Bathroom Cats V
A. Langston
8 in. x 10 in.
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Hauser--Cat Out
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READ GARFIELD'S FIRST
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Praise for Garfield's First
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Please tell
Garfield that his Christmas Letter was one of the most heartfelt I've
ever read. Ed Kostro Dec 2005
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Four or more cats is a complete coup!o
Shona
Steele (Australia) |
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5 GOOD REASONS FOR
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DID YOU KNOW... |
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Garfield: 28.03.86 - 12.06.06

Click on the cartoon to take you to
Garfield's tribute pages
GARFIELD and those infamous 20th
birthday pictures. See both birthday hats and more ...
LETTER FROM GARFIELD is a final letter
written with great love to his Mum ...
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GOOD LISTENING
A recent Associated Press poll asked, Are pets better listeners than spouses? I
suppose it should surprise few Americans, given the state of marriage today,
that many respondents said they preferred to talk their troubles over with their
dogs or cats than with their marital partners. Twenty-five percent said their
dogs were the preferred listeners; alas, only 14% said cats.

Having written and spoken extensively about the spirituality of cats, I was more
concerned with the latter data than with the fact that people talk in depth to
non-human partners.
So I want to write on behalf of feline listening. Cats are ideal listeners
because, first of all, they have superb, antenna-like ears with dozens of
separate muscles designed to pick up sounds we can scarcely imagine. More
important, as I point out in my book
Writing With Cats,
felines are unusually skilled contemplatives. They live fully in the present
moment and thus exude a peaceful aura (most of the time) that is conducive to
reflection on the part of their human staff who happen to be writers.
Thus it comes as no surprise that most of the world's great writers have lived
with cats. When Hemingway wrote that he valued the cat's emotional honesty, he
was on to something important that I have noticed in our cat, Lizzie, who is an
excellent listener. She can pick up the emotional subtext of what I say and can
sense, with exquisite intuition, any apprehension or distress on our part -- as
when we are preparing to take her to the vet. And she is never phony in her
responses, even when they are not what I might prefer. If she misses the meaning
of my words, she gets their tone and resonance.
I don't really need Lizzie as a therapist since I am married to one. Lynn,
although retired as a counsellor, is a gifted listener. But we both talk to
Lizzie and notice that she is fully present to us when we do so; she enjoys
hearing her name mentioned and is more alert and sympathetic as a listener than
many of the people we know. I mean those concerned with their own agendas who
pause only long enough in their monologues to breathe. Or so it seems sometimes.
Good listening has to do with giving full attention to another. In most
circumstances, Lizzie scores well in this category.
I think we can learn some lessons from our feline friends, especially about
living in the reality of the now and being fully present to those around us. One
drawback with cats is their tendency to walk away suddenly in the middle of a
conversation. But that's what comes with emotional honesty.
© Gerald Schiffhorst May 2010
You can read more of Gerald’s writing
on his blog:
http://www.mindfulwriting.blogspot.com/
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