Memes, Alexander, sick cat
Nov. 27th, 2004 10:27 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
No, actually, that's not what I was going to say. I've noticed some musings around town on what exactly a meme is, where the concept comes from, and how you say it (it's meem, btw).
-Cecil Adams of The Straight Dope gives the basics: What is a meme?
-And
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I don't know how or when the word acquired its secondary sense: a usually simple activity, exercise, or decoration spread via online journals, especially a quiz, survey, slogan, or Mad Lib-style randomly generated amusement. If anyone has any knowledge of how this sense developed, I would really appreciate hearing about it. (If I had the free time, I would love to compile a fandom dictionary with primary sources for its etymological information, and discussions of the range and evolution of the senses of each term. A boy can dream.)
I have not seen Alexander, but everyone on my flist has. So, for absolutely no reason, here are my favorite Alexander posts from recent days:
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So, I've got this cat, and she's been throwing up a lot. She's always been prone to tossing her cookies, but in recent weeks it's become intolerable. Hardly a day goes by now when she doesn't vomit. Aside from the obvious carpet damage, paper towel expense, and personal trauma, I'm worried for her health. She doesn't seem ill, but she can't be getting much nutrition (it just comes back up undigested), and is constantly begging for food.
By way of background, she's a 7-year-old spayed female medium-hair. I brush her and give her hairball-preventing goo daily. I haven't changed her food. She was really my mom's cat, and my mom always used to feed her... but she couldn't really be vomiting because of that, could she?
Do any of you have any suggestions? I'm extremely reluctant to take her to the vet, because she's very aggressive. No, I mean very aggressive. No vet has ever been able to examine her while she's conscious.
no subject
Date: 2004-11-28 05:31 am (UTC)I have a lot of cats, and in my experience, a cat eating and then systematically vomiting undigested food, is tracheitis (hope this is the right translation). Even if they don't have a cough. Based on the fact your cat seems healthy and doesn't show any other symptom, plus her being constantly hungry (which is normal since she can't keep her food down), I'd say it shouldn't be anything serious. Tracheitis practically makes her throat really sensitive, since she is hungry she probably wolfs her food down, this makes her trachea itch and causes the vomit. Try to make her eat slowly, say, a spoonful of her food. Then wait 10-15 minutes and another spoonful. This should keep the itch down and allow her to eat. As for permanently solving the problem, I'm sorry to say that a vet is necessary. Giving her a little food at a time and all, could help her get nutrition while you wait for the vet appointment, but tracheitis needs antibiotics and antiinflammatories.
Hope she gets better,
Jadzia