2020年12月9日 星期三

My Pandemic Cat Had a Secret

First of all, she wasn’t a kitten...

My Pandemic Cat Had a Secret

Author Headshot

By Carla Bruce-Eddings

Nan Lee

I’m taking a break this week, so I asked Carla Bruce-Eddings, a frequent NYT Parenting contributor and beautiful essay writer, to take the wheel. She has a hilarious, surprising and extremely sweet story about a pandemic kitten caper. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

— Jessica Grose, NYT Parenting columnist

In early May, I received a text from a close friend who lives several blocks away: “Do you want a kitten?”

At that point, hours and days and weeks were drifting by in a fog of restless ennui. I was home, all the time. The tense silence was pierced by ambulance sirens every three to five minutes. My then-4-year-old daughter was attending virtual preschool, and each minute felt more tenuous and bizarre than the last.

Did I want a kitten? Of course I wanted a kitten.

First of all, she wasn’t a kitten. After an intense battle of wills with a group of my friend’s neighbors, who all attempted to lay claim to what turned out to be a partially feral adult cat, I found myself on my hands and knees, speaking soothingly to my new, slim tabby. She had huge, luminous eyes and refused to come out from beneath the living room couch.

My daughter and I decided on a name together, Jinora, in honor of one of our favorite characters from “The Legend of Korra.” And we did everything we could to make our new housemate feel comfortable and secure. My daughter sang to Jinora and asked her questions, attempted to engage her with the many toys I bought, and wrinkled her nose good-naturedly when I dished out the cat’s wet food and changed her litter box.

After about two weeks of living with us, Jinora began to get fat. There isn’t a more delicate word for it. I watched her belly slowly distend as the weeks passed and wondered what I was doing wrong. Was she sick? Did I somehow screw up the transition from partially outdoor cat to fully indoor? Should I take her back to the vet?

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My daughter shared my concerns, bending low to peer into Jinora’s face and ask her, again and again, if she was all right. She would forget her worries in the next minute; the sweet, solipsistic luxury of childhood. I began measuring out each meal serving and monitoring Jinora’s waste, gently touching her belly every so often to ensure that it wasn’t hard. If that were the case, the websites warned, my cat would need to be seen by a vet right away. It was only ever vaguely squishy. Jinora would blink at me when I did this, nonplussed and vaguely judgmental.

It was the second to last weekend in May, a weekend that my daughter was at her dad’s. I got into bed and Jinora followed me, which wasn’t unusual: Since she’d arrived she became adorably clingy, her constant purring a dull roar as she sought my attention. But this night, she kept trying to burrow beneath my covers, which she didn’t tend to do. She seemed insistent; I drove her out of my room and firmly closed the door, citing “Boundaries, Jinora!” She stalked off with nary a meow.

She failed to yowl and scratch beseechingly at my door for breakfast the next morning, which was irregular to the point of frightening. When I entered the kitchen, she finally trotted out to greet me, her steps sure, her gaze somewhat wary. Before I opened my mouth to greet her I heard it: tiny, smacking mews.

I froze, and she met my startled glance, ominous in her silence. Then I summoned the courage to follow the sound to the couch, instinct pulling me down to inspect the space she had occupied weeks before, crouching in her primitive fear of the unknown. And there, in the darkness, was a small mass of furry, moving bodies, tiny mouths opening and closing.

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I gaped and gaped, wondering if I was still dreaming. The longer I looked, the more hilariously terrible sense it made. Jinora hadn’t been sick, or obese, or dying. She was pregnant, and she had given birth, multiple times, because now there were real live kittens here. In my apartment. Where I was trapped for the foreseeable future.

The rest of the day passed in a blur of hysterical phone calls and emails (I fired her vet immediately), tabs upon tabs of research and a panicked trip to my nearby pet store. I paced and fretted and cleaned as quietly as I possibly could, stopping every so often to stare at my newest charges, to joyfully scold Jinora for withholding such an explosive secret.

Finally, I moved the couch away from the wall, inch by careful inch, so I could understand what was actually happening here. And I counted. Six. There were six kittens, all alive, all latched and eating well. Six new animals inhabiting my apartment in the midst of a pandemic that seemed to have no end. I’d been scraping at my yellow wallpaper for weeks, but I suddenly felt the walls closing in around me in a wholly new and fascinating way.

I watched Jinora nurse and stroked behind her ears, feeling foolish and sentimental as tears sprang to my eyes, caught in the grips of overwhelming nostalgia. “It’s sweet, but a little agonizing, isn’t it?” I murmured to her, as the kittens held her hostage, keeping her still, beholden only to their need for sustenance and sleep. I remembered being sprawled across the very couch they took refuge beneath, gazing listlessly at the ceiling, the walls, the quietly droning television, holding my tiny daughter to my chest as she drank and drank and drank and slept and woke up and drank again.

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Aside from the process of giving birth, I’ve never felt more like an animal, stripped down to my basest biological parts, sweating and aching and grotesquely mammalian. I resented the midsummer heat, I resented my partner’s freedom to sit and stand and walk around as he pleased, I resented my own resentment; feeling monstrous for begrudging my darling daughter anything at all, with her so small, fragile and helpless. I felt elemental, powerful. I felt weak and scared.

