Paws down it is dogs. More empathy than cats. Cats generally could care less.
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
For me it's dogs.
With cats its probably how they are going to kill you.Cats are a closed book to me. They are there in the room but I have no idea what they are thinking
Don't mind either, so tend to treat them much the same, even if a dog (Chow) took an undeserved (and unexpected) bite out of my hand as a six-year-old - never owned either although we did have a cat when I was very small:
View attachment 51664
Paws down it is dogs. More empathy than cats. Cats generally could care less.
Did you know that that is a very recent development? Cats in the wild are loners (except for lions). And so it was a sensation when social behaviour was first described among the street cats of Rome in the 1960s.That's not true. I had a (male) cat go into labor with me last time around... I'd have a contraction, and he'd roll and howl on the floor. He ran about, wanting someone to take care of the problem. We've also had female cats attend to the babies, and one overly rambunctious cat who defended my son's soup while he went to the bathroom.
Love both of their journal entries. Bout as authentic as it gets.
I put the naughty Chow down to just having a bad day (waiting for its master outside a shop), was short-sighted, mistook my hand for a food offering, or because they are temperamentally that way, so not a slight on all dogs. Did make me a bit more careful around dogs for a while no doubt.Husband had a similar experience with a chow. Enjoys dogs otherwise, but no chows. Hones