smokey&Molly
Member Since 2013
Hi my name is Molly.
I am a Christian and I am also disabled. I have a 7 year old male cat named Smokey who is my emotional support animal.
Smokey was adopted to help me about 5 years ago. He has been in excellent health. Suddenly he got diabetes and now I am trying to treat him. He got dangerously low sugar and did not do well on the shots we first tried. i switched him over to the high protein low carb wet diet and he seemed to be doing great! He got new food after being hypoG last sunday after one insulin shot at home. In just two days he seemed like a new cat. The vet has me just wait to see how he was on food. he seemed great! I thought he might be in remission since he just got the condition recently and was not sick that long. His blood reading was 400 at the vet prior to insulin.
This thurs and friday he seems a little slow and didn't seem as happy and playful as he suddenly was the first few days on the new food. He seemed a little dehydrated on friday and I was worried.
I got a home test kit but waited until friday to test because he was seeming great for the first three days and he gets very angry about being messed with in certain situations. My vet said I need to test him. It was awful and the cat was hissing, mad and fiercly trying to get away.I pricked him four times and finally got blood. his reading one and 1/2 hours after food was 262. The vet said that wasn't bad considering. I cried off and on that night because I hurt the cat and and am worried that the trust he has for me will be broken. He has some problems with trust due to his background as a rescue who had a hard start in life. He is an emotional support animal, but I have had to work on him and help heal him in the trust department and he's improved, but he's not like my last emotional support kitty.But Just having him here is nice and it helps me a lot and he supports me. I am very bonded to the kitty and don't want to lose him. But he's not a calm and docile cat all the time. he is aggressive and outgoing just naturally which if he's mad can turn to him getting really mad. But when he's fine he's just an outgoing male cat that is dominant. He has liked to be carried and is nice when feeding, allows petting in certain ways and he's a smart boy that likes living here. We know he loves his home and he misses us if we are gone very long.
Being disabled this has been very hard for me emotionally. Everything from the shock, to the high vet bills, to the ups and downs and now the problems with trying to test his ears when he is upset.
I watched lots of videos online so I knew what to do, but I still didn't know if you hit the vein or not on the ear. I later assumed you hit the vein. I read today you DO NOT hit the vein. Also the lacet when through the ear like a piercing. I didn't know if that was how deep you went or not. He got two piercings in his ear today which I feel terrible about. I had a friend help me and it was better. We got enough blood on the first one, but the meter was not set up correctly so I got an error message. I tried a second time and could not get enough blood. I did not get a reading and since the cat seemed super good again this morning just on food and water. i am not doing it again today because both ears about got it in the last 24 hours and he was hiding from me and not wanting to be bothered. He was also petty and seemed to be feeling good so I will test in again in a few days I guess. I wish i could safely do it as often as other people but my cat might be too emotionally effected if I do it too much. He might become mean if you even try to pet him, which was how he was acting today.
Testing right now is the part that is hard. He's not calm when i do it and I didn't have the testing kit understood, but I thought I did. I have concerns about my cats relationship with me and its very sad he seems like he doesnt want me to touch him. He was already sensitive. Any help on making testing better would be welcomed. Thanks for reading this. Molly and Smokey
I am a Christian and I am also disabled. I have a 7 year old male cat named Smokey who is my emotional support animal.
Smokey was adopted to help me about 5 years ago. He has been in excellent health. Suddenly he got diabetes and now I am trying to treat him. He got dangerously low sugar and did not do well on the shots we first tried. i switched him over to the high protein low carb wet diet and he seemed to be doing great! He got new food after being hypoG last sunday after one insulin shot at home. In just two days he seemed like a new cat. The vet has me just wait to see how he was on food. he seemed great! I thought he might be in remission since he just got the condition recently and was not sick that long. His blood reading was 400 at the vet prior to insulin.
This thurs and friday he seems a little slow and didn't seem as happy and playful as he suddenly was the first few days on the new food. He seemed a little dehydrated on friday and I was worried.
I got a home test kit but waited until friday to test because he was seeming great for the first three days and he gets very angry about being messed with in certain situations. My vet said I need to test him. It was awful and the cat was hissing, mad and fiercly trying to get away.I pricked him four times and finally got blood. his reading one and 1/2 hours after food was 262. The vet said that wasn't bad considering. I cried off and on that night because I hurt the cat and and am worried that the trust he has for me will be broken. He has some problems with trust due to his background as a rescue who had a hard start in life. He is an emotional support animal, but I have had to work on him and help heal him in the trust department and he's improved, but he's not like my last emotional support kitty.But Just having him here is nice and it helps me a lot and he supports me. I am very bonded to the kitty and don't want to lose him. But he's not a calm and docile cat all the time. he is aggressive and outgoing just naturally which if he's mad can turn to him getting really mad. But when he's fine he's just an outgoing male cat that is dominant. He has liked to be carried and is nice when feeding, allows petting in certain ways and he's a smart boy that likes living here. We know he loves his home and he misses us if we are gone very long.
Being disabled this has been very hard for me emotionally. Everything from the shock, to the high vet bills, to the ups and downs and now the problems with trying to test his ears when he is upset.
I watched lots of videos online so I knew what to do, but I still didn't know if you hit the vein or not on the ear. I later assumed you hit the vein. I read today you DO NOT hit the vein. Also the lacet when through the ear like a piercing. I didn't know if that was how deep you went or not. He got two piercings in his ear today which I feel terrible about. I had a friend help me and it was better. We got enough blood on the first one, but the meter was not set up correctly so I got an error message. I tried a second time and could not get enough blood. I did not get a reading and since the cat seemed super good again this morning just on food and water. i am not doing it again today because both ears about got it in the last 24 hours and he was hiding from me and not wanting to be bothered. He was also petty and seemed to be feeling good so I will test in again in a few days I guess. I wish i could safely do it as often as other people but my cat might be too emotionally effected if I do it too much. He might become mean if you even try to pet him, which was how he was acting today.
Testing right now is the part that is hard. He's not calm when i do it and I didn't have the testing kit understood, but I thought I did. I have concerns about my cats relationship with me and its very sad he seems like he doesnt want me to touch him. He was already sensitive. Any help on making testing better would be welcomed. Thanks for reading this. Molly and Smokey