April 16, 2017

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'Brave New Workers': Ex-Construction Worker Builds A New Life Grooming Cats

Cat groomer Alex Perry shaves a cat.
  • Cat groomer Alex Perry shaves a cat.

    Courtesy Alex Perry

  • Former construction worker Alex Perry finds his calling as a cat groomer.

    Former construction worker Alex Perry finds his calling as a cat groomer.

    Courtesy Alex Perry

  • Cat groomer Alex Perry with a cat after he bathed it.

    Cat groomer Alex Perry with a cat after he bathed it. “I like to wrap them in a little microfiber cloth and then we roll them in the beach towel and we make a little purr-ritto,” Perry says.

    Courtesy Alex Perry

  • Cat groomer Alex Perry clips the nails of one of his cats.

    Cat groomer Alex Perry clips the nails of one of his cats.

    Rachel Valadez/Artis Photography

  • Cat groomer Alex Perry was a fan of cats since childhood.

    Cat groomer Alex Perry was a fan of cats since childhood.

    Courtesy Alex Perry

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During his first day on the job, Alex Perry learned one of the pitfalls of cat grooming when he was bitten by a Maine Coon.

“This one decided to bite me right in the gut. I made the mistake of pulling away. And I got a big tear right in my belly,” Perry recalls of that day back in 2012.

If you’re a cat lover, chances are you know what a Maine Coon is. Commonly referred to as “the gentle giant,” the Maine Coon is one of the largest and most social domesticated cats.

So not only was the cat’s action a surprise, but it was enough for Perry’s boss to wonder if he might quit.

But Perry reasoned, “It certainly wasn’t the worst thing that had happened to me. It wasn’t enough to scare me away.”

Perry stuck with it for a full week, at the end of which, his boss asked, “Well, what do you think?”

“I said, ‘I love it,’ “Perry recounts.

Groomed thousands ofcats

Since then, Perry says he has groomed more than 30,000 cats — a job he never would have imagined himself doing just a few short years ago when he was making a thriving livelihood in the construction industry.

Back in the early 2000s in Seattle, Wash., where Perry still lives, he was a housing contractor and business was booming. He says that the work could be grueling, but he was young, and the money was good.

“I think my favorite part of the whole thing was just kind of hanging out with the guys,” Perry says. “You made a lot of friends. We were going out to dinner a lot, getting together, going dirt bike riding, everybody had toys. It was a good time to be in construction.”

But then the housing bubble burst.

“I started getting a feeling about 2008. I was saying that this whole housing bubble couldn’t last forever. … This was the beginnings of things starting to take a turn.”

Soon, it was hard for Perry to get jobs.

“I felt like I was working to make about $12 an hour for work that I used to get $50-60 an hour to do. It was very demoralizing,” Perry says.

In 2011, Perry said he and his business partnerdecided it was no longer worth the effort scrounging to find work and only landing low-paying jobs. He said they decided to sell off their assets and get out of the industry.

“I just kind of quit everything and for the first two weeks it was absolutely wonderful; no more headaches, no more phone calls,” Perry says. “But sitting home and watching TV in your underwear is only fun for so long. I would say week three and week four, I really started to feel like a loser and then I really started thinking hard about what I was going to do next.”

Cat grooming as difficult as construction

The inspiration for Perry’s next career move came from an unexpected place—his own cat, a silver Himalayan named Gizmo.

“She was beautiful. She was one of those cats that got by on her looks,” Perry says. “One day, my neighbor was changing his motor oil and she decided to take a nap in the used motor oil pan. She was a mess, so I quickly had to find myself a cat groomer. So, I found one, took her in there. They got her all scrubbed up I watched the process and I was fascinated by it.”

Perry said he’d never even heard of cat grooming until that day Gizmo had that strange accident.

When Gizmo died, Perry went in search of a new cat at Seattle Persian and Himalayan Rescue. But instead of a new pet, Perry stumbled across a new hobby. Finding himself unemployed and job hunting with no prospects, Perry volunteered at the Seattle Persian and Himalayan Rescue and started getting some practical experience in cat grooming.

And that’s when he said, “I started to think, ‘Hey, maybe I could do this for a living.'”

By the following year, Perry had started his new life as an entry level cat groomer, and he quickly got plenty of experience, helping to groom 12 to 18 cats a day, five days a week.

Former construction worker Alex Perry has found his calling as a cat groomer.

Courtesy Alex Perry

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Courtesy Alex Perry

It was quite a grueling [pace].I would say in the time I worked there, I saw 12 people come and go. Out of those 12, I would say eight of them quit either the first day or within the first week.”

But Perry says he was hooked. By 2015 was a co-owner at Cozy Cat Boarding and Grooming in Seattle.

“I’ve probably groomed over 40,000 cats now. … It’s a lot,” Perry says. “You know, a lot of them are the same cats. I wouldn’t say that’s 40,000 individual cats. That’s cats that come in every few months or quarterly so I groom a lot of cats over and over again.”

Perry, 43, believes that most people have a misconception about what cat grooming is all about.

“A lot of people get into it thinking you get to play with kitty cats all day, which in a sense you do, but it’s hard work. I would put it right up there with construction as far as the difficulty of the work,” he says.

