Adorable Gumbo taking a nap
Gumbo is   an absolute treasure. He is an amazing boy who time and time again   demonstrates that cats have ADAPTABILITY not DISABILITIES. Gumbo won me   over when I visited the cat rescue. Out of 226 cats, he stole my heart.   Granted, I came home with a different cat at first because I needed  one  that I knew could do pet therapy and comfortably visit nursing  homes,  but I convinced my husband to give me a third cat as an  anniversary  present and quickly went back and brought home the big (he  was quite  overweight when we adopted him) orange boy.
Gumbo meticulously washing his paw
Gumbo   had been dumped on the shelter grounds. It took them a while, but they   were eventually able to get him inside with the rest of the felines.   Gumbo was missing many teeth and had a broken tail, but he seemed   otherwise reasonably healthy… or so we thought. Not that long after   he settled into our home he developed uveitis. Courses of antibiotics,   steroids, and antivirals didn’t prevent the progression of the   inflammation. My handsome Gumbo went blind in one eye first then lost   that eye completely thanks to the painful secondary glaucoma that   occurred. Then the uveitis destroyed his other eye leaving Gumbo   completely blind. None of this stops him. Gumbo is simply astounding   with his ability to adapt to anything and everything.
Gumbo gave Godiva a kiss
I   had plotted out move from Iowa to Minnesota and very carefully planned   introducing Gumbo to his new envirnment slowly, one room at a time.   Within fifteen minutes of arriving, Gumbo had surveyed the whole house   and knew the layout. Two tricky things for him were found, though: he   couldn’t judge the location of the step into the sunken living room   (much, much better now although he still occasionally goofs) and he had   no fear of leaping, including wanting to jump down to the bottom of the   stairwell. A quick trip to the hardware store for plexiglass to put   across the rail averted any potential disaster. For an eyeless cat,   Gumbo certainly figures out how to climb on anything he can find.
“Swatting at the cage to get whatever   makes those faint noises on the metal… can he tell by smell it’s a   mouse?” - Jean
Gumbo behaves like a normal cat. Even I forget and   slip up times, especially when he’s seated on a window ledge facing  out  at the world. “Whatcha watchin’, Gumbo?” Silly question. When Gumbo  met  Petunia, a mouse, for the first time, he first quickly glanced  over the  mouse cage then began staring intently at Petunia. However,  Gumbo had  no eyes. He’s simply amazing to me.
“My 16yo blind (eyeless) boy seeks out   Zamboni and holds him down by the neck. Zamboni’s defense? He twists   around, grabs Gumbo’s head with both paws, and licks until Gumbo lets   go… gotta love this boy!” - Jean
Please, please, please, if I   learned anything through Gumbo, it is that blind cats can have a   fabulous quality of life. Do not overlook a blind cat or think you need   to put them to sleep to put them out of their misery. Gumbo, an   incredibly content boy, has no misery. He takes everything in stride and   loves life along the way.
Godiva and Gumbo
I love this boy   and will miss him terribly one day. He cuddles at night with me. I even   had to add a second pillow above my head so that Gumbo wouldn’t keep   pushing me off my own pillow!
“My eyeless Gumbo is trying to   understand what he hears and smells on the other side of the screen…   Vidalia (a rescued stray cat mama) and her 3-week-old brood nursing.” -   Jean
Gumbo’s roughly 16 years old now, but I hope he lives   another 16 years.
Gumbo, shadow, reflection
“Gumbo greeting me at the sliding glass door: the amazing thing about the photo is what cannot be seen… just to my left, my husband is cutting up a tree with a chain saw. Why is the blind cat the most tolerant of the horrendous noise?”









 
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