Chapter 1: The Day I Was Chosen
(December 2019)
I didn’t choose the shelter life. The shelter life chose me.
And then—thank the stars and the soft blanket gods—they chose me.
She was buzzing with energy the day she walked in. Nervous system overloaded, heart too big for her chest, eyes darting toward every cat like they might bite her soul. She was the one. I knew it.
The man with her had a quieter vibe. Gentle, kind. The kind of person who wouldn’t startle a cat like me. He sat next to her and looked at me like he wanted to understand me. That counted for something.
“What about this one?” she asked, pointing at me, like she didn’t already know.
They named me Frodo. Not because of the ring, but because I was small, scrappy, full of purpose, and probably dealing with some unprocessed trauma. Same as her. And she has a weird obsession with Lord of the Rings.
Those early weeks were warm. I’d curl up between them on the couch, their laughter vibrating through my fur. They were a team. A home. A safe spot I didn’t know I needed.
But over time, the air changed. The kind of quiet that settles when people aren’t sure what to say. Still loving, but tired. Still gentle, but distant.
I didn’t understand all of it—I’m a cat, not a therapist—but I knew something was unraveling. I started sleeping on her chest instead of at the foot of the bed. She needed me closer.
When the goodbye came, it wasn’t loud or cruel. Just sad. Quiet. Necessary.
He packed his things, and I sniffed every box like it held a clue. She stayed sitting on the floor after he left, arms wrapped around her knees, and I laid beside her in the silence.
And from then on, it was just us.
Her and me. The little cat with too many feelings. The woman with too many, too.
I didn’t know it then, but that was just the beginning of a wild new era—full of messy art, loud feelings, a questionable obsession with lemon and lavender-flavored everything, and eventually… someone new.
But we’ll get to him later.
For now, just know this: I wasn’t rescued.
I was recruited.
Chapter 2: Operation: Relocation
(The Great Sneak-In of Frodo and Sam)
I don’t remember agreeing to a relocation plan.
One minute, I was sulking on a windowsill at her parents’ house. The next, I was shoved into a carrier next to Sam—the beige drama queen—and whisper-yelled at to “be quiet, for once in your lives!”
Something was happening. Something covert. Something illegal, probably.
I could sense it.
She was nervous. Hair in a bun, bags under her eyes, three half-packed tote bags dangling from one arm. She kept glancing over her shoulder and saying things like, “We’ll only stay a few nights,” and “He won’t even notice.”
Bold lies.
Sam, being a total amateur, meowed approximately every four seconds during the ride. I stayed silent. Strategic. Focused. Just kidding I meowed even more than Sam did.
When we arrived, the door creaked open like a portal to Narnia. This was not our house. This was his house.
The Law Man. The One Who Steals Her Bedtime Attention.
It smelled like cologne and logic.
She smuggled us inside and whispered, “Okay, okay, just for tonight.”
It turned into forever.
For the first 36 hours, he genuinely didn’t notice. She fed us, cleaned the litter box, and snuck us toys like she was running an underground operation.
But then—of course—I had to speak.
It was 2:37 p.m. I saw a moth. I meowed with purpose. And from the darkness came a groggy, “Was that a cat?”
She panicked. I swished my tail with pride.
The truth came out. She confessed. Sam blinked innocently. I stared directly at him, unblinking, daring him to say no.
And you know what he said?
“Okay.”
Just like that. No yelling. No “they have to go.” Just “Okay.” Then he pet my head and said, “You’re very vocal, huh?”
I didn’t purr. Not right away. But I forgave him.
…Since then, I’ve claimed the house as mine.
The window in the bedroom is my lookout. The couch is my observation perch. The yoga mat is definitely mine—especially when she’s on it. And I even venture outdoors now!
He doesn’t call me “little guy.” No. He calls me Panther. Like I’m some majestic, jungle beast prowling the countertops of suburbia. Which, to be clear, I am.
He tells me to get down at least seventeen times a day. “Frodo. Get down.” “Dude. Down.” “Panther, seriously.”
And I do…
Most of the time.
Not because I fear him. But because I respect the man who feeds me chicken treats, cleans my litter box, and lets me stay.
He loves her. He loves us.
And that makes him mostly acceptable.
(But I’m still watching him. Always.)
Chapter 3: Sam: The Quiet Menace Who Gets Away With Everything
Let’s get one thing straight.
I am the main character.
I have depth. Mystery. I stare into corners like I see spirits and occasionally scream into the void just to keep things interesting.
Sam?
Sam is cute.
That’s his whole personality. Just… stupidly cute.
He doesn’t even try. He just exists—flame point fur, soft baby face, tiny gentle paws—and everyone loses their minds.
“Aww, Sam.”
“Look at Sam!”
“He’s like a little prince!”
