lacktheknack said:
Yesterday, I put an eyeless garden gnome in my dorm-mates bed. He freaked out.
He is now OK.
If I continued to put the gnome in places that he didn't expect it, that would do bad things to him emotionally, and make me a jerk. As it is, having happened once, it's a joke at his expense that even he found funny in post.
Not everything's even a fifth as critical as people nowadays would want you to believe.
Except that cats are not humans and their mentality and phsyce does not work exactly the same way as ours does.
I think people tend to humanize their pets or animals in general too much. Believing they will be grateful for things we would be or let things go we would be able to let go off.
Cats are cats, not humans.
In this case, it simply makes more sense that by scaring the cat while it is doing something such as eating, you are making that cat feel unsafe. Now the cat will know that "once I got attacked at that feeding place. If I wish to eat there again, I must be on my guard."
Feeding is in already instingtively a nervous thing to do for any animal as it, under wild conditions, puts them in a dangerous position to begin with.
There are several studies and quiet a bit of science behind all this. When my sister studied to become a vet they even got to listen to presentations about how the cat views its domesticated home.
Sure, the cat probably wont DIE from it. But it doesnt have to bleed for it to be cruelty.