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"Falak par chamakta hua chand… Rehmat aur barkat ka paigham le kar aaya hai

"Falak par chamakta hua chand… Rehmat aur barkat ka paigham le kar aaya hai. Eid ul Adha… Woh din jo humein yaqeen aur itaat ka sabak deta hai. Jab ek baap ne Allah ke hukum par apni sab se azeez cheez bhi qurban karne ka jazba dikhaya… Yeh sirf janwar ki qurbani nahi, balkay apne nafs, apni anaa, aur apni khwahishaat ki qurbani hai. Kaaba ki taraf dekhte hue, har dil se yahi dua nikalti hai — Ya Allah, humein bhi sacchi qurbani ki taufeeq ata farma. Is mubarak din par apni khushiyan baant dein, zarurat mandon ka sahara ban jaen, aur mohabbat ka paigham phaila dein. Allah hum sab ki ibadat aur qurbani qubool farmaye. Eid Mubarak."

ID: ee88a037-45a4-4902-9004-5fd782f45f61

Created: 2026-02-21T15:24:40.572Z

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That's patrol behavior. And here's the thing — this protective instinct? It's only the surface of what's really going on. By the end of this, you're going to understand what your cat is truly communicating when they follow you in there, and it goes so much deeper than protection. It might honestly change the way you see them forever. Number two — your cat thinks you're eating without them. Have you ever noticed your cat sniffing the air the second they step into the bathroom with you? Or just... staring at you with this look, like you're clearly hiding something? That's because in their mind, you probably are. Here's why — in the wild, when a cat makes a kill, the very first thing they do is take it somewhere private. Away from the group. Because sharing isn't survival. Eating alone means keeping everything. Now think about what you do every single day from your cat's point of view. You walk into a room, close the door, and stay in there for a while. To your cat, that sequence matches one thing almost perfectly — you're eating something, and you don't want them to know. And this isn't just a quirky little theory. Resource competition is one of the most powerful forces in feline behavior. Cats are hardwired to make sure they're not being left out of a meal. Even when there's absolutely no meal happening, their brain doesn't stop and rationalize. It just reacts. Closed door, isolation — someone is eating without me. This is also why some cats meow relentlessly outside the bathroom door, or why the very first thing they do when you finally open it is investigate the floor. They're not greeting you. They're checking for evidence. They want to know what you had, and where you put the rest. And if you've ever just wanted one peaceful minute in that bathroom — well, now you know why that's apparently not allowed. Share this with someone who needs to hear it. Because we're just getting started.

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