Caveat: percipient as elder branches in the night

Words

The simple contact with a wooden spoon and the word
recovered itself, began to spread as grass, forced
as it lay sprawling to consider the monument where
patience looked at grief, where warfare ceased
eyes curled outside themes to search the paper
now gleaming and potent, wise and resilient, word
entered its continent eager to find another as
capable as a thorn. The nearest possession would
house them both, they being then two might glide
into this house and presently create a rather larger
mansion filled with spoons and condiments, gracious
as a newly laid table where related objects might gather
to enjoy the interplay of gravity upon facetious hints,
the chocolate dish presuming an endowment, the ladle
of galactic rhythm primed as a relish dish, curved
knives, finger bowls, morsel carriages words might
choose and savor before swallowing so much was the
sumptuousness and substance of a rented house where words
placed dressing gowns as rosemary entered their scent
percipient as elder branches in the night where words
gathered, warped, then straightened, marking new wands.

– Barbara Guest (American poet, 1920-2006)

[daily log: walking, 6 km]

Caveat: a more fulfilled and self-actualized indoor kitty existence

I have fallen victim to a cat video.

This one has a gadgeteer angle to it, however. 

This guy built a food dispenser for his cat that is activated by plastic toys that the cat has to find in a kind of hide-and-seek game. 

He writes on his blog: "So what if my cat, while out on patrol, actually found its prey? Surely this would bring him one step closer towards a more fulfilled and self-actualized indoor kitty existence."

He wanted his indoor cat to have the experience of the hunt, so he created an artificial hunt. This takes "playing with your cat" to a whole new level. Maybe, in the future, our pets will enjoy time in the holodeck, too? 

 [daily log: walking, sorta]

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