We need help calming a terrified cat. We adopted a 6 month old kitten from a rescue shelter.?

He started life feral but has resided at a shelter and was reasonably social with other cats and let workers pet him.

The same day we also adopted another 6 month old kitten who's very social and well adjusted.

We knew he'd be "skittish" at first, so we let him out of the carrier and put food, water and a litter box down for him and gave him space.

After the first night, we looked for him and couldn't find him.

The 2nd night we heard a crash in the kitchen, we approached and he went ballistic, running to and fro, jumping straight up, breaking stuff; it was sad. We left him alone and he disappeared again overnight.

We figured out that he'd found a hiding place inside kitchen cabinet behind the dishwasher. We've coaxed him out and blocked the entrance.

The other kitty interacted with him and seemed to be trying to calm and encourage him, talking and trilling.

Now he's in the closet. We'll continue to be patient and give him space.

Any suggestions on easing him into our home?

Pamela C2007-09-24T18:08:40Z

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I think you are doing a fine job. It will take patience-- and space. I got a mangled, Persian cat, with bronchial problems and a matted closed anal cavity from the shelter and had to take him home and put him in a lukewarm bath immediately to soak you-know-what-off, and clip him a bit! They said he had been on the streets. He was traumatized for awhile, but I left him in a separate room daily, while I was at work for a week or two before I forced him to associate with the other cat in a strange surrounding. (P.S. I went to get a cuddly kitten, but felt this one wouldn't make it if I didn't rescue him quick! He's a blue ribbon, for sure, today.) Hang in there, he'll come to know your love and ease up a bit. Just keep speaking to him gently... reassuring him. Good luck.

Anonymous2007-09-24T18:10:57Z

Time, patience, and affection are the best things to try. It sounds like your kitty had a hard life before the shelter, and it depends largely on his personality how he adapts. I have had cats start out that way that never recovered, but most have eventually become part of the family. It helps that you have another kitty friend that is trying to help out.

A couple of suggestions, other than the above, are: contact the shelter you adopted him from and ask what techniques they used with him and what worked best; experiment with different treats and toys to see what he likes and then use them as lures to get just a few minutes' interaction with him each day; the more he sees that interaction brings rewards, the more likely he'll start initiating interactions; once you find a treat he likes, remove the food from his hidey hole in the morning (it won't hurt him, just make him more willing to venture out), and then in the afternoon or evening offer him a favored treat. If it doesn't work wait a little while then put his food back in and try it a day or two later. He needs to associate interaction with reward. If all else fails, and you have a treat you know he loves, try luring him out with a string, and as soon as he's remotely close enough put a treat down for him for coming that far. I've never known a cat that can resist the string!

cyndy d2007-09-24T18:35:16Z

As long as your patient.. that is the key.

He's in a new area and needs time to adjust. Make your home cat proof (kinda like baby proof) he'll come around after a few more days and talk to you. Move slow in his presence, he thinks any movement will be getting him. He'll first only come out when the house is quiet and probably at night. That's when he'll eat, drink and check out the house. Then when he feels safe some during the day he'll come out. It's ok to know where he is but I'd say don't drag him out just yet - let him think he's hiding.

No problems unless he misses the cat box or messes else where. In time, maybe a month he'll come out when it's just you (the people that live there). He'll run when other people come by, and the longer people visit then he'll come out. Remember it would be like you just moved to another state or country ~ everything is strange. Be Patient a little longer, it will pay off.

Interact with the other one, giving him treats etc, He'll get jealous and maybe compete. Consult with the shelter if still unsure.

Anonymous2007-09-24T18:02:50Z

I was just about to ask the same question, I'm rescuing a Siamese kitten about 6 months old and she a little timid..It usually takes a cat about 2 weeks or more to feel at home, because they got trauma from being born to staying in a shelter than someone taking them into a car, then home. he doesn't know where he is yet so give em' time. If he liked being around other cats, it was probably a good idea to get another one, but it would have been better to get one he knew and was most friendly too. I'm not saying you've made a bad choice but that would have been best.

Anonymous2007-09-24T18:19:06Z

I rescued a cat with a similar background. He was terrified of everything and everyone. My answer in the end was to do nothing. At night he would eat the food that we put out, we could hear him playing with the other cats, then during the day he would hide. We made no attempt to coax him out and just left him to get on with it. As weeks went by he gradually copied the other cats and would appear in doorways only to run away again if he thought we were watching him but he eventually had enough confidence to come into rooms when we were around.

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