Saturday, April 26, 2008

Afterimage


I found him to be notoriously difficult to photograph... and in the end equally dificult to sketch. If the light wasn't just right, he simply came out as a black shadow, none of the details of his coat would show. He was a long haired cat, whose shoulder fur was short. His tail waved above his back like a plume of ... smoke. His neck sported long lighter fur that hung about his shoulders like an Elizabethan collar. In the sun, his fur took on a brown hue, where is was normally black and gray. The slightest breeze would ruffle the tips of the guard hairs. He'd always turn his nose to the wind. He was declawed before we got him, and he stood splay-footed, something I always wondered if it was because of the loss of his toes.

In the last days of his life I told myself several times I wasn't going to take any more picutres of him. That I had enough and many good ones from his younger days, before his fur dulled and separated and his whiskers turned white. I didn't stick to that. Twice more I was able to capture him, once in the days before he lost his sight peering out the front window, and once after his sight was gone, on the porch listening for the sounds that were now more distant then near.

As with some of the cats, the inspiration to sketch didn't strike until the last day. And even then it almost didn't take. For me, to sit an sketch something is to really look at it. There was nothing more I wanted to do that day then watch him, and wish that we had more time. To wish also that he could rest, because he couldn't sit still that day. So for him, like the others, I got out my pad and pencil, and watched my friend pace, hoping to fix his image once and for all in my mind, and perhaps on paper for others to see.

He settled only once during the morning, and I got a quick outline, but he was sitting under the end table, and like all the photos I'd tried, the light wasn't right and he was hard to see. A little later, silhouette followed, and another sketch as he rested on the porch. In the past, the patterns of color in the cat's fur always made my job somewhat easier. Light and dark played with the texture and length of their fur. Not with Smoke. He was all black, and long haired to boot. You couldn't capture his face with a dark smudge here and an absence of line there. The detail of his shape was lost and found in the pattern of his fur, you couldn't just draw an outline, or so I thought. Midafternoon, he settled at the foot of one of the office chairs. He sat there resting between pacing, and from the paper emerged an outline that required no fill. For once I had captured the long haired black cat in a few simple strokes. My mind's eye filled in the rest. I didn't try to draw all of him, I didn't need to, and in that final sketch, that final picture, I saw the young cat that had come to us so long ago. Here, very simply, was Smoke, reaching out and resting, at peace and at home.

We buried Smoke with the others in the back yard, under the bird bath. Five friends rest there now. Seven statues of cats grace the surrounding garden. One for each buried there, and two for those who are missing from the garden, but not forgotten.

My computer's screen saver lets me choose pictures to scroll across the screen, panning back and forth across the images. For now, and a little while longer, those are all pictures of Smoke. All images that captured a friend in motion, memories to remind me of one who is gone. Those images are freeze frames of a life that was always on the go. Now, the pictures have stopped moving and the life is gone. But the soul remains and the love will go on forever.

I miss you, Sir Cat...

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Relay for Life



Last night I went to the Seminole Relay for Life, sponsored by the American Cancer Society. It was held at Osceola High School, and was one of 12 Relays in the area last night, 4 of which were in Pinellas County. It started at 6:00 pm and went all night, concluding around 9:00 am in the morning. Team members walked the track at the high school all night. Each team was supposed to have at least one team member on the track at all times. The moon was 3 days from being full, and the night was clear and cool. There were people everywhere, they'd been walking since the start of the event. At the center of the field, a man in a jesters cap hosted a hoola-hoop contest to see who could keep the ring going the longest. Tables along the inside of the track sold everything from cyalume necklaces and flashing pins to muffins and massages, all proceeds to go to ACS. The atmosphere was like a carnival.

At 9:00 pm the Luminaria Ceremony took place. All around the track people had placed white paper bags with tea lights in them. The field's lights were turned out and the luminarias lit. Each luminaria was dedicated to a survivor, or to the memory of one who did not survive. Participants were invited to light their own candles first, starting with survivors and those currently battling the disease. Then family members, then friends we're invited to light their candles. It quickly devolved into respectful chaos, with people lighting their own candles, then helping friends and strangers until all candles were lit.

It was then that I noticed that on the track behind me, everyone was walking, slowly, introspectively, respectfully around the track. People quietly talked about those they had known, some who had survived, other that had not, others only newly diagnosed. As we walked, we passed a large group standing along the track gathered in silent memory. "That's for Emily." Emily? She was the captain of the Chemo Crew. Emily had battled cancer three times since 2001. She'd been a participant in the Relay for the last 7 years. Chemo Crew was the largest group in the Relay. She attended Osceola High School. Emily died two weeks before this Relay. Her team raised over $17,000 before the event. It was a moving tribute.

The candle lighting was very moving. Eventually the lights came back on, and the events started again. At each team's camp site the selling nicknacks, snack or drinks returned, having been suspended for the Luminara Ceremony. The buzz of activity returned. The DJ organized a tug of war at the center of the field. Walkers passed by on their appointed laps. I'm glad I went, and while I got there late and didn't stay long, I will go to another one some day. I met up with friends who had formed a team, I cheered them on, and walked with them while I was there. We are our own support group. We all met on line, we often meet for lunch. Our group, sadly, will keep growing. New members are always welcomed with the wish that they, like us, didn't need one another so much, and all the while wishing that one day, our group will cease to expand and be needed no more. Until then, for ourselves, and those who no longer can, we will walk...