Adieu, Big Cat

On my trips home to visit my mom in Sudbury, I always stop on the side of the road to collect rocks for the garden. Most of them are Cambrian Shield granite, but I have a few pieces of the nickle ore that still forms the basis of the local economy. The ore was formed in a magma lake created 1.8 billion years ago when a meteorite slammed into the region.

Last week I was sitting in the garden with Josie when I brought her over to a piece of the ore and told her to put her hand on it. I do not remember exactly what we had been discussing, but I wanted to illustrate a point about the relativity of time, about how what seems agonizingly long from a human perspective is nothing from geological point of view. If the ore could sense and think, would it even be able to register the 80 or so years of a human’s life? It would be the briefest flash of light, gone before the rock could even concentrate its attention to see if something worth investigating had happened. Even the whole history of the human lineage, a couple million years, would not be to it as an afternoon is to us.

I made a point to find some ore because it reminds me of who I am and how I got here. Had the meteorite not slammed into primeval Sudbury, there would have been no nickle-copper ore, and therefore no mines, no smelter where my father worked, and so maybe no father, no mother, no me. My sitting in the garden with Josie is one act in a cosmic drama billions of years old. And so is your sitting wherever you are sitting. And the causal connections that led to my or your being here and there, and one person’s doing one thing and another person another, and people meeting and becoming friends and colleagues are so innumerable, so improbable, that thinking about them sends a shudder through me. Had any one thing been even a little different, I would not have been born, or I would have become something else, and made different friends, or not made any at all, and would have had to sit alone in my garden rather than with Josie.

But however improbable a life is, if you are living it, then the whole 14 billion year history of the universe has worked out in your favour. Whatever you achieve or do not achieve, your life is of singular value. Once you are gone nothing ever, no matter how many trillions of years the universe will last, will be you again. And that is why we feel such pain at the death of our friends.

Although our lives are near miraculous singularities and the rocks will long outlast us, we are conscious of the passing of our days. And yet, how many days do we waste, wishing we were doing something other than we are doing, or fidgeting, restless and bored?

No mortal creature should ever be bored because no one knows for certain which moment will be one’s last. As has happened too frequently over the past three years, I was brutally reminded again yesterday of this hard truth– harder even than the ore in my garden– when I learned of the death of my friend and colleague Cate Hundleby. I was working upstairs when Josie called for me to come down, a quiver in her voice told me that something was seriously wrong. A tree had fallen in our back yard the day before and taken down the power line. I was worried that it had begun to spark or started something on fire.

But the news was far worse.

Our friends Tory and Len were in the yard, telling us that Cate had died earlier that day.

One goes numb, not quite capable of feeling the meaning of that news. One’s mind immediately goes back to the last time one saw the person, the vividness of the memory resists the thought that one will never see them again.

I called Cate ‘Big Cat’ because of her Chesire cat-like grin. I gave her the nickname very soon after she came to Windsor. I was on the committee that hired her and we were friends from the moment that she started working and living here. She lived on the same street as Josie and I, only half a block away. We would see her walking her dogs, first Abbie, then Chloe, and now, never again. Like the Chesire Cat, she has disappeared, leaving only the memory of that grin.

Cate was a transformative addition to the department, not the first woman in its history but the first feminist philosopher. When she started working here she had made a name for herself as a feminist philosopher of science. As her worked developed, it turned towards argumentation theory, where she made original contributions to a feminist theory of argumentation. She authored the Standford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy entry on feminism and argumentation, edited an important collection of essays on the work of Trudy Govier, and was instrumental in founding Canada’s first PhD Program in Argumentation. She was a loud and effective voice for change within the department, the university, and the philosophical community generally. Her arguments were not always easily received in the department, but we are the better for her efforts and contributions.

These are facts, but people are not just facts. We cannot capture the texture of a life, how they interweave with the lives of others and things, by saying what people did and what they were like. Life is experience and activity; our contributions have helped make things the way they are, but the person cannot be recreated from the traces that they left behind. Only memory can preserve the Élan vital.

Josie and I sat somberly in the garden yesterday, remembering our friend and toasting her. As we sat there, a hummingbird began to feed from a flower of a late blooming hosta. Neither of us could remember ever seeing a hummingbird in twenty years of living here.

I am a man of reason and science. I know that rocks do not experience that passage of time and that hummingbirds are just hummingbirds.

But our superiority over the rocks is that we can imagine, and pretend, and project meanings, and act as if.

And so we looked at the hummingbird and said good bye to our friend.

