10 Common Cat Owner Habits to Stop (Your Cat Will Feel the Difference Fast)
From forced cuddles to essential oils, these everyday habits can stress your cat. Here are 10 things to stop doing starting today.

You can adore your cat and still accidentally stress them out. Some of the most “normal” human habits—affection, convenience, even home fragrance—can quietly chip away at your cat’s comfort and trust.
Below are 10 common things to stop doing with your cat, plus what to do instead so your home feels calmer for both of you.
1) Stop kissing your cat on the nose all the time
A nose kiss feels sweet to you, but your cat’s nose is basically a super-powered sensor. When your face gets close, strong human smells (coffee, toothpaste, perfume) can overwhelm them in a second.
Face-to-face contact can also read as intense or threatening in “cat language.” If your cat leans away, it’s often discomfort—not rejection.
Try instead: slow blinks, quiet companionship, and gentle chin or cheek rubs. If you’ve ever noticed your cat relax when you simply sit nearby, that’s not a coincidence.
2) Stop waking your cat up just to interact
Cats sleep a lot for a reason: it helps their bodies recover and keeps their systems running well. Repeatedly interrupting naps can build irritation and stress over time.
A tired, overstimulated cat may become more reactive, withdrawn, or grumpy—sometimes even aggressive.
Try instead: let your cat wake up naturally and choose the moment for affection or play. Attention on your cat’s terms builds trust faster.
3) Stop yelling to “discipline” bad behavior
Cats don’t connect yelling with a lesson the way humans do. If you shout after something happened, your cat mostly learns that you can become scary and loud without warning.
Over time, that stress can show up as hiding, swatting, over-grooming, or even peeing outside the litter box.
Try instead: calm redirection and prevention. Move scratching to a scratching post, block access to problem spots, and reward the behaviors you want to see.



