As anyone who has ever been around a cat for any length of time well knows, cats have enormous patience with the limitations of the human mind.
–Cleveland Amory, The Cat Who Came for Christmas (1987)
I posted this photo of Momopotamus on Instagram on the Fourth of July. I don’t normally post photos of our cats, I try to respect their privacy. But with her looking at me from her normal perch on the stone wall in my studio space, with her clipped left ear and with Yankee Doodle Dandy as a backdrop, it just felt right for that day.
That should be the end of the story. But my Instagram post are shared to Facebook and when her photo came up on FB, there were several AI generated questions underneath. Pretty innocuous stuff. What movie is she watching? What is the significance of the time and date on the clock?
But there was one that made me somewhat indignant: Why is the cat grumpy?
Actually, I laughed before I decided to take offense.
But after thinking about it for a moment, I chose indignation. I wanted to tell this make-believe being that that is not the face of a grumpy cat. Oh, her gaze tends towards the permanently severe. That’s a fact. But that face you are seeing is that of an extraordinarily happy and content cat, one who knows how fortunate she is to have hit the jackpot.
That is not her grumpy look, believe me. I know that look from when she turned up as a stray cat well over five years ago. She would plant herself on the small porch of our home and peer through windows of the door. When we would open the door to put down some food for her, she would scowl and hiss in a warning way. Once I reached out to gently stroke her back while she ate and received that same hiss along with a pretty good slash on the back of my hand.
Fortunately, I am not the kind of person who learns quickly, never having properly learned about touching a hot stove. I slowly kept trying over the months and after continuing to receive hard bats and scratches on my hand, I was able to run a single finger down her back. It her fur was and is extremely soft and silky. I could feel her respond in positive way, her back arching up a bit against my finger. Then the recognition came to her that I was touching her and she swung around with a hiss.
But the Rubicon had been crossed. There was no turning back.
Don’t get me wrong, it still took well over a year, close to two actually, before I could approach and pet her. It was a process.
She had obviously had a very difficult life before this as a stray. With her somewhat misshapen belly that gave her the appearance of a hippo when she walked towards you, she was extremely defensive and suspicious of every move we made. At that point she was indeed a grumpy cat.
But you could also see she was an extremely loving cat in the way she treated her kittens, rubbing her head against them all the time. The kitten’s father was oddly enough still around much of the time when the kittens first showed up at our place. He later bugged out and wasn’t seen again until this past spring.She was obviously enamored of him and would rub all over him when he was present. It seemed unusual to me for stray or feral cats to behave in this way.
I am not going to go through the whole process today but eventually she, along with her two sons, became permanent residents in the studio.
I am her boyfriend now. She purrs in an extraordinarily loud manner when I come into the studio in the early morning, flopping down on the rug by the door demanding that I pet her. During the day she often follows me from room to room, purring all the time as she waits for the obligatory petting session. And when she plants herself on the stone wall next to where I am writing this now, she stares at me for the longest time in a way that is filled with both love and gratitude. It is a look that melts my heart. She is my well loved girlfriend now.
Grumpy cat? Screw you.
If this AI character can ever find form and make its way here, it better watch out or it will see what truly grumpy cat looks like.
Speaking of watching out, here’s a song from the Big Push, the band with Ren that made their name by busking on the streets and beaches of Brighton, that offers just that cautionary warning. This Watch Out. I am showing both their promo video for this original song, featuring the lovable, spunky determination of a little girl, as well as a live version from what is probably their most famous busking sessions. There are several videos from this session featuring Ren wearing red suspenders doing mashup covers that are big YouTube hits. The red suspender version of I Shot the Sheriff is a must see.
Now, either git or watch out.










