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What Does It Mean to Be a Black Cat Girlfriend?

What Does It Mean to Be a Black Cat Girlfriend?

Cosmopolitana day ago
In typical attention-loving fashion, 'golden retriever boyfriends' have been making the rounds online for a few years now. But more recently, the GRBF's darker, more mysterious counterpart has crept into the spotlight. Enter: the 'black cat girlfriend.'
Originating from the same cultural wellspring that gave us the golden retriever boyfriend (TikTok, obviously), the black cat girlfriend is what she sounds like, 'a partner who mirrors the classic personality traits we often associate with black cats: mysterious, independent, and selectively affectionate,' explains relationship coach Amie Leadingham.
But don't let the seemingly standoffish vibes fool you. There's much more to the black cat girlfriend archetype than her withdrawn, slightly witchy exterior lets on (and that's part of her magic). Embedded within the black cat's cool, unattached personality is the potential for fierce loyalty and vulnerability—with the right person, of course. And whether you suspect you may fall into this category or are seeking a black cat girlfriend of your own, the experts I spoke to for this story agree that BCGF energy can actually be an incredibly healthy and rewarding thing to bring to a relationship.
Below, dating experts weigh in on everything you need to know about black cat girlfriends, from what it really means to be one to whether black cat girlfriends and golden retrievers are actually compatible.
'A black cat girlfriend is the walking embodiment of 'I'm good either way' energy,' says Sabrina Bendory, a relationship coach for Dating.com and author of the forthcoming book Detached: How to Let Go, Heal, and Become Irresistible. 'She's independent, confident, and just a little mysterious. Think: 'I have my own life, but you're welcome to orbit it.''
The female counterpart of (and in many ways the antithesis to) the golden retriever boyfriend—the endlessly doing partner who lives to adore and be adored—the black cat girlfriend is more reserved, self-sufficient, and, crucially, more selective. While the golden retriever boyfriend may be characterized as 'just happy to be there,' Bendory explains, black cat girlfriends choose to be there. 'And when we do, it's because we genuinely want you, not because we're trying to fill a void,' Bendory adds.
A black cat girlfriend 'is highly selective about where they invest their social energy, values their alone time, tends to be more introverted, and has a slightly aloof yet intimidating quality about them that draws people in,' says Leadingham. But once you've earned their trust, 'they become fiercely loyal and affectionate.'
A golden retriever boyfriend, by comparison, 'is stereotypically social, confident, friendly, warm, outgoing and eager to please,' adds relationship coach and psychotherapist Samantha Burns. 'Whereas someone who is a black cat may be a bit more cautious and wary of giving their love and attention freely. With a black cat girlfriend you have to initially 'earn it,' but once you prove yourself, they are loving and affectionate.'
It's easy to mistake black cat girlfriend energy as cold, avoidant, or even 'pick-me'–coded, hence why some might interpret the BCGF label as negative. But the thing that makes the black cat girlfriend so compelling is that she's not any of those things. Her confidence and independence come from a place of authenticity, not fear or performance.
'It's the opposite of performing for male approval; she's magnetic because she's good on her own,' Bendory explains. 'She's not trying to be the 'cool girl' in order to get the guy, she just is who she is—and there is nothing sexier than that.'
And while many may mistake the black cat's independent, slow-to-warm approach to relationships for fear-based avoidance, Bendory says the true black cat girlfriend 'isn't afraid to be vulnerable, be present, and actually connect' with the right person.
'Being a black cat girlfriend is actually a sign of emotional maturity and strong boundaries,' adds Leadingham. 'They know their worth, and they're not going to give their energy away to just anyone.'
Far from the cold, calculating femme fatales black cats are sometimes made out to be, a black cat mentality is actually 'one of the most powerful dating mindsets you can have,' says Bendory. 'A black cat doesn't chase, she attracts. If she's giving you her time, it's because she wants to, not because she's trying to prove something.'
Social media wisdom commonly holds that 'every relationship has a golden retriever boyfriend and a black cat girlfriend.' And while we're told opposites attract, is golden retriever energy really a match for your typical black cat?
In short, it can be!
'They can be a great match—as long as both are coming from a healthy place. If the black cat is just dissociating and afraid to be vulnerable, that's not mysterious, that's avoidance,' says Bendory. 'And if the golden retriever is insecure, desperate, and willing to be her loyal servant no matter how she treats him, that's not devotion, that's a doormat.'
Basically, black cat on golden retriever compatibility all depends on whether both parties are able to 'understand and appreciate their differences rather than trying to change each other,' says Leadingham.
If they can do that, then black cats and golden retrievers may even be able to learn from each other and establish a kind of ying-yang harmony in a relationship. 'I like to say that golden retriever boyfriends have a secure attachment style, which means they are comfortable with closeness and intimacy, they communicate well, they are reliable, and confident in expressing their feelings,' says Burns. 'A black cat girlfriend may be a bit more reserved, skeptical, or slower to warm up initially. But once that connection is created they also model this security, confidence, affection, and loyalty towards their partner.'
Ultimately, whether or not a golden retriever is the right partner for you, as the prospective black cat girlfriend, is up to you to decide. Because, as Burns notes, the most defining feature of the BCGF is that she 'is comfortable with her independence and is proactive in getting her needs met. She knows what she wants and doesn't feel the need to constantly be on or people please.'
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36 Purchases That Feel Like Treats In Your Thirties
36 Purchases That Feel Like Treats In Your Thirties

