• Dragon Rider (drag)@lemmy.nz
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    arrow-down
    5
    ·
    10 days ago

    You’re being very helpful, thank you. Drag is a big dog lover. A lot of people on the internet say dragons are big cats, but drag disagrees. Dragons are very socially intelligent and responsive to human forms of communication. Like dogs. Drag has read a lot about cats. Like how meowing is usually only used by kittens to talk to adult cats, but cats started meowing as adults to talk to humans, because humans don’t understand normal cat language very well. Drag grew up with dogs and speaks dog almost as fluently as english. Drag hasn’t had very much cat exposure at all. Drag’s only ever gotten to know one cat, and we never reached the stage of actually communicating. We were able to play, but not to communicate. Internet memes seem to indicate that cats are perfectly comfortable living in a house with humans they can’t communicate with, and some humans feel the same way. Drag doesn’t feel that way. Drag needs to be able to communicate with any intelligent creature for whom interaction is expected and violence is discouraged. Drag doesn’t want to use violence on cats, that sounds horrible. Thus, drag needs a way to solve problems without violence. Dogs are so much easier. If you call a dog a bad dog, it understands instantly. Dogs put in an effort to listen and to make themselves understood, and they put in an effort to get along. Cats seem perfectly comfortable completely ignoring communication. Which, drag hears, can lead to live mice being dropped in your bed.

    • celeste@kbin.earth
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      9 days ago

      Like a dog peeing on the floor, dropping a mouse on the bed has to happen once so they can figure out it’s unwanted. Unfortunately. The impulse is sweet, though - she was sharing food and play with me - so it’s just a silly story I share about her, now. She was such a great little hunter. I had her as a kitten in an old house, and she leapt to the challenge of taking care of the slight mouse problem. Or, supplementing the household’s food, as perhaps she saw it. When we moved from that house to one with a serious mouse problem, she became the hardest worker there. That memory, once the sheets were clean, became a cherished one. She cared about my well being, and giving me food was a way of showing me I was part of her cat family.

        • celeste@kbin.earth
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          2
          ·
          8 days ago

          Tough to remember, but I was loud and nonviolent, based on what i know about myself. If you see a kitten bite another kitten too hard, they yell out. I try to go “OW” when I’m training a young one not to bite, and then move away (fun time is now over). A mama cat will bat a kitten’s ears for misbehaving, but I don’t do that. I mostly suspect I didn’t react how her instincts said I should (i didn’t hunt and play with it and then eat it). Combined with the loud noise, it wasn’t something worth trying again. Could’ve just been a coincidence, because it’s not like training them out of biting where there’s a clear progression to gentler biting and then licking and then a little pause when my hand is where she would normally bite it.