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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To want to keep trying with the new kittens

110 replies

2222thatsme · 24/03/2025 14:10

We took home 3x 7 month old kittens a month ago from a rescue. We previously had an mature adult cat. We didn't do enough research and totally underestimated the impact of 3x kittens.

I keep having mental wobbles and thinking, "I can't do this." Each time I fall into a bit of depression but eventually come out of it, find a solution to whatever the new challenge is and tell myself, "nope, cats are a commitment".

My husband is doing and saying the same out loud. We're both prone to depression, but his is medicated. However, over the weekend, my husband broke down to his mum about finding it all really hard and not being able to cope. He then admitted to me that he now dreads coming home after work.

The things we're finding hard are:

  1. One of the kittens has also had illness during this time, which required trips to a vet far away, which has been an added stress. He's now on the mend.

  2. The kittens have destroyed a lot of parts of the house. Not from boredom scratching (they have so many toys including puzzle ones, scratching posts, I try to do interactive play with them when I can). The damage occurs just from them playing together. It's sweet to watch, they're bonded littermates, but through simply playing chase and pounce with each other, they've destroyed furniture and curtains. I started to price up buying replacements for the damaged stuff over the weekend, got beyond £1K, then stopped and just cried.

To minimise the destruction we have removed all curtains, rugs, an armchair (replaced it with a massive cat tree), and removed all ornaments.

Yesterday evening, my husband sat down next to me in the living room and said, "the room is cold and echoe-y. I don't like the lack of privacy. I'm going to my office." Five minutes later, he then left the office as it's so overcrowded with our ornaments (it's the only cat free room we can reasonably have, as our kids forget to shut the other doors). He says our house doesn't feel like our house anymore, it feels like a cattery with people inserted into it.

I asked an online cat forum and they recommended Jackson Galaxy. I watched his videos this morning and he said each cat just need 30-45 minutes strenuous play a day. Individual play needed as some cats dominate the play and prevent others getting attention. So for three cats that's 2 hours and 15 minutes play a day. I've managed 15 minutes and then ten minutes play with all three cats so far today, not done separate play yet. They mostly wanted to play chase and pounce with each other.

  1. The rest of my life has gone out of the window. I was told at the beginning of the year that I needed to lose weight as my heart health is bad (my dad died young of heart disease so it's a big worry for me). I started a strict diet and exercise routine and lost some weight. This all stopped with the cats, the weight is back on and I'm now stress eating again, although trying not to.

  2. Our kids (7 and 9), who are both diagnosed ND or likely ND, recently told me that I never pay attention to the anymore. I've tried to encourage them to join with me in playing with the cats, which occasionally they do and to be fair my 7 year old helped me build a new cat tree for them over the weekend, but mostly they don't want to and ask "can't we do something else?" They're also overwhelmed by the smell and mess, and chose to play in rooms away from the kitchen-diner, where the cats are based. I asked on a parenting ND children forum, and most people said pets helped their ND kids.

  3. The house cleaning has gone out of the window, which is another stresser for my husband. He likes a clean, immaculate house, which I never fully achieved, but I used to get close to. Now, there's food, litter and cat toys in lots of places. He's also likely ND and finds it overwhelming. My husband works FT, I work PT (3-6 hours a week, depending on need), so housework falls on me. He is picking up more household chores without me asking, but I can see it's adding to his stress levels.

  4. I made some pin money selling secondhand baby clothes, which had the bonus of decluttering the house and helping my husband's anxiety levels. That has also gone by the wayside.

  5. I keep forgetting to do stuff. I forgot to get my kid's uniform washed in time for today. I forgot we'd run out of food so couldn't do my son's packed lunch. I forgot the stuff my daughter needed for Brownies. My brain can't seem to remember the previous emotional load.

I can't do it all and at the moment, the cats take up most of my time. I'm suspected to have ADHD alongside depression, so it's an effort for me to focus on a task. Maybe if I could be more productive, then it would be easier. But it's beginning to feel like there isn't enough hours in the day.

So, at the moment I'm saying, lets keep going with the kittens, they'll grow out of it in a year or so, we can do this. But the rest of my family aren't feeling it and are either depressed (my husband) or highly strung (my kids - who pick up on their parents not being ok mentally by becoming more disruptive, fighting more, shouting and screaming more - so I'm trying to manage their behaviours on top of everything else).

My MIL says "get rid of the cats, your and your family's mental health is more important".

Have I made the wrong choice?

OP posts:
PosiePetal · 24/03/2025 14:13

Have they been spayed/neutered? If so, I would start letting them out. I am always cautious not to let kittens out too young but have started at 6 months old. My cats are now 5 and 11 (years old).

yeesh · 24/03/2025 14:14

You made a mistake in getting so many cats, they will be easier to rehome as kittens and it will be kinder on them. You need to put your children first. Cats can be playful and very active for many years so you are delusional if you think they will stop play fighting and scratching things in a year tbh

HereintheloveofChristIstand · 24/03/2025 14:15

Why did you get so many?

