Dear Friend,
Are you experiencing any of these challenges:
Your cat is not using the litter box consistently.
Your cat is spraying.
Your dog is difficult to house train.
Your dog's house training seems to have disappeared.
Did you know that abdominal adhesions might be the cause of the problem?
ClevelandClinic.com describes adhesions in humans after surgery as:
"scar tissue that forms between abdominal tissues and organs that causes your tissues and organs to stick together. Surgery of the abdomen is the main cause of this scar tissue."
The same thing can and does occur in animals!
Many animals can tolerate the pain and discomfort of adhesions, but some cannot.
Those able to tolerate it at first may, months or years later, reach a point where the discomfort becomes overwhelming and results in issues we think are behavioral, but are really pain based.
New kitten, Melissa, misses litter box while recovering from spaying.
My kitten, Melissa, about 4 days after her spay surgery, left a huge puddle of pee on the floor right next to the litter box.
I told her: "I know you are a very clean cat, and you wouldn't pee on the floor unless there's a problem. What's going on?"
Melissa admitted to discomfort while urinating, and when I checked her abdomen, sure enough, there were several adhesions and they were very painful to her.
I cleared her adhesions using energy healing,
and she never used the floor again to urinate.
Note: Some cases require multiple healing sessions to get all the adhesions cleared.
I checked in with Melissa as she continued to heal from the surgery and cleared several small adhesions over a few weeks. Her litter box usage remained consistent.
Male cat who started avoiding litter box at just over 1 year old.
A client contacted me about their 18 months old male cat who had just started spraying.
In this case, the cat's neuter surgery had involved searching around inside his abdomen for a testicle that had not descended prior to the surgery.
While he was able to tolerate the discomfort for almost a year, it had finally become too much, and the cat was using the litter box inconsistently.
As soon as a healing session was completed,
the cat returned to normal litter box usage.
Note: I've also done successful healing sessions for male cats who had normal neuter surgeries and who developed adhesions that contributed to spraying behavior.
After 29 years of experience communicating telepathically with animals, I know there are many reasons why cats stop using a litter box or why a dog might be a house training challenge.
Adhesions after surgery is just one possible factor.
During an Animal Communication session, it is usually possible to pinpoint the causes of the unwanted behavior.
Then you and I and your animal can develop a Plan-of-Action to get the issue resolved as quickly as possible.
To get started, purchase an Animal Communication session.