By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
PetlyInfoPetlyInfoPetlyInfo
  • Home
  • Cats
    • Cat Care
    • Cat Health
    • Cat Behavior
  • Dogs
    • Dog Food
    • Dog Training
    • Dog Health
  • Birds
    • Bird Care
    • Bird Food
    • Bird Training
  • Horse
    • Horse Care
    • Horse Health
    • Horse Training
  • Pets Reviews
  • Contact
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
PetlyInfoPetlyInfo
  • Home
  • Cats
  • Dogs
  • Birds
  • Horse
  • Pets Reviews
  • Contact
Search
  • Home
  • Cats
    • Cat Care
    • Cat Health
    • Cat Behavior
  • Dogs
    • Dog Food
    • Dog Training
    • Dog Health
  • Birds
    • Bird Care
    • Bird Food
    • Bird Training
  • Horse
    • Horse Care
    • Horse Health
    • Horse Training
  • Pets Reviews
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Editorial Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • About Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact
Mousesol
CatsCat Care

Stop Doing This to Your Cat NOW!

A slightly blurry, candid smartphone photo of a person awkwardly carrying a cat in a plastic carrier, illustrating the message: Stop Doing This to Your Cat NOW!.
Real-world mistakes happen every day—here is how to start doing better for your feline partner.
By
ALIXES ANDERSON
pet info
ByALIXES ANDERSON
Alixes is the creative force and Chief Quality Officer behind this platform. With a refined palate for premium salmon and a PhD in "The Art of...
Follow:
April 10, 2026
26 Min Read
Share
SHARE

Honestly just sitting here on my phone outside a shop and I saw someone carrying a cat carrier like it was a sack of potatoes and it just fired me up. People just don’t get it. They really don’t.

Contents
Understanding the Feline PartnershipMy TakeFeeding Your Cat the Wrong FoodsHidden ToxinsMy TakeStop Doing This to Your Cat NOW! Regarding HygieneMy TakeOverfeeding or Free FeedingMy TakeSkipping Regular Vet VisitsThe Stoic MaskMy TakeNot Providing Enough Mental StimulationMy TakeUsing Harsh Discipline or PunishmentRedirect, Don’t ReprimandNeglecting Grooming NeedsForcing Social InteractionLeaving Dangerous Items Within ReachThe Danger of StringMy TakeIgnoring Early Signs of IllnessConclusion

My buddy Herbert—he lives out near Tamworth—was telling me his cat was being a jerk but when I went over there the poor thing’s ears were pinned so far back they were basically horizontal. If you aren’t looking at the ears you aren’t listening. At all.

It’s not about owning a pet, it’s a literal partnership and most people are failing the contract because they’re too busy looking for a cuddle instead of watching the tail. A cat’s tail hitting the floor isn’t a happy drumbeat, it’s a warning light. Stop ignoring the hardware.

The rhythm of a house changes when a cat enters it. It becomes about the spaces between the furniture. Most people think they can just Stop Doing This to Your Cat NOW! by reading a list, but it’s deeper.

It’s about the way the light hits their fur and the way they choose to stand by a door. They are stoic. They don’t complain until the pain is so heavy they can’t carry it anymore.

You have to listen with your eyes. Watch the weight. If the partnership is going to work, you have to stop treating them like small, weird dogs. They aren’t.

I’ve spent a lot of time just standing still, watching. Cats have this herd dynamic, even if they’re solo. They manage their territory like a lead mare manages a paddock.

They scan the horizon. They check the wind. When we mess with their ancestral instincts, we break the gear. We snap the connection.

It’s our job to be the ground they walk on, not the storm that keeps them hiding under the bed.

Understanding the Feline Partnership

A close-up of a cat's head with ears slightly rotated, demonstrating how to Stop Doing This to Your Cat NOW! by reading their signals.
Their ears are like radar dishes; if you aren’t watching them, you aren’t listening.

You can’t fix the behavior if you don’t respect the obligate carnivore reality. It’s biological. It’s in the teeth and the gut.

