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We just threw them in, let them work it out. One of our grown cats is quite neurotic and very jealous, so we did have to chase her away from the kittens at times. And we went out of our way to shower the older cats with affection and not let them see us fawning over the kittens for a while. We gave them separate litter boxes and food areas, too.
It's worked fine. A lot of growling, especially from Minnie, our neurotic one (She's twenty pounds, we misnamed her!). She still growls. But they worked out the territories by themselves. We just interfered when it got to claws, which never got serious, and tried not to act too differently, so that the cats didn't feel too upset about the changes. Another thing I did was pet the kittens and the older cats at the same time, which got them used to being close.
It can't go perfectly smoothly, because it is a big change. But I think the less you worry about it, the easier it will go. Like bringing home a second child, you just have to make sure that the older ones don't see the younger one as a threat for affection. But play it by ear, let them work out their own hierarchy (which may turn out differently than you expect), and watch for fights. Make the new cat adjust more than the older ones, if you can. Don't move the older cats' box or food, for instance. And don't scold the older ones if you can help it, coax them through it. When Minnie would growl, I would pet her and tell her it was okay, and she would usually calm down.
I know, I'm rambling. Sorry.
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