Posted on October 28, 2010.
Why does my cat wee on my business? I live with my family and my 2 cats.
One of my cats started to pee in my room which is very different from her as she was always very clean. Every time I cleaned him and said she just weeds in a different place. But a year later she is still weeing on my business! It will even go to the basket of clean clothes, move until it finds things and my wee on them. It was my shoes, my bags Jasper Conran, everything smells of cat pee! It has never been a friendly cat if it's hard to know what is wrong: (
In addition, she sleeps in my moms room and she hates my brother and I wonder why it did not target?!
I wonder if this is a health problem as I found a place to pee behind the cabinet which had been transformed into an oil like substance and has lost a lot of hair. Even if it is 7-8 years and it wee things on anyone elses makes me think this behavior is more than a health issue, help or advice would be appreciated:)
I guess its because she loves you. It can be attached to you and she can smell your perfume on things so it goes. It could also be territorial when they land they pee on things. It is my best guess good luck.
Maybe a urinary tract infection .. Call your vet or perhaps the local veterinary hospital to find out for sure.
Perhaps a medical problem.
Here are some possibilities that I found online:
Inflammation of the urinary tract may cause painful or frequent urination, inability to urinate, blood in urine, and crying during urination. A cat is likely to eliminate outside the litter box if he comes to associate the box with painful urination, or if it has an urgency to urinate.
Behavioral problems such as litter box aversions, inappropriate site preferences, or urine spraying can also lead to house soiling. An aversion implies that there is something about the litter your cat finds unsavory. It could be the box, the litter, the location of the box, or all three.
Something about the annoyance of your cat litter.
The box contains strong odors. The litter can have an unpleasant odor if you clean it with harsh chemicals. Or, if you do not clean enough, the box is strong smell of ammonia (a normal byproduct of urine). In both cases, litter covered maintain and amplify these odors.
The sides of the box are too high. Cats with painful legs, joint pain, mobility problems or others may have difficulty entering a box with high sides. Kittens have similar problems.
There are many more. Here is the site.