I once took in a tabby cat named Brush, who was extremely aggressive (2).
Because we were both busy, we didn’t have time to reply to the doctor until after six o’clock.
Doctor: Are you two going to get off work soon?
(Ten seconds later) Are you going to get off work soon?
(Another ten seconds, extremely angry) Are you going to get off work soon!
I put Brush in the sightseeing cage at the door (a large cage with glass windows on both sides and ventilation on the side, the kind that attracts customers at the door of the store.) I thought that there were no cats or dogs on the side, and Brush was cute, so this should be okay.
Unexpectedly, he scared the little girl to tears. Originally basking in the sun, a little girl came over. He also interacted with her through the glass, but after interacting twice, he suddenly bared his teeth at the little girl, scaring the little girl to cry out loud…
I didn’t know how to reply anymore, I could only numbly reply with an emoticon pack, and then frantically called my roommate, asking her to get off work and pick up the cat. I was too embarrassed to see the doctor…

When my roommate picked up the cat, I found that because Brush had more “achievements”, no one dared to press Brush to get vaccinated. When my roommate pressed Brush to get vaccinated, the first shot of triple vaccine was relatively mild, and the second shot of rabies was relatively painful. Brush directly broke away from people and bent the needle.
Doctor: The last time I bent my needle was the big white dog of XX’s family. (It was said that when my big donkey was sterilized and took anti-inflammatory drugs, he also struggled to not bend the pillow, but the big donkey was a fat dog weighing more than 60 kilograms…)
Later we didn’t find the owner of Brush. Maybe the brush itself had no owner, so we gave the brush to a sister in the same community.
When my sister took him to be sterilized, she happened to meet the doctor.
The doctor was still very angry when he saw Brush, and even “bewitched” my sister: “I know this cat, Brush, right? The needle was broken last time. I recently read a document. In fact, the best injection position for cats is the tip of the tail. For Brush’s sake, let’s inject it at the tip of the tail to prevent him from struggling…”
The sister also raised a cat for the first time. She called us with a confused look on her face: “I heard that Brush is particularly suitable for injecting the tip of the tail???”
Hahahaha, it is somewhat a bit of revenge!
To explain the last stalk, the saying that cats should be vaccinated at the tip of the tail has been circulated for a long time, because some cats will develop “injection site sarcoma” after vaccination, not only vaccination, but also other injections may cause it. Of course, the incidence of this disease is not high. Conventional treatment methods generally recommend injecting the vaccine into the cat’s forearm, calf or tail tip, so that if it is really sick, part of the tail can be directly removed.
However, the reason why the public likes to inject the neck is because there are fewer nerves in the neck and it is also easy to hold the cat. As for the tip of the tail, it’s purely a “personal grudge” (dog head).
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