- Thread starter
- #471
Do you see the halo over his head? That's because he decided to gnaw on my ankle when I got out of bed because he was hungry.
Thankfully, he never bites hard.

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She is just helping you tidy.Kiwi is being very naughty this morning. She pushed a glass off the table 4 times.
I think people misunderstand cats. People always say they don’t know their name or certain commands, thats not true! They do, they just choose when they want to listen to them and if its worth their time.
Cats and training? I think people are muddled. It works fantastically. Cats can train their humans in a matter of hours.That's generally from people comparing them to dogs, which is a completely unfair comparison. Dogs were bred from wolves, who are very pack-centric. It does a wolf no good to ignore what the alpha of the pack is telling them to do; in fact it does them much better to mindlessly follow because they could be punished for not doing as much. Since dogs generally see their owners as the alpha of their pack (and dogs who don't generally are the ones who have behavioral issues), of course they are going to obey commands and hang on their owner's every action in a very subservient relationship, something I don't find appealing, personally.
Cats, on the other hand, are solitary by nature. Can they be trained? Of course, but it takes a different strategy than with dogs to do so because they are not biologically the same as dogs and their brains aren't programmed to listen to anyone but themselves. The fact that they're solitary by nature, yet are willing to ignore that instinct to cohabitate with humans is so lovely to me, though.
Also, anyone who thinks cats don't know their names hasn't been around cats much. Even when Casper doesn't want to listen to me, he perks his ears when I say his name. Usually, he'll look at me when I do as well. He doesn't do that for any of the million nicknames I have for him, so I get the feeling he understands that Casper is what he's supposed to be called.![]()
Yep! Very well said. My cat has never once, even when shes sleeping, not come when i call her name. I think thats actually really intresting.That's generally from people comparing them to dogs, which is a completely unfair comparison. Dogs were bred from wolves, who are very pack-centric. It does a wolf no good to ignore what the alpha of the pack is telling them to do; in fact it does them much better to mindlessly follow because they could be punished for not doing as much. Since dogs generally see their owners as the alpha of their pack (and dogs who don't generally are the ones who have behavioral issues), of course they are going to obey commands and hang on their owner's every action in a very subservient relationship, something I don't find appealing, personally.
Cats, on the other hand, are solitary by nature. Can they be trained? Of course, but it takes a different strategy than with dogs to do so because they are not biologically the same as dogs and their brains aren't programmed to listen to anyone but themselves. The fact that they're solitary by nature, yet are willing to ignore that instinct to cohabitate with humans is so lovely to me, though.
Also, anyone who thinks cats don't know their names hasn't been around cats much. Even when Casper doesn't want to listen to me, he perks his ears when I say his name. Usually, he'll look at me when I do as well. He doesn't do that for any of the million nicknames I have for him, so I get the feeling he understands that Casper is what he's supposed to be called.![]()