Pets
Related: About this forumIf you want the best seat in this house you'll have to move the cat. Smiley Cat Photo.

niyad
(131,370 posts)George McGovern
(11,472 posts)LoisB
(12,733 posts)George McGovern
(11,472 posts)wnylib
(25,570 posts)My previous ones have all been male
I don't know if this is true of most females, but Ember is less territorial than the males were.
The cat before Ember was Leo, an orange male tabby. He was so affectionate that I nicknamed him Mr. Love. But he was also very territorial. If he was curled on the couch end whee I usually sat, he would not budge. He pushed back at any attempts to move him.
There is one kitchen chair where I often sit when reading a book or posting online. It's more convenient than my desk chair since the desk is cluttered. Also close to the fridge for snacks.
When I was away from that chair, Leo used to curl up on it. When I returned to the chair, he wrapped his paws around the seat to avoid being moved. Sometimes when I was seated there, Leo decided that it was his turn to have the chair. He would jump onto it behind me and push hard against my back with his whole body, trying to dislodge me.
When he lost that battle for the chair, he just sat on a chair that was at the end of the table and perpendicular to mine. Then he reached a paw under the table to touch my leg, as if to confirm that we were still friends.
Ember is just the opposite. When I approach the couch where she is spread out she immediately leaps down to yield it to me. Same with the chair.
George McGovern
(11,472 posts)Like when you would return to "your" chair, he had made it "his", even wrapping his paws AROUND THE SEAT! Talk about territorial!
But Ember seems more agreeable. What a pair!
Thank for bringing a chuckle to my day.
wnylib
(25,570 posts)Leo was so talkative that when I was on the phone, I had to shut myself in another room because Leo kept trying to join the conversation.
Ember is so quiet that she goes for several months without a single meow. She communicates with body language and by calling my attention to her in a variety of ways, like knocking things to the floor (which Leo never did).
Completely different temperaments.
It was quite an adjustment for me when Ember came into my life. Her lively, silent mischief helped me get over my grief when Leo died.
George McGovern
(11,472 posts)wnylib
(25,570 posts)Leo gripping the chair seat by wrapping his paws around it. One time I tried to get him to let go by tipping the chair almost upside down. Did not work. He just dug his claws into the chair cushion and hung there.
George McGovern
(11,472 posts)wnylib
(25,570 posts)feline courtesy behind Leo's behavior.
I came across an online article about how cats in a multiple cat household handle territorial issues. They develop a system of owning certain areas at different times of the day.
I live by myself, so Leo was the only other living creature in my apartment. Dogs regard themselves as part of the human pack, but cats view their humans as part of the cat colony. So, in Leo's mind I was a very rude cat who did not abide by proper feline etiquette because I hogged certain spaces too often and too long. He was trying to assert his rights and teach me etiquette.
George McGovern
(11,472 posts)"No one knows how a cat's mind works. They make of us a captive audience to the absurdly sublime. All we can do is watch in awe and disbelief as they twist into knots all we think we know about them and reality. They are truly the masters of the universe."
wnylib
(25,570 posts)I don't have any special talent of my own for knowing how cats think and behave. I just apply what I've read in articles and books by animal experts who have studied them.
Example: My current cat, Ember, is very strong willed and we used to get into power struggles when she insisted on doing things that I wanted her to stop, like getting onto the table. The more I said, "No, no," the more she defiantly hopped up there with a hostile stare at me.
Then I read about how cats communicate friendliness to each other in body language. The article said that it works with cat and human communications, too. Cats will blink slowly at each other to indicate an absence of hostility. It can mean affection, or friendship.
So when she got mad at me for saying, "No, no," I did the slow blink at her a couple times. She calmed down and stopped thumping her tail. After a minute, she slowly blinked back at me. Blinking back at me meant, in cat body language, "OK, I understand. We're still friends."
She started initiating the slow blink at me when she did something that she knew I didn't like. It was like saying, "Oops. Still friends?"
She has not lost her feline independence. She's just more civil about it and more cooperative with me now that we've established that we are friends who mean no harm.
George McGovern
(11,472 posts)Do you happen to have a photo of her?
wnylib
(25,570 posts)I had not saved them to any place. When my phone had a melt down, I lost all of the pics. They showed her in a close up of a "loaf" position (when cats tuck their legs under their body), sitting on top of her cat tree looking down at me, two of them with her watching a movie on TV while sitting by herself in a lounge chair.
My favorites were of Ember sitting behind the Christmas tree. They were taken one right after the other and showed her sizing up the tree with mischief in her eyes over which ornament to swat. All of them lost.
MIButterfly
(2,462 posts)Only it says "the house" instead of "this house." And it has a different cat on it.
George McGovern
(11,472 posts)3catwoman3
(29,148 posts)...to a prewarmed seat.
George McGovern
(11,472 posts)Polly Hennessey
(8,749 posts)left for humans, the floor. 😳