Last Updated on April 11, 2026 by admin
Bentley weighs 20.2 pounds. Beau weighs five. When Bentley decides it’s cuddle time, there’s no negotiation — he just sits on her.
That’s exactly what their owner Lauren, 29, walked in on: her massive cat parked directly on top of her kitten like she was a heated cushion he’d found on sale. Beau was somewhere underneath, presumably rethinking every life choice that led to this moment.
But Beau is five pounds of pure audacity. In the TikTok video that’s now been watched over 1.3 million times, she wriggles free, circles behind her enormous brother, and launches a full-scale ambush on a cat four times her size. Bentley barely flinches. He’s been through this before.
How They Got Here
Lauren brought Beau home as a kitten, and the introduction went nothing like the textbooks describe. There was no slow acclimation through a closed door, no scent-swapping with blankets. The two became obsessed with each other almost immediately.
Now they do everything together. They nap tangled in each other. They eat side by side. And every single cuddle session ends the same way — in a play fight that looks like a nature documentary directed by someone who’s had too much coffee.
The Daily Routine
Bentley’s approach to coexistence is simple: if Beau is in a spot he wants, he sits on her. If Beau is doing something he finds interesting, he sits near her and stares. If Beau is sleeping, he drapes one enormous paw across her body like a weighted blanket with opinions.
Beau’s approach is equally consistent: wait, plot, attack from behind.
Their TikTok account has racked up 4.7 million likes documenting this exact cycle. One recent video captioned “Bentley is double his size — will Beau keep growing?” has fans already placing bets on whether the kitten will ever catch up.
The Internet Weighed In
The sitting video pulled 1.3 million views and 293,400 likes on TikTok. Comments split into two camps: people who were genuinely concerned for the kitten’s safety, and people who recognized the scene instantly because their own cat does the exact same thing.
“This is literally my two cats every single day,” one commenter wrote. Another added: “The revenge attack from behind is SO accurate.”
For anyone worried about Beau, the Cornell Feline Health Center notes that play fighting between bonded cats — even when there’s a significant size difference — is normal social behavior. Cats who were raised with companions learn to calibrate their roughness. The key sign that it’s play, not aggression: both cats keep coming back for more.
Beau keeps coming back for more.
20 Pounds of Gentle
Bentley could flatten most things in Lauren’s apartment if he wanted to. He chooses to flatten only Beau, and only with love. His fans call him “the gentle giant,” but Lauren knows better. He’s not gentle. He’s just slow. Beau is faster, and Bentley has accepted this.
At 20.2 pounds, Bentley isn’t overweight — he’s just big. The kind of big where guests walk in and say, “Is that a cat?” The kind of big where Beau uses him as a pillow and disappears completely.
And every night, they curl up together in the same cat bed. Bentley takes up 90 percent of it. Beau takes the remaining 10 and somehow still wins.
Does your big cat sit on your little cat? We need photographic evidence. Drop it in the comments.