A cat isn’t choosing to be difficult; it’s responding to a world that feels unstable. They are solitary hunters, sure, but they live in a social web with us.

When that web gets tangled by our ignorance, the cat pulls away. They retreat into that stoic shell.

Think of it as a treaty. A partnership. You provide the safety, they provide the presence.

But if you treat them like a toy, the treaty is void. They see the world in high-definition through their whiskers. Every vibration matters.

When you Stop Doing This to Your Cat NOW!, you’re actually starting to respect the silence they live in.

I see people projecting all this human drama onto them. He’s being spiteful. No. He’s reacting.

He’s a hunter whose territory has been compromised. If you can’t see the way their ears rotate to catch the sound of a closing door three rooms away, you’re missing the whole conversation.

The partnership relies on you being as observant as they are.

I have put together a small guide on how to read what they are telling you without words.

Body PartMovementMeaning
EarsPinned flatFear or aggression
TailThumping floorRising irritation
WhiskersForwardCuriosity or focus
EyesSlow blinkTrust and affection

My Take

Watching the ears is the fastest way to know if you should reach out or back off. Respect the space they are asking for and the bond will grow stronger.

Feeding Your Cat the Wrong Foods

A cat sniffing a plate containing onions and garlic, showing why you must Stop Doing This to Your Cat NOW! regarding human scraps.
What looks like a treat to you can be a biological grenade for your cat.

Food is the foundation. It’s the dirt the grass grows in. But people keep dumping toxic human scraps into the bowl like it’s a trash can.

Onions. Garlic. These aren’t just bad, they are biological grenades for a feline.

I saw Herbert trying to give his cat a piece of a burger once. I had to stop him right there. The dairy products myth is another one that won’t die.

Most of these cats are lactose intolerant. You’re giving them a stomach ache and calling it a treat.

Cats don’t have the machinery for carbs. They need named animal protein. If the bag doesn’t say Chicken or Beef as the very first thing, put it back.

They need taurine like we need oxygen. Without it, their hearts just… fail. Their eyes go dim.

It’s a slow decline that you won’t even notice until it’s too late.

Hidden Toxins

Avoid giving your cat any food containing xylitol, chocolate, or grapes. These substances can cause rapid kidney failure or neurological issues that may be life-threatening if not treated by a professional immediately.

The bowl shouldn’t be a buffet of human leftovers. It should be a precise fuel source.

When you ignore their ancestral diet, you’re basically asking for a massive vet bill down the road. It’s about respect. Respecting the gut.

Let me break down the difference between what fills their belly and what actually fuels their life.

Food ItemSafety StatusBiological Impact
OnionsHighly ToxicDestroys red blood cells
DairyRiskyCauses digestive distress
Raw FishDangerousThiamine deficiency risk
ChickenEssentialProvides vital taurine

My Take

Stick to the meat they were built to eat. If it comes from a plant, it probably does not belong in their bowl in any significant amount.

Stop Doing This to Your Cat NOW! Regarding Hygiene

A pristine, unscented litter box tucked into a quiet corner of a room, emphasizing proper hygiene.
A clean box in a quiet spot is a sign of respect for your cat’s territory.

The litter box is a scent-based boundary. It’s their flag in the ground.

If you leave it sitting there, full of waste, you’re basically telling the cat their territory is a dump. They hate it.

Their sense of smell is a thousand times sharper than yours. If you can smell it, they are drowning in it.

It’s no wonder they start peeing on the rug. The rug is cleaner.

Scoop it twice a day. Minimum. It keeps a neutral scent profile.

If you don’t do this, the trust is gone. You’ve failed the basic maintenance of the partnership.

It’s not a chore; it’s a communication. You’re saying, I respect your space.

And the location? Don’t put it next to the washing machine.

Would you want to go to the bathroom next to a jet engine? Put it in a quiet, low-traffic area.

They need to feel safe from ambush. If they feel vulnerable, they’ll find a corner behind the dresser where they can see the whole room. It’s simple mechanics.

