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How Does My Cat Really View Me?

July 31st, 2007 · 1 Comment

A kitten will potentially view its new owner as a replacement litter mother. Its point of view changes as it grows older.When a kitten is first separated from its litter mother and siblings, plus any associated humans, there is much for it to adapt to and learn about. The owner is sniffed as they undertake the human stroking and petting ritual, in order to ascertain who that person is. The human scents that the cat smells will offer information about gender through testosterone and oestrogen, and perhaps about dominant emotions from skin pheromones about its world is gained through scents and smells.

The new owner in effect becomes a ‘replacement litter mother’ or even a ‘replacement lead cat’ to the kitten, because all the normal functions of maternal behaviour are taken over by the human. These include:

  • Exploring outside the ‘nest area’ (perhaps the bedroom).
  • Providing the ‘kill’ (thanks to cat food manufacturers).
  • Moving the kitten around.
  • Protecting it from danger.

Eventually, the maturing cat would probably see its kind and non-aggressive owner as a ‘replacement mate’ and potentially, their human partners as ‘competitive males’ or ‘passive females’. This is likely to be the view from a cat’s point of view.

The cat’s brain does not include the equivalent of our frontal lobes. They cannot switch perspectives and see the world from our (intellectual and considerably elevated) viewpoint. They make simple decisions based on their own instinctive responses and learned experiences, such as:

  • Are we humans part of their social structure or not?
  • Are we a threat or not?
  • Are we predator or prey?

They cannot ‘think’ that we are cats and/or they are humans. That ‘intelligent’ perception is far too complicated for cats, however apparently clever they may appear. Even though we are biped to their quadruped, owners probably represent ‘giant cats’ because of the way we interact with them and act as natural replacements.

Tags: Cat Behaviour


1 response so far ↓

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    1 Cindy Oldale // Jan 31, 2008 at 8:36 am

    my female cat skyla (abt 2yrs old) is very loving, she lies on my tummy and extract hers nails into me like kneading i think its called. some nights between 2 and 3 am she walks aroung crying, and i dont know what is causing it.she is well looked after,very loved, and eats morning and nite, and she wakes me up every morning performing for her food, and when i get up and give her food, she doesnt eat it, now i know she is performing for her food cause she scratches the cuboard where the food is in.
    Could you explain her crying at nite!!!
    its like meow meow meow for an hr long??
    thanks

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