OMG! There are organizations that take cats like this. I'm so sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I put an otherwise healthy 3 year old cat down after struggling with the same thing for 3 years. Ruined our couch, peed on everything soft, and if he jumped on our bed, even in the middle of the night, I'd wake right up from a dead sleep and try to grab him mid-pee. Because jumping on our bed always led to peeing. Peed on my mother in law in the middle of the night. Would stop for a month or so, then do it again. Had him on Prozac, then a miss of 2 drugs, saw a cat therapist behaviorist (didn't do any good, she was useless), and had scat mats on the couches. Finally decided we couldn't live under seine any longer. He was anxious, so we couldn't make him and odor ir barn cat, couldnt give him to someone else as I knew he'd do it there, etc. Vet came to the house and peacefully put him to sleep.
In your case, OP, you've had him for years, he's very elderly now and you will need to put him down in a year or so, and I think it's time now.
How would you ever think to put him in a windowless basement? Even stuck in the laundry room, it's away from his people, and he's a social cat. Time to do it, he won't know anything after its done, you're going to lose him in a year, it'll just be a bit sooner. I'm really sorry, OP, this is a hard decision. But living in a tiny room with no human contact isn't really living. Why not let him go? You'd do it if he was in physical pain, well.... he's in emotional pain.
Omg, next time just try to adopt the cat out to someone with problem solving skills instead of killing him.
Anonymous wrote:I put an otherwise healthy 3 year old cat down after struggling with the same thing for 3 years. Ruined our couch, peed on everything soft, and if he jumped on our bed, even in the middle of the night, I'd wake right up from a dead sleep and try to grab him mid-pee. Because jumping on our bed always led to peeing. Peed on my mother in law in the middle of the night. Would stop for a month or so, then do it again. Had him on Prozac, then a miss of 2 drugs, saw a cat therapist behaviorist (didn't do any good, she was useless), and had scat mats on the couches. Finally decided we couldn't live under seine any longer. He was anxious, so we couldn't make him and odor ir barn cat, couldnt give him to someone else as I knew he'd do it there, etc. Vet came to the house and peacefully put him to sleep.
In your case, OP, you've had him for years, he's very elderly now and you will need to put him down in a year or so, and I think it's time now.
How would you ever think to put him in a windowless basement? Even stuck in the laundry room, it's away from his people, and he's a social cat. Time to do it, he won't know anything after its done, you're going to lose him in a year, it'll just be a bit sooner. I'm really sorry, OP, this is a hard decision. But living in a tiny room with no human contact isn't really living. Why not let him go? You'd do it if he was in physical pain, well.... he's in emotional pain.
OMG! There are organizations that take cats like this. I'm so sad. Anonymous wrote:I put an otherwise healthy 3 year old cat down after struggling with the same thing for 3 years. Ruined our couch, peed on everything soft, and if he jumped on our bed, even in the middle of the night, I'd wake right up from a dead sleep and try to grab him mid-pee. Because jumping on our bed always led to peeing. Peed on my mother in law in the middle of the night. Would stop for a month or so, then do it again. Had him on Prozac, then a miss of 2 drugs, saw a cat therapist behaviorist (didn't do any good, she was useless), and had scat mats on the couches. Finally decided we couldn't live under seine any longer. He was anxious, so we couldn't make him and odor ir barn cat, couldnt give him to someone else as I knew he'd do it there, etc. Vet came to the house and peacefully put him to sleep.
In your case, OP, you've had him for years, he's very elderly now and you will need to put him down in a year or so, and I think it's time now.
How would you ever think to put him in a windowless basement? Even stuck in the laundry room, it's away from his people, and he's a social cat. Time to do it, he won't know anything after its done, you're going to lose him in a year, it'll just be a bit sooner. I'm really sorry, OP, this is a hard decision. But living in a tiny room with no human contact isn't really living. Why not let him go? You'd do it if he was in physical pain, well.... he's in emotional pain.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you taken your cat to the vet to discuss this at length? Sometimes this issue is a result of pain. At 15, euthanization is something any loving pet owner should be open to, as it is kinder to the animal. Just keeping him alive for your feelings is not kind. Really. Not saying this issue is that issue, but at some point soon it could be. I also have a 15 yo cat, and I sympathize greatly.
