T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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4914.1 | the driver may not know | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Sep 06 1991 18:14 | 11 |
| Please remember that cats can be hit without making significant sound or
impeding movement of the car that hits the cat....a driver who is tired from
work and trying to get home might not know that the cat was even hit. this
is a sad example of why I try to make my home as comfortable as possible for
my 4 furry housemates, but they don't go outside. Many years ago, I walked
outside one crisp autumn morning in New England and found my beloved Prince
Charming dead in my front yard where the car that hit him had thrown him.
It is kind of you to stop, and it is so sad that others don't value the life
of a cat enough to stop when they see a cat get hit, but sometimes they
really don't know they've hit one.
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4914.2 | Thank you for doing what you're doing | SNOOPY::SCHIMPF | Brian Schimpf - TOOK::SCHIMPF | Fri Sep 06 1991 18:14 | 8 |
| Good luck and speaking as someone currently looking for a lost cat -
thank you so much for your caring in being willing to do what you are doing.
I know it is hard on you and takes time that you probably can't easily take
away from other things. You're exactly right - if this was someone's pet
they would most certainly want to know and not sit and wonder what happened.
Take it from me.
Brian
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4914.3 | rationalization? | PARITY::DENISE | And may the traffic be with you | Fri Sep 06 1991 20:27 | 12 |
| I understand your anger. For a person to knowingly hit an animal
and leave is unforgiveable. But maybe the person didn't realize it.
If the cat was black, driver was tired, had the radio blasting, etc.
they honestly may not know what happened. I always try to take that
into consideration when something like this happens. There are other
reasons someone may not stop too. Like the fact that it is a very
busy street and it would endanger the driver and others too to try to
stop. Or maybe the person was afraid. Or on their way to a hospital.
Or late for work and planned to call animal officer as soon as possible.
Of course, the person could be the same type of person that hits a
human and leaves too, but it's easier to try to reason that just
maybe they honestly didn't realize it.
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4914.4 | you were very kind to be there for him | MCIS2::HUSSIAN | Christmas is only 16 weeks away!! | Mon Sep 09 1991 10:02 | 5 |
| I'm so sorry. I know how you felt sittin there, but try to remember
that he left this world being comforted & consoled. I'm sure he
appreciated it.
Bonnie
|
4914.5 | | DELNI::YORSTON | | Mon Sep 09 1991 10:38 | 17 |
| That happened to my sister an I one afternoon. We where driving down
the road and we saw a cat running across the street and sure enough
it went right under the tires of the car in front of us.
We pulled over to see if we could help the cat and we walked over to
the houses of the yard the cat ran out from trying to find the owner.
Which no one was home at any of the houses. We went back to the cat
an someone else had pulled over and gave us a box to put the cat in
so we could bring it to the vets (which was right down the street).
When we brought the cat in we told the girl behind the desk what had
happened and that we tried to find the owner of the cat. Well she
went over to the box and she reconized the cat. It turned out that it
belonged to one of the vets that had worked there. She said that
owner wasn't there at that time and that she would break the news to
her....
It's an aweful feeling seeing something like that happen. But
sometimes you can't help wonder if the person that hit the cat relized
it or not, or if they just didn't care...
|
4914.6 | They get it in the end | MURPHY::CORMIER | | Mon Sep 09 1991 12:00 | 14 |
| I feel for you. I had something similar happen, but I KNOW FOR A FACT
that the car that hit the little guy knew it, and just decided not to
stop. I stopped, cried my eyes out as I comforted the little thing,
and another nice woman pulled over to help ME! I brought the cat to
my vet for a decent burial (I just couldn't leave it on the side of the
road...so impersonal) and tried locating the owner, but to no avail. I
believe these things add up in the here-after. If the driver knew
he/she had hit the cat, but decided not to bother to stop and help,
that driver had better watch out at the pearly-gates for the dump truck
with the cat behind the wheel!!!! This thought always causes a wicked
little smile at the image (maybe this would be a great "Far Side"
comic...anybody know Larson?).
Sarah
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4914.7 | | CHOCLT::THOMPSON | | Mon Sep 09 1991 16:16 | 9 |
| I want to thank those of you who have replied so far. I guess because of
feeling angry and not to mention, a bit sorry for myself, I never considered
all of these other things (like the driver not knowing, etc.)
Just to update you, I haven't found the owner yet. No calls on the signs that I
put up. I also looked in the paper this weekend in the lost and found, but
didn't have any luck. I won't stop trying.
Again, thank you all for caring.
|
4914.8 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds DTN:297-2313 | Tue Sep 10 1991 09:09 | 17 |
| I can also sympathize with you. I had the unpleasant task of picking
up a beautiful white cat that had been hit on Rt 37 in Braintree. I
went back to be sure the cat was dead and it was wearing a collar and
tag. It hadn't been dead long either.
So I picked him up and brought him home and called his people. The
man said he didn't know what to tell his 6 year old. I didn't say
much except that I'd lost a cat to a car once and that was why my
cats were not allowed to run free.
Unless you know for a fact that the driver deliberately hit the cat
or knowingly kept on going, its better for your sanity to interpret
his behavior as due to not knowing he hit a cat. Maybe this is
silly, but I'd rather feel positively about others for my own peace
of mind.
Nancy DC
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4914.9 | More hit and runs | MODEL::CROSS | | Tue Sep 10 1991 11:54 | 27 |
| I, like Nancy, keep a positive attitude. This DID happen to my mom
once, who is a real cat lover. She was on the way to the store to buy
bread and when she parked in the parking lot a woman came over to her
and said, "I saw you hit that cat back there and I want you to know
that if you have any problems I will stand up for you, as there was
nothing you could have done about it. He just raced between your
wheels and got hit." My mom was incredulous because she claims she
never even felt a bump! On top of that she was devastated, as she
loves cats. She went racing back to the scene and there was the
family. They yelled, and she came home in tears. I'll never forget
it.
The other day, I found a dead black cat on Farm Road in Marlboro. He
was so badly mauled, I knew that if I were his owner I would not want
to see him like this. I stopped and found a neighbor who helped me.
The worst part of the whole situation is that the owner wasn't home.
She wasn't home because that morning she had had to bring her dog to
the vet to be put to sleep. Imagine going thru one trauma only to come
home to find your only remaing pet dead? I felt so awful. I just
wanted to race to the humane society and bring her back a black kitten
in a box. But knowing this really wouldn't ease the loss, I just went
back to work.
But I never stopped thinking about it...all day and the next.
Nancy
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4914.10 | :-( | SRATGA::CANTONI_MI | | Thu Oct 31 1991 12:11 | 13 |
| I had the same thing happen to me too. As I was walking home one
day, a woman approached me and said she had just hit a cat and did
I know anyone who owned a black and white cat. Unfortunately, I
did know the owner, and while we were standing there, we tried to
warn off a truck but he just barrelled right over the poor cat (who
lived for another half hour after that!). So I think that people
just don't pay attention ( or just don't care :-( ). I mean, how
do you not see two people waving frantically??!
My sympathy goes out to you and the kitty; it's a horrible thing
to have to go through.
mc
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