I was going to suggest witchcraft, until I got to the last line of
your message. But come to think of it, husband and cat have one thing
in common. Why did you say you keep samples of their hair?
Mark
At 04:52 PM 3/1/2007, you wrote:
>
>In a message dated 3/1/2007 4:33:59 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
>[log in to unmask] writes:
>
>my black cat Pythagoras was vomiting on the poison he ate, shortly
>before he died.
>
>
>
>I'm sorry....I meant no disrespect. I, too, have an all black cat (one of
>the easy-pukers) who became seriously ill about a year
>ago. That vomiting was
>different than the ordinary "opps, I ate too fast" vomiting that some cats
>do. You could tell by his disposition, his eyes, and his inability to stand
>up without falling over. We're unsure of the etiology of his
>illness.....could have been poison or it could have been something
>viral or bacterial.
>Whatever it was, I've never seen anything, human or feline, so
>close to death that
>didn't just up and die. (and I'm a medic, I know what death looks like up
>close and personal)
>
>He recovered but with some serious personality defects. I wouldn't go so
>far as to say he was left brain damaged, but he can't jump on
>anything without
>accidentally ramming his head into it first, he's afraid of his own shadow,
>he's paranoid about everything, possessive about my bed and small pieces of
>paper, terrified of new pillowcases, and he's mighty peculiar-acting around
>people. He cries a lot, too.
>
>Actually, now that I think about it, he reminds me of my first husband.
>
>Lo
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