sick cat follow up
Posted: Sun Jan 26, 2014 12:06 am
I had an animal communicator work with my cat Tiny this a.m.
Some interesting things came out of it.
1. He has no problem with eating itself—no mouth or swallowing problems
2. He gets severe nausea as soon as he eats—but he does not vomit, or choke, or any
other type of visible reaction.
3. He feels a sensation of vibration in his body. It is not a muscular weakness.
4. He is hungry but loses his desire to eat anything as all food tried causes the nausea
5. But he keeps trying. He takes in 1-2 oz of food as about all he can handle.
6. Likes to go out but it is very cold here so this is not happening much—maybe
a few minutes on the front step in the sun before he wants back inside.
7. Likes warmth as by the wood stove or on thick blankets, or my lap
8. Is thirsty which is unusual for him.
9. Some sense of pressure in the middle of the abdomen—like after eating a very large meal
10. No visible pain on palpating the area.
11, He told the communicator that he really appreciated my trying to find different foods
that might be able to eat.
Communicator thought to look at heart, kidney or cancer issues.
Have been giving him some vit C, 2-3x/daily
Also the CS
Took Irene’s suggestion and gave him 1 dose of Acon 200c. Luckily that is all
I had on hand. Other potencies: 30, 1M on hand. It seemed to have helped
a bit and he ate a little bit more for one day.
Did a ph of his urine with a litmus strip. It read betw 6-7, closer to 7
Okay, I broke down and took Tiny to a vet. Not a memorable experience.
He saw nothing wrong in particular. No temperature/fever.
Said his tonsils were swollen but there is no problem with swallowing.
Because Tiny is a big cat, he thought he had enough fat to withstand a
couple of days with minimal food! Tiny weighed about 12.5#. He has
lost some weight this past week. But he is a very round cat and looks very
large. Vet thought the fast would help the liver detox.
That sort of tells me he thought Tiny was overweight and not eating well
despite what I reported.
I had to ask several times about blood work to check out the liver and kidneys.
He finally drew some blood and will have at least some of the results back by
tomorrow (Sunday morning).
Can’t believe how cooperative my cat was. Given the stressfulness of the situation,
he traveled without a carrying case, sitting quietly on my lap once I began to drive.
On the way back he lay on the seat next to me without any visible stress. At the vet’s
he stayed on my lap and then on the exam table without any fussing. He was not
lethargic; it seemed more like he was trusting me to try and take care of him.
He is a cat with a very strong mind of his own and an attitude about his perceptions
of things—he knows how things are supposed to be!
He can be very aggressive with other cats that cross his boundaries, but when we had
this obnoxious guest cat a year ago, Tiny never once fought with him after I told him
that we needed to treat this displaced cat with kindness. The guest cat took Tiny’s passivity
as a sign that he could be an aggressive alpha male so the situation became unbearable
and Tiny was super stressed out. That guest cat became a guest no more and it took
several months to bring Tiny back into the house and feel comfortable again. He still
won’t eat in the kitchen.
I did a repertorization of the case but would interested in what other people see in it
for a remedy.
tanya
Some interesting things came out of it.
1. He has no problem with eating itself—no mouth or swallowing problems
2. He gets severe nausea as soon as he eats—but he does not vomit, or choke, or any
other type of visible reaction.
3. He feels a sensation of vibration in his body. It is not a muscular weakness.
4. He is hungry but loses his desire to eat anything as all food tried causes the nausea
5. But he keeps trying. He takes in 1-2 oz of food as about all he can handle.
6. Likes to go out but it is very cold here so this is not happening much—maybe
a few minutes on the front step in the sun before he wants back inside.
7. Likes warmth as by the wood stove or on thick blankets, or my lap
8. Is thirsty which is unusual for him.
9. Some sense of pressure in the middle of the abdomen—like after eating a very large meal
10. No visible pain on palpating the area.
11, He told the communicator that he really appreciated my trying to find different foods
that might be able to eat.
Communicator thought to look at heart, kidney or cancer issues.
Have been giving him some vit C, 2-3x/daily
Also the CS
Took Irene’s suggestion and gave him 1 dose of Acon 200c. Luckily that is all
I had on hand. Other potencies: 30, 1M on hand. It seemed to have helped
a bit and he ate a little bit more for one day.
Did a ph of his urine with a litmus strip. It read betw 6-7, closer to 7
Okay, I broke down and took Tiny to a vet. Not a memorable experience.
He saw nothing wrong in particular. No temperature/fever.
Said his tonsils were swollen but there is no problem with swallowing.
Because Tiny is a big cat, he thought he had enough fat to withstand a
couple of days with minimal food! Tiny weighed about 12.5#. He has
lost some weight this past week. But he is a very round cat and looks very
large. Vet thought the fast would help the liver detox.
That sort of tells me he thought Tiny was overweight and not eating well
despite what I reported.
I had to ask several times about blood work to check out the liver and kidneys.
He finally drew some blood and will have at least some of the results back by
tomorrow (Sunday morning).
Can’t believe how cooperative my cat was. Given the stressfulness of the situation,
he traveled without a carrying case, sitting quietly on my lap once I began to drive.
On the way back he lay on the seat next to me without any visible stress. At the vet’s
he stayed on my lap and then on the exam table without any fussing. He was not
lethargic; it seemed more like he was trusting me to try and take care of him.
He is a cat with a very strong mind of his own and an attitude about his perceptions
of things—he knows how things are supposed to be!
He can be very aggressive with other cats that cross his boundaries, but when we had
this obnoxious guest cat a year ago, Tiny never once fought with him after I told him
that we needed to treat this displaced cat with kindness. The guest cat took Tiny’s passivity
as a sign that he could be an aggressive alpha male so the situation became unbearable
and Tiny was super stressed out. That guest cat became a guest no more and it took
several months to bring Tiny back into the house and feel comfortable again. He still
won’t eat in the kitchen.
I did a repertorization of the case but would interested in what other people see in it
for a remedy.
tanya