Rules of Etiquette
for Inexperienced Cats
If you have to throw up, get into a
chair quickly. If you cannot manage this in time, get to an Oriental
rug. Shag is good.
Determine quickly which guest hates
cats. Sit on that lap during the evening. He won't dare push you off and
will even call you "nice kitty." If you can arrange to have cat
food on your breath, so much the better.
For sitting on laps or rubbing
against trouser legs, select colors which contrast with your own.
Always accompany guests to the
bathroom. It is not necessary to do anything. Just sit and stare.
For guests who say, "I love
kitties," be ready with aloof disdain, claws applied to stockings or
a quick nip on the ankles.
Do not allow closed doors in any
room. To get one open, stand on hind legs and hammer with forepaws.
Once the door is opened for you, it is not necessary to use it. You can
change your mind. When you have ordered an outside door opened, stand half
in and half out and think about several things. This is particularly
important during very cold weather or mosquito season.
If one person is busy and the other
is idle, sit with the busy one. For book readers, get in close under the
chin, unless you can lie across the book itself.
For ladies knitting, curl quietly
into lap and pretend to doze. Then reach out and slap knitting needles
sharply. This is what she calls a dropped stitch. She will try to distract
you. Ignore it.
For people doing homework, sit on
the paper being worked on. After being removed for the second time, push
anything movable off the table -- pens, pencils, stamps -- one at a time.
Get enough sleep during the daytime
so that you are fresh for playing at night between 2 and 4 a.m.