Buddy The Cat: Adopting A Human Was The 579th Best Thing I Ever Did!

Training your new human will take time but it’s totally worth it, Buddy says.

buddycolumn

Sure, humans can be frustrating. They’re loud, lumbering beasts and they look funny with their bizarre two-legged gait, always teetering around as if they could fall on their weird, furless faces any second.

They’re woefully incompetent when it comes to reading whisker and tail, their noses are dead and they stubbornly refuse to learn the simple language of territorial marking. Even kittens can do that!

Because they’re not very smart and their senses are laughably blunted, we felines have to do most of the hard work and communicate with humans the only way they know how: by making otherworldly warbling noises with their mouths and vocal cords.

It’s a ridiculous way to communicate and you’ll feel like a fool, but unfortunately it’s the only way to get them to respond to demands and directions. Just go with it.

Humans are convinced these arbitrary sounds have deep meaning, so it helps if you vary your tone and inflect some emotion into your warbling. You’ll know you’ve been successful when they stop to ponder your meaning, trying to work out in their slow, limited minds what you’re trying to communicate. It doesn’t even matter what you “say,” really. They’ll decide it means something.

Despite the limitations of these simple creatures, many of them can be gentle giants and they’re easily manipulated. Roll onto your back, pull your paws up beneath your chin, fix them with a wide-eyed stare and squeak out a little “mew, mew!” then watch their hearts melt. They’ll serve you food in no time!

There’s no doubt about it, adopting a human has been the 579th greatest decision I’ve made in my life!

buddy_eyes

When you adopt your human, don’t expect them to transform into your butler, maid and personal chef overnight. It takes time and lots of repetition to properly train them.

But once you do, there’s nothing like the life of a house cat! Your meals are served with the precision of Swiss trains, because your humans will know there’s hell to pay if they’re late. You’ll be nice and cozy in the winters and comfortably cool in the summers. Your territory will be well protected with strong, human-built barriers preventing strange felines and interlopers of various mammalian forms from intruding. You’ll have your pick of comfortable napping spots, and if you properly train your human, you’ll have a nice, soft, secure lap spot where body heat is abundant and service is never more than a meow away, because your human can’t go anywhere while you’re sleeping on them.

In fact they’ll postpone the call of nature, allow their limbs to go numb and endure uncomfortable positions just to avoid disturbing you! LOL! I like to sit on my human’s chest as close as possible to his face so his nose is buried in the fur on my flank, then see how long it takes for him to choose breathing over my comfort. LOL!

However I must warn you, my friends, about one disturbing human tendency that can pose a problem. As a species they are hopelessly addicted to glowing rectangles of varying sizes — some small enough to fit into the pads of their furless paws, and some big enough to dominate the family nap room. They just stare at the big ones, but with the small rectangles they can sit there for hours poking at them. They just poke, poke, poke with their paws, sometimes making weird expressions with their faces, sometimes giving off interesting pheromones.

If your human is susceptible to falling into the glowing rectangle trance, you’ll have to develop strategies to break them out of it. And don’t make the mistake of stealing the little glowing rectangles. I tried that once and my human stopped all other activity to look for it, becoming increasingly frantic. My dinner was late, my nap was interrupted as my human flipped over couch pillows and looked under furniture. It was a disaster.

In my next column, we’ll talk about caring for your human, the importance of regularly grooming them, and your responsibility to supervise their bowel movements. Humans are high-maintenance pets and they get clingy if you don’t give them enough attention.

But in the meantime, I hope I’ve convinced you that adopting a human is a major net positive!

16 thoughts on “Buddy The Cat: Adopting A Human Was The 579th Best Thing I Ever Did!”

  1. As Bertie has gone “walkabout” (again) I can’t ask for his views but Bella was very clear that adopting us was of no consequence in her life goals as “Humans have no relevance to Gods…” This was rapidly followed up with “give me food”…

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Lucinda (who’s a silver tabby just like Buddy!) wonders: How do we address the people furniture issue vis-a-vis claw maintenance? I’ve actually gotten yelled at for merely sharpening my claws! Should I try to leave this house, and see if I can find some sensible people to adopt? Or just suck it up, and have raggedy useless claws for the rest of my life? Any suggestions would be really appreciated.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Silver tabbies are awesome. They’re called “standard issue cats” on reddit, which is kind of a running joke.

      Buddy says he feels for Lucinda. Do you have one of those big tower scratchers or a scratcher fastened to a wall? I think a big appeal of furniture is that it’s sturdy and won’t wobble while our feline friends scratch it.

      Like

      1. Lucinda here: I have lots of scratching posts, but why can’t I just scratch what I feel like scratching when I feel like scratching it? I live here too. If the peoples wanted to scratch the couch, they could, and nobody would say boo. What’s wrong with me? Do I not rate???

        Liked by 1 person

      2. If that’s truly how they think, then no wonder Bud looks me in the eye when he scratches the couch as if he’s saying “Yep. I’m scratching it, even after you told me not to approximately 18,482 times.”

        Have you ever tried couch protectors or scratchers that attach to the corners of couches? I would like to know if they work.

        Like

Leave a reply to johnggraham Cancel reply