[Felvtalk] He went on his own time. . .

Marlene Snowman tessie1965 at icloud.com
Tue Oct 17 02:54:55 CDT 2017


Ken, I am so very sorry for your loss. Zorro was lucky to have found you to love him for your year or so. I’m sure he came into your life for a very good reason. 

I am fortunate to still have my Bear for now two years, despite her starting off with many ailments plus FeLV having the vet immediately suggest euthanize as the only option. I was pleasantly surprised to see her put on a little more weight and reach 7 pounds this week. 

I am grateful for all the lovely souls who see other options, despite financial and great emotional toll in loving these wonderful fur babies. 

Marlene 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Oct 17, 2017, at 12:29 AM, Amani Oakley <aoakley at oakleylegal.com> wrote:
> 
> Ken,
> 
> I am very sad to hear about your loss of Zorro. FeLV is a terrible disease that robs us of our beautiful furbabies, far far too soon. I am thrilled, though, that there are people like you out there who care and take the necessary steps to make little lives worth living, and lets these little babies know what love is, on their time on earth.
> 
> Amani
> 
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Felvtalk [mailto:felvtalk-bounces at felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of kresch831 at mchsi.com
> Sent: October-16-17 11:24 PM
> To: felvtalk at felineleukemia.org
> Subject: [Felvtalk] He went on his own time. . .
> 
> Good Evening to all who just responded to Robert's "Anyone still there" email. This is my first post and I stumbled upon this site in my frantic effort to get info on FelV. Our tuxedo, Zorro, was with us barely a year when FelV took him in less than two weeks. I first saw him among the weeds and shrubs of my lower garden as he darted about, perhaps pursuing a field mouse. Over the next few weeks  I steadily coaxed him closer to the house with food, water and my appearances. Eventually he was on the back porch daily meowing for breakfast and our Teddy Bear dog, Oliver, watched Zorro eat from the other side of the screen door. By late September Zorro was eating in the house, finding the litter box and purring so loudly he could be heard from ten feet away. 
> 
> Zorro was neutered, vaccinated and checked over and quickly became the kindest, most lovable cat I've ever had and at 70 I've had a few! We all spent a wonderful year plus together and Oliver became so accepting of Zorro that he allowed himself to be groomed my him. All this came crashing down six weeks ago. Zorro slept more, did not jump into bed with me and though he ate, he ate in little spurts. We took him in, tried some antibiotics first since he had a fever but nothing changed. Then the blood tests; then the devastating news: FeLV. The Vet suggested we consider putting Zorro down since it was incurable. I said Zorro will decide that action. For the next ten days we bought time with Zorro using a coticosteroid via pills. But the inevitable came suddenly three Monday evenings back. Zorro was slowly walking and then just laid down. His breathing became labored and I lay down next to him whispering in his ears and stroking his side. I told him to go, he'd done it on his terms and w
>   ithing five minutes he was still. 
> 
> We've buried him with his bed and special blanket to cover him and keep the soil off. He's now beneath a tree near where I first saw him.
> 
> Ken Resch
> 
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