If you want to keep the peace, you have to keep the box right.

RequirementBest PracticeGoal
FrequencyTwice dailyScent control
LocationLow trafficSecurity
QuantityOne per cat plus oneTerritory management
Litter TypeUnscentedRespiratory health

My Take

The box is the center of their world. Keep it clean and quiet if you want a partner who feels safe in your home.

Overfeeding or Free Feeding

A domestic cat using its paws to get kibble out of a plastic puzzle feeder to prevent overfeeding.
Interactive feeders turn mealtime into a hunt, keeping your cat lean and sharp.

We are making our cats obese because we’re lazy. We leave the kibble out all day and call it love.

It’s not. It’s neglect. Cats are designed to hunt, eat, and then rest.

Grazing like livestock ruins their metabolic rhythm. It turns a sharp hunter into a heavy, lethargic shadow of itself.

Feline obesity is a silent killer. It’s the weight on the joints, the strain on the liver.

It’s hard to watch. Once they get big, it’s a nightmare to get the weight back off.

You have to be the one who measures the portions. You have to hold the line.

Seeing the numbers helps you understand how heavy this problem has become for our feline friends.

A pie chart titled "Feline Weight Distribution" showing data for Healthy Weight, Overweight, Obese.
Data visualization showing Feline Weight Distribution.

My Take

Measure the food every single time. A few extra kibbles every day might seem small, but to a ten pound cat, it is a massive caloric surplus.

Try interactive feeders. Make them use their brain.

It mimics the hunt. It keeps the mind sharp while the body stays lean.

A bored cat is a fat cat, and a fat cat is a sick cat. Period.

Skipping Regular Vet Visits

A veterinarian gently examining a calm cat on a silver table during a routine checkup.
Don’t wait for them to look sick; the stoic mask hides pain until it’s often too late.

Cats are masters of the stoic mask. They hide everything.

In the wild, if you look sick, you get eaten. So they pretend they’re fine until they’re nearly dead.

If you wait for them to look sick, you’ve waited too long. You need a baseline for their health.

Blood work matters. Physical exams matter.

It’s the only way to catch the whispers of kidney disease or dental rot.

Dental pain is a nightmare for them, but they’ll still eat. They’ll just suffer through every bite.

The Stoic Mask

In the wild, showing weakness makes a cat a target for predators. Your indoor cat still carries this instinct, meaning they will purr even when they are in significant pain to hide their vulnerability.

Go once a year. Make it a habit.

It’s the preventative vaccinations and the checkups that keep the partnership going for fifteen or twenty years instead of eight or nine.

Don’t be the person who only calls the vet when the cat hasn’t moved in two days.

Since they won’t tell you they are hurting, you have to know what to look for at home.

Behavior ChangePossible Hidden Problem
Hiding in closetsChronic pain or fever
Messy or greasy furDental issues or arthritis
Excessive thirstKidney trouble or diabetes
Avoiding jumpsJoint inflammation

My Take

By the time they look sick, the internal fire has been burning a long time. Get to the vet early to catch the small things before they break.

Not Providing Enough Mental Stimulation

A confident cat sitting on a high wall-mounted shelf, looking down at the room below.
Vertical space allows your cat to be the lookout they were born to be.

A bored cat is a destructive cat. They have this predatory energy that has to go somewhere.

If it doesn’t go into a toy, it goes into your curtains or your skin. They need to climb.

They need to be high up so they can survey their kingdom. It’s about psychological well-being.

Vertical space. Get a tree. Put up some shelves.

Let them live in three dimensions. If they are stuck on the floor, they feel small and trapped.

A cat on a high shelf is a confident cat. They are the lookout of the herd.

Do play sessions. Every day. Use a wand toy.

Make it move like a bird, then a mouse. Let them catch it.

If they never catch the prey, they just get frustrated. Let them feel the win. It resets their brain.

You have to match the toy to the instinct if you want them to engage properly.

