Re: [Felvtalk] MeMe 2006-3-32010

2010-03-05 Thread Laurieskatz
Jane, I am so sorry. I did not realize when we talked privately yesterday
that MeMe took the 10PM flight to heaven just the night before. The two
photos of Meme are amazing (and so are your other photos!). Your love is
between every line of your story about sweet MeMe. What a joyful cat she
was. And what a character. Grief is not for sissies. I still cannot talk
about recent losses without tears. I can't talk about long ago losses
without tears. Our grief is evidence that someone lived and was loved. It is
how we honor their lives and how we heal. Feel your grief. Let your Scotties
comfort you. And you, them. Look for MeMe. I suspect, with  her being such a
character, that she will visit you. When the Scotties look at something you
cannot see, it could be MeMe. I think animals see things we don't or can't.
God bless you for loving this wonderful soul. You will be tied together
forever.
Pick up the book Cat Heaven, by Cynthia Rylant, if you can. It is a child's
picture book and very comforting.
XO
L

-


___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org


Re: [Felvtalk] MeMe 2006-3-32010

2010-03-05 Thread Jane Lyons

thanks Laurie
As I said to you yesterday, you are a great list mate and friend.
I know you understand.

Jane
xxx


On Mar 5, 2010, at 10:38 AM, Laurieskatz wrote:

Jane, I am so sorry. I did not realize when we talked privately  
yesterday
that MeMe took the 10PM flight to heaven just the night before. The  
two
photos of Meme are amazing (and so are your other photos!). Your  
love is
between every line of your story about sweet MeMe. What a joyful  
cat she
was. And what a character. Grief is not for sissies. I still cannot  
talk

about recent losses without tears. I can't talk about long ago losses
without tears. Our grief is evidence that someone lived and was  
loved. It is
how we honor their lives and how we heal. Feel your grief. Let your  
Scotties
comfort you. And you, them. Look for MeMe. I suspect, with  her  
being such a
character, that she will visit you. When the Scotties look at  
something you
cannot see, it could be MeMe. I think animals see things we don't  
or can't.
God bless you for loving this wonderful soul. You will be tied  
together

forever.
Pick up the book Cat Heaven, by Cynthia Rylant, if you can. It is a  
child's

picture book and very comforting.
XO
L

-


___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org



___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org


Re: [Felvtalk] MeMe 2006-3-32010

2010-03-05 Thread Sharyl
Dear Jane,
What a loving tribute for MeMe.  She was an awesome girl.  Her story brought 
tears to my eyes as I remembered my sweet Angels who are waiting for MeMe at 
the Rainbow Bridge.  I will light a candle for her tonight.
Sharyl

--- On Fri, 3/5/10, Jane Lyons j.ly...@mindspring.com wrote:

 From: Jane Lyons j.ly...@mindspring.com
 Subject: [Felvtalk] MeMe 2006-3-32010
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Date: Friday, March 5, 2010, 10:11 AM
 I sent this message yesterday with a
 photo of MeMe but it did not go through the list.
 There are two photos of her on my photo webpage. The one on
 the bottom right is the best of the two (if anyone wants to
 see her face)
 Say two of the grieving process is not any better.
 Jane
 
 photos
 http://digitalimagecafe.com/member_profile.asp?member=memex2
 
 
 
 
 Last night the vet came at 10:00 to put MeMe to sleep. I
 had her for three years and two
 days and I am grateful for each and everyone of those days.
 She was an extraordinary cat.
 
 She was highly symptomatic with FelvĀ  when we adopted
 her but we managed to
 get her to a place of almost normalcy for almost three
 years and up until the last few months
 she lived a full and happy life.
 
 She had been in steady decline since mid December and the
 quality of her life had diminished
 drastically. She stopped eating three days ago and
 yesterday morning she could not jump
 down from the kitchen countertop. It was at that moment
 that I knew I had to make the call.
 
 Four weeks ago she had a complete blood work up which
 turned out to be completely normal.
 The vet was astonished when he called me with her report.
 He said he had been afraid to read it
 because he didn't want to call me with , what he was sure,
 would be a bad report. I knew, despite
 the numbers that she was not well. We had given her a round
 of Clavamox to help her stomatitis
 and she developed diarrhea that I could not get rid of
 despite homeopathy and Forti-Flora that
 had worked before.
 We did an ultra sound of her digestive tract which proved
 to be inconclusive'' and yet she continued
 to get sicker. Yesterday my husband found a mass behind her
 right ear that was enormous. It had not
 been there a few weeks ago but I suspect her lymphatic
 system has been under assault since mid December
 when I began to see changes in her coat and her energy and
 then her behavior. Through it all, she continued
 to seek us out to sit in our laps and to sleep in our bed.
 She never hid or indicated that she wanted to be alone.
 