I knock over a snake plant: villain.
Sam sticks his paw in a cup of water: comedy genius.
I brood in a window, contemplating the mysteries of the universe.
Sam falls asleep in a laundry basket, and suddenly it’s “the cutest thing I’ve ever seen in my life.”
It’s exhausting.
He doesn’t even meow that much. Just looks at you like, “I’m small. Please never stop loving me.”
And it works.
I could hate him, if I wasn’t so busy watching his back.
I’m the one who checks the door before he walks through it. The one who wakes her up when he’s feeling sick. The one who keeps one ear open during storms while Sam curls into her neck and sleeps like a baby sea otter.
He gets away with everything. But he also makes her laugh when she’s sad. He rubs his head against her face in that soft, silent way that says, I’m here too.
And I respect that.
He’s not my friend.
He’s my brother.
And unfortunately… he’s kind of perfect.
Chapter 4: The Healing Human
I’ve seen her break.
Not in the dramatic way people expect—no glass shattering, no screaming matches, no violins playing in the background.
She breaks quietly.
Like a mug with a hairline crack. Like a bookshelf slowly tilting under the weight of too many expectations. Like someone who’s been strong for so long, she forgot it was okay not to be.
I’ve seen her on the floor. In the bathroom. On the porch. On the hallway rug, forehead pressed to the ground like maybe it would whisper something back.
And I do what cats do.
I stay. I boop her with my head and give her nose kisses.
I sit just close enough to say, “I’m here,” but not close enough to make her push me away. I blink slowly. I breathe in sync with her. I wait.
Some days she’s on fire with art—painting with her whole body like she’s trying to sweat something out of her bones. Other days she doesn’t move. Just stares. Quiet. Still.
Healing, I’ve learned, is not a straight line.
It’s messy and weird and involves a lot of late-night snacks, unfinished journals, and crying during commercials.
Sometimes she dances in the kitchen with no music on. Sometimes she forgets how to eat. Sometimes she sleeps wrapped around Sam like a security blanket. Sometimes she talks to her plants like they’re old friends who just stopped by to check on her.
There are notebooks and paintbrushes everywhere, and tears in the laundry and lavender candles that burn for hours.
I’ve watched her stitch herself back together with poems, potting soil, and sugary pink lemonade.
It’s not glamorous.
It’s brave.
Humans forget how brave they are.
But I see it.
I’ve always seen it.
And no matter how many days she cries or sleeps or forgets how beautiful she is, I never stop showing up.
Because she showed up for me first.
That’s what love is.
Even if she puts my treats on top of the fridge like I won’t scale a cabinet to get them. (I will.)
Chapter 5: The Garden Is Not a Litter Box (But I’ve Tried)
She loves dirt.
Not like, “Oops, my hands got dirty.” No. She wants the dirt. She crumbles it in her fingers, rubs it between her palms like it’s healing clay from some ancient ritual, and whispers to her house plants like they’re about to tell her a secret.
I respect it.
But also—I’ve seen a lot of dirt in my life. And do you know what dirt usually means to a cat?
Exactly.
So naturally, when she dragged a giant monstera into the living room and left a wide-open pot of soil unattended while she ran to grab a watering can, I saw my chance.
I climbed in, turned around twice like a gentleman, and settled into position.
She came back mid-squat.
“FRODO, NO!”
It was dramatic. Arms flailing. Water sloshing. She gasped like I was trying to assassinate her dreams. I leapt out of the pot like a startled ninja and knocked over two other smaller pots filled with dirt on the way.
That was the beginning of the Garden Wars.
She brings in trays of herbs and I sniff every one like I’m the customs agent of Houseplants. She gets out her trowel and I sit on top of it. She lays out pots and I lay in them.
I am, as she says, “not helpful.”
But here’s the thing: she talks to the plants like she talks to me. Soft voice. Full of hope. As if everything she touches might bloom with enough love.
And when she’s outside, covered in dirt with leaves in her hair and freckles on her arms, she looks… happy. Peaceful. Like maybe the world makes a little more sense when she’s helping something grow.
So no, the garden is not a litter box.
I know that now.
But every once in a while—when she’s not looking—I still stick a paw into the chamomile just to remind everyone who runs this jungle.
Spoiler: it’s me.
Always has been.
Chapter 6: The Paint Witch and Her Chaos Room
She calls it “art.” I call it “colorful-based warfare.”
The room smells like wet acrylics, old dreams, and Mod Podge. It’s where she goes to feel everything all at once and cover canvases with her soul. I, personally, go there to nap on the only clean surface available—the warm corner of the desk she’s constantly trying to reclaim.
There’s paper pulp in the blender. Not food. Not even soup. Just torn-up bits of emotion getting spun into fibrous sheets she later writes poems on. I’ve stepped in acrylic paint, chewed on oil pastels, and once got glitter stuck to my tail for three days.
