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Conference misery::feline_v1

Title:Meower Power is Valuing Differences
Notice:FELINE_V1 is moving 1/11/94 5pm PST to MISERY
Moderator:MISERY::VANZUYLEN_RO
Created:Sun Feb 09 1986
Last Modified:Tue Jan 11 1994
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:5089
Total number of notes:60366

208.0. "Thumb sucking in cats" by CFIG1::DENHAM () Wed Feb 05 1986 10:17

Has anyone ever heard of a cat that sucks her thumb?  I have one that was
found in an abandoned house when she was about 1 week old.  She was raised
by humans.  I got her from the people who taught her to drink from a dish
and sucking baby formula through rags from that time only to discover
that the wife and the dog were both allergic to her.  When I got her she
didn't even seem to know that she could jump and was very curious about my
other cat.  She developed a lot of her cat-like habits apparently by observing
the older cat. 

Now when she gets content she will cuddle up to a person or the other cat
and put one pad in her mouth suck on it and work the claws on the other paw.
I hoped she would outgrow this but she is now about 5 months old and no sign
of this habit diminishing.  Does anyone know how to stop her?  Does anyone
know if this is in any way harmful? 

/Kathleen
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208.1PEN::KALLISWed Feb 05 1986 14:137
I haven't heard of this before, but it doesn't sound any more harmful than
thumb-sucking in humans (and "the teeth will come in crooked" is a canard).
Probably it's healthier than her sucking tassles or blankets.

Leave it alone; she may outgrow it.

Steve Kallis, Jr.
208.2CAPT::WALSHWed Feb 05 1986 14:1621
From my own experience and previous responses in this file, it appears certain
cats never outgrow their suckling habits.  Fortunately it does not appear to
be harmful. 

The Empress Star loves to suckle my wife's nightgown.  This used to be
a problem, in that she would crawl under the covers on our bed at night
and wake Lynne with a large wet spot on the side and/or numerous puncture
wounds.  Now we have her "trained" to the point that she only tries to
get under the covers when one or both of us is obviously awake.  (Sometimes
I get Lynne up by letting Star sneak under the covers on my side...)
                       
Anyway, a cat that suckles ITSELF should be less of a problem, unless the
noise level is intense.  We have another cat, Muri, who loves to suckle on our
tom, Oscar Gordon.  (Oscar seems to like it as much or more than Muri.  Oscar
is a little weird...)  The only reason we discourage this practice is that
Muri is loud enough to wake the dead, so she has learned that she shouldn't
do this at night in our bedroom.

Other than that, it's pleasurable to the cat, so don't worry about it...

- Chris
208.3DELNI::CLARISSAMon Feb 24 1986 07:0712
    About cats suckling each other or themselves, just be sure to warn
    the vet if you take the cat in to stay overnight. We took two cats
    in to be neutered and the vet let them come out of the anesthesia
    together. The cats were from the same litter and had lost their
    mother young and one loved to suckle on the other. You guessed it,
    one started sucking before either woke up and when we picked up
    the cats one had a big raw spot on his tail that took ages to heal
    and never got it's hair back.
    
    Needless to say we never went back to the vet but I always felt
    sorry for the cats strange looking tail.
    kris
208.4Need for SecuritySQM::MURPHYIs it Friday yet?Fri Apr 03 1987 14:5118
    I've just now read these notes on cats that continue to suckle or
    knead.  Wanted to find out if anyone had come up with a different
    solution than what I've heard over the years - taken from their
    mother too young or lacking something in their diet.  Both of these
    reasons have been repeated in the notes.
    
    Not too long ago I heard, I think it was Paul Harvey on WBZ, that
    there are many "adults" (humans) who still suck their thumbs.  They
    did this when children and continue to now that they're grown up.
    These, mind you, are people in all kinds of businesses.  When they
    take a coffee break it's usually a "thumb sucking break".  Most
    of them have calouses on their thumbs from the many years of sucking
    them.  Perhaps then the other reason cats continue this habit could
    be for the same reason - the need for security (hence the "security
    blanket").  Just something to think about!
    
    Pat
    
208.5security blanket ...25175::KALLISHallowe'en should be legal holidayFri Apr 03 1987 15:3611
    re .4:
    
    This is complicated by the fact that humans have many ways of
    disguising their continued suckling.  Smoking, for instance, is
    one example; pencil-chewing is another.  Cat equivalencies are less
    disguisable: when Morlock went after a tassle and kneaded the cloth
    around it, it was obvious what he was doing.  If he had been a pipe
    smoker [perish the thought], he might have used that as a "mask."
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr.
    
208.6mine sucks thumb tooCTOAVX::DUSZAKThu Oct 27 1988 14:1213
    I couldn't believe what I was reading.  This sounds like my story.
    My daughter brought home a two week old kitten.  The mother was
    killed by a car.  I fed it milk from an eye dropper and it licked
    moist cat food off my finger tip.  This occurred in June, it is
    now Oct and this sweet innocent little thing is still sucking its
    pad on its paw.  She climbs up to my face so I can kiss her as she
    sucks her thumb.  If I don't kiss her head, she touches my lips with
    her wet paw.  She comes for this comfort every time she sees me
    sitting relaxed.  We also had a male neutered cat who tried to be
    a mother to her by washing her and batting her when she got too rough
    in her play.  He still washes her every now and then by putting
    her in a head lock.