[Search for users]
[Overall Top Noters]
[List of all Conferences]
[Download this site]
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 |
181.0. "Feline Burnout" by LISZT::HART () Fri Dec 06 1985 13:37
This article is a reprint from the University of Connecticut's
DAILY CAMPUS newspaper, dated November 13,1985. It was sent to me by
my daughter, who appreciates my love for cats.
FELINE BURNOUT
by Diane White (a syndicated columnist)
* Does your cat sleep most of the time?
* When she's not sleeping, does she lie around listlessly
staring into space?
* Does your cat sometimes, for no apparent reason, dash madly
from one end of the house to the other, then collapse in a
heap?
* Does she perk up at the sound of a can opener then turn her
nose up at the contents of the can?
* Does she need catnip to relax and have a good time?
* Does your cat go on unexplained meowing jags?
* Has she lost her sense of humor?
If you answered 'yes' to any one of the above questions then your
cat may be suffering from feline burnout.
The everyday stresses placed upon cats are at an all-time high.
Cats are expected to be companions, playmates, child-surrogates,
entertainers, even therapists. The result is that many cats,
overburdened with responsibilities, required to wear too many 'hats',
are burned out.
Take the case of Tom (not his real name). Tom had always been a
vital, active cat, outgoing and playful, interested in other animals,
in people, and especially in ripping his owner's furniture to shreds.
Then slowly, almost imperceptibly, he began to change. Finally he
withdrew and hid, emerging only at night, when, in the hours before
dawn, he would sit on his owner's head, dig his claws into her scalp
and meow.
"It almost seemed," Tom's owner's said, "that he was trying to
tell me something."
Indeed he was. The source of Tom's problem came out in
counseling with a feline burnout specialist. it seems that Tom's
owner read somewhere that a good way to wind down from there
high-pressure job was to sit in a comfortable chair stroking her cat
Page 2
and talking about her problems.
Relaxing for the owner perhaps, but not for the cat. Tom didn't
want to hear all his owner's troubles. He had enough of his own. Oh,
it looks easy, lying around, being fed and petted and played with,
having your every need catered to. How many times have you looked at
your cat and said, enviously, :Boy, what a life"?
But try to see it from the cat's point of view. she has her own
life to live in addition to her job, or jobs. Humans who selfishly
place too many demands on their cats are openly inviting feline
burnout. Not every cat is cut out for a career.
Feline burnout appears in many forms. In some cases it may seem
like simple boredom, in others like hysteria. Sometimes it may
surface as catnip-dependency.
And it can occur for any number of reasons. Loneliness can cause
it, but so can too much stimulation. Cats need companionship but they
also need time to be on their own, their own personal space in which
they feel free to express themselves as cats.
Once you identify feline burnout, what can you, as an owner, do
to alleviate it?
1. Try to become more aware to your own compulsive and
too-demanding patterns.
2. Nurture your cat, don't expect your cat always to nurture
you.
3. Try not to be judgmental. When she tracks kitty litter all
over your clean floor, when she rips holes in your new
pantyhose, try to understand that she may only be trying to
make contact with her true self.
4. Change your schedule completely to make your life more
"cat-centered".
5. Place a large brown paper grocery bag in the middle of the
floor. Place a pinch of catnip inside it. Stand back.
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
181.1 | | DR::BLINN | | Sat Dec 07 1985 15:18 | 4 |
| And make a trip to Bertha's Kitty Boutique, allowing the cat a chance to
pick the items of his or her preference..
Tom
|
181.2 | | PEN::KALLIS | | Mon Dec 09 1985 10:09 | 4 |
| ... not to mention an all-night sniffing spree in a butcher's shop or
fish market rented for the occasion....
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
181.3 | | EDEN::CWALSH | | Tue Dec 10 1985 09:49 | 4 |
| Or, get your cat a helper to make it easier for her to take care of YOUR
needs. Sometimes two or three (or even more) helpers are required to share
the load...
|
181.4 | | ASYLUM::SIMON | | Wed Jan 22 1986 13:42 | 12 |
| Hmmm.
I always wondered what the problem was. I'm sending Tigger and Einstein
to the office and spending my day in front of the Window or Wood Stove.
Then, when they get home, they can fix me dinner and I'll lie on the floor
at their feet while they scratch me behind the ears and tell me their problems.
It seems only fair that a role reversal should occur in order to understand
the plight of the burned out feline.
My customers will probably understand the cat more than they understand me!
|