eftychia: Me in kilt and poofy shirt, facing away, playing acoustic guitar behind head (Default)
Add MemoryShare This Entry
posted by [personal profile] eftychia at 02:29pm on 2004-02-29

First, I'll get the whining about my body and my social life out of the way so that I won't feel a need to mix it in with the more interesting parts...

Yesterday I was slow getting started and then had to stick around anyhow waiting for the FedEx delivery that wound up going awry, so I missed the birthday brunch of one of my LJ friends. But [livejournal.com profile] dmk and [livejournal.com profile] bill_in_germany phoned to say that they were hanging out at the Inner Harbour and to ask how I felt about their dropping by with pizza. So I put chunks of yesterday's to-do list on hold for a while to hang out with friends and eat pizza, both of which were quite pleasant activities. There were two different parties last night that I'd been aware of and wanted to go it if I'd felt well enough and wasn't too far behind on stuff, so I tried to get back to my to-do list. But my body's afternoon supply of energy was starting to wind down. [livejournal.com profile] anusara called to ask whether I was going to a third party, and I said I wasn't sure whether I was going to make it to any of the parties or not, but I'd try to get somewhere. Then came the "am I too tired to drive / if I sit and rest for half an hour will I stop being too tired to drive / if I nap for an hour will I wake up feeling okay to drive / do I feel energetic enough to enjoy interacting with people?" session of internal dialogue. Quite often if I'm tired enough to have to think about it, I'm too tired to go out. This is annoying, as I already have way too little social life and there are people I really did want to see last night, but at least I did get to see two friends yesterday afternoon.

But I've got this unhelpful pattern I fall into, that I do recognize (but only after it's too late): I get stubborn and think, "I should just be able to push myself to get there; I know I'll enjoy seeing people if I do; I just need a little more alertness/energy, or a smidgen less pain," and then I spend so much time and energy trying to figure out whether i need rest first, that I never get the rest that might make the difference.

If I had a housemate who got invited to the same parties and outings, who could drive when I'm feeling marginal road-wise, and nudge me in the direction of getting ready when my time sense goes away, that might help. Maybe.

After all of that, and still too tired, I couldn't get to sleep when I gave up on trying to go out. And when I did eventually crash, I woke up again an hour later and couldn't get back to sleep, so I'm in a really foggy mental state today, with poor time sense, difficulty concentrating, and a curious pressure at my eyes and temples. And I still have that to-do list. Feh.


But hey, I did see two friends for a spell, which is better than a lot of days. And the news of impending pizza gave me enough incentive to shovel off the kitchen table, which had gotten rather out of hand. And I found some interesting reading while failing to sleep (though I had a browser crash which the "resume browsing where I was last time" only recovered a third of the windows from, so once again a bunch of "link sausage" and quote-of-the-day candidates went away (along with some pages I just hadn't finished reading yet) ... frustratingly, this happened as I was in the process of copying links to the link sausage entry in progress and to the quotes queue so I could close some of those windows, when it crashed, so as I was reducing the strain on the computing resources, that's when it decided to bite me in the ass. Go figure.).

While we were eating pizza, my guests were amused watching Perrine jump into the oven to hunt mice. Then Bill made a comment about how Perrine had turned herself one-dimensional and vanished into a crack. I mis-heard him and thought he'd said she squashed herself flat, thinking she was under the oven again, but he pointed out where she'd gone and what he'd actually said finally sank in...

There's a corner under the counter next to the stove which looks like it ought to be a cabinet except that the stove is where most of the door would have to be, so it's this open space that's really awkward to store anything in. (That's where I thought Bill was pointing at one point, but not quite.) Under the cabinets there's a recessed kick-board, a pretty standard shape for kitchen cabinets. The front lip of the floor of the cabinet-oid space meets the side of the stove, but there's a toe-deep channel underneath that where the kick board runs parallel to the side of the stove.

That was where Bill was pointing.