TargetToy TypeBenefit
BirdsFeather wandsAgility and jumping
MiceSmall kickersMuscle and wrestling
InsectsLight pointersSpeed and focus

My Take

Always end a light pointer session with a physical toy they can actually catch. It keeps their brain from getting stuck in a cycle of frustration.

Using Harsh Discipline or Punishment

A cat scratching a tall sisal post while a human hand offers a treat nearby.
Redirecting behavior with rewards builds trust; punishment only builds fear.

If you yell at a cat or use a spray bottle, you are breaking the trust. They don’t understand that the water is because they scratched the chair.

They just think you’re a giant, unpredictable predator. It creates a breakdown of trust that is incredibly hard to fix.

They don’t have a concept of bad. They have needs.

If they’re scratching the sofa, they need to scratch. Provide a better alternative.

Put a post right there. Rub some catnip on it. Reward the good behavior.

Redirect, Don’t Reprimand

If your cat is scratching the sofa, do not yell. Instead, place a sturdy scratching post right next to the spot they prefer and reward them with a treat when they use it.

Positive reinforcement works. Fear doesn’t.

If you use fear, you don’t have a partner. You have a roommate who is afraid of you. That’s not a life.

Neglecting Grooming Needs

A person using a grooming brush on a cat to remove loose fur and check for lumps.
Grooming is more than just vanity; it’s a health check and a bonding ritual.

Even the short-haired ones need help. It’s not just about looking good.

It’s about health. Brushing removes the loose fur before they lick it off and turn it into a hairball in their gut.

It’s human assistance for a biological process.

I check for lumps, bumps, or parasites every time I brush. It’s a quiet moment.

It’s a way to feel the body under the fur. If you start when they’re young, they’ll lean into the brush. It becomes a rhythmic part of the day.

Trim the nails. If you don’t, they can grow around and pierce the paw pads.

That’s real pain. Just take the tips off.

It protects the furniture and it keeps their feet healthy. It’s basic.

Forcing Social Interaction

A cat walking toward the camera with its tail held straight up in a friendly greeting.
A high tail is an invitation; let them be the ones to initiate the contact.

Respect the social threshold. Some cats want to be in your lap for six hours.

Some want to sit three feet away and just look at you. Both are valid.

If you pick them up when they’re trying to walk away, you’re violating their autonomy.

Listening with the eyes means seeing when they’ve had enough.

If the tail starts to twitch or the ears flick to the side, let them go.

If you force it, you get defensive biting. And then people blame the cat.

It wasn’t the cat’s fault. You didn’t listen.

Let the cat come to you. If they approach with a high tail, they’re saying hello.

If they’re hiding, let them hide. They’re requesting privacy. Respect it.

The bond grows in the spaces where you leave them alone.

Leaving Dangerous Items Within Reach

A cat about to chew on a piece of loose yarn, illustrating the "linear foreign body" danger.
Common household items like string can become life-threatening emergencies in seconds.

Your house is a minefield. Hair ties, rubber bands, thread—these are linear foreign bodies.

Cats love to chew them, but they can’t always spit them out. They get swallowed and then they cinch up the intestines.

It’s a surgical nightmare.

And plants. Lilies are the worst.

One lick of pollen and the kidneys just shut down. It’s fast and it’s brutal.

You have to check every plant. If you aren’t sure, get it out of the house. It’s not worth the risk.

The Danger of String

Never leave yarn or string unattended around your cat. If swallowed, it can cinch the intestines like a drawstring bag, leading to a life-threatening medical emergency that is difficult to diagnose.

Check the floors. Secure the trash cans.

Be proactive. It’s easier to move a hair tie than it is to pay for a three-thousand-dollar surgery.

Your living room is a landscape of potential trouble if you aren’t careful with what you leave out.

ItemDanger LevelPotential Outcome
LiliesExtremeFatal kidney failure
String/YarnHighIntestinal blockage
Essential OilsModerateLiver toxicity
IbuprofenExtremeSevere poisoning

My Take

If you would not let a toddler play with it or eat it, do not let your cat near it. Prevention is the only real cure for these accidents.

