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I don't know that it's Alzheimer's, but old cats definitely slow down.
My Merlin, who's 19, seems to stop and think a lot lately, like "uh,
what was I doing, oh yeah looking for Daddy's lap". And he's getting
very hard of hearing, so he seems more spaced out than he really is.
His tired old bones just make him slow. He talks a lot demanding
attention, but usually only when he feels I'm ignoring him. He's
developing cataracts, and he doesn't seem to really smell things unless
you put them right under his nose.
My guess is that the acute senses that cats have relied on all their
lives (hearing, smell, sight, whisker-sense) deteriorate with age.
Their brains are still working, thinking cat thoughts, but they're less
well plugged into the world around them, which is very confusing for
them, and may ultimately prove terrifying.
One of the things I got from Elizabeth Marshall Thompson's latest book,
"A Tribe of Tiger", is that cats are about meat, and survival for the cat
as a species has historically meant being able to hunt (so that's the way
their genes are wired). I have found this idea to be remarkably applicable
to just about any aspect of cats' behaviour. Her corollary to this
theme, tossed off in a single sentence, is that with so much of their
basic behaviour wired in like this, the rest of a cat's brain is free
to develop a unique personality.
len.
len.
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My cat, Max, will go down to the basement and cry a couple of times
... because he's wanting some attention. As soon as I call him, make
any kind of fuss, he tears right back upstairs again like a shot, to
Mommy and everything's fine.
Maybe your friends cat is feeling neglected and wants some "special"
attention.
Sue
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| And he's only 2. Usually it means he's lonely and wants attention,
or sometimes he wants the other 2 cats to play (the call is sufficiently
different that I get it right about 90% of the time). Calling out
to him either brings him trotting to me for love, or gets me another
cry (as if to say "Not you Daddy, the other cats...").
Thanks,
Keith
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