Rules for Cats

1. DOORS
Do not allow closed doors in any room. To get a door
opened, stand on hind legs and scratch the frame. You
may also reach under the door and pull clothing
towards you; silks get the quickest reaction. Once
door is opened, it is not necessary to use it. After
you have ordered an "outside" door opened, stand
halfway in and out and think about several things.
This is particularly important during very cold
weather, when it's raining or snowing, or during the
height of the mosquito season. Swinging doors must be
avoided at all costs.

II. CHAIRS AND RUGS
If you have to urp, get to an overstuffed chair
quickly. If you cannot manage this in time, get to an
Oriental rug. If there are no Oriental rugs, shag
is a good substitute. When urping on shag, be sure you
project; it is a must that it stretch for as long as a
human's bare foot.

III. BATHROOMS
Always accompany guests to the bathroom. (See Rule 1)
It is not necessary to do anything - just sit and
stare.

4. HELPING
If one of your humans is engaged in some semi-closed
activity and the other is idle, stay with the busy
one. This is called "helping"; humans are known to
refer to it as hampering". 
The following are the rules for "helping": 
a) When supervising cooking, sit just behind the left
heel of the cook. You cannot
be seen and thereby stand a better chance of being
stepped on and then picked up and comforted. 
b) For book readers, get in close under the chin,
between
eyes and book, unless you can lie across the book
itself. 
c) For knitting projects or paperwork, lie on the work
in the most appropriate manner so as to
obscure as much of the work or at least the most
important part. Pretend to doze, but every so often
reach out and slap the pencil or knitting needles.
The worker may try to distract you; ignore it.
Remember, the aim is to hamper work. Embroidery and
needlepoint projects make great hammocks in spite of
what the humans may tell you. 
d) For people paying bills (monthly activity) or
working on income taxes or Christmas cards (annual
activity), keep in mind
the aim - to help! First, sit on the paper being
worked on. When dislodged, watch sadly from the side
of the table. When activity proceeds nicely, roll
around on the papers, scattering them to the best of
your ability. After being removed for the second time,
push pens, pencils, and erasers off the table,
one at a time. 
e) When a human is holding the newspaper in front of
him/her, be sure to jump on the back of the paper.
They love to jump.

5. WALKING
As often as possible, dart quickly and as close as
possible in front of the human. Especially effective
places to strike are: 1) On stairs, when they have
something in their arms; 2) In the dark; and 3) When
they first get up in the morning. This exercise helps
with improving their coordination skills.

6. BEDTIME
Always sleep on the human at night. If there are two
(or more) of you, book end the human putting off the
greatest heat. They will try and squirm but your
sheer numbers and inert bodies will effectively keep
them pinned.

7. COMPUTERS
1: Only show interest in computers that are turned ON,
the operator will need your help.
2: Monitors are bad for human eyes. It might ruin your
owner's sight and cause them to buy less cat food.
Always get in between the monitor and the person
operating the computer. For best results, stands as
close to the monitor as possible. If you are removed,
go and sulk in a corner for a minute, then repeat.
Look as innocent as possible.
3: Keyboards are great to lie down on. Make yourself
as comfortable as possible. Marching over the keyboard
several times is fun too. Practice aiming at
alt-F4, N, and ctrl-alt-del.
4: Always chase the mouse. Your owner can't blame you
for this, since it's your feline instinct to chase
mice.
5: Floppy disk make great scratching posts. Nothing
beats floppies when it's time to sharpen your nails.

 Good friends are hard to find, harder to leave, and impossible to forget.
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Access the Recipes And More list archives at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/recipesandmore%40googlegroups.com/

Visit the group home page at:

http://groups.google.com/group/RecipesAndMore
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to