After the deal on the house was made, I
waste no time packing stuffs. One because I don't have much time
left, two because I don't want to make myself crazy counting the days
as the bank is processing the mortgage. Those and, I still have to
think about how to make up for the (rather huge) lack of the down
payment. I myself only carry three boxes. One for my clothing, one
for my kitchen, and another for my handcraft things. The cats,
however, have the whole house to pack for.
It's been long days, both by the
meaning of the proverb, and literally. I have to go to work, which
aren't getting any easier, especially with the change of management
in my office. After work, I have to check on the new house, making
sure that all has been tended properly, then I go round for the
strays and feral, then end the day by packing. One box after another.
If there's emails or all, I'd go ahead and reply it, trying to keep
it as simple as my mind can handle. On those days, don't ask me about
good food, enough rest, or whatever in between. I even forget the day
and the date, and allow all the work zombified me.
What kept me conscious is one: a mortgage
for us. For me and the Syndicate, and brand new hope for the first
TNR operation in Bandung, and probably Indonesia. I have been trying
to establish this operation for so very long, without support from
whatever organizations that I appealed to, but if we get the house... if
we get the house I can make a feeding station on the carport (now
that I don't have car) and that will officially start the TNR. The
location on which I choose the house is perfect. It's a hillside,
with plenty of unopened land, and people literally dumping cats of
all ages to any unclaimed land, from a red baby to a senior cat.
And I am too poor to reach out for them
and offer them to stay in the sanctuary. Eventually I have to choose,
but rather than just picking the straw and leave the rest on the
street I wanted to make some changes. I wanted to left the ferals a
tiny hole in their dark life, a tiny hole that will allow a ray of
light to shine as brilliant as those who stays in the Syndicate's
home. That is, a slight reduce on overpopulation. I can only do one a
month, but I truly hope that one day the Syndicate will grow large
and strong enough financially to do one a week, or more. As time pass
by, perhaps a year or so, at least those existing feral won't have to
deal with scavenging their own poop for food.
Certainly it all might be just an
utopia, a distant dream, and most likely they will die before an
minimum effect of the TNR is reached, considering how heartless
people here think of animals, but if Sun Tzu started a journey of a
thousand mile with a single step, I want to start that single step
with a dream.
The dream was shattered again, then,
when the bank call and they can only approve 80% of what I originally
applied, with various reasons. I was taken aback, and get a fatal
blow. So I just let my cat-crazy- lady personality comes out and talk
to the bank for three straight hours, on the phone, until they agree
to review the application and come back in two days.
Another two excruciating days. I am
sick of all this but if being excruciated for two days can give the
Syndicate a house, I'd do it. We are just gone too far to come back
now and besides, this housing business had dragged people around the
world into a roller coaster ride. It'd be lame if we all landed back
on the pod with an anticlimax.
Meanwhile I got only a portion of what
I need for the down payment, so that two excruciating days I slept on
the floor (because the bed had already packed) all of a sudden I feel like I have to be a diplomat, a negotiator, in a mission for a land for all the
refugees - the cats.
Whether it's sheer luck, or just my animal instinct taking over (people tend to give out their dormant skill whenever they are cornered, don't you think?) or Heaven was lending me their favor. The developer
agreed that I pay the balance of the down payment in installment. It
throws me into a double debt: the mortgage, and the down payment. It's a hefty tag on me, honestly, but at least the
cats will have a new home. The cats who has been living roofless and loveless for years, perhaps the rest of their lives.
And then the bank. They called me again
and say they need another two days...
Oh no, I snapped. So I am turning
green into Incredible Hulk and crush them all with the palm of my
hand. And then I call my friend the King Kong and together we kill
the developers and claim the house for free.
I lied.
I told them that my rent is overdue by
three days already, and I have to move out at the end of the week, so
it's sudden death. I told them that I know Central Bank of Indonesia
give them a tough target on housing credit, I told them that I know
how many percent the marketing is going to get if I got the deal, and
I also told them I know that they too, as an employee, just like me,
has to meet the target set by their employer or lose their promotion, or job all together.
And, while we're talking about time and target, I also mention that the month of
August is very short, because there's Ramadhan big holiday, and the
bank, as well as everyone else, will close business until at least
the beginning of September, and so they need to consider my
application because although it's small (houses in Bandung can reach
millions of dollars), the larger the amount they are agreeing to, the
more their target will be fulfilled. So they have to decide now or I am changing my mind and will find another house.
Simplified it, profession wise I turn
myself from a secretary into a diplomat, into a Goddess of Gambler.
All right, not a goddess, just a gambler.
They took my token and roll the dice.
They call again that evening, outside office hour, that they can adjust the amount to reach what I
am applying, legally.
It means I have to skip office to go to
their office and sign the contract immediately (before they changed
their mind) and though I am also at a pinch in the office due to the
mean new CEO (more about this later) I took my jackpot.
In Japan, there's this time that a
student call “Examination Hell”. A time when they try to graduate
from their school and competing to enter higher education. Their
days will be filled by study, study, study, cram school, exam
preparation, and more study. Plus the pressure from their parents
(who don't want to be ashamed of their children's grade), pressure
from the teacher (who will get a point or lose their job depending on
the success of their students), pressure from their peer (who can do
anything to bring them down so they can go up).
The Survival Game
includes those who cannot cope throwing themselves in front of a
running train, hang themselves in the storage house, free-falling
from the school roof or admitted into a mental hospital, or run away
from home and try to figure out how to live out their lives as an
outcast.