She paints with her fingers sometimes, like she’s trying to physically remove something from her chest. And when she’s in the zone, she forgets everything—me, Sam, her tea, the entire concept of time. The music plays loud and weird and sometimes she sings. Badly. I love it.
I watch her make messes and then name them beautiful. I think that’s brave.
Chapter 7: She Doesn’t Cook, and That’s Fine
The kitchen is for coffee, snacks, and minor emotional breakdowns.
She’s not what you’d call a “cook.” She’s more of a… food assembler. A scavenger. Her talents lie in finding microwavable bacon, pairing it with pickles, and calling it dinner. Sometimes it’s just toast. Sometimes it’s peanut butter and a spoon.
I’ve seen her burn a frozen waffle. Twice.
But you know what? She’s nourished. She’s hydrated (sometimes). She has favorite mugs for different moods and once ate an entire jar of peppercinis in one sitting after a stressful email.
The oven is more of a decoration. The stove? Emotionally unavailable. But the microwave? A faithful companion.
She doesn’t cook. And that’s fine. She feeds herself in other ways.
Chapter 8: Downward Dog Is Offensive
She twists herself into an odd pretzel while I sit nearby and wonder if she’s okay.
Yoga time means mat time. Which means “my mat” time. I don’t care how intentional her breath is or how open her heart chakra is supposed to be—if there’s a flat surface on the ground, it belongs to me.
She lights candles. She plays spa music. She moves slowly at first, like a leaf in the wind. Then she makes this strange grunting noise and tries to put her foot behind her head. Sam watches from under the couch with mild concern.
I’ve stepped on her back mid-plank. I’ve knocked over her water bottle during Shavasana. She still calls me her “yoga buddy.”
Sometimes she cries at the end. Just a few tears. The quiet kind. I curl next to her when that happens. That’s the real yoga, I think.
Chapter 9: Work Is a Scam (Unless You’re a Cat)
She leaves. She returns. She counts minutes until lunch.
She works now. Part-time. At the boyfriend’s law office. It’s quiet work, mostly papers and phones and sighing loudly around 10:41 a.m. every day. She says things like “just making it to lunch” and “it’s too nice of a day out to be stuck inside at work.”
I don’t get it. I sleep 18 hours a day and no one makes me fill out a time sheet.
When she comes home, she drops everything by the door and lays on the floor. Sam sits on her back. I walk across her hair. It’s called decompression. We’re professionals.
She works, but she doesn’t live for it. She lives for morning light, late-night snacks, and the moment she unbuttons her pants after a long day. That’s the paycheck.
Chapter 10: Sex Is Loud and I Don’t Want to Talk About It
Every night. Same noises. Same guy. It’s like a weird ritual I never agreed to be part of.
They love each other. That’s nice. Truly. Love is beautiful. But love is also… loud. And rhythmic. And involves way too much eye contact.
I’ve tried everything—scratching at the door, fake coughing, staring directly at them from the dresser. Nothing stops them. Sometimes they laugh. Sometimes they ignore me. One time she threw a sock at my head.
I now consider the hallway my safe space. I sit there with wide eyes and existential dread, waiting for the awkward moans to end.
It’s fine. I’m fine. But if I have to hear one more “Oh my God” I might spiritually relocate.
Chapter 11: Her Brain Is an Amusement Park Without a Map
Some days she’s a rocket ship. Other days, she’s a soggy noodle.
Her brain moves fast. Like faster-than-light fast. She thinks six things at once and forgets four of them before finishing a sentence. She gets distracted by air molecules and hyper-focused on reorganizing the spice cabinet at 1 a.m.
Sometimes she’s too sad to move. Sometimes she laughs so hard she chokes on her own spit.
She writes lists she never follows. She overthinks every text. She apologizes for things no one even noticed.
But she’s brilliant. She loves big. She remembers tiny details and forgets major holidays. She’s chaotic, yes—but never careless. I trust her. Even when she forgets what day it is.
Chapter 12: Humans Are Strange and I’m the Only Normal One Here
You cry over songs. You forget where your keys are. You talk to the moon like it owes you money.
Living with humans is like watching an improv play with no intermission. They do weird things on purpose. They eat food that hurts their stomachs. They talk to their pets in baby voices and then wonder why no one takes them seriously.
She’s the weirdest one I’ve met. She has conversations with plants. She rearranges furniture at midnight. She says things like “the vibes are off in this corner” while doing headstands against the wall.
But she also loves better than anyone I know. Fiercely. Loudly. Softly.
She chose me. And that makes her strange, sure—but also wise.
She’s my human.
And for all her weirdness, I wouldn’t trade her for the world. Not even for the good tuna.