Cats feed off of your energy

Perry insists that one must have a special touch to be successful in the cat grooming business.

“Some people have a gentle touch and some people don’t,” he says. “I just feel very relaxed around cats, you know. I’m not a hippy-dippy type person, but I definitely believe cats feed off of your energy and if you have a positive, quiet energy, I think the cat senses that and it will just make everybody’s life much easier.”

One of Perry’s favorite things about the job is bathing the cats, and he offers a special tip.

“I like to wrap them in a little microfiber cloth and then we roll them in the beach towel and we make a little purr-ritto,” he says.

Perry believes he’s found his calling in cat grooming.

“I feel lucky because I am now finally one of those people that — I do what I enjoy for a living and I am able to maintain a decent lifestyle doing it.”

As for that age old question some may be asking, “Well, how do you bathe a cat?”

The short answer Perry says, “Quickly.”

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The First Female Boston Marathon Runner Prepares To Run Again

In 1967, Kathrine Switzer ran the Boston Marathon, even though it was a men’s-only event. She tells NPR’s Lulu Garcia-Navarro about that race, and training to run it again in 2017, at age 70.

LOURDES GARCIA-NAVARRO, HOST:

The Boston Marathon is tomorrow, one of the marquee events for distance runners around the world. As with many sports, it used to be a men’s-only event until 50 years ago, when Kathrine Switzer became the first woman to wear a Boston bib number and race. Now she’s prepping to run it again at the age of 70. Kathrine Switzer joins me now from Boston. Welcome.

KATHRINE SWITZER: Thank you very much. It’s wonderful to be with you.

GARCIA-NAVARRO: So it’s hard to imagine these days that women would be banned from running in a marathon. Take us back to 1967. What was the thinking behind that?

SWITZER: In 1967, when I pinned on that bib number, I really wasn’t trying to prove anything because a woman had actually run the Boston Marathon the year before by just jumping out of the bushes and running. There was nothing about gender in the rulebook in those days because everybody assumed a woman really couldn’t run and didn’t want to run, and why even bother with it in the rulebook or on the entry form?

And in sports, the longest distance in the Olympic Games, in fact, was just 800 meters. It was feared that anything longer was going to injure women, that they wouldn’t be able to have children or they somehow turned into men. That was what was the theory.

GARCIA-NAVARRO: Really, that they were going to turn into men or that their uterus would be damaged?

SWITZER: Absolutely. You know, it was amazing. You’ll never be – ever have children, they said. You’re going to get big legs. You’re going to grow hair on your chest. It was hilarious, the myths. And, of course, when people hear myths, they believe them because to try otherwise might mean damaging yourself. So people were afraid and they just went about their lives that way and restricted themselves.

GARCIA-NAVARRO: But you didn’t. You actually entered that 1967 marathon. Tell us a little bit about how you did that and what – and the story behind that.

SWITZER: Well, I entered the race simply because my coach had been a 15-time Boston Marathon runner. And he didn’t believe a woman could do it, but he loved running with me and telling me stories about the Boston Marathon. So he energized me. And, you know, when I told him that I really wanted to try and he said he didn’t believe a woman could do it, I was bound and determined to prove him wrong.

So we did the – all the right things. We followed all the rules. We signed up using the correct entry form and had our travel permits and our AAU cards. We were parts of the federation. The only thing that challenged it was how I signed my name. I sign my name K.V. Switzer, with my initials. And when the entry form went in, they thought it was from a man.

GARCIA-NAVARRO: The race organizers realized there was a woman on the course, of course. How did they find out, and what happened when they did?

SWITZER: At about a mile and a half into the race, the press truck went by us, and they saw that I was a woman in the race wearing numbers and they began taking pictures. And alongside of the photographer’s truck came the officials’ press truck. And the race director was on the truck and the guys were teasing him. And he got so angry that there was a girl in the race that he stopped the bus and jumped off it and ran after me and attacked me in the race and tried to pull off my bib numbers, screaming at me, get the hell out of my race and give me those numbers.

And I was just blindsided by this. I was terrified. I was scared. And my boyfriend came along with a full streak and gave the official a cross-body block and sent him out of the race instead. You know, we laugh about it now because it’s so funny when a girl is saved by her burly boyfriend. But, you know, I said to my coach immediately after the incident – and I said, I have to finish this race now because if I drop out of this race, nobody’s going to believe that women are serious.

GARCIA-NAVARRO: We should tell our listeners you won the New York City Marathon in the ’70s. You came in second in Boston once. You’ve been running ever since. And now, again, you are going to run the Boston Marathon at 70 years old. What’s – what are your hopes for the race day?

SWITZER: You know, what’s going to happen on Monday, Patriots’ Day here in Boston, is to come back 50 years and celebrate the fact, first of all, that I can run, that I’m capable of doing it, amazingly enough, and I’m very, very grateful for that. And I’m also very grateful for the opportunity to thank a city and the streets that changed my life and help to empower millions of women all around the world and change the face of the sport.

GARCIA-NAVARRO: Kathrine Switzer, good luck out there tomorrow and what an honor to speak with you.

SWITZER: Thank you so much. Good luck everybody and stay fearless.

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