“If an artist may throw paint in rage, if a poet may lament the weight of existence, then surely I may puff my tail in protest.”
— Franzi Katzka, on ‘pineconing’ and the art of justified exasperation

There comes a moment when patience wears thin when the world’s quiet injustices pile too high when the absurdity of it all—the delayed meal, the misplaced toy, the unprovoked disturbance—cracks the fragile veneer of composure. And in that moment, something primal takes over. The tail fluffs, the eyes darken, and the stance shifts from grace to sharp-edged indignation. This, dear reader, is pineconing—the physical embodiment of justified exasperation.
Some believe frustration is an emotion to be tamed, smoothed over, and rationalized. But I ask: Why should it be? If an artist may throw paint in rage, if a poet may lament the weight of existence, then surely I may puff my tail when forced to endure the unbearable—like an unexpected visitor or an improperly portioned meal.
Pineconing is not merely a reaction. It is a statement. A refusal to accept disorder as the natural state of things. A visceral declaration that fairness has been compromised that dignity has been tested. And yet, once the message has been received—once the human fumbles to correct their error, once Schmutz relents and steps away from my perch—the tail settles. Balance is restored.
Is this not the cycle of all resistance? The quiet endurance. The slow build. The inevitable moment of revolt. And then, the return to calm—until the next offense arises.
Perhaps, then, the question is not why I pinecone, but why others do not.