6 Adorable Cat Behaviors With Shockingly Evil Explanations
There seem to be two kinds of people in the world: those who don't understand cats, and those who think cats are kind of douchebags.
Unfortunately for cat lovers, science has kind of come down on the side of that second group. Research has revealed that a lot of the quirky and even cute things your kitty does are actually signs that your cat is kind of a dick.

Cats have many different ways of communicating, but the meow is every cat's go-to vocalization when it wants to tell us something; be it, "I'm hungry," "pay attention to me" or "I just took a dump, go clean it up." However, far from the one-dimensional barking sound that dogs use to communicate, cats are like living stereo equalizers that are able to fine tune the pitches and tones of their meows... so they can better manipulate you into doing what they want.

A recent study has shown that people subconsciously can tell the difference between a pleading or soliciting meow and a run of the mill, casual one just by listening to sound clips taken from different felines in different situations. The subjects said the soliciting sounds came across as more urgent and less pleasant than a normal meow, much like the cries a human baby makes when she's hungry.
In fact, further studies have proven that a cat's cry for food or attention shares a remarkable similarity in frequency to a baby's cry. It's not coincidence- it's pure, kitty evil genius.

Using their expertise in Soviet-style subliminal advertising, cats adjust their purrs and meows to include this frequency which then prompts their owners into responding to them more quickly. Like well trained animals ourselves, we respond because, not only is the sound annoying to us, but it also stimulates our natural instinct to immediately nurture anything that sounds like our offspring, even if it is covered in fur and named Mr. Bojangles.

One of the major perks to owning a cat over, say, a dog or a horse, is that all cats instinctively drop their waste into neat little litter boxes, eliminating the need for frequent "walkies" and the palpable awkwardness that comes with the public use of pooper-scoopers and plastic baggies. Cats instinctively seek to bury their droppings, so it works out for everybody.
Contrary to popular assumptions though, this behavior doesn't come from Snowball's obsessive compulsive cleanliness, but rather an evolutionary holdover from before felines were domesticated and had more dangerous predators than the vacuum cleaner to worry about.

Burying the poop prevents detection by their enemies, but there's another layer to it, which is that they do it to avoid challenging the dominant cat of the group. It kind of makes sense, if burying the poop is a sign that they fear another, larger animal, then leaving it uncovered would be a pretty aggressive act. "No one here is bad enough to fuck with me. Enjoy my shit."
So... what do you suppose it means when your cat doesn't bother to cover his poop?

Yep, some cats intentionally leave their crap uncovered or in conspicuous locations (such as on a doormat or in your sister's bed) in order to communicate to us that they are the dominant member of the household, and that this territory is theirs.
In the wacky world of feline politics, feces act as little, smelly flags that clearly dictate the boundaries of each cat's domain. In the wild, these flags are intended to be seen, and smelled, by other cats, a sign that this is the stomping grounds of a badass kitty.

I claim this bed in the name of Admiral Bootiekins!
When it comes to the shared domain with humans that domesticated cats enjoy, the same territorial rules still apply, so a housecat who leaves his waste out in the open is sending the message to us that he is El Presidente, and that we should be covering up our shit, so as not to offend him.
And guess what? We do. We helpfully flush away our poop and your cat probably thinks it's done entirely to avoid offending him. Yes, if you want to take back your house, it's time to poop in kitty's bed.

By nature cats are hard to read. They're not like dogs, hopping around with joy when you walk in the door, or slinking away with shame when caught eating the garbage. No, cats have mastered an expression of almost disdainful indifference that they seem to wear regardless of their mood.

However, as any spinster will tell you, a cat's affection is obvious when its purring and rubbing its face and body against your leg. It's like the animal is giving you a little kitty hug the only way it knows how!
The problem with that, though, is when cats rub up against their owners, it has nothing to do with affection at all, but instead is kitty's way of claiming you as its property.