 This weekend I walked into the front hall to find her lying
 between our two Scotties in a pool of sunlight.
 As sick and as vulnerable as she was, she trusted them and
 us. She was a strong and trusting and courageous
 animal who could scale 40' trees with more agility than a
 squirrel. She was fearless and when we discovered that
 she was positive and could not go out she adapted to her
 cat jacket and spent all her days outside or going for
 walks with the dogs. She led the pack with her tail
 straight up and an occasional detour to climb a tree (with
 her
 20' retractable leash).
 
 I could go on forever. She was just too wonderful.
 
 I have one positive thing to report. She had stomatitis
 (inflamed and sore gums) which we treated with antibiotics
 and homeopathy and a topical spray. Nothing worked for
 long. I discovered over this past month that the pro-biotic
 I was using for her diarrhea helped her mouth enormously. I
 was mixing Forti-Flora in her food twice a day for weeks
 and last week I noticed that her mouth was almost normal.
 For anyone dealing with stomatitis you might try a
 probiotic.
 
 So dear friends I think that all of us who are loving these
 endearing, loving creatures can learn a lot from their
 nobility and grace.
 MeMe was a gift and a life lesson to me. She has taught me
 so much and while she is not sitting in my lap as I type
 (and cry) she is deeply imbedded in
 my heart and will always be.
 
 Bless all of you who are living and learning from these
 very special beings
 
 love
 Jane
 
 
 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
 


  

___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org


Re: [Felvtalk] MeMe 2006-3-32010

2010-03-05 Thread Amy
Jane,

It sounds like MeMe had a wonderful 3 years with you.  She was so lucky to be 
loved and cared for by you through this horrible disease and it sounds like you 
were just as lucky to have her.  I'm sorry to hear of her passing and hope 
those precious memories of her bring you some comfort.

Amy

--- On Fri, 3/5/10, Jane Lyons j.ly...@mindspring.com wrote:

 From: Jane Lyons j.ly...@mindspring.com
 Subject: [Felvtalk] MeMe 2006-3-32010
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Date: Friday, March 5, 2010, 10:11 AM
 I sent this message yesterday with a
 photo of MeMe but it did not go through the list.
 There are two photos of her on my photo webpage. The one on
 the bottom right is the best of the two (if anyone wants to
 see her face)
 Say two of the grieving process is not any better.
 Jane
 
 photos
 http://digitalimagecafe.com/member_profile.asp?member=memex2
 
 
 
 
 Last night the vet came at 10:00 to put MeMe to sleep. I
 had her for three years and two
 days and I am grateful for each and everyone of those days.
 She was an extraordinary cat.
 
 She was highly symptomatic with FelvĀ  when we adopted
 her but we managed to
 get her to a place of almost normalcy for almost three
 years and up until the last few months
 she lived a full and happy life.
 
 She had been in steady decline since mid December and the
 quality of her life had diminished
 drastically. She stopped eating three days ago and
 yesterday morning she could not jump
 down from the kitchen countertop. It was at that moment
 that I knew I had to make the call.
 
 Four weeks ago she had a complete blood work up which
 turned out to be completely normal.
 The vet was astonished when he called me with her report.
 He said he had been afraid to read it
 because he didn't want to call me with , what he was sure,
 would be a bad report. I knew, despite
 the numbers that she was not well. We had given her a round
 of Clavamox to help her stomatitis
 and she developed diarrhea that I could not get rid of
 despite homeopathy and Forti-Flora that
 had worked before.
 We did an ultra sound of her digestive tract which proved
 to be inconclusive'' and yet she continued
 to get sicker. Yesterday my husband found a mass behind her
 right ear that was enormous. It had not
 been there a few weeks ago but I suspect her lymphatic
 system has been under assault since mid December
 when I began to see changes in her coat and her energy and
 then her behavior. Through it all, she continued
 to seek us out to sit in our laps and to sleep in our bed.
 She never hid or indicated that she wanted to be alone.
 
