T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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378.1 | Of course, this isn't lust, but... | DONJON::SCHREINER | danger zone | Fri Nov 07 1986 13:05 | 20 |
| I don't have both, I only have the feline kind of kids, but I must
admit that I do the same thing. I will say that I love all my cats,
but the emotional ties with some of them are much stronger than
others. Fire is my "baby"....the emotional attachment between the
two of us is incredible...I loved him from the first time I saw
him at 4 months of age at a cat show. I then proceded to follow
him around from show to show until I was "in the right place at
the right time", and at almost a year old, Fire became mine. I
can remember even before I owned him, he would see me coming at
a cat show and he would start to get excited and talk up a storm.
He never even got that excited when he saw his "at that time" owner
coming up to him. Actually, he barely ever even woke up at a show.
So, I guess I've gone on long enough ... but, I do think we have
bonds with our cats, and I think, like people, sometimes your just
attracted to each other.
purrs
cin
|
378.2 | cats are NOT kids | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Nov 07 1986 13:38 | 20 |
| One of my friends, who doesn't own cats, is always saying that I
treat mine like children. In fact, she is always saying that both
of us should have children, since she thinks I lavish affectation
on the critters. Margie is a sweet person, but I don't think she
really understands why I have cats and not dogs, for example. I
am only home maybe one night a week, and am usually not around much
on weekends, either. The cats (especially now that there are two
of them to keep themselves entertained; JFCL used to cause a great
deal more trouble when she was Only Cat) can take care of themselves
for long periods of time pretty well. I can go away for a weekend
leaving a bunch of food in one of the automatic machines, fill both
water dispensers, and make sure the kitty box is clean, and the
critters are fine. My mother-in-law can't go anywhere for more
than a few hours because she has to go home to let out the dog (she
thinks he is too old to board at a kennel), and he gets paranoid
if deprived of human companionship for too long. Not to mention
how much care CHILDREN need! I love my cats. They are fun to watch,
affectionate, and good compnay when I am sick or when things aren't
going well, without requiring a whole lot of routine care. They
are NOT my "children".
|
378.3 | Kids is Kids! | NEBVAX::BELFORTE | | Fri Nov 07 1986 15:28 | 27 |
| As one who has all three kinds: cat/kids, dog/kid, and kid/kids;
I gotta say, if I had it to do over I would have my dog/kid, and
cat/kids before and probably instead of my kid/kids. PLEASE, no
flames PLEASE!!!!! I love my son and daughter more than anything
in the world, but they are going to be leaving home soon, and they
have already more or less left in one sense, they have their outside
interests and friends, but my dog/kid and my cat/kids are the light
of my life. They will be with me until the end, they never talk
back (well, the black Siamese does, but just to voice her opinion),
they are there for me if I don't feel well, they are there for me
if I am angry (even if the anger is at them for some reason), and
most important, they are there if I want to cuddle and show some
loving, my son is to big to be held on my lap and kissed and held
in a loving way (he is as tall as I am, and boy is it awkward to
cuddle with him), to hold him I have to stand up, and that isn't
what laps are for.
I talk to my "kids" the same as I talk to my kids, and nobody in
my family thinks we are unusual. Many a time I have heard my daughter
say, "Casey, go find your brother", and the dog will go find my
son. We are always teasing about who the "kids" look like, and the
looks we get from outsiders is great.
So for my sons Brent 13 yrs and Casey Jones 3 yrs, and my daughters
Sarah 11, Hotrail 3 1/2 and Chessie 2 1/2, I bid you ado.
Mary-Lynn
|
378.4 | Purrfect Roommates | EUCLID::LEVASSEUR | Ayatollah of Rock n Rollah | Mon Nov 10 1986 10:56 | 17 |
| I have had many cats in my life, all of which I loved like
friends, one dog, a Labrador Retreiver, I liked almost as much
as my cats. When I had Sabrina, the Lab, well she was the worst
Catophobe I ever knew. If there were a cat in the house she
would have killed it for sure, so after she died, it was back
to cats.
When I have live alone I treated a cat more like a person
than a kid, Like, "well Rascal, what shall we have for dinner
tonight", or I'de talk to the cat as if he/she were a person.
Sometimes I think they *do* understand us. When I've been very
down, the cats have always come and curled up next to me purring
loudly or laid a re-assuring paw on my face. There's also the
secure feeling (for those living alone) of hearing a loud purring
sound from somewhere on or near one's bed. I just look at them
as surrogate companions.
Ray
|
378.5 | | NINJA::HEFFEL | Tracey Heffelfinger | Tue Nov 11 1986 12:39 | 40 |
| I don't think I treat my cats as kids so much as they take the
place of kids in my life.
Let me clarify a bit.