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36 Purchases That Feel Like Treats In Your Thirties

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Laneige's Neo Blurring Powder to absorb oil and blur pores so effectively that you'll be like, "Oh ... witchcraft??" Might be the only explanation for how this can matte-ify your complexion while still keeping it radiant and glowy. ✨ A set of Victoria's Secret–inspired seamless "invisible" underwear so soft and stretchy your butt will want to *sing* when you slide them on. This is a true holy grail underwear that doesn't show, doesn't ride up, and somehow manages to look cute all at the same time. A set of espresso martini instant cocktail tea bags — all the sophistication of tea, the zing! of coffee, and the 😜 of a cheeky cocktail, without the exorbitant bar price tags. All you have to do is add three ounces of cold water, 1.5 ounces of hard liquor, and the tea sachet into a glass, and you'll have a delicious cocktail in one minute. Lumify Eye Drops, a product so beloved by TikTok that despite being more $$ than other brands, it's the number one selling brand on Amazon right now. 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Dad Describes What Makes Orange Cats So Unique and People Can't Stop Laughing
Dad Describes What Makes Orange Cats So Unique and People Can't Stop Laughing

Yahoo

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Dad Describes What Makes Orange Cats So Unique and People Can't Stop Laughing

Dad Describes What Makes Orange Cats So Unique and People Can't Stop Laughing originally appeared on PetHelpful. If you have an orange cat at home, you know that many of them have different personalities from other cats. For some reason, they always seem to be funnier, more demanding, and far quirkier than your average cat. And people love watching and hearing about orange cat antics, as you'll see in this video that orange cat dad TikToker @renusdelph shared recently. Renus has an orange cat who loves to be held in a unique position - he likes his dad to hold him on his back so he's upside down. Make sure your sound is on so you can hear Renus describe what makes orange cats so unique; you'll be laughing by the end of the video! We can't quit laughing at how chill this cat is is! Renus' description painted the perfect mental picture, all while watching the orange cat watch down!Commenters Stories About Their Own Funny Orange Cats Viewers left some funny comments and stories about orange cats. @Enything the Gremlin was spot on when they said, "Orange is an affliction." @muchtooyoungtofeelthisdamnold added, "That's because all orange cats share a single brain cell," and @Ashuri shared, "Mine sometimes has thoughts..." We couldn't help but laugh when @Porsche said, "No thoughts. Elevator music behind eyes." @maxxfarmer63 suggested, "Try tuxedo cats, same thing." Commenter @White Trash Witch talked about her orange cat, "My orange cat is terrified of the microwave and pop top cans. They are definitely a whole other breed LOL!" @connieboren186 cracked us up with, "Little Pumpkin Trip Hazard here was feral this spring. But he got a hold of a brain cell and realized inside is not bad." Viewer @kyriemason0 made us laugh with, 'My orange is also weird. He likes to face plant the back of the couch." @GPM admitted, "I would like to trade places with him… just for a day… his level of oblivion sounds sooo nice!" It would be a great way to get away from it all! Psychology Today shared one reason why orange cats might be different from other cats, "Yet, there are other plausible reasons why orange cats may be more affectionate. The gene responsible for the orange color is sex-linked, resulting in a much higher likelihood that an orange cat will be male versus female. Although the research is far from definitive, male cats have been said to be slightly friendlier than female cats, which could explain the loving nature of orange cats." This explanation might not explain why they're so goofy, but it might explain why everybody loves them! Dad Describes What Makes Orange Cats So Unique and People Can't Stop Laughing first appeared on PetHelpful on Aug 15, 2025 This story was originally reported by PetHelpful on Aug 15, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword

