Poor Travis. Twelve years ago this summer, he ran out into an isolated, one-lane country road in front of my car. I had to swerve to miss him, but he just stood there. My son got out of the car, and this tiny, sickly, 4-week-old kitten jumped up into his arms. Travis was born with congenital herpes, and at 3 months we nearly lost him. Travie is the sweetest, most loving cat I've ever owned. He sings to birds. He has never in his life shown aggression to anything. He makes friends with everyone. The dogs even let him drink milk out of their bowls.
He has a chronic problem with constipation. He always has problems going. Sometimes he gets so bound up he can't go at all. He's had two surgeries already. Both times he was in the hospital for a week. Last time the bill was $900. Vet said he might need a colostomy.
Travie is 12. While by no means ancient, he's no spring chicken anymore. I've decided I really don't want to put him through the surgery again. Not to mention me. And my pocketbook. And knowing that surgery will not fix the problem but just remove the present blockage -- maybe even make the overall problem worse -- I don't see the point. I've tried dietary changes. He never gets dry cat food -- only fresh meat, milk, and eggs. Won't eat pumpkin, which was the only suggestion the vet could offer.
Anyway, we're back at that emergency stage again. Milk of mag and suppositories aren't budging this. I know from previous experience that my choices at the vet will be surgery or euthanasia. Conventional medicine, as far as I have been able to research, has nothing else for him. I've been tapping for him, and I strongly believe that I must find a way to heal him energetically or let him go.
I feel a little responsible because I didn't tap enough for him before he got this bad. Resistance, perhaps? Maybe I'm responsible, if he is physically expressing some blockage in my own energy field.
I would appreciate any suggestions. And if anyone wants to surrogate-tap for a sweet little stray kitty who just happens to be the light of his mother's life, we'd take that too.