Cats can be problematic. Ours definitely

Cats can be problematic. Ours definitely is. He’s a cowardly cat, afraid of his own shadow and dependent on us to keep him safe. He’s also a house cat and proud of it. He has no wish to go outside, looking out the windows as if examining another galaxy.

Most of all, though, he knows what’s important to us and he commandeers whatever that thing is. Often whatever paperwork I’m dealing with on the table. Usually my laptop.

Once, when he took a stroll across the keyboard, getting the laptop to work again required a trip to the nearest computer repair shop. After that I protect the keyboard with whatever is handy so he can’t get to it. But he can and does choose to sleep on the closed laptop. So I can’t work on it unless I disregard his feelings entirely and shove him away. Which of course I never do because he’s so sad at being displaced that guilt prevents me from pushing him away.

But today, after half an hour snoozing on my laptop, he decided to let me get some work done. Actually, he decided to take a stroll through his kingdom … the house … and see what was going on. I took advantage of his generosity and am now getting some blog posts done.

At least he’s polite about claiming whatever he wants. And nice. And has a personality that meshes with ours.

Domestic cats are a whole different breed from lions, tigers, and cougars. They just take what they want and anyone who gets in their way had better start running. No manners at all. I think about the wild kind of cat, the kind of nasty cougar that inspired Wanted Sharpshooter, every time Smoky looks at me with that sleepy expression he has and simply purrs as he snoozes on whatever I want at the moment. So thank you, Smoky, for letting me actually get some work done today.


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Published on January 13, 2014 08:51
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message 1: by Lilo (last edited Jan 15, 2014 03:25PM) (new)

Lilo Upfront: I am glad that Smoky has such a good home and even gets to sleep on the laptop. I got a new desktop Mac, a month ago, and our Sally likes to sleep on it. I guess she knows it better by now than I do because I still write on my old XP. I am an outright computer-idiot, and as long as my husband hasn't got enough time to familiarize himself with the new system so that he can teach me, I still struggle with my old XP, which keeps threatening to breathe its last.

We have 31 cats, and they are all different -- just like people. While most of our cats love the outdoors (18 acres plus adjoining federal lands), a few don't go out much, and one wont' set a paw outside after being gone for 3 weeks, about 10 years ago; she must have had a close call.

One of my future writing projects is a non-fiction narrative tale, titled "The Cats of Happy Cats Ranch", but before I start writing any new books, I have to get my 3 existing books published. I am still struggling with formatting (a helluva job with footnotes), photo-collages, and whatever else is necessary for publishing.

I am way behind with everything; that's why I am also behind with reading your blogs, which I always enjoy reading.

Btw, since you obviously love cats, you might want to read my review (and the following comments) of "Review of a Cat". It's a fun read. Here is the link:

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 2: by Florence (new)

Florence Witkop Love your review, Lilo. You have it absolutely right about cats. Smoke is our first cat ever and he's an eduation.


message 3: by Lilo (new)

Lilo Thank you, Florence. Yes, it takes a while to understand cats. And as I said, they are not all alike. But usually, once a cat's (human) pet, always a cat's (human) pet.


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