this post was submitted on 01 Apr 2025
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None of those are about trimming.
You could literally just search "why do people trim cat claws." Or just read the other reaponses in this thread.
Unless you're just time trolling, which is a weird way to spend time.
I am not a time troll, please read my other responses too, i compared the trauma.
Other people have laid out, with scientific articles etc, why this is absolutely not comparable to declawing.
(most of the links in this chain are posted by me, and are for unrelated topics) - I was comparing trauma, and in comments I go deeper about impact of clipping on their preying skills, and then discussion go on for if indoor cats prey or not, and many links are related to that. I also had added a link for anatomy of claw vs human nail (It is basically just geometry, but there claws are more deep seated and wrap around bones)
https://www.petmd.com/cat/general-health/how-to-trim-cat-nails
You can literally just do a web search about "why do we trim cat claws"
i know i can search, i know why people trim claws, question is, shoul we or should we not
That is an extreme case, and I think that is required pain here.
most of these things seem to indicate to me, the said cat is not doing play/scratch/hunt/climb enough. Many comments speak of this, but i think cats gradually and naturally wearing claws is better than discreetely done
Cats didn't evolve with upholstery. There's not much equivalent in the wild.
So a cat's instinct is probably to have longer claws than are safe in the modern context.
On the other end of the spectrum, my cat was fine using her scratchpads and posts for more than a decade but she's now quite elderly and doesn't play like that as much as she used to. Shamefully, I didn't notice her nails had grown too long until she started limping because one had grown long enough to cut into her footpad.