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DJ Kirkby said in November 26th, 2009 at 2:49

This poem was very beautiful to read.

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Aly said in November 26th, 2009 at 2:49

I miss having pets.I would like to have a cat and I know the kids would too.DH and DS are allergic, but we’rs slowly introducing them to dogs and cats in order to desensitise them.Maybe we will have a little purring fur ball of our own.

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Anne said in November 26th, 2009 at 15:32

I always wondered why a pile of purring kittens doesn’t levitate. It seems like they should.

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LR Adams said in November 26th, 2009 at 20:53

This is a great poem. I love pets, especially dogs. Thank you once again for posting up the youtube videos, they are very touching & more people need to take a look at the words they choose to use in society. You are an inspiration to us all. From a 23-year old who has aspergers as well as living with an autistic/mentally challenged 19-year old sister……thank you

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ballastexistenz said in November 26th, 2009 at 21:25

Actually I just tried this with my iPod speaker and if you turn the volume all the way up and put your hand on the speaker (if you have one) it’s very possible to feel the very cool purring rhythm. Unfortunately I can’t simultaneously listen and transcribe the rest of it since the iPod won’t let me watch a video and edit text at the same time.

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Phillida Phoenix said in November 27th, 2009 at 1:30

Beautiful poem, beautiful video.

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AnneC said in November 27th, 2009 at 3:14

As the maker of the linked video I will say first that I apologize for the lack of captioning, but really when I randomly record my cats I am not figuring that my meandering background-babble ought to be the focus in the first place!

Purring, however, is another matter. What I was thinking (and was discussing with Amanda after she wrote and said she’d linked one of my videos) was that it would be awesome to have some sort of a force-feedback thingie that could attach to the computer and allow someone (including someone who might be d/Deaf, etc.) to FEEL the purr. I suppose playing it through loud, well-made speakers might approximate this effect, but in any case, purring is one of the first ways kittens and their mothers communicate and does not depend on either eyesight or hearing as newborn kittens are both blind and deaf until their eyes/ears open. So their first week (or so) of life is comprised entirely of tactile/olfactory experiences, which of course includes the purr between them and their mother.

So yeah, tangent, but cats are easy to go on tangents about. Mew!

And the kittens in the video are indeed feral rescue kittens — I caught them in a local neighborhood when they were between 7 and 10 weeks old (got the first two at 7 weeks, took 3 weeks longer to catch the third!). They all had various medical issues (fleas, intestinal parasites, one of them was underweight at first, etc.) but those have been treated now and they’re all healthy and thriving and seem happy in their new home (my house has big huge windows in it, being a California ranch-style construction, which are splendid for bird and squirrel-watching!).

Oh and the kittens’ names are Brodie (tabby on left in video), Coraline (tabby on right), and Shadow (black kitty, snuggled behind the other two). They are siblings/littermates.

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sanabituranima said in December 2nd, 2009 at 1:59

Pleae pray for my friend C. She is very upset because her cat died. Also people are being cruel to her.

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[...] photos could easily go with my last cat post, and will have to do while I’m writing a series of new cat-related posts. She was doing [...]

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cat insurance said in January 7th, 2010 at 6:34

awww…. lovely. =)

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