All this house business is my examination hell.
Packing, negotiating, working, handling sick kittens, and pressure
from the landlady's son, pressure from my office, pressure from the
money and trying to calm the already stressed out mobster of cats in
my house.
They feel a change is coming, they know
something different is going to happen, they know that there probably
be some sort of storm, but they can't comprehend the human side of
it, so they stressed anyway.
And then all the volunteers that
promised me they'd help canceled out with various reasons, or with no
reasons at all. An old news, but though I made “plan A(lone)” it
still take a lot of effort to figure things out all by myself.
I plan to take my leave on August 8 to
move, but the house isn't ready, still on finishing. I ran out of
energy to fight, actually, so I leave it on my Lord, again. Then the
supervisor called and said that my house can be finished on August 8
at night, if I am willing to pay their dinner, because they took overtime it
without their superior's consent, and even if they did ask their superior, the developer won't want to pay anyway.
I agreed. As an appreciation on their
willingness and consideration, and mostly because need to go out by Friday, August 10.
I went out at once and buy them 10
packs of dinner from the nearest canteen I can find on the area, and
even have dinner with them.
You see, people like them, the builders,
are considered of low class here in Indonesia, unlike their
professional counterpart in USA or Europe. Listening to the whole new
level of jokes, of thoughts, and learning about the whole different
world, the same tight money management, the same simplified lives
from different perspective teach me a lot about handling tough times
and trying to go with the flow, about mixing business with pleasure.
The dinner reminds me of how lucky I am to have all these things that
I cherish: a work with good pay, opportunity to experience, and live,
in animal welfare world, worldwide supporter (oh yes, thank YOU for
that), and a possibility of a dream come true.
At August 9 I woke up very early, and
set out to rent some car, a minivan, to transport the cats. They had
spent the night in basket, and since the journey will be long and
stressful (for them, cats are not good movers) I wanted their move to
be as quick as possible.
I took them all in one way, and put
them all in a room inside the house. I open a window for fresh air,
but left them in their basket. As soon as they smell new air they
start to shift from whining to cautious, but at least they keep their
brains away from being stressed.
Then I took the bus back to my rent,
feeing dizzy, get myself some lunch (breakfast, supposedly) and drag myself to a truck pool nearby to rent one to move the things. Then I
rode with the truck drivers, also considered a low class here, to the
new house and unload all stuffs. When I paid them their fee they told
me that they are surprised that a patron are willing to help them
carry the stuffs. Usually a patron, mostly female, will behave lady
like and watch, and let them do whatever order she gave them about
unloading. Well, I am not a lady. A cat lady, perhaps, but not the
kind of a lady they have been talking about. Then I invite them for a
lunch, their lunch, in nearby canteen, for the heck of it.
I tend to reply a kindness with more
kindness. It runs in my family.
And, I want the cats to go out of the carriage as soon as possible. And then, I want, no, need to get this done quick, before I got a nervous breakdown. I am on my limit.
By 6 in the evening, the freshly done, previously empty house looked like Titanic. I push all the boxes into one room, clean the house, lock all the doors and window, then let the cats out.
I was prepare that some of them go jump around like crazy, but it seems like I undermine their adaptability and resilience. Most of them has been moving from rent to rent with me before, so they are probably not all that nervous to have to move into yet another environment. Still, I sleep on the floor in another room (the bed is still unpacked) with the door open. All 37 of us crumpled onto a large carpet that night. I haven't release the cats into the backyard because I don't want them to jump out of the house, and got lost.
Besides, it's not quite done yet. The grasses and bushes are cleaned up, but it's still stone and dirt.
Before (left) and After (right) |
On Saturday, however, the cats are pretty much calm, so after their morning ration, I open the door to the backyard, and have them take a look on their new home.
The first astronaut to step on the stony moon in Neil Armstrong. The first Whiskers' Syndicate resident who touch the stony backyard is Renoir.
Ainu (left, back legs only), Kansai (center, looking at camera), Renoir (right, facing camera), Peta (behind Renoir) |
As the Syndicate have a sniff on their new moon, I took the chance to arrange some of the things, and as more things are out, the cats seems to be encouraged to explore.
Some of them didn't come back into the house that night, and choose to sleep outside. I was a little bit wary because mountain breeze at the new house is rather cold, but it seems like the cats want to enjoy their fresh new home, away from the cage. I choose to trust their instinct.
Wow! What a story! I'm so glad to hear some details. Hope you and the Syndicate are settling in a little now. I love the new place based on the photos so far...and I sure hope you have not had the nervous breakdown yet!
ReplyDeleteI am so happy for you and the beautiful pussycats, now you have a home to stay in, and don't have to worry so much about having to pick up and move them at short notice. I was so very worried about the result of your efforts to buy a home because I had no email update and could not find the blog website again, but I am very relieved, and happy. I also hope that now you have a permanent location that some animal welfare organisations will give you support to properly setup and continue the TNR facility.
ReplyDeleteI am amazed at your energy and determination, and the incredible love you have for animals, especially cats, to go through so much to bring them a better life in a place that treats them so poorly that it breaks my heart to read about it. So much hard work and determination deserved this wonderful reward for the Whiskers Syndicate, and for you. You deserve to be well satisfied with yourself, but I'm sure there is much hard work ahead, with at least one less thing to worry about.
The world is a much better place for having you in it.
Thank you Josie.