My daughter returned the following day, led inside and roundly hushed by her dad, who warned her that the surprise waiting for her demanded silence, and a very gentle touch. I couldn’t help but marvel at her as she encountered the newborns. My beautiful daughter, whose baby fat solidifies into lankiness a bit more each day, her smile as blazing and sharp as her wit.

The author’s daughter communing with surprise kittens.Eric Eddings

They’re kittens,” she exclaimed softly, padding across the wooden floor in her socks, dropping to her knees to watch them. Her dad snapped photos as she cooed, petting them cautiously, each passing moment a greater exponent of precocious wonder. I smiled at her and wondered how she was ever small enough to fit within the crook of my arm. “Can we keep them, Mommy?”

We kept only one, in addition to Jinora, who will be spayed before the year is out. We named him Azula. And after the protracted scatological horror of litter box training six raucous kittens and their mother, two were enough.

It feels just right, as we enter a whole new season of cold isolation. Two battle-worn, lovingly exhausted mothers; two sprightly, endlessly curious offspring — sharing space, seeking companionship, privately gestating our strange little lives within these warm, ever-shrinking walls.

Want More on Pandemic Pets?

Tiny Victories

Parenting can be a grind. Let’s celebrate the tiny victories.

My 3- year-old daughter is obsessed with pretending to be a kitten. So, I play Mama Cat, and she will do ANYTHING! “Mama kitties always wash their kitten’s fur…” and BAM. Shampooed her hair with zero resistance. “Meow! Kittens LOVE scrambled eggs for breakfast!”…And they’re gone. Total win.— Melissa Thomasma, Victor, ID

If you want a chance to get your Tiny Victory published, find us on Instagram @NYTparenting and use the hashtag #tinyvictories; email us; or enter your Tiny Victory at the bottom of this page. Include your full name and location. Tiny Victories may be edited for clarity and style. Your name, location and comments may be published, but your contact information will not. By submitting to us, you agree that you have read, understand and accept the Reader Submission Terms in relation to all of the content and other information you send to us.

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2020年12月8日 星期二

The strange death of global shmobal

Not such a small world after all.
Shipping containers at the Port of Seattle in August 2019.Ruth Fremson/The New York Times
Author Headshot

By Paul Krugman

Opinion Columnist

Many years ago, when I was still a youngish academic on the make, my late parents gave me a gift — a sweatshirt decorated with the words “global shmobal.” At the time, you see, I was going to many, many international conferences. And when my parents asked what the conference in Milan, or São Paulo or Tokyo was about, I apparently routinely answered “global shmobal.”

And why not? When I decided, in grad school, to specialize in the study of international trade and finance, there were surprisingly few Americans in the field — it didn’t seem all that important to a big country with what was at the time a mainly inward-looking economy. But in the years that followed, as world trade grew by leaps and bounds, global economics began to attract a lot of attention, which among other things meant a lot of conferences.

We’re not just talking about academic attention, either. The broader public was also fascinated by global shmobal. Over the course of my adult life, there have been two blockbuster economics best sellers: Lester Thurow’s 1992 “Head to Head” and my colleague Tom Friedman’s 2005 “The World Is Flat.” Both books saw international economic competition as the central issue of the future, although Thurow thought it would be competition among advanced countries while Friedman, writing during the “China shock,” saw the world as, well, flatter, with almost every country in the fight to attract business and capital.

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But a funny thing happened just a few years after “The World Is Flat” came out — or so it seems to me. I can’t quantify this, but my sense is that the issue-engaged public — the kind of people who probably bought Thurow’s and Friedman’s books, who take an interest in world affairs — got a lot less interested in global shmobal.

Oddly, one of the few influential people who stayed obsessed with international trade and investment flows, at least until he shifted his focus to trying to overturn the election he lost, was President Donald Trump. But Trump’s trade wars were very much his own idea; they never had much of a constituency (and business, of course, hated them). Trump tried to portray President-elect Joe Biden as a patsy for China, but it never really stuck.

Why did global competition fade from prominence in the public mind? Part of the answer is that the great surge in world trade from the mid-1980s until around 2008 turns out to have been a one-time event. We haven’t seen anything like a collapse in world trade, but the share of trade in world production has on average been, um, flat since 2008. The Economist has labeled this condition, where international linkages are stagnating, “slowbalization.”

This slowdown in globalization isn’t a terrible thing; as I recently tried to explain in a wonkish little paper, there’s no law saying that world trade must grow as a share of the world economy. Globalization is driven by a race between the technology of transportation and the technology of domestic production, and there’s no reason transportation must consistently win. But slowbalization certainly makes global shmobal less sexy, so interest shifts to other issues.

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Beyond that, my sense is that a growing number of people have come to appreciate something that breathless talk about global competition tended to obscure: We have met the enemy, and they are us.

This is very much true when it comes to economic issues: Conflicts of interest within countries are much more important than conflicts of interest between countries. And although it’s a terrible thing to say, recent political events have taught Americans, at least, to fear the rising power of some groups within this country more than we fear some hypothetical threat from abroad.

Obviously the world is still out there, and while world trade may be stagnating, it’s still much bigger than it was a few decades ago. But America’s future will be defined by what we do at home, not on some global playing field.

Quick Hits

Despite the trade war, China’s trade surplus is rising.

Economists don’t think it matters.

Slowbalization or just another phase of globalization?

Was it always just globaloney?

Feedback

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Facing the Music

Well, it has “world” in the titleYouTube

Not exactly about globalization, but whatever.

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