeling that my boss thinks I'm
>> lying.  On one recent occasion, I had a valid reason but lied anyway,
>> because the truth was just too darned humiliating.  I simply mentioned
>> that I had sustained a head injury, and I hoped I would feel up to
>> coming in the next day.  By then, I reasoned, I could think up a doozy
>> to explain the bandage on the top of my head.  The accident occurred
>> mainly because I had given in to my wife's wishes to adopt a cute little
>> kitty. Initially, the new acquisition was no problem.
>> 
>> Then one morning, I was taking my shower after breakfast when I heard my
>> wife, Deb, called out to me from the kitchen.  "Honey! The garbage
>> disposal is dead again. Please come reset it."
>> 
>> "You know where the button is," I protested through the shower
>> pitter-patter and steam.  "Reset it yourself!"
>> 
>> "But I'm scared!" she persisted. "What if it starts going and sucks me 
>> in?"
>> 
>> There was a meaningful pause and then, "C'mon, it'll only take you a
>> second."
>> 
>> So out I came, dripping wet and buck naked, hoping that my silent
>> outraged nudity would make a statement about how I perceived her
>> behavior as extremely cowardly.
>> 
>> Sighing loudly, I squatted down and stuck my head under the sink to find
>> the button.  ...It is the last action I remember performing.
>> 
>> It struck without warning, and without any respect to my circumstances.
>> No, it wasn't the hexed disposal, drawing me into its gnashing metal
>> teeth.  It was our new kitty, who discovered the fascinating dangling
>> objects she spied hanging between my legs.  She had been poised around
>> the corner and stalked me as I reached under the sink.  And, at the
>> precise moment when I was most vulnerable, she leaped at the toys I
>> unwittingly offered and snagged them with her needle-like claws.  I lost
>> all rational thought to control orderly bodily movements, blindly moving
>> at a violent rate of speed, with the full weight of a kitten hanging
>> from my masculine region.  Wild animals are sometimes faced with a
>> "fight or flight" syndrome.  Men,in this predicament, choose only the
>> "flight" option.  I know this from experience.
>> 
>> I was fleeing straight up into the air when the sink and cabinet bluntly
>> and forcefully impeded my ascent.  The impact knocked me
>> out cold.  When I awoke, my wife and the paramedics stood over me.  Now
>> there are not many things in this life worse than finding oneself lying
>> on the kitchen floor buck naked in front of a group of "been-there,
>> done-that" paramedics.  Even worse, having been fully briefed by my
>> wife, the paramedics were all snorting loudly as they tried to conduct
>> their work, all the while trying to suppress their hysterical
>> laughter.... and not succeeding.
>> 
>> Somehow I lived through it all. A few days later I finally made it back
>> in to the office, where colleagues tried to coax an explanation out of
>> me about my head injury.  I kept silent, claiming it was too painful to
>> talk about, which it was.
>> 
>> "What's the matter?" They all asked, "Cat got your tongue?"
>> 
>> If they only knew!
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
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>> 
>> 
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In reply to: Message from douglas.sharp at gmx.de (Douglas M.Sharp) ([Leica] My kitty - Seth's cat story)