No, this is not about cat training boot camp!
If training your cat to sit, stay and heel is your goal, perhaps
you should get a dog. If training your cat to adroitly perch himself
over your toilet to do his business is your goal, perhaps this article
is not for you either. This article is for all of us who would be happy
training our cat to just use the litter box instead of our comforter,
closet or shoes. This is for owners who would be happy training their
cat to use a scratching post instead of the stereo speakers. If you're
like me, you admire your cat for being a cat and you want him to behave
as nothing other than a cat, but a well-behaved one.
Why do cats do the things they do. Fortunately, we'll never know
or even come close to knowing everything. The feline mystique is what
often attracts us to our cats and makes them so fun and interesting to
live with. But it sure would be nice if we could understand them enough
to train our cat to stop urinating in our closet!
Before we start training our cats to do something or to stop
doing something, we need to look at how cats learn. They don't
understand English, they can't read books or attend lectures. They learn
by experience. If the experience is good, they will try to repeat it.
If the experience is unpleasant, your cat will try to avoid it in the
future. Cats enjoy raking the furniture with their claws, so they
continue to do it. But it's quite a shock when they stick their nose in a
candle flame, so they won't do that again.
The key to training a cat and understanding cat behavior is to
make sure that whatever you want your cat to do is exceedingly rewarding
and pleasurable. Whatever you don't want your cat to indulge in must
never be rewarding or fun, in fact, it must be unpleasant.
Sometimes we unintentionally reward our cat for obnoxious
behavior. A common complaint is that the cat pounces on the owner at
five in the morning, meowing up a storm and generally being a pest. What
do the owners do? They get up and feed the cat,
play with him or let him outside. You have trained your cat to wake you
up! Your cat has learned that his behavior gets him exactly what he
wants.
Many owners become frustrated because they can't catch the cat
in the act of the crime, so instead they show the cat the evidence
(usually a wet spot on the carpet or pieces of shredded drapery) and
discipline the cat at that time. A common training (mal)practice is
grabbing the cat, pointing out the wet spot, then dragging him to the
litter box and forcing him to dig in the litter. If you do this, you are
training your cat that being reached for by the owner is a bad
experience and that the litter box is a torture chamber. It is usually
difficult if not impossible to catch the cat in the act because most
cats have already learned that being caught is bad news.
Reprimands simply do not work when training your cat. If you catch kitty
in the act, he will only misbehave when you are not around. If you
punish the cat later, he will not associate the reprimand with the crime
(you will also be training your cat to mistrust you). In either case,
the misbehavior will continue. Some cats misbehave just to get attention
and the attention is enough of a reward to cause kitty to continue his
ways. So what do we do?
If you want to prevent cat problems from occurring, or train
kitty to stop his bad habits, the answers are the same. Begin with a
clean slate and give your cat a fresh start.
Stop all reprimands and punishment. Concentrate on making
your relationship fun, rewarding, playful and interesting. Sometimes
this change alone will solve your cat training problems. Cats are known
to become overly active and destructive when bored. Daily play sessions
and relaxing massages help your cat calm down. Cats that feel neglected
will often stop using their litter box. If you schedule regular sessions
to give your cat undivided attention and to play games with him, even
litter box problems can disappear almost overnight.
Set up your cat to succeed in performing those behaviors
you want her to learn so she can be rewarded. The most effective method
of cat training is through rewards. This will give you the opportunity
to reward and praise him for good behavior.
Set up the cat's environment so that his misbehavior is
not a rewarding experience. Let's take a look at furniture scratching as
an example. While making your cat's scratching post fun, rewarding and
exciting, the training process also requires you to make the furniture
unattractive as a clawing item. Instead of you telling the cat to avoid
the furniture, let the furniture itself tell the cat to stay away. It's
up to you to find something your cat does not like. See the cat
scratching training article for full details.
Maybe you are into training your cat to jump through a hoop;
maybe you just want him to stop climbing the drapes. Whatever the case,
remember that cats learn best through the use of rewards, praise and
positive reinforcement. Set kitty up to succeed. Set yourself up to
succeed with your cat. It works, and it simplifies training your cat.
It's a lot more fun when training succeeds for both of you.
I hope our cat training articles will help you better understand
your cat's behavior - the whys, dos, don'ts and hows - so that you and
your cat can have a fun, rewarding and lasting relationship.