The Four of Us
Thursday, January 22, 2026
A Borgesian First Time Rosemary’s
portrait stares at me from my place in bed. When I turn off the lights I can
imagine her gaze still there.
When we went
to get Niño and Niña 7 years ago at the SPCA, Niña became her cat. Niña ignored
me or ran away. Now with Rosemary dead five years Niña is constantly on me. She
has transferred from Rosemary to me.
The presence
of my two cats helps me keep sane. That presence, gives me a purpose in a life
that has lost most of it. I believe that I will be more useful to my small
family when I am dead. But it is Niño, who has lymphatic cancer of the
intestines, and when he stares at me, I know what he is thinking. “Alex don’t
die before we do. Who would take care of us if you did?”
While Niño
communicates without talking, that does not stop me from talking to both cats.
This I do all the time, particularly when I return home from shopping at
Safeway.
I live alone
but I talk a lot. In the car, without thinking, I find myself saying out loud, “Rosemary,
the quiero,” or I simply repeat her name especially in Spanish, “Rosamaría.”
With my two
cats next to me on the bed and with Rosemary in her framed portrait on the wall
I feel that we are four in the room.
Magically,
as I stare at her and she stares at me back I am back 57 years with my Asahi
Pentax S-3 and Kodak Tri-X, taking her portrait. Why did she have that sad look?
Did she know or even think then that one day we would not be together?
A Borgesian First Time
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
 | | 20 January 2026 |
Being a Jorge Luís Borges fan and a lover of the
only-in-English term Borgesian I constantly experience what Borges often said
that every first time is followed by repeated first times.
In my bedroom until today I had 8 framed pictures on
the wall that featured my daughters and granddaughters. There were none of
Rosemary. In the morning I went to pick up a framed photograph of Rosemary at
Magnum Frames on Main and Marine Drive.
I put it on the wall. It is opposite me when I am on
my bed. Rosemary stares at me with those sad eyes of hers. I took the
photograph in the beginning of 1969. This means that the portrait is from 57
years ago. The print in the frame is not a darkroom print or an inkjet b+w
print. It is an inkjet transparency mounted on silver carboard. It resembles a
Daguerreotype.
She stares at me, and. I stare back. It seems like she
is posing for me in our Calle Herodoto
home in Mexico City. Borges was right. She is in my room and the eye contact is
startling. It saddens me. But I would rather be sad if that means that she is
posing for me for that Borgesian first time. Again.
Emojified - Homedepoed & Couriered
Monday, January 19, 2026
Mr.Watson, come here I want to see you
"We
read not only because we cannot know enough people, but because friendship is
so vulnerable, so likely to diminish or disappear, overcome by space,time,
imperfect sympathies, and all the sorrows of familial and passional life."
Harold Bloom - How To Read and Why (2000)
While I am no great writer I do write. I consider
myself to be a cronista (chronicler) spying on people in Facebook and in
TwitterX. I don’t ever comment and should I have to go to the US the
authorities would find nothing offensive in my phone. I just want to recognize the changing trends.
In this chronicling I have seen how the world has
become emojified (my coining), texted, and our city and many other cities are
losing small shops and restaurants and are becoming homedepoed (my coinage) and
couriered (my coinage).
I have written before a blog (in above link) on the mounting list of
excuses I am given by people when I call them on the phone.
There is something new that I have noticed in last
year. I have a first cousin in Buenos Aires. I call him on Messenger or
WhatsApp. He is friendly and we chat about our life as little kids together.
But he never calls me back.
I have a good friend in Mexico whom I met in 1962. He
both knew my mother, my grandmother and Rosemary. On October 1 I called him. “Alex I am in Costco.” He hung up. He never
did call back. I did a month later and he was pleasant.
Why is this happening? I believe that both my friend
and cousin do not live alone. They have someone with them all the time. They do
not experience or have any idea of what it is to live in a house of silence and
that the phone never rings.
Another friend might call me and say, “Alex, you called?” What stops these
people from calling me to find out how I am doing as this is why I call them? I often look at myself in the mirror and I ask myself, "What is wrong with you?"
This chronicler at age 83 feels much like his now gone
friend Abraham Rogatnick, who three months before he died said, “I am not long
for this world and I am glad.”
A Feline Bond
Sunday, January 18, 2026
 | | Niña - 17 January 2026 |
I remember
going up the stairs in my Kits house some years ago and I heard Rosemary
talking. When I entered our bedroom she was the only one there. She knew and
immediately told me, “I was talking to Niña.” There has been only one change
beyond the death of my Rosemary and that is that I also talk to the cats. There is
one difference as I mostly communicate with them in Spanish.
There is a
lot of Spanish cutesy talking. Niño becomes Niñomuchi and Niña is Niñamuchi. Or
I might ask ¿Cómo están los gatos de Mamuchi (Rosemary)?”
My eldest
daughter lives in Lillooet so I don’t see much of her. My youngest, Hilary is
having a marriage not working all that well so I don’t hear much from her. I
live mostly in the silence of my solitude accompanied by my two orange and
white cats. They are cuddly and always there.
When
Rosemary and I adopted them from the SPCA some7 years ago (they were middle aged) Niña became her cat. In the last few years she has now adopted me
and she is with me all the time and insists on getting on top of my chest.
Her
presence, her loyalty, reminds me of an event that happened the day Rosemary
died on 9 December 2020.
The family
was in the living room waiting for the funeral company to arrive to take
Rosemary’s dead body away. I had a thought. “I am a photographer and you have
to take this photograph.” I went up and there was Rosemary dead on her bed with
Niño sleeping on her chest. I took the photograph. This was one of the most peaceful scenes I have ever encountered.
I believe
this has to be the most important photograph I will ever take or have taken. I
will not show it to my daughters. What was important was the action of taking
it and being a photographer beyond being human.
When I look
at Niña I know she must not remember. I do. I will treasure her company until
one of us goes.
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