The Death of a Companion & Friend
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
 | | Niño 13 May 2026 | Two Paragons of StabilityWaiting to Join Rosemary in Oblivion My Dear
Rosemary,
Both of us
know that in our oblivion we will never see each other again. But writing to
you today feels almost comforting as you are the only person in my life that
understands what it is like to lose our cat Niño.  | | Rosemary & Niño May 2020 |
This morning
when I woke up, both cats, as usual, were right next to me sleeping. But that
was not to be. Niño was dead. He must have died early in the morning as rigor
mortis had not set in.
When you
were alive in the crazy world we were both living in you were a paragon of
stability. You would understand that when Niño stared at me with those
intelligent eyes there was stability there, too. No matter what I did during
the day, if I had to leave home I had that comforting thought of arriving home
to Niño a Niño. It was never quite the same as when you were alive and you
would ask me, “Alex, how was your day?”
Through the
years we came to the conclusion that the quickest cure to a dead cat was a
brand new one. We never got a kitten. We liked the mutual and pleasant task of
learning to adapt to each other. But now it is different as Niña is Niño’s twin
and I could never get another cat that might not get along with her. We both went to the SPCA to get them. Niña became your cat and Niño was mine. After you died the previously shy Niña competed with Niño for my attention. I now grieve that Niño is gone but with Niña we will share our grief and live will be tolerable.
In my
diminishing world of people that I know I now live alone (not quite) with one
cat. Today she got on me and we almost had a siesta. She kept smelling the spot
where Niño died. I wonder if she knows that her twin brother is dead? I often wondered
if they remembered you.
It is
paradoxical that I am getting rid of stuff that was Niño’s. I threw away his
cancer medicines. But what will I do with his shiny metal eating dish? I took
him to the Veterinary Hospital on West Boulevard to be cremated in his wicker
basket. What shall I do with it? The basket had a blue towel. Will I launder it
and put it away?  | | In these last months he would sun himself just about here. |
Before I
left him at the hospital I gave him a big hug and smelled his cattiness.
Our daily
night routine will be different. At around 8pm I will give Niña her treats. Then I will bathe, get into
bed and read. It was when I was about to turn off the light that I would get
Niño right next to me. He had been ailing for over a month. He seemed to find comfort
in my touching him and brushing him.
I will think
of that look on his face when I often imagine him saying, “Papi, don’t die
before we do. If not, who will take care of us?” With him gone, statistically I
believe I will be next.
Rosemary you
died on our bed. Niño died on our bed. It is obvious that your almost 84
year-old husband will probably die on it, too. Is that symmetrical? I have
written here before, that after you died, when our two daughters and
granddaughters were waiting for the funeral service to take you away I knew
that I had one obligation. If I was going to call myself a photographer I had to take your last portrait. I went
upstairs to find Niña asleep on your chest. I cried.
In my life I have only photographed death twice - you and Niño.
As your
portrait on the wall from my bed stares at me, It is now even more obvious that
the world that you and I shared for 52 years is breaking up into one that if
you were alive we would not want to live with anymore. When I drive in this
Vancouver I think, “Rosemary, you would never recognize the city you brought us
to in 1975. It is a cold alien place where people now avoid face to face
communication."
Six minutes
before you died you asked, “Am I dying?”
I could not answer. Now I know I have to stay around until Niña goes, even
though I might before her. My will to keep living is diminished. Yes, I am
dying but not quite yet.
The urn with
the ashes of your cat Casi-Casi, are in a pot in our garden. Niño’s will be in
a similar urn and will be company to Casi-Casi.
When I turn
off the lights tonight there will be for of us. You, Niño, Niña and me. The two
of you are strong absent presences of that I loved. And explanation of the red roses on Niño. Before Rosemary died she often went to our old Kerrisdale garden to see what she could find. One day she brought a red rose bush and told me it had been growing on the back lane. I told her that we had never had red roses ever on our back lane. In last century Vancouver purchased roses were not on their own root stock. They were grafted to an old and very sturdy rose called Rosa 'Dr. Huey'. After the rose that was grafted to it, Dr Huey came back. I grows nicely in our garden. This rose's stability exactly mirrors that of Rosemary and my Niño. Henceforth the rose will my memory of two dead loved ones.
 | | Niña this afternoon 13 May 2026 without Niño |
A First Time
Sunday, May 10, 2026
 | | Alexandra Norris - Nikon FM-2 with Kodak Tri-X - New Scan 10 May 2026 |
Alexandra Norris's fine essay on posing
A Felicitous Occasion The
emptiness of living with two cats, getting next to now phone calls and seeing
my youngest daughter, at the most, every week and a half, finds me working in the
garden, removing the black spot leaves from my roses, scanning my plants and
writing my daily blog. This daily blog sometimes is one I may write three
times. I have all that leisure time to do it.
Today I was
thinking of a class I used to teach at a very good photographic school (now closed) called Focal Point. It was on 10th
Ave close to UBC. One of my most popular classes was called The Contemporary
Portrait Nude. I taught it beginning in 2010 for a couple of years until the
school closed.
