I am so sorry to hear about Ginger.  It is so hard to
lose one of our babies.  My heart goes out to you
right now.  You and your family are in my prayers.

--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> 
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2006 11:13:30 EST
> Subject: Ginger is gone
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
> [EMAIL PROTECTED],
>       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> She never regained consciousness after the MRI. She
> started breathing some  
> on her own, but not enough to get sufficient oxygen
> without the machine. After  
> several hours all the vets said there was no way she
> was going to regain  
> consciousness, and also that the mass in her brain
> was so big, after the  
> neurologist actually looked at the pictures rather
> than just the report, that  she 
> said even if it was an infection rather than a tumor
> there was nothing she  
> could do. She said that it was so large that the
> slight increase in brain  
> pressure from the anesthesia made her brain herniate
> and part of it go out  through 
> the back of her skull.  Gray and I stayed with her
> for an hour or  so while she 
> was on the breathing machine, and talked to her and
> told her how  much we 
> loved her, and reminded her of what a good life she
> had had and how  happy she 
> had been, and told her we did not want her to
> suffer, and asked her  
> forgiveness, and then euthanized her. We took her
> home wrapped in a blanket and  I slept 
> next to her last night and then this morning we
> buried her next to the  stream 
> and waterfall in our back yard, in the woods, where
> she used to sit for  
> hours watching the waterfall.  We are in total
> shock.  I have been  fussing for 
> months over Lucy, with her IBD and bladder stones,
> and Patches, with  her teeth 
> and her UTI's, and have paid less attention to
> Ginger because she  seemed to 
> be doing so well. Just Saturday morning we were
> laughing at her  because she 
> was racing around the house, chasing a pen, and then
> bothering Lucy  to play 
> with her.  Apparently she had a large brain tumor
> then and it just  had not 
> affected an important part of the brain yet. When
> she started acting  sick Saturday 
> night and I took her to the ER on Sunday, and then
> to another ER  on Monday 
> and had her seen by an internist, the vets all told
> me that she had  probably 
> just ingested something and had mild gastroenteritis
> and it would work  itself 
> out. But she had a brain tumor the whole time.
>  
> I do not know how old she was. If the shelter was
> right, then she was  almost 
> 7.  I had her almost 4 years, and they said they
> thought she was  about 3 
> when I adopted her. I think she had been there a
> year or two and had  come in as 
> an adult, with a litter of kittens who subsequently
> died from  FeLV.  I think 
> it was her personality that kept her going for so 
> long.  She was always 
> happy, had no malice toward anyone, and acted like a
>  kitten her whole life. I have 
> never in my life seen a cat who played so  much. 
> She literally was 
> fascinated by everything, and saw everything as a 
> toy.  She loved watching the toilets 
> flush, and the printer print, played  with our
> shoelaces when we put our 
> shoes on, chased pens and peanuts and a  little
> plastic Easter egg around the 
> house.  Even at the first ER on  Sunday morning,
> when she was feeling too sick to 
> eat, I got her to play in the  examination room
> while we waited for her test 
> results, with a piece of string  tied to a q-tip.
> Last April, when her teeth 
> got so bad she could not eat and  needed 10 removed
> surgically, and right 
> afterwards when she had a bad URI that  lasted for
> weeks and I had to syringe feed 
> her, she was still playing the whole  time. She was
> joyful, and the life of our 
> house. The house feels so empty  without her.
>  
> She was also Simon's best friend.  Until he died
> last February, the  two of 
> them played all day long.  She used to go up to him
> and put her arm  over his 
> neck, like putting him in a head lock, and then the
> two of them would  tumble 
> and chase each other, run up the cat tree at the
> same time while batting  at 
> each other, chase each other up the tree in their
> yard. She used to climb  that 
> tree, and one here in our new house as well.  She
> loved watching the  
> waterfall in the woods behind our house, and staring
> at the frogs in the little  pond 
> in the backyard during the summer. She never hunted,
> but she did catch one  of 
> the frogs one time and carried him around until we
> saw her and got her to  
> release him unhurt.  She truly bore no malice toward
> anyone, had very  little 
> fear, and was always ready for an adventure.  When
> she was  recuperating last 
> spring from her dental surgery and URI and I brought
> her down  to my mom's so I 
> could tend to my horse Pepsi as she was dying, my
> mother was  amazed that she 
> was not at all scared of being in a new house and
> just walked  around the room 
> exploring. She stayed at my mom's for a month, while
> we packed  our house and 
> moved down here. She was alone a lot in the room
> there, and took  to watching 
> tv with fascination. She would meow at my mom to
> turn the tv  on.  My mom 
> would work on the computer in that room, and she
> would bat at  the cursor as it 
> moved across the screen.  My mom used to flush the
> toilet  in the attached 
> bathroom just to entertain her.  She would get these
>  obsessions with a particular 
> food and refuse to eat anything else but that one 
> food for months, and then 
> suddenly switch to a different food.  I would  have
> to buy her cases of 
> whatever her current obsession was. Sometimes I
> would  try to hold out and try 
> feeding her something else, because I had run out 
> of her food or just because I 
> thought she should not eat the same thing all the 
> time, but she would hold out 
> for a whole day until I gave in and went and got 
> her what she wanted, or 
> threw away whatever it was I was trying to get her
> to  eat and opened up a can of 
> what she wanted.  She loved baby food, and got  it
> every morning with some 
> supplements. Except once Lucy and Patched could not 
> eat baby food, starting a 
> few months ago, I got lax and sometimes went a day
> or  two without giving it to 
> her, which of course I now think about sadly and
> wish I  had not done.
>  
> She lived longer than I should have expected. But
> when I read that Rudy  
> lived to 13, I of course hoped she would too, as she
> seemed to be doing so well.  
> She probably had a brain tumor while I was hoping
> for her to live  another 6 
> years. It is why I am superstitious. I felt anxious
> as soon as I  felt myself 
> hoping for them to live to 13, like something bad
> was going to  happen to one 
> of them soon. And it did.
>  
> I loved her, and still do, and miss her terribly.
>  
> Michelle
> 


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