I bent down to look into the crack, expecting to see a tail, or some back fur, or maybe an ear. I saw nothing. There was no cat. It was suggested that perhaps after turning herself into a line, she had proceeded to collapse herself all the way to a point. I remarked that she is, after all, a singular cat.

Eventually I noticed that the far wall of the space-that-would-be-cabinet was slightly closer than the wall of the kitchen (judging distances while squinting into a shadow with one eye doesn't inspire a lot of confidence in one's depth perception, but I finally decided it probably wasn't an illusion). So apparently Perrine had managed to turn the corner back there. My first thought was, "At least that means she'll have room to turn around." I decided not to worry about her getting stuck until I heard her cry. We returned to conversation and calories.

Some time later Perrine emerged, while I was facing the right direction to see. I thought watching her re-inflate from a plane looked surreal, but this ... shapes looked funny for a few minutes after watching her do that; I think I bent an eyeball. Or maybe it just bent my brain. (Maybe she's not a toon after all; maybe she's a ferret wearing a cat-suit.) I know some of the visual space she takes up is fur, but I pet her, I pick her up, I hold her; I know that she's not a stick-figure drawing of a cat with a hologram projector strapped to her; she has mass, she has size in all three dimensions ... except when for a few minutes at a time, she doesn't. Watching her ooze (I cannot say "crawl", that's not what she did) ooze out of that space, it did not look comfortable, but neither did she exactly look distressed.

I just know she's trying to figure out how to get behind the fridge. I see her staring at that opening, and I know the mice run there.

I had a few other things I'd planned to write about in this entry, but I got so caught up in remembering Perrine's kitchen spelunking that I've forgotten what else I was going to say. So I'll stop here for now. But someday I'll have to write a story about a mathemagician whose familiar is a topologically talented tabby.

There are 8 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] silmaril.livejournal.com at 11:54am on 2004-02-29
All right, I'm both officially freaked out and officially thrilled by your kitty.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 01:57pm on 2004-02-29
Yah, that sounds about how I feel when I watch her do these things. It's cool, butand creepy.
 
posted by [identity profile] anniemal.livejournal.com at 12:18pm on 2004-02-29
Having seen her disappear under the stove, I never underestimate her ability to crunch planes to a line. Given her talents, I'd scarce blink at her becoming a point. I smile.

I'm glad you had fun.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 02:10pm on 2004-02-29
She gets wider when she flattens out to go under the stove. Maybe I should've guessed she'd have a way around that to get into a low and narrow space, but I didn't guess, so it was startling.

Someday I'm going to see one ear and one eye staring out at me from a space that's smaller than cat-sized in each direction, realize that she has managed to crunch pointwise, and start questioning the geometric axioms I learned in high school.

OTOH, Bonsai Kittens (http://www.bonsaikitten.com/) would suddenly seem less far-fetched...
 
posted by [identity profile] realinterrobang.livejournal.com at 03:16pm on 2004-02-29
You had to bring up the Bonsai Kittens, didn't you? Yeargh. (Then again, if you asked TuckerEstron, she'd probably tell you I have "medical experiment issues," or something. Bleah.)
 
posted by [identity profile] anniemal.livejournal.com at 06:59am on 2004-03-01
I second the "Ugh!" heartily.
 
posted by [identity profile] puzzledance.livejournal.com at 07:30pm on 2004-02-29
Magic morphing moggy!
 
posted by [identity profile] katrinb.livejournal.com at 08:19am on 2004-03-01
It's very simple. Cats can liquefy at will, then resolidify on the other side.
Having watched my plump _and_ big-boned Sugar get into spaces I didn't think a ferret could manage, I am firmly convinced of this.(Getting him out again is not a challenge, however, as long as there are cat treats and tuna water in the world. I've a picture on my desk of Jason luring him out from under my parents' sofa with a red fluffy toy...it's very cute.)

Links

January

SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24
 
25
 
26
 
27
 
28
 
29
 
30
 
31