You have the emotional maturity of a blueberry scone.

Giles ,'Touched'


Natter 45: Smooth as Billy Dee Williams.  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Sophia Brooks - Jun 20, 2006 11:11:30 am PDT #2957 of 10002
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

I've tried something like what is advertised on TV, I think. I think the problem is that it has soaked down to the pad, so I really need to saturate the carpet AND pad. Also, in that area, there is no ventilation, so it just sort of gets stuck there, at the bottom of my stairs.


Sophia Brooks - Jun 20, 2006 11:13:04 am PDT #2958 of 10002
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

I suspect you'll get less of the first, more of whether your current cat

Current cat is gone because of my mauling. I think I may get questions about what I did to induce a cat to maul me!

I generally have just found my cats somewhere-- on the street or from a friend. So this adoption thing is new to me!


-t - Jun 20, 2006 11:15:56 am PDT #2959 of 10002
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

Yeah, once it gets into the carpet pad there isn't much you can do. One of the enzyme based things that are supposed to "eat" the organic matter might work, if you can really soak the spot. Unless that's what you've already tried.

Eta: Animal rescue people will priobably have dealt with animals that maul unprovoked - they should understand that you didn't do anything.


tommyrot - Jun 20, 2006 11:18:24 am PDT #2960 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

I generally have just found my cats somewhere-- on the street or from a friend.

An advatage of getting a cat on the street - the first one's always free!


ChiKat - Jun 20, 2006 11:19:46 am PDT #2961 of 10002
That man was going to shank me. Over an omelette. Two eggs and a slice of government cheese. Is that what my life is worth?

The shelter I adopted my cat from said that they would call my landlord to verify I could have a cat and would do 1-2 home visits. They did none of the above.

I did have to fill out a long adoption form and have a 10 minute interview with a person at the shelter, but that was it.


sarameg - Jun 20, 2006 11:22:33 am PDT #2962 of 10002

Nature's Miracle is the most commonly available enzyme thingie.

A lot of fostering groups do home visits these days. Even 10 years ago, the county shelter actually DID call my references to make sure I wasn't planning on making cat soup or something. (Bewildered my poor references. I'd just moved here so no one knew me, except for this couple who were my dad's grad students way back in the day. So they get this call asking about my character and most of their memories of me are from when I was 10! )


Sophia Brooks - Jun 20, 2006 11:25:23 am PDT #2963 of 10002
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Once I actually found a cat IN my apartment.

I had been away for a few days, my cat was with my mother, and when I came home, there was a cat in my apartment. I lived on the second floor with my own entrance. I was freaking out at the movement, though, because I thought it was a rat.

This cat went to live with a friend of mine and had kittens, which now belong to my mother.


bon bon - Jun 20, 2006 11:26:00 am PDT #2964 of 10002
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

Sophia: lock your doors!


tommyrot - Jun 20, 2006 11:26:51 am PDT #2965 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Elephants and other species can experience emotions akin to those present in disturbed people. Writing in the June/July issue of Seed Magazine, GA Bradshaw recounts a the story of pair of "traumatized" elephants who witnessed the slaughter of their families being massacred and grew up to be mass murderers, indiscriminately killing rhinos and other animals. He goes on to discuss the burgeoning body of evidence for parallels to human psychology in many vertebrates and even some invertebrates, and tantalizingly asks whether this means that humans' "unique" and subtle psychologies aren't more common than we like to think.

Until a few years ago, making such inference and diagnosing elephants with PTSD would have been dismissed as anthropomorphism. But no longer. Elephant psychopathology, chimpanzee infanticide and other un-animal-like behaviors are part of a growing body of research that suggests science is building toward a radical paradigm shift. Streams of new data and theories, critically from neuroscience, are converging into a new, trans-species model of the psyche. Humans are being reinstated back into the species continuum that Darwin articulated, a continuum that includes laughing rats, octopuses with personalities, sheep who read emotions from the faces of their family members and tool-wielding crows.

[link]


DawnK - Jun 20, 2006 11:29:14 am PDT #2966 of 10002
giraffe mode

Sophia we just adopted 2 kittens, and even though like ChiKat, I had to fill out a very lengthy form, the only thing they ever really asked me to do is come and talk to them face to face (the form said they would do 1 - 2 home visits before you could take the cat home). I was worried because we live on a boat - sorta out of the norm - and they wouldn't feel comfortable letting us adopt. So I also investigated adopting from the SPCA shelter which didn't have the home visit requirement (but all their kittens were taken).