Vet's are accustomed to dealing with animals. Whether using proper handling, special gloves, squeeze cages, carrier, you name it, they can do it. All thus really seems to be is a cry for help, to hold your “pet". Which is sad, really. When new animals come into the home, they should have a Vet' appointment made ASAP. They should also be quarantined, in a designated climate-controlled room, that has low-light and in a quiet setting. You were given ideas on what to do, and if she is indeed pregnant, then, she should be left alone. Feeding, watering and observation. Let her relax and do what she will do. This is why exotics don't make great pets for everyone. All you want to do is hold it, love it, squeze it. Leave her be. Get her to a Vet', stat. Stop procrastinating. If you went into this venture, to purchase a kinkajou, the seller should have never sold you a pregnant female. In the first place. That is irresponsible and shows that he/she was driven by the sale, not what is best for the animal. Was this an impulse buy? Did you even vet the seller? Did the seller ask you a mile-long list of questions about your enclosure, diet, lighting, climate-control, vet services, etc? I doubt it. Do that female a favor while helping yourself in the long-run, take her to the Vet' and get her checked-out, or return her to the seller. This is not gonna end well for the animal. If the seller refuses to refund, which they will. Suck it up and turn that animal over to authorities that can properly care for it. Do it soon, as in tomorrow. Make a choice and stick to it. Before you end up taking pics, which I'm sure you have done and posted them on some website with a 'book, 'gram, 'itter, etc, and have to explain why the animal died, and blame everyone else but yourself. Which, her being in your possession, falls solely on you. Save the animals life and get refunded or eat the cost and give her to the proper authorities that can care for her.