I watch cats. Not because they invited me to, they never do, but because they sit there being quietly perfect at everything, and somehow I end up staring like I've forgotten how to blink. It's ridiculous, really, us with our half-finished coffee and our endless questions, while they have already decided the day is for napping, eating, staring out windows, and occasionally knocking something off a shelf just to remind us who's in charge.
I watch cats. Not because they invited me to, they never do, but because they sit there being quietly perfect at everything, and somehow I end up staring like I've forgotten how to blink. It's ridiculous, really, us with our half-finished coffee and our endless questions, while they have already decided the day is for napping, eating, staring out windows, and occasionally knocking something off a shelf just to remind us who's in charge.
Here you'll find notes on living with them, the unwritten contract we never signed but follow anyway. The tiny wars over space that end in shared naps nobody won. The way boredom turns into sudden chaos for reasons only they understand, then slips right back to stillness like nothing happened. Cats don't explain themselves. We do, all the time, usually wrong, and they just watch with those half-closed eyes that say go on, try again. Hard to tell who is more patient.
If you're here because you typed "cats" into the search bar (or "cat," same difference, who hasn't?), stay a while. We'll notice the small things most people walk past: the slow blink that means mercy granted without a fight, the ritual of bowls filled twice a day with no fuss, the embarrassment after a missed leap when they pretend it was intentional all along. Quiet resolutions that aren't resolutions at all, just the house settling into whatever new normal the cats have decided on.
No advice. No shopping lists. No how-to guides. Just the absurd, beautiful truths of sharing a home with creatures who are quietly better at it than we are, and who tolerate us with a patience that's almost kind. Probably us who need the tolerance more.
The cats do the real work. I'm just the one with the notebook, the bad habit of talking to them like they care (which they don't), and the occasional hope they might be amused anyway.
This website actually came about second. I recently wrote a book , The Unwritten Contract: Notes on Living with Cats. It wasn't some grand plan or calculated move. It was a necessity, plain and simple, born out of the kind of love that sneaks up on you and refuses to let go. The book came first because I couldn't not write it. The love was too much, the moments too insistent: the slow blink that means mercy, the way time loops in seasons and waiting, the quiet resolutions that aren't resolutions at all. It had to go somewhere, so it became pages. Now those pages spill out here, because some things are too good to keep to one binding.
Stay here if you want to remember why you love them. Stay if you want to laugh at yourself a little for thinking you understand them. Stay if you just want to sit quietly with someone else who watches. That's the honest part. The rest is just pages. The cats don't need the book or a website. They have the house, the bowls, the laps, and each other. We get to watch, and sometimes, if we're very quiet, they let us write about it.
Hard to tell if the cats notice we're here.
Probably us who need the company more.
That's the reason, isn't it? The cats have each other. We have them. And sometimes, when the light is right, and they're all asleep in a pile, it's almost the same thing.