 This weekend I walked into the front hall to find her lying
 between our two Scotties in a pool of sunlight.
 As sick and as vulnerable as she was, she trusted them and
 us. She was a strong and trusting and courageous
 animal who could scale 40' trees with more agility than a
 squirrel. She was fearless and when we discovered that
 she was positive and could not go out she adapted to her
 cat jacket and spent all her days outside or going for
 walks with the dogs. She led the pack with her tail
 straight up and an occasional detour to climb a tree (with
 her
 20' retractable leash).
 
 I could go on forever. She was just too wonderful.
 
 I have one positive thing to report. She had stomatitis
 (inflamed and sore gums) which we treated with antibiotics
 and homeopathy and a topical spray. Nothing worked for
 long. I discovered over this past month that the pro-biotic
 I was using for her diarrhea helped her mouth enormously. I
 was mixing Forti-Flora in her food twice a day for weeks
 and last week I noticed that her mouth was almost normal.
 For anyone dealing with stomatitis you might try a
 probiotic.
 
 So dear friends I think that all of us who are loving these
 endearing, loving creatures can learn a lot from their
 nobility and grace.
 MeMe was a gift and a life lesson to me. She has taught me
 so much and while she is not sitting in my lap as I type
 (and cry) she is deeply imbedded in
 my heart and will always be.
 
 Bless all of you who are living and learning from these
 very special beings
 
 love
 Jane
 
 
 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
 


  

___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org


Re: [Felvtalk] MeMe 2006-3-32010

2010-03-05 Thread Frank Sue Koren

Jane,
Your MeMe sounds like such a very special cat.  She was beautiful and had 
such astonishing golden eyes.  It seems that MeMe was one of those few truly 
extrordinary cats that we are privledged to know in our lifetimes.  I am so 
sorry you lost her too soon.

Sue
- Original Message - 
From: Jane Lyons j.ly...@mindspring.com

To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Friday, March 05, 2010 10:11 AM
Subject: [Felvtalk] MeMe 2006-3-32010



I sent this message yesterday with a photo of MeMe but it did not go
through the list.
There are two photos of her on my photo webpage. The one on the
bottom right is the best of the two (if anyone wants to see her face)
Say two of the grieving process is not any better.
Jane

photos
http://digitalimagecafe.com/member_profile.asp?member=memex2






Last night the vet came at 10:00 to put MeMe to sleep. I had her for
three years and two
days and I am grateful for each and everyone of those days. She was
an extraordinary cat.

She was highly symptomatic with Felv  when we adopted her but we
managed to
get her to a place of almost normalcy for almost three years and up
until the last few months
she lived a full and happy life.

She had been in steady decline since mid December and the quality of
her life had diminished
drastically. She stopped eating three days ago and yesterday morning
she could not jump
down from the kitchen countertop. It was at that moment that I knew I
had to make the call.

Four weeks ago she had a complete blood work up which turned out to
be completely normal.
The vet was astonished when he called me with her report. He said he
had been afraid to read it
because he didn't want to call me with , what he was sure, would be a
bad report. I knew, despite
the numbers that she was not well. We had given her a round of
Clavamox to help her stomatitis
and she developed diarrhea that I could not get rid of despite
homeopathy and Forti-Flora that
had worked before.
We did an ultra sound of her digestive tract which proved to be
inconclusive'' and yet she continued
to get sicker. Yesterday my husband found a mass behind her right ear
that was enormous. It had not
been there a few weeks ago but I suspect her lymphatic system has
been under assault since mid December
when I began to see changes in her coat and her energy and then her
behavior. Through it all, she continued
to seek us out to sit in our laps and to sleep in our bed. She never
hid or indicated that she wanted to be alone.

This weekend I walked into the front hall to find her lying between
our two Scotties in a pool of sunlight.
As sick and as vulnerable as she was, she trusted them and us. She
was a strong and trusting and courageous
animal who could scale 40' trees with more agility than a squirrel.
She was fearless and when we discovered that
she was positive and could not go out she adapted to her cat jacket
and spent all her days outside or going for
walks with the dogs. She led the pack with her tail straight up and
an occasional detour to climb a tree (with her
20' retractable leash).

I could go on forever. She was just too wonderful.