A few seconds later, it rose from the hosta and flew away.

16 thoughts on “Adieu, Big Cat

  1. Hi Jeff, I just learned of Cate’s passing from your last blog post. First of all, I’m sorry for your loss. Second of all I’m sorry for our loss. I had kept in touch with Cate over the years through Facebook, and even helped her out with some health and fitness related things.

    She definitely was one of the people who had a tremendously positive impact on my life. She was a great teacher, and did what Any great teacher is supposed to do, which is to point the way for a student on how to become a better person. She helped do that for me, and for that, I am infinitely thankful to her.

    Windsors philosophy department was nothing short of strengthened by her presence there. I am very sad to hear of her passing…

    Thank you for saying what you said about her in your post. And About our human experience with life in the universe. Much much love to you and Josie and I hope that you are both otherwise doing well.

  2. Hi Jeff, I just learned of Cate’s passing from your last blog post. First of all, I’m sorry for your loss. Second of all I’m sorry for our loss. I had kept in touch with Cate over the years through Facebook, and even helped her out with some health and fitness related things.

    She definitely was one of the people who had a tremendously positive impact on my life. She was a great teacher, and did what Any great teacher is supposed to do, which is to point the way for a student on how to become a better person. She helped do that for me, and for that, I am infinitely thankful to her.

    Windsors philosophy department was nothing short of strengthened by her presence there. I am very sad to hear of her passing…

    Thank you for saying what you said about her in your post. And About our human experience with life in the universe. Much much love to you and Josie and I hope that you are both otherwise doing well.

    ~Ali~

    • Hi Ali,
      Devastating news, made the worse for being so unexpected and sudden. I was upstairs writing one minute and talking to our friend’s Tory and Len the next about how Cate was dead. Ugh. Huge loss, both as a friend and a colleague. The beginning of the semester is going to be terrible, but we will have to pull it together for the sake of the students. I hope you and Carrie Anne, and Feris (sp?) are well. Did Josie tell me you have moved to Ottawa, I am a bit scattered and can’t remember. If so, i hope all is well in the new location.

  3. What a beautiful tribute to Cate. Thank you for this. It’s tough news—the toughest I’ve heard in a long while. And I can’t even imagine how hard it is for friends and family and colleagues who saw Cate more often. Extending condolences to you and the whole department. Losing Cate will reverberate throughout our philosophical community, but your dept is the epicentre and I’ll be thinking of you all.

    • Hi Lisa,
      Thanks for reaching out. No one here, and certainly not me, can really believe that she is gone. I hope things are well with you.

  4. Thanks, Jeff for this beautiful tribute to Cate at a time when it doesn’t yet seem real. This is a huge loss for the Philosophy Department and the University community. She will be greatly missed.

    • Hi Lee, thanks for reaching out. Her death is tremendous personal and professional loss. We will be discussing a memorial at our dept. meeting tomorrow. I will keep the community apprised.

  5. I’m deeply saddened by this unexpected news. My first encounters with Dr. Hundleby were of her as the friendly lady walking her husky near my place. Although I wasn’t aware that she was a professor within the department, we would often cross paths, and our dogs had become friends. It wasn’t until she noticed me wearing my Philosophy hoodie that she discovered I was an undergraduate student in the Philosophy department. She enthusiastically recommended her classes to me, and I can still vividly recall her smile filled with passion and genuine pride from that moment. It’s not the last time I saw her, but it’s the first thing that comes to my mind when I think of her. Please accept my condolences, to you and anyone who cherishes beautiful memories of her.

  6. Perfect tribute, Jeff. Heartfelt condolences to you, Josie and everyone touched by Cate’s kindness and humour. She was remarkable and her death leaves a permanent void.

    • I have still not fully felt the reality of the news, Heather. Thanks for reaching out. Hopefully paths cross under better circumstances soon.

  7. This was beautiful, thank you, Jeff. I’m not going to be able to see a Cheshire Cat without thinking of Cate now ❤️ (and my mother will vouch for how many I own!)
    Lots of love to you and Josie and the whole Windsor crew 💔

    • Hi Katie, The news has left me and everyone else stunned. It was so sudden, so unexpected. We are all devastated (but also very happy that your mom is healthy and back to work). Yin and yang, dark and light.

  8. Hi Courtney Adieu … is the only piece by Derrida that I like (but I actually did not make the connection until you pointed it out). I am still stunned, and sad, and …
    I hope you are well. Hope we can chat under better circumstances some time.

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