by Benjamin Haines » Tue Aug 09, 2022 12:29 am
We had to put our senior cat Hershey to sleep this past Tuesday, August 2. He was 14 and a half.
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Hershey originally belonged to one of our mutual friends, then he got moved around and ended up in a bad location, so we jumped at the opportunity to offer him a new home and he was with us since the Spring of 2014.
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Hershey was a character. Whenever he tilted his head upward or rubbed his face on anything while purring, his mouth would hang open slightly and he would purr loudly out of his open mouth.
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Whenever Hershey was hungry and I was asleep, he would place his paw on my face and gently flex his claws until I woke up. Then when we moved to a new apartment last year and he discovered that he could make noise by banging his paw on the bedroom closet's sliding-mirror-door, he banged on that closet door with gusto. I had to start leaning big pillows against that closet door at night to stop him because he was so loud about it.
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^ That was Hershey back in September 2019 when we brought him home after he was lost for four days and three nights. He had escaped from the car in the parking lot at the vet's office in the middle of town after what was supposed to be a quick appointment. Instead he panic-ran into a woodland thicket and we spent the rest of the week scouring the town for him, posting lost cat fliers and knocking on doors. The caller who eventually spotted him was someone who saw one of the very first fliers that I had posted nearby. Rather than being traumatized by the experience, it only took Hershey about ten minutes to get his bearings once we brought him home. He just needed to walk around the whole apartment and recognize everything, and then he was eating and lounging about in his home like he always did.
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^ That plush Dragon Ball was Hershey's chosen accessory. From the moment he first saw it, he claimed it as his. He never tried to rip it up or bat it around. He would use it as a pillow for his head, or he would rest with one paw touching it, or he would just lie down next to it. It was just his thing that he liked to have.
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Hershey was the middle-aged member of our trio of cats from 2014 to 2019, with the short-haired snowshoe KC being the senior and the long-haired nebelung Mercury the youngin'.
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Hershey and KC previously lived in the same apartment from 2011 to 2012 and they shared a brotherly bond.
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KC would frequently groom Hershey's head, which Hershey always appreciated.
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The little lady cat Mercury was only about 1 and a half when Hershey came to live with us, so he has been a fixture of her adult life these past eight years. Hershey and Mercury always loved to wrestle and chase each other. Whenever he noticed her hiding under the cover of a box or a blanket or something, he couldn't resist the urge to stick his paw in and bop her repeatedly until she gave chase. When she went through a phase of hunting lizards and bringing them into our home still alive, Hershey had to one-up her by catching a big frog at the pond and happily trotting up the porch steps with it still wiggling in his jaws. After we had to euthanize KC in 2019, Hershey and Mercury were our only two cats for two years.
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We adopted Casper, a stray neutered male cat, this past September and he and Hershey quickly became friends.
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When Hershey was young, he lived with an older male cat who taught him to hunt, and then he and KC lived together for much of their adult lives, so it was nice that Hershey got to form another bond like that with Casper during the last year of his life.
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Hershey also acted as a stabilizing force between Casper and Mercury, as she had hated Casper's guts through the window since he first showed up outside as a stray and she didn't want us to adopt him at all. I think that Hershey being friendly with both of them has gone a long way toward getting Mercury to accept Casper over the past year.
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Hershey was diagnosed with chronic kidney disease in May of last year. We switched him to a special low-protein, low-phosphorus diet food and we got his blood checked every six weeks. His blood values mostly remained stable and he really didn't show any outward signs of illness for most of the past year. Whenever we took the cats outside, he and Casper would race to be the first out the door, and the two of them loved to roughhouse indoors. Hershey was still running around playfully a month ago. The first sign that his health was declining was in the last week of May, when he ate noticeably less, but his behavior was otherwise unchanged, his blood values were stable at that time, and his appetite returned to normal in June. It was in the middle of July when his appetite dropped again, and this time his blood values had doubled since June. We tried everything to help him eat more, feeding him liquid food by syringe to keep him eating, injecting him with subcutaneous fluids to keep him nourished and hydrated, hoping he could bounce back again. Even though he was more tired and less active than before, he was still enjoying his daily life during the last two weeks of July, hanging around the apartment with us and the other cats and basking in the fresh air and sunshine when we went outside together. Sadly, on Sunday the 31st, he took a turn for the worse. He no longer wanted to walk around much at all and he couldn't seem to even get comfortable lying down. He was clearly in pain and he didn't sleep much at all that day. It eventually became clear that he was badly constipated, which was the last thing he needed on top of everything else. I took him to the vet on Monday, August 1 and they tried to clear his constipation but they couldn't get much out. I brought him back home that afternoon but he just didn't show any improvement. Hershey was at the point where the only way to prolong his life any longer would have been by keeping him at the hospital 24/7 hooked up to intravenous fluids, and we weren't going to put him through that. We stayed with him all night and then spent that Tuesday trying to make him as comfortable as possible while we said goodbye. The vet arrived at our apartment around 3:30 in the afternoon. Lying on a blanket in the middle of the bedroom floor, Hershey fell asleep with his head rested in my hand as we petted and spoke to him. We buried his body that evening on the property of our friend's grandparents, where Hershey was born and where his mother still lives today.
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^ That's the last photo of Hershey that I ever took, on July 27. I'm glad that it's a photo of the three of them together. I will always miss Hershey, and I regret that he experienced such a sudden and rapid decline in health in his final days, but I'm thankful that we got to share so many years with him, that we got to give him a home for the rest of his life. He made a deep and lasting difference in all of our lives.
