This is an empty dish. the sign of a neglectful caretaker. |
This time of the year Judy and I review our dreams for the New Year. Me? Sure, I live for the moment, but I worry about
my future when my dish is empty,
Looking forward to a new day, a new week, a new month.... |
or when I want to explore the campground and mom is still in her
pajamas.
Before the present year is scratched out, covered up, and a new year pounces forward, Judy reviews our past and sets our goals. She dreams impossible dreams. And me? I reach for the stars.
In Judy’s recent blog, The Writings Of A Wandering Widow, she
describes how to prepare for the coming year. Cleaning and organizing.
Me? I’ve got the cleaning part down. I lick my fur until it
shines. And Judy takes care of my organizational chores, storing my many, many
toys in one basket. If I remove one, Judy’s impatience prevents
her from waiting for me to return the toy to it proper place.
Before I set my goals I ponder exactly what I want, but I’m
a cat, so that’s easy.
I always dream impossible dreams. As a kitten, separated
from my mom, I hovered in the bushes, cold and hungry. I envisioned warmth and purring contentment.
My dreams brought me through and I never gave up. Back then, I didn’t know what impossible meant.
But really, nothing is impossible. I wanted a warm home and
a savior appeared and took me to Judy, who gave me more than I even could have
imagined, two warm homes, my stick house and my motorhome.
Once I wished
for a larger litter box, and Judy took me to The White Sands National Monument in
New Mexico,
The Mesquite Flats Sand Dunes. A huge litter box. |
So you see, what could only seem like
an elusive sand castle can become real and more amazing than anything I ever fancied.
What do I dream of in the coming year? I want to do
something that will blow my mind. I want to be an Adventure cat.
I want to see
the aurora borealis, WikiTravel - Northern Lights and chase the thousand rays of lights dancing across the
night sky.
I want to travel the Mother
Road, , Route 66, from California to Judy’s home town in . Springfield Illinois.
My advice to you. Live
in the moment. Be content to find the joy of a little thing, a bird flitting
by, or a whiff of catnip. And believe in the impossible.
The Rhyolite school |
Yeah but, you say? What happened to the people that lived in
this ghost town of Rhyolite, Nevada? What about their impossible dreams? Looks pretty sad, but I’ve prowled
the streets of this Rhyolite ghost town.
The Cook Bank in Rhyolite |
This was a three story building in Rhyolite that cost $90,000 to build. It housed the stock exchange. |
The ghosts and their stories linger on the desert breeze and
I sense their presence and hear their voices. “Go for it!” They shout. “No regrets!”
They explain what I see, what is left is their legacy. They reached for the
stars and are not sorry for it.
.
Thanksgiving is a time to review my struggles, which for
me, have been few. I spent much of this year comforting Judy as she bid her
sister good bye. As difficult as it was to see my mom so sad, I was grateful to
be there for her.
And what do you know? As great as Judy’s loss was on October
13, the next day, after sixteen years of estrangement, the universe reunited Judy
with her daughter and family. Judy now has a new littler of folks to love.
The impossible dream!
Dream it!!
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!!!
Books by Judy Howard on Amazon
GOING HOME WITH A CAT AND A GHOST
COAST TO COAST WITH A CAT AND A GHOST
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