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Title: | Meower Power is Valuing Differences |
Notice: | FELINE_V1 is moving 1/11/94 5pm PST to MISERY |
Moderator: | MISERY::VANZUYLEN_RO |
|
Created: | Sun Feb 09 1986 |
Last Modified: | Tue Jan 11 1994 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 5089 |
Total number of notes: | 60366 |
17.0. "Cats are..." by XENON::GAUDREAU () Wed Jun 13 1984 15:55
The following is something about cats which may or may not appeal to
the better nature of some cat lovers. It pokes a little fun at our
masters. My MASTER is a sassy 17 pound gray tiger (female) and knows
all the tricks...
Cats,
Cats are a peculiar breed.
They usually lay around all day, seemingly enjoying the fat of the land.
It is pointless to name them, they never come when you call.
They act as though they are the masters, surely not at all.
The point I say, is why?
Cats aren't stupid but very sly.
We think we commmand, but all cats know the truth, they rule the land....
More yet,
When was the last time you said hi to your cat. This morning? Maybe
just as you left for work? or did you just ignore the poor beast. You
must remember that your cat is man's best friend. Forget that stuff
about dogs, when was the last time your dog pounced on a mouse, lazily
& with great finesse, tore its little head off, and scattered the
insides around the floor? Why, without cats, we would be overrun with
rodents in mere minutes. You should constantly worship the very chair
that your cat decides to use (day & night), even though it it YOUR
chair and YOU want to use it ANY time that you have the desire. Not
that you can't use it of course, just wear a pair of very heavy leather
gloves and use every bit of your awesome strength to haul that beastie
off the cushions while in the process, ripping the chair to pieces.
Sometimes, though infrequently, your cat has to do something other than
sleep the day away. Some of their prime habits are eating your food,
abiding to the famous nature call any old place (especially if they can
scratch), and the best of all, irritating the hell out of you, the
"master". Take food for example, we all need it, whether it be Grouse
from La Machine or Sushi from the cat food can. Cats need food just as
badly as we do, only they pretend that they are above it. That's why
they appear to be so finicky. You ever see a cat tear into a bowl of
cat food that is has felt below its station after a few days of not
eating. Finicky? Sure they are. Just look how readily they eat your
food, particularly, when you aren't watching them help themselves from
your table. After the eating all that food, something has to give
somewhere. You build the pressure up and something has to go. Cats, in
this regard, are the experts of the animal kingdom. So neat, so
careful, they sneer at toilet paper and any similar products. Cats go
to great pains to escape your notice while they "take care of
business". If you should ever make the mistake of glancing over at the
litter box whilst a cat is engaging in the creation of fertilizer, you
will be greeted with the hardest, coldest stare you have ever gotten.
Cats seem to be waiting for you to look. They know you will and when
you do, they turn on Mr. Frosty. Cats in general have several different
kinds of stares and intensities. They never look at anything, they just
stare. Some stares let you know that they want out NOW. Some mean feed
me NOW. Others say messages like, you MAY (take that as WILL) pet me
now, don't touch me, back off, OH YEA?, and lastly, there's my favorite
stare of all. The contest stare. Cats can stare almost anything down
because they have quite a lot of patience (no, they are not doctors).
Cats will stare down people, dogs, birds, plants, and rocks. They
almost always win too. You notice though, that cats never try to stare
down other cats (except in the tourny) because it's usually not worth
the effort. I have the proud distinction to stare down a cat. I spent
nearly 13 hours doing it, but the cat lost. He probably just got bored,
otherwise, I'd still be there staring and staring, with several empty
cases of Visine behind me. Now you may start to wondering how cats can
bug you. Just think about it for a minute. Every cat in the world,
past, present, & future, knows what it takes to bother anybody,
anything, anywhere. Say you like to sleep until say 9 a.m. Your cat,
looking out for your better interests, is likely to wake you at 4 a.m.,
just so you can rise with the sun, see the glorius new day, and raise
your blood pressure a little while you jog after your cat. Why is it
that cats know just how far away to stay from potential danger? You
could be laying on your couch, minding your own business (which the cat
has some stock in) and the cat would scratch your dangling hand a
trifle (i.e. removing your fingers). You would then attempt grabbing at
the cat, forgetting that it is a completely useless thing to do, only
to find that your cat is a mere 2 inches beyond your grasp. The cat
population is more than healthy because of this unique and useful
trait. Small wonder too, what would you do if you caught it? Let it
rake your face until you dropped it? By avoinding capture, the cat is
just proving in yet another way that it is looking out for your better
interest!