I don't have nor do I have the desire to have kids. My emotional
make-up is such that kids would always be too dependent or not
dependent enough on me. I need to be needed, to have someone that
loves me, that I love, etc. But... I'm a independent person and
I get impatient with people who depend on me too much. So for the
first half of the time they spent with me I'd be going crazy because
the kids would be smothering me, and the rest of the time, I'd go
crazy because they were starting to "leave the nest". (There'd
probably be about, oh, 4 days when the balance was right.) I don't
understand nor have patience with adolescent to teenage kids. (Little
ones aren't bad. As a matter of fact, I'm quite good with them
when I know I can home at the end of the day and leave them with
someone else. ;-))
Cats on the other hand are very much like me. Independent,
playful, choosy with their friends, a bit selfish, intelligent.
I understand them. I think they are perfect companions for me.
My cats need me and some of them, I think, would be quite distraught
if they were separated from me. But they can survive short separations
and they don't smother me like, say, a dog would.
Some would say I treat my cats like kids because they get as
good or better medical attention than most kids I know. (Hell,
I give them better medical attention than I give myself!) And they
have lots of toys and a 2 Kitty jungle Gyms. And I take time of
of work, if necessary, to get them to the vet's or just be with
them while they recover from anesthesia or whatever. But I don't
think so. I think I treat them more like loved (slightly
brain-damaged :-) ) companions.
tlh
mom/companion to 6 of 'em
|
378.6 | Of course, we love our "kids"! | DONJON::KBLUBAUGH | | Wed Nov 19 1986 11:48 | 14 |
| I've lived with my two "kids" for 3 years now, and I know I treat
them much better than I ever would treat a kid/kid. There have
been times (during my "pre-DEC" poverty days) when Underfoot and
Jellybean have eaten the best cat food and had clean litter boxes,
when "mom" had to eat instant mashed potatoes and toast to survive
until the next payday.
Don't get me wrong, I do want to have real kids someday, but right
now living alone with my two loveable children is perfect for me.
There's something about walking in the door after a hard days work,
and saying, "Hi, guys....did you miss me?" and getting nothing more
than very "vocal" meows, purrs, and various other explatives.
Kelley
|
378.7 | I love my "boys" | SUBURB::TAYLORS | MINNIE | Fri Mar 18 1988 07:42 | 28 |
|
I agree entirely with Tracey (see note 5). I do not have any Kid/Kids
and neither do I want any (maybe I will in years to come, who knows??)
but at the moment I am happy with my "boys".
I started off with 2 cats four years ago, "Dillan" and "Elsa".
They were brother and sister and given to me as an 18th birthday
present. Before I had Elsa spayed I decided to let her have a litter
as I'd heard it made them more affectionate (which it did).
She had four kittens all of which she let me watch being born.
I kept one of the liter, the first born, and called him "Sammie".
Unfortunately soon after that Elsa got run over and killed. I was
heart broken and killed but glad that I had one of her offspring
to remind me of her.
Dillan is still around, even after having Key Gaskell Syndrome (see
earlier entry 368.6 I think) and Dillan and Sammie seem both very
happy.
Both come to meet me every night when I arrive home from work and
walk up to the house with me. They both always want cuddles and
talk to me all the time (well..mostly Dillan does cos Sammy can
only manage a few squeeks now and then) and both never tire of playing
with each other (not like Kid/Kids!!)
Because of these reasons I feel I am more attached to my "boys"
than I could ever be towards Kid/Kids.
|
378.8 | I'd rather have cats | CTOAVX::DUSZAK | | Wed Dec 28 1988 12:36 | 9 |
| I have three teenagers and I would rather raise cats. They drive
me crazy. My cats give me comfort and relax me. Also its easier
to leave three cats than three teenagers and go away on vacation.
The cats can stay outside, but God only knows what the kids would
be up to.
|
378.9 | Max-cat and me | CURIE::HAROUTIAN | | Fri Dec 29 1989 16:44 | 11 |
| My Max-cat is fond of being cuddled and loves to be held tucked into my
arm, on his back, with one paw flung across my chest (picture a baby
nursing and you'll get the idea). Stirs something very basic and
protective in me. I guess what I get from Max-cat is similar to the
warm feelings I get from my son, but my relationship with Max-cat is
of course much more limited in scope because his repertoire of
responses is and always will be limited in comparison to that of a
person. Max-cat is sort of always there, willing to be petted and
cuddled pretty much anytime I'm in the mood to pet and cuddle him.
Unconditional type of relationship that I don't have to work hard at.
Lynn
|
378.10 | and they are so beautiful | FORTSC::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Wed Jan 03 1990 12:44 | 8 |
| I think the one aspect of pet ownership that is overlooked is the VISUAL
one. I treasure the interaction I have with my cats and dog, variations on
the parent/child relationship all, but I also get great pleasure in looking
at them....particularly my cats. I find them quite beautiful creatures
to watch - both in repose and at play. I take pleasure in watching these
graceful, healthy, and I hope, happy creatures move around in my world.
I read somewhere once where having a cat was a way of bringing a little bit
of the "wild places" into your heart.....I think that is true.
|
378.11 | I'm facinated by the graceful jumps | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Wed Jan 03 1990 17:45 | 7 |
| RE: .10
personally, I am amazed at some of the jumps that they do. The angles,
the height, the distance, the body contortions. IMHO they far surpass any
acrobats/gymnasts that I've ever watched.
Deb
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