I have one positive thing to report. She had stomatitis (inflamed and
sore gums) which we treated with antibiotics
and homeopathy and a topical spray. Nothing worked for long. I
discovered over this past month that the pro-biotic
I was using for her diarrhea helped her mouth enormously. I was
mixing Forti-Flora in her food twice a day for weeks
and last week I noticed that her mouth was almost normal. For anyone
dealing with stomatitis you might try a probiotic.

So dear friends I think that all of us who are loving these
endearing, loving creatures can learn a lot from their nobility and
grace.
MeMe was a gift and a life lesson to me. She has taught me so much
and while she is not sitting in my lap as I type (and cry) she is
deeply imbedded in
my heart and will always be.

Bless all of you who are living and learning from these very special
beings

love
Jane


___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org







No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 8.5.435 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/2723 - Release Date: 03/05/10 
07:34:00



___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org


Re: [Felvtalk] MeMe 2006-3-32010

2010-03-05 Thread create_me_new
Jane -
What a wonderful tribute to an extraordinary cat. And it sounds like she had 
extraordinary owners. All my FeLV cats have brought something special to my 
life  I have never regretted keeping any of them, no matter how much 
heartbreak I have had to go through.
One day your memories of her will only make you smile.
Beth
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

-Original Message-
From: Jane Lyons j.ly...@mindspring.com
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 10:11:52 
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: [Felvtalk] MeMe 2006-3-32010

I sent this message yesterday with a photo of MeMe but it did not go  
through the list.
There are two photos of her on my photo webpage. The one on the  
bottom right is the best of the two (if anyone wants to see her face)
Say two of the grieving process is not any better.
Jane

photos
http://digitalimagecafe.com/member_profile.asp?member=memex2
 
 




Last night the vet came at 10:00 to put MeMe to sleep. I had her for  
three years and two
days and I am grateful for each and everyone of those days. She was  
an extraordinary cat.

She was highly symptomatic with Felv  when we adopted her but we  
managed to
get her to a place of almost normalcy for almost three years and up  
until the last few months
she lived a full and happy life.

She had been in steady decline since mid December and the quality of  
her life had diminished
drastically. She stopped eating three days ago and yesterday morning  
she could not jump
down from the kitchen countertop. It was at that moment that I knew I  
had to make the call.

Four weeks ago she had a complete blood work up which turned out to  
be completely normal.
The vet was astonished when he called me with her report. He said he  
had been afraid to read it
because he didn't want to call me with , what he was sure, would be a  
bad report. I knew, despite
the numbers that she was not well. We had given her a round of  
Clavamox to help her stomatitis
and she developed diarrhea that I could not get rid of despite  
homeopathy and Forti-Flora that
had worked before.
We did an ultra sound of her digestive tract which proved to be  
inconclusive'' and yet she continued
to get sicker. Yesterday my husband found a mass behind her right ear  
that was enormous. It had not
been there a few weeks ago but I suspect her lymphatic system has  
been under assault since mid December
when I began to see changes in her coat and her energy and then her  
behavior. Through it all, she continued
to seek us out to sit in our laps and to sleep in our bed. She never  
hid or indicated that she wanted to be alone.

This weekend I walked into the front hall to find her lying between  
our two Scotties in a pool of sunlight.
As sick and as vulnerable as she was, she trusted them and us. She  
was a strong and trusting and courageous
animal who could scale 40' trees with more agility than a squirrel.  
She was fearless and when we discovered that
she was positive and could not go out she adapted to her cat jacket  
and spent all her days outside or going for
walks with the dogs. She led the pack with her tail straight up and  
an occasional detour to climb a tree (with her
20' retractable leash).

I could go on forever. She was just too wonderful.

I have one positive thing to report. She had stomatitis (inflamed and  
sore gums) which we treated with antibiotics
and homeopathy and a topical spray. Nothing worked for long. I  
discovered over this past month that the pro-biotic
I was using for her diarrhea helped her mouth enormously. I was  
mixing Forti-Flora in her food twice a day for weeks
and last week I noticed that her mouth was almost normal. For anyone  
dealing with stomatitis you might try a probiotic.

So dear friends I think that all of us who are loving these  
endearing, loving creatures can learn a lot from their nobility and  
grace.
MeMe was a gift and a life lesson to me. She has taught me so much  
and while she is not sitting in my lap as I type (and cry) she is  
deeply imbedded in
my heart and will always be.

Bless all of you who are living and learning from these very special  
beings

love
Jane


___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org