May 22, 1984.
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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17.1 | | WILVAX::NICHOLE | | Wed Jun 13 1984 18:34 | 4 |
| Bravo! I loved every minute of it while I'm sitting here at my VT laughing
and saying "Yah, Yah!".
Nichole
|
17.2 | | XENON::GAUDREAU | | Thu Jun 14 1984 12:04 | 5 |
| Glad to have a fan. That piece was inspired by a much "loved" cat after
she did some rather "nice" things to my favorite fern...
Joe
-=-
|
17.3 | | REX::GETTYS | | Thu Jun 14 1984 16:48 | 5 |
| I've always thought that there was one main difference between a Siamese and
other more "ordinary" cats - other cats think they own you - the Siamese KNOW!!
it!!!!
/s/ Bob
|
17.4 | | MIGHTY::HERBERT | | Fri Jun 15 1984 12:07 | 33 |
| When I saw the title of this note "Cats are...", I wondered what it could
be. Now I see that it's a great place to tell about the neat way that
cats have of getting the best of all of us. My cats will be very proud
when they see this file.
I like the "look" cats get on their face when they're trying to ignore
you when you're talking to them. They'll be looking off into space, and
you'll see their ear twitch when you start talking, but they'll continue
to look the other direction. You don't want to admit that your "baby"
could be ignoring you, so like a fool, you start calling, "Here kitty...
...pretty kitty...come here....hey!...look over here...." You see the ear
twitch a little more, but the cat's eyes are slowly closing which may be
accompanied by a yawn.
This is too much to take as a parent! So you get clever and try to trick
the cat into looking at you by saying things like "Are you hungry?....
..do you want to go outside?....LOOK! A BUG!...GET THE BUG!...." The cat
will then usually jerk to attention and look at you with big eager eyes.
But when he's discovered it was a trick, he will leave the room in disgust,
and you feel terrible for stooping so low!
Most cats have a good life. They have humans to cater to all of their needs
and to make up excuses for kitty's bad behaviour. When kitty kills your
favorite pet bird you can blame it on "nature's instinct". When kitty
destroys your newly recovered couch it's because she needs to sharpen her
nails and you aren't providing anything else for that purpose (like a tree
in the middle of your living room). If kitty races through your whole
house knocking over potted plants, knick knacks, and priceless heirlooms,
it's because she doesn't get enough excercise and she's just having "fun".
They know that whenever they get yelled at, they'll be back in our good
graces soon because their humans can't stand to be without the kitty's
affection. THEY are in control, and they'll remind us of that constantly.
|
17.5 | | ROYAL::RAVAN | | Fri Jun 15 1984 13:14 | 16 |
| Ever wonder what it is they're saying to us? The Orientals talk all
the time, of course; my husband and I suspect they're just nattering
constantly, sort of a train-of-thought thing ("I'm too warm. There's
a lap. Where is food? That's a bird outside, I want to go out. No
I don't. Where are the people?" and so on). But Abigail, my black-and-
white, chirps lazily at me if I disturb her rest, and sometimes just
when I look at her. It sounds like a mother cat to her kittens, or
maybe the other way around; I can't tell if it's just "Hi", or if
she's muttering kitty insults at the dumb human who can't read
whisker twitches.
One of my favorite cat-language features is the shake of a paw
to indicate disgust. Wish I could do something that graceful to
make a point!
-b
|