Why Is Your Cat Always Sleeping (Except When You Want To?)

help adjust your cat’s biorhythms.

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While we sleep about 7 to 9 hours a night, a cat sleeps roughly 12 to 16 hours out of every 24. Why is it, then, that they often seem to be underfoot and jonesing for action just when we want things calm? You’d think that with all that time snoozing, the chances would be high for them to be taking it easy when we are.

The reason is that while we are diurnal — most active during the daylight hours — cats are crepuscular — most active at dawn and dusk. In the wild, those times of day provide them with enough light to hunt prey but not enough to be so easily spotted by predators. It’s a biological safeguard.

But what it means in your house is that if the sun starts to rise at 5 am and your alarm clock is set for 7, your cat doesn’t care. She is ready for action as soon as the night’s darkness starts to lift. That’s why so many cats start slapping their owners around in bed as dawn creeps in.

It’s the same for dusk. Just as you’re trying to wind down from a long day, preparing dinner, or getting other chores done after many hours at your desk or away from the house, she’s feeling revved up.

How to sync your down time with your cat’s

You’re not going to be able to erase many thousands of years of evolution by the way you train your cat. She’s always going to have a biological urge to remain active at dawn and dusk. But if you spend some time with your cat every day — training her, playing games with her, stroking her, and so on — she will be able to adapt to your routine better than she might otherwise. Stick to a schedule, and it will go even better. Cats like predictability, and if she can count on you to keep her engaged and entertained at certain times of the day, she will be more likely to be able to make accommodations for your own biorhythms.

Also, perhaps you can adjust your to-do list a little bit. It’s hard at dawn, but at twilight, maybe the thing to do is make a point of playing with your cat rather than trying to get her to adapt to the fact that you want to prepare dinner at that time or just sit quietly. In other words, maybe for the sun-setting half of her daily crepuscular cycle, you can play to her natural propensity rather than the other way around. The concerted effort to pay attention to her at that particular time of day might help her act more cooperatively when you really need it.

1 COMMENT

  1. Since my cat was a tiny kitten I trained her to eat at certain times. As a kitten she ate at 6:00am, 12:00,pm 5:00pm, 10:00pm and 11:00pm. I had to contain her as a kitten because she ate all kinds of things she shouldn’t resulting in two vet visits so, I gave her her own room ( actually my office but also her room) so she does not sleep with me. Now she wakes me at 6:00 I feed her and go back to sleep til 8:00. Then I feed her at 12:00, 5:00 and 10:00. at 2pm she gets a snack that she has to forage for. At 12am we go to bed. I heat a cat stone and put it in her bed and then I give her a teeth cleaning snack. We pet and rub etc for about 10 min. then she curls up in her bed and goes to sleep. She likes to play after lunch because she sleeps all am. She also plays after dinner at 5:00pm. We chase and hunt and she runs all over the house then while I cook and eat she likes to go out on our enclosed patio to hunt bugs. About 4 in the afternoon she enjoys watching the squirrels running everywhere in the yard (that is another story). Her weight is stable; she is happy and healthy.

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