A recent study finds that cats are a lot less disruptive of sleep than dogs.
What's your experience? https://theconversation.com/could-sharing-a-bedroom-with-your-pets-be-keeping-you-from-getting-a-good-nights-sleep-226216 #caturday #CatsOfMastondon #DogsOfMastodon
Could sharing a bedroom with your pets be keeping you from getting a good night’s sleep?
Pets provide a source of comfort and intimacy for many owners drifting off to sleep. But according to new research, they may also disrupt your ability to fall or stay asleep.The Conversation
- Definitely (45%, 56 votes)
- Those researchers never met my cat (43%, 54 votes)
- Those researchers never met my dog (10%, 13 votes)
vieuxnez
in reply to The Conversation U.S. • • •WhiteCatTamer
in reply to The Conversation U.S. • • •I think that depends entirely on whether the cat has decided that sleeptime is over for the human.
Dogs might be bigger and louder, and cats smaller and nimbler (and without clickety claws on hardwood) but they also have Agendas and if you sleeping past 4:13 AM is not on that Agenda, they will make it known.