Burning the motor out on her dildo.
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Her eyes might be slightly two tone but she has no clear lines. She’s five now. The craziness lasted until she she was about two. She does love to play still but she’s calmer. She likes me hiding from her and peeping round the corner and shouting boo. She also likes me chasing her. What is most noticeable about her behaviour is her attachment to me. She follows me everywhere. If I’m on another floor of the house, she cries until she finds me. She thinks she’s human. When we sit at the dinner table, she tries to join us. I kiss her whenever I get home from work so she will try and kiss any visitor that arrives - she will meow at them until they do it. Her best quality is her love of children. My husband and I are foster carers. It’s hard when children first arrive as they’re in a new place and often we will have to work to build their trust. However, they will bond with kind and gentle Agatha straight away. She’s loving and gentle and just what most of our kids need. Thank you for asking about her.
FYI, my close friends would find it funny that I’m on a celeb (only just) gossip site and managed to mention to squeeze in a post about my cat. In my defence, the AE threads can be quite heavy (by virtue of her actions) and so it’s nice to be reminded a bit of the light and love in the world. Agatha is actually the anti Alice
She sounds PRECIOUS. My boy follows me everywhere too - if he doesn’t know where I am, he lets out his tiny, plaintive mew. He’s like a little dog - and like your Agatha, very companionable; he doesn’t like to be away from His People. Unlike your sociable little lady, though, he hates strangers - he hides, or guards my bathroom door for sole reason (and refuses to play Peep-o). Once the threat has gone, he can relax, and goes back to wrecking things. And he loves water: he enjoys getting into a wet bath or shower, the lunatic!
That’s a wonderful thing you and your husband do - I admire you so much for your compassion and empathy in helping kids who are so vulnerable and fragile. It’s truly an amazing thing.
I know what you mean about these threads. I’ve had to step back at times either to battle chronic depression, or because Alice’s horribleness, her endless rants, unfamiliarity with the truth, damage she’s done to the children, pain she’s caused others and general narcissism make me feel quite sick. So many of us here have survived narcissists who have broken us in some way, and I’m no exception - I’ve been around them all my life. But the people are also why I love these threads: there is so much support, kindness and compassion, even genuine love displayed, that it feels like a proper community (and in many ways more solid than ‘real world’ ones). God knows what we’re going to discover today, as a consequence of the hearing, and over the next few weeks: as ever, it’ll be worse than we could ever have imagined. A good thing, then, that we have Kittens.
Please give Agatha a nose-kiss for me.