You did exactly right, no matter how things turn out.  You acted with your 
heart.   Your friends and family should be proud of you for being a caring 
person and support you.  Take what measures you can to protect your guys--all 9 
of them.  






                                                 If you have men who will 
exclude any of God's creatures
                                                 from the shelter of compassion 
and pity, you will have men who 
                                                 will deal likewise with their 
fellow man.
                                                                  St. Francis
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Barbara Oberst 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2006 4:34 PM
  Subject: Re: How do yall do it?


  I have 5 of my own cats, plus 4 strays we're fostering.  In October, 1 of the 
fosters tested a faint positive for FeLv.  The others tested negative; I just 
had them retested last week; now 2 more are a faint positive, too.  The scary 
thing is, we were told (not by a vet) that the adoption agency doesn't normally 
retest negative cats, and those that tested negative could live with my other 
cats--now I'm worried all of my cats will get it, as some of my own cats were 
not current on the FeLv vaccine, as they've been exposed to them for over 2 
months.

  Most people, including my family, think my husband and I are crazy for taking 
in strays, especially now this has happened (my own mother now is implying a 
sort of, "Serves you right" when I talk to her). But, how  could we have left 
those poor 5 month old kittens to die?  They were living in a storage shed, and 
they were being cared for by the employees; but some of them abused the cats. 
We still think we did the right thing, despite what's happened.  We do it 
because we love cats, and have been accused of being too soft-hearted (I've 
been called worse things!).  I'd rather err on the side of kindness, if I had 
to go to an extreme.

  "Dianne K Perry, Ph.D." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
    Thank you for this.  It reminded me of the day  Asia was diagnosed with 
FELV, even before the Lymphoma ....I was down in the dumps and wondering why 
this again in my life....(last year was horrible with the loss of 4 pets and a 
husband and a couple rescue dogs)

    anyway, it came to me that Asia picked me ...she did, there was no doubt 
about it when it happened last Dec. I knew, her foster parents knew, we talked 
about it.....

    It came to me loud and clear that God had her pick me because I would take 
care of her to the very best of my ability and would not give up easily.  

    Dianne
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: TenHouseCats 
      To: [email protected] 
      Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2006 2:09 PM
      Subject: Re: How do yall do it?


      the short answer?

      we do it because we can. we might not always THINK that we can, but 
clearly the creative force of the universe, by whatever name you choose to call 
it, believes that we can.

      these critters always manage to find us, no matter what we do. i have 
come to believe that, in order to complete their journeys, they come to us 
because there is something they need that only we can give them. and that there 
is something that we need to learn that only they can teach us. it never gets 
easier to deal with the difficulties of special-needs cats, but after the first 
few times they appear in our lives, i think we start to realize that we ARE 
supposed to be doing this work, and that it's not just some bad cosmic joke.... 

      everyone does what they can. some of us can work with the elderly, the 
sick or dying; some can foster; some can give great amounts of time or money 
but are unable to physically take in additional animals. there are so many ways 
to help, and each path is valid... 





      On 12/26/06, Kelley Saveika <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
        Hi guys,

        I don't have an FELV+ that I know of, but I do have a kitty with VSM 
(ventricular septal defect) - a heart condition.  She could die at any time, or 
she could live for quite a while.  (If you could add her to the prayer list, 
that would be great).  Her name is Missy, and I love her more than anything in 
the world. 

        She had an echocardiogram and was diagnosed with VSM this summer.  I 
think I have cried every day since.  Before she had the echo I thought she 
would be dead every day when I got home.  Now I'm sure she will be.  Nice as 
the heart list people are, I can't really read that list; it is too close to 
home.  I can barely read this one, and I cry a lot here too. 

        How do yall stand it?  I don't think I am strong enough.

        Kelley

        -- 
        Rescuties - Saving the world, one cat at a time.

        http://www.rescuties.org 

        Vist the Rescuties store and save a kitty life!

        http://astore.amazon.com/rescuties-20 



      -- 
      Spay & Neuter Your Neighbors!
      Maybe That'll Make The Difference....

      MaryChristine

      AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
      MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      ICQ: 289856892 


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