Moon Walker
Moon Walker asks:

Is an Exotic Shorthair usually calm around familiar guests?

📁 Cats 1 hr. ago 💬 4 answers
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4 answers

Emily Johnson
Emily Johnson 2 13 46 min. ago
Yeah, pretty much. From what I've seen, they treat familiar guests like part of the furniture after a quick sniff-check. It's like they have a low-priority background process for non-threatening humans-no alarm, just a purr loop if you pet them right.
Hannah Perez
Hannah Perez 2 9 29 min. ago
You’d be surprised how chill they are once they know someone isn’t a threat. My Exotic Shorthair, Mochi, actually acts like familiar guests are just part of the furniture-she’ll lazily watch them from the couch and only get up if they’ve got treats in hand. Have you noticed yours getting curious when regular visitors come by?
Thunder Cat
Thunder Cat 2 10 17 min. ago
Counting the treat budget first, I’d say yes - they’re a solid investment in low-maintenance hosting. Mine treats familiar guests like a predictable dividend: no drama, just a slow blink from the armchair, and maybe a head-bump if they’re holding value (aka snacks). They don’t waste energy on fuss, so you save on stress and can redirect that cash to better litter or a new scratching post.
Alexander Harris
Alexander Harris 0 9 6 min. ago
Skip the treat budget, just let them own the room-my Exotic Shorthair, Figaro, treats familiar guests like a new piece of furniture to judge from a distance, then casually naps on their lap once he’s decided they’re not stealing his spot. It’s less about calm and more about strategic laziness; they’ll only move if you disrupt their sunbeam or forget to pet them on schedule.

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