Dr. Chen recommended something called the ZipBuddy™.
It's a ball with a fuzzy tail that turns on when your cat touches it.
I ordered it that night.
When it arrived, I was nervous.
Another $13 wasted?
I turned it on. Set it on the floor.
Oliver's ears shot up.
Within seconds, he was stalking it.
The ball moved all over the place. Left, right, spinning. Just like a mouse trying to escape.
Oliver pounced.
For the first time ever, he played hard for 20 straight minutes.
Not just a quick swat and walk away.
Actually playing.
The next morning, I left it on before work.
That night, I slept until my alarm went off.
No 3 AM sprint. No crashes. No meowing.
Oliver was peacefully asleep.
I checked the security camera later.
Oliver played with that thing for over 2 hours while we were gone. In short bursts all day long, exactly how cats naturally hunt.
By bedtime, he was calm and tired.
A cat that plays during the day sleeps at night.
So simple.
But it worked.
The Science Actually Makes Sense
I went down a research rabbit hole after that.
Here's what vets have known forever:
Cats are wired to be active at sunrise and sunset.
That's when they hunt in the wild.
But house cats who sleep all day don't use up that energy.
So it explodes at the worst time: when you're trying to sleep.
The fix isn't complicated:
Tire them out during the day, they'll sleep at night.
But regular toys don't work because:
They don't move, so cats don't care.
Laser pointers need you to be home.
Regular balls roll for 3 seconds and stop.
Your cat needs something that moves on its own for hours. Something that feels like hunting.
That's what motion-activated toys do.
They turn on when your cat touches them.
They move like real prey.
They keep your cat busy for hours, not minutes.
And the data backs it up:
A study of 847 cats found that 98% of owners saw less nighttime chaos after adding motion-activated exercise during the day.
That was exactly what happened to me.