I'm placing this in the rescue forum because I do feel strongly about choosing a shelter or rescue cat, and because I figure experienced rescue people will be able to offer the best advice, insight, suggestions etc.
Assuming we are allowed to get ourselves another cat, I've been thinking almost full time about what kind of cat (personality) to go for and also how to recognise those personality traits when I see them. My history here is almost a problem. We had family cats all through my childhood, but that was a while agoAnd I wasn't the primary caregiver then so I didn't have the ultimate responsibility for their wellbeing. As an adult I've adopted one cat, and she turned out to be such a total keeper I've never really had to assess or negotiate 'consciously' choosing a cat. I tend to forget this and say grandly I've never met a cat I didn't like, but in fact it's not true. I have encountered a (very) few cats I truly disliked. And I've met quite a few I liked fine just because they were cats, but I didn't feel that I'd ever develop that heart-tugging affinity with them. Some very mellow, very easy going cats have even struck me as kind of [whisper] boring [/whisper].
I guess I just worry about ending up with one of those second types of cat. If I take someone, I don't think I could muster the gall to return them just because they weren't 'special' enough to climb right into my heart. I'd dump a guy for not being special enough, but not a catI'd keep them and take care of them (scritches and cuddles and all, along with the food and the vet care). But of course I want both me and my son to be in love.
So here are my worries, in no special order.
- I think we like shy cats. I'm introverted, my son's introverted; we just have a natural empathy for introverts who come with fur. I'd rather give the love and attention and home to someone who isn't assertive enough to swagger right out there and grab it all for themselves. I go for the ones who are a little unsure they really are special enough to be loved and then bloom slowly when they discover they are. And/or someone who's unsure how they'll be treated until they find out they can trust us. We're both very quiet, very 'gentle' people and my son's practically a cat whisperer, but still . . . . my worry with this is that I'll end up with someone who's too shy even to warm up with US, or too skittery ever to settle down. I don't want to adopt someone who never will be at ease with cuddles and scritches and make us all unhappy with attempts to change that. Or someone who will be so nervous we have to tiptoe around our own home. I do have that neurotic landlord to worry about. I just feel like we can't really afford another cat who resorts too easily to trauma-peeing when you vacuum too many times in one week. Is there a set of behaviour hints I can look for to find the line here?
- I think I want a cat who's had a hard time up till now - either stray, or abandoned/given up by earlier families. I just kind of 'feel' it as a fairness thing. I also feel better with someone who's got some 'outside' smarts. Not that I'd sling the cat outside and close all the doors if it wanted to stay inside all its life, but we live at ground level, and windows and doors MUST be opened. So anyone we get will have access to the great outdoors, and I'd rather it knew what the great outdoors is. But at the same time I feel like we need a cat who WILL bond with us once we take it. If I had one of those walkabout cats who vanish for days or weeks at a time I think I'd fret myself down to the bone. Again, things to look for?
- Finally, we are unreasonable. Cat-having for us is an interactive thing. We definitely need to trade cuddles and scritches and head-bumps, and spend a certain amount of our lives with a cat on our laps. (I also have an unfulfilled yen for one of those cats who follow you around and natter at you about their whole day. Limpet was lovely and very interactive with us, but she was just like my son: silent when happy and only remembered she had a voice when she had rights to read us. The 'but' on this one is I don't think I can deal with one of those velcro cats who never leave you alone. I worry about getting a cat whose needs are greater than what I can meet. It's such a cycle - the more you resist the more they need, so the more you resist etc etc. Are there ways of predicting a cat who will be actively happy person-time but also intends to have its own life?
My problem is basically that I'm spoiled rotten and maybe don't deserve a new cat at all. We had a Formative Cat who was stuffed to the eyeballs with personality but also happened to be almost insanely sweet. Now I'm just plain spoiled. No other cat will be Limpet and I truly know that. I want all the personality all over again, but I don't want that to mislead me into adopting someone who would be better off with someone more experienced, more patient, with more spare time to give . . . When I read that over it does sound like I'm being unreasonable.
Thoughts? Experiences, anecdotes, insights? Advice?
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