Spicy baby
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Scorpion’s gonna scorp.
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doomsider@lemmy.worldreplied to cm0002@lemmy.world last edited by
Apparently when a cat does this they are showing they trust you. You break this trust when you rub their belly. This causes them to violently attack you. True story and I would do it again.
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monkdervierte@lemmy.mlreplied to cm0002@lemmy.world last edited by
There was this slightly autistic cat of us (sadly not anymore) that loved getting caressed, but only to a certain point where she began to panic(?). I then took her on my lap and after the panic happens, put my hand over her eyes, she pushes in like if to hide/feel secure. Did this a few times and that fixed it.
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sylvartas@lemmy.dbzer0.comreplied to monkdervierte@lemmy.ml last edited by
My gf has a cat who's probably somewhat autistic. But he's also quite smart and will just go away when overstimulated.
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maalus@lemmy.worldreplied to monkdervierte@lemmy.ml last edited by
It's simple overstimulation and all cats do it. You can't give them a shitload of stimuli or they'll start losing their mind - biting, scratching, flailing. Then they'll usually move away to chill out so they don't get stimulated further. Imagine being ticklish and getting tickled by some a-hole for way longer than it's funny. Yours was just trusting enough to sit in your lap after. The head pressing is normal too, cats feel safer when they are held tightly / pushing on something. Google "squish that cat" - it's a 7 minute video on how to handle a cat. My cat does the head push when he had a bad day too.
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maalus@lemmy.worldreplied to doomsider@lemmy.world last edited by
Depends on the cat and how it has been trained and if they like belly rubs. Some of them simply don't like it. Mine for instance shows me the belly all the time, and it isn't a trap. I will at most get a lovebite and then he starts licking my hand. While I still pet him.
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fiskfisk33@startrek.websitereplied to monkdervierte@lemmy.ml last edited by
that's not autism, that's just cat.
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🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️replied to cm0002@lemmy.world last edited by
Meanwhile there is a stray in my apartment that follows me around whenever I'm outside and comes over to get his belly rubbed. If I don't rub his belly, he bites.
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I read this in Gianni's voice https://youtu.be/NV-p_-OvUnA
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monkdervierte@lemmy.mlreplied to fiskfisk33@startrek.website last edited by
Ah no, the autism was additionally..
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sam_bass@lemmy.worldreplied to cm0002@lemmy.world last edited by
Love bites. Love bleeds.
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fiskfisk33@startrek.websitereplied to monkdervierte@lemmy.ml last edited by
fair enough!
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notyou@sopuli.xyzreplied to maalus@lemmy.world last edited by
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monkdervierte@lemmy.mlreplied to maalus@lemmy.world last edited by
Well, she got RRRRRrrr and biting (but not running away) in overstimuly mode after the "fix". Look, she was inbred and clearly autistic, different but way smarter than other cats (was a farm and she's ca. our 30. cat; i do know how they behave usually). My guess is more that she got trusty enough to me/us during that training to feel safe enough to not panic.
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monkdervierte@lemmy.mlreplied to sylvartas@lemmy.dbzer0.com last edited by
Yep, that one and her brother were smarter too.
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ERROR: Earth.exe has crashedreplied to cm0002@lemmy.world last edited by
My cat is lovely, doesn't bite when I pet the belly*
*as long as its under a minute... or sometimes less than that...
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triflingtoad@sh.itjust.worksreplied to sam_bass@lemmy.world last edited by
put that on a t-shirt
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sam_bass@lemmy.worldreplied to triflingtoad@sh.itjust.works last edited by
A certain rock band might take exception to that