Morgana, the Claustrophobic Kitty
For over ten years, my family and I have had several cats
sharing our home with us. Our first kittens, Tiger and White
Sox, came to us from a friend whose own two cats had produced a
litter simultaneously and she was in desperate need to find good
homes for them. Next to arrive was Bonnie, whom I brought home
after seeing some young kids tormenting her. Then Brat Cat
joined us; her mother was a stray who decided our backyard was a
good birthing place.
And then there was Morgana. She was rescued from the Animal
Shelter when she was still quite young.
By the time Morgana moved in, a little over a year ago, my
husband and I thought ourselves "old hands" regarding litter box
training. With all our previous felines, we'd had little or no
trouble adjusting them to the litter box. At that time, White
Sox and Brat Cat were the only two living in the house. Bonnie
had passed on and Tiger refused to be a house cat, preferring to
live outdoors.
Morgana was a challenge.
When she first came to us, she was about six weeks old,
newly-weaned. We kept her in our bedroom the majority of the
time for the first month for two reasons. First, since that is
where my husband and I spent most of our time, it was easier to
train her to use the litter box which was kept in our bathroom.
Second, we wanted to give White Sox time to adjust to the new
kitten, as she is rather old and doesn't like changes.
We had a large covered litter box in our living room which our
other cats shared. For Morgana, we placed a smaller, uncovered
box in our bathroom. It took about three weeks before Morgana
was consistently using the litter box, which was longer than it
had taken our other cats but we weren't overly-concerned.
The trouble began once we moved Morgana into the other parts of
our home. Since she was still too little to climb into the
larger litter box, we put the smaller one in the living room
also. But after she became large enough, we put the smaller one
away. And then Morgana rebelled. She began leaving little
"surprises" for us all over our living room furniture.
We thought she just needed to be re-adjusted to the larger box,
so we began our training over again. But none of our tried and
true techniques worked this time. Whenever we'd put her in the
litter box, she would jump right back out. And if we tried to
keep her there, we would get several scratches for our trouble.
My husband and I didn't know what else to do; we talked to other
cat owners we knew to see if they might know a reason for her
strange behavior. One friend mentioned that cats sometimes act
out when their environment undergoes a change, but I couldn't
see how anything had changed - other than her being around the
other cats more often and she seemed to enjoy that. White Sox
didn't much care for the frisky kitten and did her best to stay
far away from Morgana. But Brat, being younger, loved to play
with Morgana.
Another friend suggested Morgana's behavior might be caused by
not keeping the litter box clean enough to suit her. Of course,
we knew that cats would often not use a dirty litter box, and so
we would scoop it out every couple of hours. But now we began to
clean the litter box more often; every time we saw White Sox or
Brat occupy it, in fact.
But still Morgana refused. I looked around on the internet,
trying to find some advice on this problem, and discovered it's
recommended to have one litter box for each cat and a spare.
Sharing had never bothered our other four cats, but we went out
and bought three more large, covered litter boxes anyway.
Morgana was not impressed by our consideration for her
cleaniness. Her "surprises" continued. Then it occurred to us
that, perhaps, she was adverse to sharing a litter box with any
other cat. So we removed the large, covered litter box into our
bathroom where only she would have access to it. That didn't
work either.
My husband and I were just about at our wits' end. We had no
idea what else we could do, short of making her an outside cat.
We'd tried every suggestion from friends and the internet we
came across and nothing helped.
And then our son gave us the clue we needed. He was playing with
the cats one day, and he tossed a blanket on top of Morgana. She
went wild; hissing and clawing until she got out from underneath
the blanket. We realized our little Morgana had a fear of being
enclosed, as she was inside the covered litter box. I suppose
this derived from her time spent in a cage at the shelter with
so many other kittens.
However it began, we now knew what to do. We took off the cover
of the litter box for Morgana and it took no time at all before
she was happily visiting it all the time.