Ignoring Early Signs of Illness

A cat tucked away in the shadows under a bed, showing a subtle sign of potential distress.
When the routine changes and they start to hide, they are telling you something is wrong.

The first whispers of a problem are always subtle. Maybe they’re sleeping on the floor instead of the bed.

Maybe they’re eating a little slower. These aren’t just quirks. They are signals.

You have to be the guardian who notices.

Weight loss is huge. If a cat loses a pound, it’s like a human losing twenty.

It’s a massive metabolic shift. Weigh them. Keep track.

Don’t wait for them to look skinny. By then, the liver or the kidneys are already struggling.

Changes in vocalization are a red flag too. If a quiet cat starts howling, they are in distress.

They are trying to tell you the partnership is failing. Stop Doing This to Your Cat NOW! means you stop ignoring the small stuff.

You pay attention.

Conclusion

A cat sitting comfortably near its owner, showing a relaxed posture and mutual respect.
When you meet them on their level, you build a partnership that lasts a lifetime.

Living with a cat is about patience and observation. It’s not about control.

It’s about the unspoken loyalty that comes when you finally meet them on their level.

When you fix the food, the box, and the boundaries, the whole energy of the home shifts.

Every change you make is an investment in the partnership. It’s a way of saying you see them.

You see the hunter, the stoic, the friend. It’s a long road, but it’s a good one.

Take a look at your cat right now. Really look.

Are the ears forward? Is the body relaxed?

If you Stop Doing This to Your Cat NOW!, you’re choosing to be the person they think you are. You’re building peace and mutual trust. And that’s the whole point.

TAGGED:Animal Wellnesscat behaviorCat HealthFeline CarePet OwnershipPet Safety
Share This Article
Facebook Copy Link Print
pet info
ByALIXES ANDERSON
Follow:
Alixes is the creative force and Chief Quality Officer behind this platform. With a refined palate for premium salmon and a PhD in "The Art of the Perfect Nap," she ensures that every recommendation meets the highest feline standards. Alixes doesn't have an "owner"—she has a highly trained staff that maintains her lifestyle. When she isn't reviewing the latest smart feeders, she can be found judging your interior design choices from the top of the bookshelf.
Leave a Comment Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • What is the best way to help an injured bird?
  • Can Cats Eat Eggs ? The Ultimate Safety and Nutrition Guide
  • Can Cats Drink Milk ? A Comprehensive Guide To Feline Nutrition
  • Stop Doing This to Your Cat NOW!
  • 7 Foods That Can Kill Your Dog (Warning!)

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Related Stories

More from The Blog
A slightly blurry, homemade-style photo of a golden retriever looking up expectantly at its owner on a sidewalk, illustrating the question: What is the golden rule for dogs?
DogsDog Training

What Is the Golden Rule for Dogs? A Guide to Canine Consistency

By
ALIXES ANDERSON
March 31, 2026

What is the golden rule for dogs? Honestly I am typing this…

A real-life, slightly blurry photo of a tabby cat sitting on a kitchen floor and looking away from a full bowl of kibble, highlighting the question: Why is my cat not eating?
CatsCat Health

Why Is My Cat Not Eating?

By
ALIXES ANDERSON
April 8, 2026

Why is my cat not eating? Look if the food bowl is…

A homemade photo of a dog looking at chocolate and onions on a counter, illustrating the dangers of Toxic foods for dogs.
DogsDog Food

Toxic Foods For Dogs: Essential Safety Guide For Pet Owners

By
JOHNFREEMAN
March 25, 2026

Look i'm typing this fast because I just saw another case of…

A smug cat sitting on a desk looking at the camera, illustrating the concept of Cat Care petly.
CatsCat Care

Mastering Cat Care petly for a Happy Feline Home

By
ALIXES ANDERSON
March 19, 2026

Look, if you think just putting out some dry biscuits and a…

Show More
pet info pet info
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Editorial Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • About Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact
Facebook Instagram Pinterest

© 2026 PetlyInfo.com – All rights reserved

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?