Category Archives: Life

Oscar and Oscar

My cat of 17 years died today.  Actually I chose to put him down.  That was 5 hours ago, but it’s been 5 hours of second guessing.  Did I make the right decision?  Could we have fought through this latest set of problems?  Would things have been different if I had acted sooner?

I could list all the problems, going back to last November, and you’d say it was a reasonable decision, that he was suffering, especially these past few days, and it would require more suffering for a chance of getting back to some level of stability.  And while that stability might have lasted months or years, he could also be back in this same position in just a few weeks.

Augusto asked me what did my gut say.  He thinks it’s best to always go with your gut.  But while my head says this was the right decision, my gut says never give up.  That comes from living through a plague, I guess.  I’m telling myself I made the logical decision, but I also hear a voice saying I made the decision too quickly.  I had pretty much made up my mind before talking to the vet today.  See my twitter post “One last day in the sun” and others. Nick and Martin had come over yesterday to say their goodbyes.  But today the vet said I could give him subQ fluids every day for the next week and force 300 calories daily into him, and the herpes like sores on his tongue, throat and esophagus might heal and he’d start eating on his own again. But it had been such a battle this weekend to get even 30 ml and 50 calories into him, I don’t think neither he nor I could handle it.  And that’s the part that gnaws at me.  I should have been able to handle this.  I’m suppose to be able to handle anything.

With his brother, Alex, who died two years ago in two weeks, we didn’t have to make this decision. His body just slowly gave out. He was not in pain, I think.  He just drifted away.  And we knew that weekend that it was going to happen soon.  We spent that Sunday with him.   When he passed, it was very peaceful.  For Oscar, having to choose which day for him to die was really hard. Now I’ve been looking at old pics, seeing how beautiful and healthy he was, and I think I gave up too soon.  But then I look at all the pics I took yesterday and today and think, no it was time.

Nick and I got  Alex and Oscar from a girl who rescued kitties and worked at JPL-NASA, where I was working at the time.  They were 6-8 weeks old and part of a litter of 4.  I was only expecting to get one, but after I told the girl that I’ll take this one (don’t remember whether that was Alex or Oscar), the other climbed up on my lap and said “You know you’re not leaving without me.”  I said “Yeah, I know”, and took the two home.  We didn’t have cell phones back then, but Nick, being a doctor, had a pager, so I paged him a single character, 2. He was at one of his meetings at the time, and squealed out loud with joy.

On the way home from Pasadena, Oscar curled up on the back seat and fell asleep, while Alex was all frightened, and climbed up on my lap and onto my chest and I held him tight the 20 minute drive to Hollywood.  (At six weeks old he could fit into the palm of my hand).  This pretty much defined their personalities for the next 15 years.  Alex was high maintenance. Oscar was nonchalant.  Alex you always needed to watch out for, Oscar could take care of himself.  Neither were afraid of people, though.  In fact they’d run to the front door if they heard the door bell ring.

I suppose if I’m here to reminisce about Oscar the cat, I need to also reminisce about his namesake.

Nick had wanted a female cat, and was going to name it Alexis (after Alexis Morrell Carrington Colby Dexter Rowan of course). But we got two boys, so Alexis became Alex. I got to choose the other one’s name.  I named Oscar after a boy I hardly knew.

Prior to the availability of protease inhibitors, which made HIV a relatively manageable disease, people had a lot of misunderstanding, apprehension and fear of AIDS.  Even the gays. Especially the gays. And of course blood relatives. (OK, that’s all still true today, but not as bad.) Back then you rarely told anyone you were positive, but once the symptoms of full blown AIDS showed up, everyone knew.  And way too often guys would find out their good friends weren’t very good friends at all.

I had gone over to some guy’s house just south of WeHo, someone I had only recently met, to lay by his pool, and Oscar was there too.  Oscar had been living in the guest house since losing his job.  He was a few years older than me, so that would mean mid to late 30s, and tall and handsome.  He had been an all star high school quarterback from Texas, had been Home Coming King, was certainly part of the “A-list” in WeHo, being invited to all the right parties, etc. He continued to be a jock, was on all sorts of sports teams here.  But then he developed full blown AIDS and his friends suddenly were no where to be found.  His Tex-Mex familia had abandoned him too, so he couldn’t go back to his small town in Texas.

