by Wolf » Tue Jun 02, 2015 10:50 pm
I don't know if anyone can give you an adequate answer as to what is going on in this birds mind. I suppose that it could be as Pajarita suggested that the honeymoon period is over. but even if that is true, there is still a combination of influences that we are unaware of at work here with the visit to the vets office some how being the trigger. The behaviors that you describe are not normal for a parrot, yet he had to have learned them from someplace. They are the actions of a parrot that is obviously fighting for its life out of fear. Or they could be the actions of a parrot that has learned that this is the only way to get what it wants from a human, probably due to the human not listening to the bird. Or at least these are the only two circumstances that I am currently aware of that bring about this type of sustained behavior in a normally social and relatively peaceable bird or other creature.
It is possible that none of us will ever actually know the real reason behind these behaviors, but we can be certain that the bird has a very real and valid reason for them. The only thing that is left other than observation in hopes of understanding the causes is to figure out what can be done to counter the effects so as to restore good behaviors. This may be the end result of a string of events which only time and loving patience can heal. Because of this set of thoughts I would operate on the premise that for whatever reason, the bird is terrified and act accordingly.
Mimi, my 16 year old Amazon was that traumatized when she came to live with me. It has been 2 years of a long slow process of relieving her fears and allowing her to heal. There have been may set backs in this time and for no reason that we could find, there have been times where she would try to take a step out of her fear on her own and right afterwards regress right back and be months before she could pull herself back together. During this whole process I have never pushed her to do anything at all. I still can't show her a nut that she loves, and eagerly devours when placed in her dish, in my hand without her immediately retreating screaming to the back of her cage. At this point in time, I fully expect it to still be years if ever, before she heals from what was done to her, to begin to remotely act like a parrot of her species should act. She is making improvements, but they are so slow in coming that they can't be measured in day or even in weeks but in months at the very least.
Just don't let it get you discouraged, the bird does not want to be this way, it goes against all of its natural instincts and its natural nature and that in itself is a source of stress for him. The only tools that you have that can help him are love, patience and consistency. And time.