How else to explain the fact that tailed beasts manage to seep into any crevice is unknown to us. Science too.
Cats are amazing creatures whose way of thinking we, bipedal people, will never comprehend. We cannot understand why the top shelf of the cabinet looks especially convenient; what is so interesting “show” in the washing machine that the cat is ready to look at it for hours; why the broom seems so dangerous even to those pets who see it for the first time. The only thing that scientists could explain is the love of cats for boxes. It turns out that the purrs will choose the second option for a reason between the stunning cat house and the box from under this house. They need a box to feel safe.
But many are haunted by one more thing: how do cats manage to seep into the narrowest cracks and fold into the tiniest boxes? Scientists mumble some boring things about this, they say, flexibility and mobility of joints, all that. But it seems to us that the matter is completely different. First, the process itself looks like this.
Second, everything on this planet is made up mostly of water. Man is about 70 percent water. And cats are one hundred percent, if not water, but liquid, which, by some strange whim (a great feline deity, not otherwise), took the form of fluffy four-legged animals. Agree, this explains everything! Therefore, cats manage to crawl into the sofa, where there is no place even for a hamster, sneak into the kitchen through an almost closed door and hide in a tiny space between the washing machine and the refrigerator.
But seriously, the whole point is really in the structure of the skeleton of cats, it is incredibly flexible. For example, their collarbones are not attached to anything at all. Therefore, seals are folded as if they have no bones.
However, the version that seals are liquid seems to us much more interesting. And the photos from this are even funnier.