The Science of Why Humans are Obsessed with Stadium Concerts
The Science of Why Humans are Obsessed with Stadium Concerts

Time​ Magazine

time2 hours ago

  • Time​ Magazine

The Science of Why Humans are Obsessed with Stadium Concerts

August 15, 2025 marks the 60th anniversary of a pivotal moment in live music history: The Beatles' infamous performance at Shea Stadium. What began as an unprecedented attempt to accommodate the Fab Four's overwhelming popularity has evolved into a touchstone of pop culture—the modern stadium tour. Today's stadium concerts are more than just supersized live shows; they have become cultural phenomena and socio-economic markers. Perhaps most intriguingly—at least to me—they are also neuroscientific experiments in mass synchronization. In 1965, pop music's demographic was dominated by teenagers with disposable income and a desire to break the self-imposed boundaries of their post-Depression-era parents. The Beatles' audience at Shea was overwhelmingly young, predominantly female, and distinctly American. In the decades since, stadium audiences have expanded in every conceivable way. Through the '80s and '90s artists like U2, Madonna, and Michael Jackson drew increasingly global, multi-generational crowds. Today, truly global music acts like BLACKPINK and Bad Bunny play to stadium audiences worldwide, reflecting the increasing multicultural appeal of contemporary music. And touring artists like Bruce Springsteen, Paul McCartney, Cyndi Lauper, and The Rolling Stones now draw in new followers aside lifelong fans, with three generations of family members often attending together. Fandom itself has transformed. Where fans once relied on the vagaries of radio play and magazine spreads to engage with their favorite artists, today's fans form tightknit communities on social media platforms like TikTok and Discord. Through these digital spaces, enthusiasts exchange theories, share memes, decode Easter eggs, and coordinate elaborate travel plans and ticket-buying strategies months in advance. The shift from passive consumption to active participation has transformed how fans engage with pop music, turning concerts into global events that have expanded well beyond geography and generations. Yet this evolution has created new challenges, chief among them, the skyrocketing cost of being part of the experience. We've gone from $5.10 to see the Beatles at Shea Stadium to Eras Tour tickets with face values ranging from $49 to $449 reselling for up to $20,000 on StubHub and SeatGeek. When my mother wanted to surprise me with tickets to Bryan Adams' Waking Up The Neighbours Tour in 1992, she lined up at the physical box office hours before opening with other eager fans. She forked over $42.50 for two, side-view seats in the lower bowl. Compare that to last year when I battled bots and refreshed my browser every few milliseconds in the hope of scoring four tickets to Olivia Rodrigo's GUTS World Tour before they soared to mortgage-level proportions. By some miracle, I was able to take my three teenage daughters to their first arena show for a relatively low $600. They're now saving their babysitting money and diligently tracking price trends for Benson Boone's American Heart Tour while I'm (half) considering dipping into their college fund to see Bryan Adams again this fall. At what point does the price of admission outweigh the joy of participation? When it came to the Eras Tour, like many other disappointed Swifties, we had to settle for movie screenings and grainy live feeds. Swift didn't stop in our hometown of Montreal. We considered travelling to Toronto, Boston, New York, or Philadelphia. When calculating the costs—tickets, travel, accommodations, meals—our cheapest option turned out to be Lisbon, Portugal. That three-day excursion would have set us back about $6,000 CAD. While that was substantially less than the resale tickets in any nearby city, the financial cost and complicated logistics of participation were too great. Economists often argue that high ticket prices are simply a reflection of market forces—artists, and resellers, can charge more because demand far outstrips supply. Sociologists counter that this trend deepens cultural divides, turning concerts into exclusive experiences for the financially privileged. Despite the costs, stadiums continue to sell out at record speed, raising the question: what is it about live music that makes us willing to pay such a premium? Is it the music itself, the sense of community, or something even more basic? For 30 years, our lab has been exploring why music moves us—literally and figuratively. Many of our studies focus on memory for music, demonstrating that people have a remarkable ability to recall melodies, pitch, tempo, and loudness with surprising accuracy, even without formal music training, suggesting that musical memory operates differently from other forms of memory. We conducted some of the first neuroimaging studies to map the brain's response to music—showing how it lights up the brain, engaging areas responsible for hearing, memory, movement, and emotion all at once. This is why a song can transport you back to a specific moment in time, evoking vivid memories and