Back then there were many different ways to succumb to AIDS, lots of opportunistic infections and wasting.  Things that destroy your body without affecting your mind.  But there was one, AIDS Related Dementia, that took your mind leaving your body intact.  This is what Oscar had.

I met Oscar just as it was being confirmed that he had full blown AIDS.  We had a few dinners, talked on the phone a half dozen times, and sat by his pool a few sunny days. (Once he wanted to toss the football back and forth, but it didn’t take very long to show how bad of an idea that was. I am unable to either catch or throw a ball.)  But the dementia set in quickly and within 4 or 6 weeks, he was unable to take care of himself and was put into hospice care where he died a few weeks later. I cried. And for some reason, a few years later I named my tiny orange kitten after him.  Oscar the cat kept me company for 17 years.  And then he died.  And I cried again.

Swim Trunks

Went to the gym last night (Friday) for the first time in 11 days.  I had a bout of food poisoning. Got sick at work on Tuesday.  Sick on Wednesday.  Started on Cypro on Thursday.  Had my first meal Friday night.   But also developed the hiccups on Thursday, which was pretty continuous while I was awake until the following Thursday.  The hiccups caused a lot of acid reflux, which irritated my throat and tongue (and seemed to make me susceptible to thrush).  But once I started on three meds, the super strength Prilosec, Fluconazole, and a muscle relaxant Baclofen. The hiccups went away within 24 hours of starting those meds.  And my voice is no longer raspy.

Have no idea what caused the food poisoning.  Had only eaten out of my fridge the previous two days.  But this was the worst I’ve ever had.  Well in 1992 I got shigella, but within 12 hours I was in the ER with an IV in my arm.  So that was probably more serious, but it was over real quick.  This just lasted for days and days.  And yes I had been talking to my doc asking if I should go to the ER, she no need unless this, this and this, which never happened.

So at the gym last night, I had a pretty descent all around workout.  Didn’t try to do too much.  But I weighed myself, and I was down 10 pounds from two weeks ago.  And that’s after days of eating like a pig.  At it’s peak I’m sure I was down 15 pounds or more.

The really depressing part of all this was the timing.

At the gym there is a name for a type of weightlifter, the perma-bulkers.  Guys who are always trying to get big, and feel you need to need to eat constantly and be a bit overweight to gain muscle.  Perma-bulkers may be big, but they’re never in good shape.

Then there are guys who grow muscle while maintaining 5% body fat all year long.  They must have the right bacteria in their intestines. Because while they train hard, they eat a ton of food and never gain an ounce of fat.  I hate them.

I’m pretty good at staying lean, at least with the subcutaneous fat and the intra-muscular fat. But I’ve had a problem with the visceral fat, the fat in between the organs.  Certainly the meds don’t help.  So while I can see my abs, the hand held meter shows me at 16% bodyfat.  This shows up as a protruding stomach.  My waist had reached 35″.

So I decided I was going to work out extra hard, eat right, and get my waist back down to a more athletic number.  Ok, but by when?  I needed a goal.  Well, there’s a big gay pool party in Palm Springs in April.  1000+ muscled guys, age skews older, average probably 40.

And I promised myself that if I got below 33″ waist, I’d reward myself with these overpriced designer swim trunks.  So I trained really hard, dieted, did aerobics.  And I got down to 32.5″ waist. And I bought the overpriced swim trunks.

On the Sunday before the event, a straight guy at the gym commented to me “You look jacked!”  And then Tuesday, 4 days before the big pool party (which for I had already bought the ticket), I got sick.  So I didn’t get to go to the pool party.  And I’ve lost all my definition, but that will return with a few weeks back in the gym.

Now I have these overpriced swim trunks and no place to wear them.

three weeks before big gay pool party.  two weeks before I got sick

three weeks before big gay pool party. two weeks before I got sick

Starting Over

My old website was created in 1997 and hasn’t been updated since 2004.  So I’m going to start over. Don’t want to use FB, G+ or the others, as don’t like their privacy policies.  Let’s see what I can do here.