why does my cat stare at me? asked and answered
You looked up from your phone and the cat was staring at you. Unblinking. Inscrutable. Possibly for the last ten minutes, possibly since Tuesday. You want to know why. I am a cat, I stare at humans professionally, and I will tell you exactly what is going on behind those eyes. Most of it is flattering. Some of it is about food. A small percentage is classified.
staring is how we talk to you
Here is the thing humans never quite absorb: adult cats barely meow at each other. The meow, the stare, the slow parade past your laptop, these are tools we developed largely for managing humans, because you respond to them. You are a visual, noisy species. We adapted. When a cat stares at you, it is not being eerie. It is speaking. You are simply slow at the language, which is why articles like this must exist.
the slow blink: you are being told something important
Watch the eyes. If the cat looks at you and closes its eyes slowly, that is not sleepiness. Researchers have actually studied this: the slow blink is a genuine feline signal of trust and contentment, the nearest thing we issue to a written compliment. An unblinking hard stare says vigilance. A soft stare with slow blinks says: i am comfortable enough around you to close my eyes, which for a predator is an enormous concession.
You can answer. Look at the cat, blink slowly back, look away. Done correctly, the cat will often return it. You have now had a conversation. It is the only small talk I endorse.
the routine audit (also known as: you are late)
A great deal of staring is administrative. Cats run on routine with the rigidity of a small railway company, and you are the unreliable staff. If the stare happens near feeding time, near the cupboard where the food lives, or from beside an empty bowl, there is no mystery to solve. The stare is a memo. The memo says: it is six o'clock somewhere in this house and you know exactly what you have done.
the predator's habit
We are ambush hunters. Watching things attentively without moving is not strange to us; it is the job. You are the largest, most erratic creature in the territory, you control the food, the doors and the warm surfaces, and you fall over nothing at least once a week. Of course we monitor you. It is not menace. It is due diligence. I have watched my humans for years and I still cannot predict them, which keeps the work interesting.
affection, the quiet kind
Cats that like you simply watch you exist. If the cat sits across the room facing you, loafed, eyes half shut, occasionally blinking slowly, that is companionship, feline edition. Dogs express devotion by standing on you and breathing. We express it by choosing to be in the room and keeping an eye on our person. Different schools. Ours is quieter and sheds slightly less.
when a stare is worth a closer look
Rarely, staring has a medical edge. A cat staring blankly at walls or into corners, pressing its head against surfaces, or showing a sudden change in pupil size in normal light deserves a vet visit, as does any staring that arrives together with confusion, yowling at night, or changes in eating. In older cats especially, changes in awareness are worth taking seriously. The stare I have described everywhere else in this article comes with a relaxed body. The concerning kind does not.
Upload a photo to the cat mood reader and get your cat's inner monologue decoded, including their current opinion of you. Prepare yourself.
read their moodRelated files from my desk: why does my cat bite me and why does my cat knock things over. Or skip the reading and stare directly at me, three free messages, no signup. I promise to stare back.
The obvious note: behaviour writing with jokes attached, not veterinary advice. Staring plus confusion, head-pressing, or any sudden change in an older cat means a vet, promptly.