Cats are cute, but sometimes so annoying! And it can be very difficult to drive them away: along with the annoyance in the cute mustachioed Murzik, remarkable stubbornness suddenly begins to appear. If the cat sets itself the goal of doing something, it will hurt itself, but it will do it.
Instructions
Step 1
If you really need to chase your pet (or any other cat) away, don't get annoyed, angry, or abusive. The cat will not be able to sue you or write about you in the newspaper, so your atrocity will remain on your conscience. If you do not want to proceed from the principle “do no harm to your neighbor”, push away from the principle “do no harm to yourself”: do you need these very pangs of conscience, without which a person can do without?
Step 2
So, you need to drive the cat away and do it not with a kick or a fireball, but with respect for the cat's dignity. You can try to distract Vaska with some toy and throw her into another room, where (by the pike's will, by the cat's will) there is already a whole bunch of rustling bags, toys and a bowl with a treat. Provide your pet with something to do, and he will no longer need your attention so much.
Step 3
You can scare the cat. Bring a vacuum cleaner into the room and watch the purr flee at full speed to a safe shelter. Difficulties here can be with those cats that are not afraid of the vacuum cleaner, and with those that are too impressionable. Agree, cats, like humans, have different temperaments. Therefore, Murzik, once frightened by the vacuum cleaner, will not remember this tomorrow, but some Gray will remember this for life and will be disgusted to take revenge on you.
Step 4
Gradually start teaching your cat not to be disturbed at certain times. For example, instead of kicking the cat out of the bedroom every night, make it clear to her that she shouldn't go in here at night. Close the door tightly enough so that your gray pet could not open the door with its paw, and if she starts screaming in a voice that is not her own, pleading to be let in, say in an impressive voice several times: "Shoot, Murka, scatter!" Maybe she will not understand the meaning of the words you said, but she must understand the intonation exactly.
Step 5
If we are not talking about a domestic cat, which you are trying to restrict access to certain places, but about a homeless cat that begs on the street, sitting next to your table, at which you eat your dinner in the open air, just try to ignore it. Cats are not stupid creatures. They may not figure out how to get the tray of food out from under the bookcase where they drove it with their own nose, but if they see that they cannot wait for feeding, they will move to some other place. It doesn't matter what the cat thinks about you: she's gone, and that's enough for you.