Omg, 15 is not old for a cat.
My 15 year old kitty still climbs trees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you all. I see that I'm definitely not alone, and I'm impressed with what people will do for their cats. I just talked to my mom, who told me my kids are getting a lesson in love - that made me feel better. My DH is also touched by how protective the kids are of the cat, which is partly why he has backed off a bit.
My mom suggested getting a tarp from Home Depot and throwing it over the sofa at night and when we're out. My cat is peeing when we're home now too, but I can keep an eye on him.
I'm grateful that my cat is 15 and not younger - I know this won't last forever. He's had a very good, happy life.
Thank you all, for the feedback.
PP here. Absolutely. Do this, OP. Listen to your mom. : )
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you taken your cat to the vet to discuss this at length? Sometimes this issue is a result of pain. At 15, euthanization is something any loving pet owner should be open to, as it is kinder to the animal. Just keeping him alive for your feelings is not kind. Really. Not saying this issue is that issue, but at some point soon it could be. I also have a 15 yo cat, and I sympathize greatly.
Omg, 15 is not old for a cat.
My 15 year old kitty still climbs trees.
15 is pretty old for a cat. Most in my experience live to be 15-17. My parents have a 20 year old Siamese right now, but he's been old for a long time.
Anonymous wrote:OP again - only other option is to keep a plastic drop cloth over the sofa, and just change it if he pees on it (and hope his behavior calms down in time now that we're home from vacation). Would that be totally nuts? I figure he has a year or two max left to live.
No more pets for us after this, sadly.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you all. I see that I'm definitely not alone, and I'm impressed with what people will do for their cats. I just talked to my mom, who told me my kids are getting a lesson in love - that made me feel better. My DH is also touched by how protective the kids are of the cat, which is partly why he has backed off a bit.
My mom suggested getting a tarp from Home Depot and throwing it over the sofa at night and when we're out. My cat is peeing when we're home now too, but I can keep an eye on him.
I'm grateful that my cat is 15 and not younger - I know this won't last forever. He's had a very good, happy life.
Thank you all, for the feedback.
Anonymous wrote:OP again - only other option is to keep a plastic drop cloth over the sofa, and just change it if he pees on it (and hope his behavior calms down in time now that we're home from vacation). Would that be totally nuts? I figure he has a year or two max left to live.
No more pets for us after this, sadly.
. Sorry, but gee whiz. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in animal welfare, and I think it would be kinder to euthanize your cat than to leave him locked in a laundry room.
If you have truly exhausted every option - speaking with your vet, and perhaps also a behaviorist - and your family is unwilling to live with the pee and poop in the wrong places, then I don't see much other choice. You can try to rehome your cat, to a family who understands that he has special needs now. But that isn't easy to do.
I'm sorry you're going through this. Frankly, your husband is an asshole. But you probably already know that.
No, you are the asshole, are you kidding? He is not even a cat person and he has had to deal with pee and poop from this cat for 5 years. Plus, no carpets and everything covered in plastic. He is much better than me, and I'm plenty patient. I'm sorry OP, it's a tough situation. We euthanized a pet and I still get sad about it, even if our dog was suffering, it was terrible. You are a really good person <3
Anonymous wrote:I work in animal welfare, and I think it would be kinder to euthanize your cat than to leave him locked in a laundry room.
If you have truly exhausted every option - speaking with your vet, and perhaps also a behaviorist - and your family is unwilling to live with the pee and poop in the wrong places, then I don't see much other choice. You can try to rehome your cat, to a family who understands that he has special needs now. But that isn't easy to do.
I'm sorry you're going through this. Frankly, your husband is an asshole. But you probably already know that.