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Talking about a little miscommunication,
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I want to go over some real basic cat body language
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that you probably said, oh he means this.
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And it is completely in left field.
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The first one, Halloween cat, right?
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You've seen it before.
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Cat with arched back, tail up in the air, and making themselves
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totally puffed up.
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And we interpret that as aggression.
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In reality what it is, is pretty much the opposite.
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It's fear.
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The cat will blow up, sort of tough,
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in order to make themselves appear bigger, because they're
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afraid of something that just happened.
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The second one, the old, cat laying on his or her back,
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right?
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Now, when you see your dog lay on his or her back,
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you go in for the tummy rub.
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Those of you who have reached in to rub your cat's belly,
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you get bit or scratched.
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I call this the cat hug, because what they're doing
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is exposing the most vulnerable part of themselves,
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their midline.
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If you are facing a potential predator,
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this is that place that you do not want exposed, right?
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When a human hugs another human, we
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are exposing our midline to that other person.
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It is a mutual show of risk-taking and emotional
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trust.
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Cats do the same thing by showing you that.
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That does not mean, come on in for a belly rub.
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Now let's talk about the big one, the wagging tail.
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Folks are looking at their cat through dog-colored glasses
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and are saying, this means my cat is happy.
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As a matter of fact, they are usually saying the opposite.
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Now, cats will start to get worked up,
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start to get a little agitated to static in the environment
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by absorbing that energy.
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It's almost like it comes in this way,
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and then it gets stuck in the tail.
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And then, how am I supposed to get this energy out of my body,
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you know?
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And then, it starts getting worse, right?
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And then by the time they are ready to pounce
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on you or anybody, or explode with their staticky
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frustration, it is like this.
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We talked in the past about the miscommunication
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that is inherent with cat overstimulation aggression.
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So that is, you're sitting there petting the cat-- pet,
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pet, pet, pet, pet.
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Suddenly, chomp.
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You get bit.
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The other one we talked about a little bit was play aggression.
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Your ankles get attacked, but why?
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Because your cat wants to play and is not getting that
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play attention.
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We've even talked about how your cat can pee on the couch,
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for instance.
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You're like, why do you hate me?
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An insecure cat will pee on something
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to mingle their scent with yours, as if to say,
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you and me, buddy, we're compadres, right?
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So whether it is Halloween cat, whether it is the cat hug
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--the belly rub that we go in for, which we
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shouldn't-- whether it is the play aggression attack,
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the overstimulation aggression attack,
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whether it is the wagging tail, these are all ways that we can
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take off the dog-colored glasses,
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take off the human-colored glasses.
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Look at your cat through cat-colored glasses,
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their motivations, what their reality is, and you'll
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spend a lot less time misconstruing, getting
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angry, projecting, doing all those dangerous things
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that we tend to do more with cats than dogs
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for sure, but pretty much anybody else.
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So that's it for today, folks.
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You can find me where you find anybody these days,
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whether it's on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube.
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The Animalist Network has me in spades
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these days, so watch Animalist.
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And also, don't forget, make some comments down below,
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subscribe to my feed.
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You'll find out what's going on, like for instance, the Google
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Hangout that is coming up very soon now.
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We're going to be talking, more specifically than not,
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about litter box issues.
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But you know me, we're going to go all over the map.
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All right folks, until the next time
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we speak, all light, all love, all mojo to you.
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Love you.
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THEME SONG: You're a bad cat.
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I'm not a bad cat.
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You're a bad cat.
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I'm not a bad cat.
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You're a bad cat.
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I'm just misunderstood.
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Meow.