It was three years ago tonight when I first got close enough to photograph a small cat who I now call Alex.
For weeks, I had been trying to get close to a tiny feline — maybe 4 months old — who was living behind the garbage dumpster at a restaurant where I used to go. He had been scared enough to get away from everyone who had tried to catch him.
He seemed to spend much of his time in the relative safety of the drainage system at the end of the parking lot. Every time I got close to him, he would dart into an opening and disappear. On this night, I got close enough to take the picture you see above, but when I got any closer, he was gone like a shot.
A friend eventually insisted that I use a trap to capture him. I kept trying to do it my way, but he kept escaping. Finally, my friend bought a trap for me and insisted I try it. And she was right.
I caught the little guy. He was terrified, but he quickly learned to trust me. He had a huge personality, so I named him Alexander the Great. Alex for short. Today, he’s the senior of the three current cats in my home.
But just as importantly, he’s one more of a long line of cats and dogs who let me feel as though I’m rescuing creatures in the same way that I wish someone could have rescued me when I was a child.

Who’s afraid of a federal shutdown? Many of us hope for the real thing
Years later, I see that I was an outsider who could never fit in
The Alien Observer:
‘Cash for clunkers’ was an even bigger clunker than we first realized
Being alone allows us to indulge our worst flaws and avoid change
Time is the most unrelenting enemy that any of us will face
Home is just a dream that some among us are still searching for