emotions. Our studies show that when people listen to music they love, it activates brain regions associated with pleasure and reward, helping to explain why a favorite song can feel as satisfying as a good meal or a warm hug. Music's ability to give you chills and make you feel euphoric is tied to the release of natural opioids in the brain, the same chemicals that help relieve pain. Years ago, our lab showed in brain scans that listening to the same piece of music caused people's brain waves to synchronize. Recent studies conducted in real-time, in concert halls, demonstrate that people enjoy music more when the performance is live and experienced as part of a group. Live music triggers stronger emotional responses than recorded music due to the dynamic relationship between the audience and the performers. The visual cues, collective energy, and real-time responsiveness of live music engage more sensory and emotional systems than listening alone, deepening our visceral connection to the experience. Attending a concert is associated with increases in oxytocin, a bonding hormone, enhancing our sense of social connection. When we move together to music—clapping, swaying, or singing in sync—we engage neural circuits involved in motor coordination, empathy, and social prediction, reinforcing our sense of being part of a group. We're literally on the same brainwave! What ties all this together is the simple but profound idea that music is more than just entertainment. From the joy of discovering a new banger to the comfort of an old, familiar tune, music may well be a biological necessity, a fundamental part of being human, wired into our brains and bodies in ways that shape how we think, feel, and connect with one another. Our innate desire for connection might also, in part, explain why a friendship bracelet exchange (inspired by Swift's You're On Your Own Kid) is trending at modern stadium shows: the simple act of swapping beaded bracelets cultivates a microcosm of human connection within a macro-scale experience. It's a ritual that transforms a crowd of thousands into an intimate community, where strangers become momentary friends, bound by shared enthusiasm and a tangible token of group membership. It's a small, tactile gesture that taps into our deep-seated need to bond, to feel seen, and to belong. In a world where digital interactions often replace physical ones, these trinkets are a reminder of the power of touch, of giving, and of creating memories that extend beyond the concert itself. Music has always been a social glue, a way for humans to synchronize their emotions and movements, whether around a Neanderthal campfire or in a packed stadium. And in an era of increasing isolation, these moments of connection feel more vital than ever. Making friendship bracelets to share with your fellow Swifties may be part of the solution. But today's stadium shows aren't just about emotional connection or even entirely about the music—it's also a masterclass in sensory stimulation. The Beatles may have pioneered the stadium format, but their setup was quaint by today's standards. Early stadium shows featured little more than musicians standing in front of a static backdrop, struggling to project their sound through subpar sound systems designed for sports announcers, not music. By the 1980s, technological advancements had changed the game. Pink Floyd's The Wall Tour in 1980 set a new standard for large-scale stage production, with elaborate sets, visual projections, and theatrical storytelling. U2's Zoo TV Tour in 1992 introduced multimedia screens that transformed the stage into a digital playground. More recently, Taylor Swift's Eras Tour involved 70,000 wristbands pulsing in unison, and stage sets transforming from slithering snakes to whimsical fairy-tale forests to cinematic cityscapes. And Beyoncé's 2023 Renaissance Tour incorporated cutting-edge robotics and high-fashion couture, proving that stadium concerts can be as much about visual effects as they are about the music. While many fans view these advances as improvements, others argue that the intimacy and simplicity of early stadium shows have faded, and been replaced by a commercialized, high-stakes industry. The Outlaws Roadshow stadium tour in 2012 left me feeling as though I had overpaid for a lights and lasers show that happened to include the Counting Crows phoning it in somewhere in the background. In the pursuit of grandeur, has some of the raw, unfiltered magic of live music been diluted? And what does all this mean for the future of live music? If the past 60 years of stadium shows (and tens of thousands of years of human music-making) have taught us anything, it's that music, at its core, is about shared experience. We crave the pulse of the bass beneath our feet, the collective chant of a catchy chorus or killer bridge, the unspoken understanding between strangers who, for just one night, are part of something bigger than themselves. As technology continues to evolve and fan communities grow more interconnected, one thing is certain: the stadium concert will remain a space where we come together, not just to listen, but to belong.

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