6
My family has lots of wisdom. Grown men who only eat boxes of macaroni and cheese telling me things in secret like they really matter. Women who pet cats the wrong way saying I should immediately stop the way I'm living and do it all differently. All of them dressed badly and with no end of tips on how to live a good life.
They will say their smart things all over the place. Usually mumbled. Sometimes to my friends and not me. Often things I think are wrong or I immediately forget. Stuff they are always changing their mind about, but tell me anyways. This time, for sure, they’ve got it right. Something I should take to heart.
“Be quiet”, they tell me, “Would you just listen”.
They’ve all got their words to live by. Or at least until tomorrow when they will suggest another direction. Calling me back to them. Almost angry I dared listen to the person they had been yesterday. Putting their hands over their faces. “Oh, you foolish boy. You listened to that”
But sometimes they get it right. And on one thing, they’ve been remarkably consistent throughout the years. No matter their state of inebriation. No matter how much they usually prefer to argue with each other, on this they can all agree.
“Don’t ever, ever, ever tell anyone you’ll take their cat”
They’ve got warnings for me to heed. How there’s never any end of people getting rid of them. How they all know each other and talk amongst themselves. Mostly about what suckers are out there who've always got a little more room in their house. Who can’t say no if you just show them a few photographs. Tell them how nice and friendly it is. How much they like tuna and how they might never get any again if no one takes them.
“Don’t be like that, right?”
“But maybe it will die if no one else wants it”
But they are resolute.
“You can’t save everything”, they say. All of them, in perpetual agreement that it's better to let a few cats die than be anyone’s sucker. Even when I show them the pictures. Tell them about the tuna. Demonstrate the kind of sad meowing I start to hear in my head anytime someone let's me know they’ve got one they don’t want anymore.
And on this wisdom I have listened. The one thing my family has taught me. To never say I’ll take your cat. Not really. Only that you should let me know if no one else does. Just in case.