I own you, motherfucker!
Cats, like many other animals, are packed full of pheromone-oozing scent glands that are primarily used to communicate with other cats on such hot topics as identity, sexual availability and territorial ownership. The most active and important glands that a cat uses to send these messages are located on the tail, the side of the body and the face. Thus, when a cat rubs up against your legs or slides its face along your hand, it is engaging these glands in order to leave its unique scent on you.
That scent in turn communicates to any other animals in the vicinity that not only is it, say, female and horny, but that you, the human, belong to her. When a cat brushes against your legs, it's less a furry hug and more of a prison yard tattoo. One that reads, "Owned By: Mittens" and, "Single Siamese Female, 8, seeking uncut Tom for a romp in the alley."








I've never had a problem with my cats bringing home dead animals and tryign to give them to me, but then, I hunt, bringing home a hare larger than kitty and dropping it in front of where she is fast asleep on the kitchen tiles so she wakes up to the thump and finds a ginormous bleeding corpse in front of her nose shows here I am the breadwinner in our house.
ReplyMy cat literally does all of this... even the pooing on the floor. He even pooed in clothes! It's time to take action! Pass me the beans, Mom! It's time to get revenge!
ReplySo...All this years, I've been owned by a mentally retarded cat? Doesn't surprise me.
ReplyHmm the rubbing up on people thing makes sense. My friends have two cats in their home and one often rubs up on people, while the other doesn't. I guess the older kitty is the dominant one.
ReplyI knew about the whole "rubbing on you to show ownership" thing, so when I first got my cat a few years ago, I decided to try a little experiment by regularly rubbing the sides of my face on my cat. It seems to have been pretty effective, considering she rarely rubs on me (she generally shows affection by sitting next to me and purring), she's never pooped outside the litter box, she almost never meows, and she's never brought home any dead animals (I know she kills birds because she has feathers around her mouth sometimes when she comes home, and I find the bones in the yard). She's generally quiet and submissive - she even rolls over on her back when I go to pet her, and she follows me around the house. So call me weird for rubbing my face on my cat, but I'm the dominant one.
ReplyWho cares? This is just ammunition for cat haters. If you hate cats, great. If you love cats, that's fine too. Dogs and human babies/children manipulate in "evil" ways too - it's called survival.
ReplyPerhaps it's just useful to drop silly notions like "good" and "evil" because Mother Nature and the Universe don't give a flying f@*k.
I wonder if my cat would actually s**t a brick if I ate something it brought me after all the times I refused?
ReplyDo it! Then, come back and tell us.
you say evil behaviors; I say intelligent, clean and an amazing display of the evolutionary process!
Replyalso, in all my years of cat ownership I have never ever ever had a cat poop outside the litterbox unless it was outside the whole house...hm!
I guess you showed your cat who's boss.
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Do you offer any smaller ones? Like... cat size, really? It's interesting that you'd post this on an article about cats, as the cougars I've owned have such an annoying habit of eating my loyal dogs, scaring my zebras and giraffes, and riling up my trained elephants to the point of madness... I've found bobcats to be much more manageable, but I still wish I could find a cougar that wasn't so hard to deal with... unlike the other animals, spanking and whipping them just makes them angrier... or in some cases results in an oddly arousing purring and moaning sound... cougars are just the damnedest confusing things, I tell you...
#4 I believe it, mostly because my cat does it after I've gotten out of the shower. She knows I've just cleaned off a lot of excess smells (that humans can't smell), so she'll do it then.
ReplyThough this is the cat that knows to look both ways across the street if she hears a car coming, and once tried to take down a fully grown deer.
I had to read this in shifts as my cat zia kept headbutting me.
ReplyA meow is a means of communication that a kitten uses to communicate with its mother. For lucky kittens the human becomes the adoptive mother to which the cat continues to communicate through meows. I am a caretaker for an indeterminate number of TNR feral cats. Unlike their socialized counterparts the adults do not meow. They make very little noise whatsoever. The meow is the socialized/feral dividing line.