In one of
those classes we had a model that was especially lovely, alert and intelligent.
She wrote for me her experience of posing nude for the first time. I will place
here (above) two blogs involving her.
Because I
was the teacher I rarely took photographs. I did not have a digital camera.
With Norris I managed to take some photographs with a Nikon FM-2 and with what
soon was to become my favourite digital camera that I use to this day in company
with my Fuji X-E1 and X-E3. That fave was and is my iPhoneR3G. It has not had a
SIM card for years. I keep it charged at all times as I like to use it lots. Better and newer phones cannot compare to what I can do with the iPhone3G.
I will place
here some of those that would not offend those offensive “community standards”.
One
revelation that find outstanding is that I have gone again to the photographs on her
file in my computer with the use of my 22 year-old Photoshop-8 using a
technique I was not aware of in 2010. I open the photograph and immediately go
from RGB to LAB in Photoshop. With Lab, any correction I may do with contrast or
shadow detail, does not affect the colour. I will place here a photo I took with
my Fuji X-E3 of that most important tool in my Photoshop with which I am able
to bring out (the detail is always there and is not invented) that all important
shadow detail. What I am unable to fix well was the iPhone3G’s inability to
handle extreme contrast so the highlights cannot be brought down well.
Give Me Back My Heart - Jann Arden & 8x10 Glossies
 | | November 1994 |
Jann of the Ardent Heart 01 Jann of the Ardent Heart 02
My mother,
grandmother, my Rosemary and I were all teachers. Once you have taught it is difficult
to stop. I am 83 and I believe that I have useful information (at least related
to photography and portrait photography) that I would like to impart. But few
in this 21st century, where Rembrandt lighting has disappeared and
phones are ubiquitous, seem to be interested.
Perhaps
someone reading this just might be interested in why 8x10 glossy photographs
were the rage back in that other century.
This can be
explained easily with these initials BS and AS. BS stands for Before Scanners (be they
flatbed or those non-plus-ultra drum scanners). AS stands for After Scanners.
In that now
remote century when newspapers, magazines and photography books or illustrated
books were paramount to information and culture, blacks could not be properly
reproduced, particularly in newspapers. These publications demanded glossy 8x10
photographs. I can remember my finickity photograph drum drier. The output
would feature photographs that had spots, etc. The cure for this was awfully
complicated. And so Ilford Photo in England came up with the idea of plastic
coated photographic paper. When I used it I applied slight pressure on the wet
photograph with a car windshield wiper. I finished it off with a hair dryer.
Once the
scanner came into the equation, scanners could reproduce true blacks for
publications. It was at about that time that some of us figured out that
Ilfospeed Photographic Paper was not archival. Even in files with no light the
prints, in spite of having been properly fixed developed a yellow cast full of
spots.
And this
guy, noticed that some of them were beautiful. They were so amazingly lovely
that I have been scanning these prints and printing them as inkjets with
archival paper.
An example I
am awfully proud of is this 8x10 (not glossy!) of Jann Arden.
And No Sulphur Dioxide
 | | Vancouver - 10 May 2026 |  | | Rosa 'Princess Alexandra of Kent' 10 May 2026 |
When
Rosemary and I married in the lovely neighbourhood of Coyoacán on 8 February
1967 we were not quite ready to adjust to a married life in Mexico City. My
mother helped us get a little house in Arboledas, Estado de Mexico. It was
there where we were faced with situations I had never encountered before.
Such was the
atmospheric pollution of greater Mexico City that clouds were never white they
were yellowish. When it rained the sulphur dioxide in the air mixed with the
water to produce sulphurous acid. This meant that I usually watered my car so
that the rain water would not corrode the car paint.
Once a year
I would remove the gasoline tank of my WV Beetle and I would clean the gunk
inside with paint thinner. Even though I had installed an extra gasoline filter
in my car, that sludge managed to get through.
Such was the
bumper tailgating of traffic in the Periférico Freeway that I installed a
switch in my car that would turn on my brake lights without my pressing the
brakes.
When I went
to my teaching position at the Jesuit University Universidad Iberoamericana I
was stopped once a year by the same policeman who with a smile would say, “ Profesor Alex you were … I will have to give you a ticket.” So I would bribe him.
All the
above disappeared like magic when Rosemary brought us (our two daughters) to
Vancouver in 1975.
Thanks to
Rosemary I was able to live a financially good life in photography and I
learned to garden.
But best of
all (in a way) when I go on my daily bike rides to Jericho Beach I stop at West
Point Grey Road park to take the same photograph of the cityscape and I glory
at all those clouds that do not have a hint of yellow. I tell my Mexico friends
my delight in being able to drink our tap water.
And here
(and again thanks to Rosemary) is today’s scan of one of her favourite roses,
the English Rose Rosa ‘Princess Alexandra of Kent’. The bloom is 5 inches wide
and extremely fragrant.
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