ReplyI've actually noticed that feral cats don't meow. It didn't occur to me that this is the case because domestic cats meow to humans as their "parents" as a holdover from being a kitten. Interesting stuff!
We have ferals living in the parking lot at my work, and some of them DO meow, at least at those of us who feed them. One of them is named Squeaky because of the incessant squeaking/meowing whenever she sees us. I brought one home who I don't believe was a true feral (he jumped in my lap, obviously had a family at one point). He's my sweet baby, now, and he definitely meows to tell me what he wants. He also does "snake face" when I try to move him off my lap.
this article just made me love cats more! when my cat hisses, it's impressive and awe-inspiring how the cutest face i've ever known can instantly become so frightening. I now find it awesome that he could be mimicking a snake, good for him! s**t i'd run away from that little fluffball no matter how big i am! also, why should ownership and love be mutually exclusive when it comes to face rubbing?!? in my opinion cats only bother to make things theirs if they love them, and they also have no problem sharing with those they like.
ReplyNot covering up their poop is most definitely not adorable.
ReplyThat drawn out mrrrow is called caterwauling and its basically all the sounds a cat can make at once, at least that's what I read in a book once.
Replykill all cats and feed them to the poor
ReplyLol at all the sad old cat ladies thumbing these comments down. I'll take a kitten, then immediately have the thing put down. I hate the small little bastards.
Reply Hide All See All 3 RepliesYou're a douche.
A world class douche and waste of space.
troll
Most of these instinctive traits about cats are true but the "evil explanations" are nonsense.. And dogs do most of the same things in different ways. #6. Cats have different sounds for different needs. It's not manipulation it's common sense.. My dog used to sound like an old man grumbling and grunting if I was taking all the covers in bed or if was keeping him awake.. He also sounded like a baby howling when he wanted out of his crate. #5. I've never had a cat crap anywhere other than his or her litter box and it was always covered up. And most dogs try to cover theirs up too although grass doesn't cover as well as kitty litter. :) I think they cover it up because they're embarrassed and feel it's improper to leave things untidy or smelly.. #4. Cats rub to display affection and to put their scent on you as ownership.. I've seen plenty of dogs (usually the small ones) hump their owners leg to display dominance or ownership. #3. LOL!! A cat hisses or "spits" to scare off something they're afraid of.. The same way a dog growls. #2. Obsessive cleaning is because they are obsessively clean creatures.. They're just grooming for Christ sake. And both dogs and cats pee on things to mark their territory or to let you know they're "pissed" off.. #1. Cats are hunters and are proud to show off their prey.. I've seen the sweetest dogs kill squirrels, rabbits, chipmonks, etc.. They just don't feel the need to show if off. Cats are conceited and want praise for their kill.. Just my opinion!!
Reply Hide All See All 5 RepliesYour cat is stupid.
Cats are obsessively clean for the purpose of stealth. They are more likely to be successful as predators when their prey cannot see or smell them.
were they shaolin chipmonks? (bwahahah, I kill me)
"I've never had a cat crap anywhere other than his or her litter box and it was always covered up."
Want to trade?
"I think they cover it up because they're embarrassed and feel it's improper to leave things untidy or smelly"
Nonsense--that's imputing human motivation onto an animal. They cover it up because the "smelly" aspect alerts predators to their presence, as the article pointed out.
"I've seen the sweetest dogs kill squirrels, rabbits, chipmonks, etc.. They just don't feel the need to show if off."
Really? I've had dogs present me with dead critters.
Mine will crap in my bedroom closet when the litter box is unacceptable. Trouble is, I'm not the one who maintains it. My roommate does.
my cat found my mouse out of her cage and picker her up and then preceded to sit in front of me grooming it as if to say "this has your scent on it so I didn't hurt it, but you have not taught this thing to properly groom itself ! look at this tuft of fur out of place !" meanwhile my mouse was like "oh yeahh! that's the spot"
ReplyHaha! That's cool.
No explanation for why they stare at nothing and then run for their lives? I thought they were either trying to freak me out, or they're in fact feline versions of Haley Joel Osment in 'The Sixth Sense'.
ReplyWell sometimes cats suddenly get a burst of energy and just zip off. I actually do that a lot, and I'm obviously not a cat.
@BloodValkyrie, how do we know you're not a cat?