AfricanGreen · 24/03/2025 14:16

You are overwhelmed. You have taken on too much. Sometimes it's better to admit defeat and sell some. You need to go down to one kitten only.

Favouritefruits · 24/03/2025 14:16

Do you let your kittens out of the house? They sound bored and under stimulated, I honestly find cats go stir crazy in the winter being cooped up and as soon as spring hits and they go out for longer periods they calm down again.

what are the kittens doing that means you can’t clean or tidy?

Whyherewego · 24/03/2025 14:17

I voted YABU but only because I don't understand why you thought 3 kittens would be anything other than destructive and hard work and I'm not sure what the rescue was thinking.
I'd contact the rescue and say it's not possible and you can't cope and honestly I think that's ok. Especially given your DC don't even seem interested. This is not the right family for the cats

Gettingbysomehow · 24/03/2025 14:19

What on earth persuaded you to get three. One kitten is more than enough trouble. In fact I avoid kittens generally. Your existing cat must be pissed.
Absolutely bonkers.

cakeisallyouneed · 24/03/2025 14:19

It sounds like you’re having a tough time OP. You may get some tough responses in AIBU. You can also post on the litter tray chat.
Are you planning for them to be outdoor cats? If so you can start to let them out after they have had their 2nd vaccinations and are neutered. This should only be a few months away and will make a big difference and they can spend some of their energy outside instead of you providing it. Kittens also play together so you shouldn’t have to be doing hours of entertainment.
Having said that, if you’ve over committed, kittens are generally more in demand so it may be better to return them sooner rather than later. You could offer to foster them until they are rehomed so that you are not burdening the rescue. Maybe then consider an older cat. These are often overlooked and are over the kitten stage and may be a better fit for you.

NewNameBridget · 24/03/2025 14:20

Three is a lot.

We got one adolescent cat last year (10 months old) and BOY did we regret it for a while, she was wild, scratched furniture to smithereens, would eat everything and anything (ex stray, so a scavenger), including string (three days of poo mashing until it came out). She single handedly (pawedly) destroyed the Christmas tree...

And this was despite regular playing, games, puzzles, etc.

It all changed when she started going outside on her own. She's now 15 months old and is a different cat, she'll still try to eat a bunch of roses, but the scratching and general wildness had passed. She's a lovely snoozy, sociable, little thing now.

Mancala · 24/03/2025 14:20

It sounds like you've got enough on your plate without this. It will improve I'm sure, but nobody seems that into the cats, and I think littermates are always going to be more into each other than you. Contact the rescue to see if they will take them back and learn from this experience - don't get any more pets, it doesn't work for you.

ilovesooty · 24/03/2025 14:22

I'm surprised that the rescue considered you suitable owners in the first place. Given that no one in the house is going to engage properly with them, perhaps you'd better admit you made a mistake and return them - all of them as they're bonded. Hopefully they'll be young enough to be rehomed quickly and not be damaged too much by the experience.

Don't feel tempted to get any more animals either.

TightPants · 24/03/2025 14:24

Are you going to let them out OP? As other posters have said, this will make a huge difference to their behaviour.
My kitten was exactly like yours (and one was enough to deal with, so I can’t imagine 3 in one go!)
But a few weeks after she was spayed and vaccinated we’ve started letting her out. She’s a changed cat, so much more chilled and back to being a sweetheart again (most of the time anyway!)

Pleatherandlace · 24/03/2025 14:24

Get a cat flap

2222thatsme · 24/03/2025 14:32

Gettingbysomehow · 24/03/2025 14:19

What on earth persuaded you to get three. One kitten is more than enough trouble. In fact I avoid kittens generally. Your existing cat must be pissed.
Absolutely bonkers.

I should have added. Our adult cat has passed away. We have three kittens as the rescue wanted them to stay together as bonded littermates.

OP posts:
2222thatsme · 24/03/2025 14:34

ilovesooty · 24/03/2025 14:22

I'm surprised that the rescue considered you suitable owners in the first place. Given that no one in the house is going to engage properly with them, perhaps you'd better admit you made a mistake and return them - all of them as they're bonded. Hopefully they'll be young enough to be rehomed quickly and not be damaged too much by the experience.

Don't feel tempted to get any more animals either.

Why would the rescue consider us unsuitable? We'd had a previous cat. I am engaging with them, aiming for over an hour a day. My kids are occasionally but feel overwhelmed.

OP posts:
2222thatsme · 24/03/2025 14:35

TightPants · 24/03/2025 14:24

Are you going to let them out OP? As other posters have said, this will make a huge difference to their behaviour.
My kitten was exactly like yours (and one was enough to deal with, so I can’t imagine 3 in one go!)
But a few weeks after she was spayed and vaccinated we’ve started letting her out. She’s a changed cat, so much more chilled and back to being a sweetheart again (most of the time anyway!)

Yes. The rescue said to wait another two weeks, but that's the plan.

OP posts:
2222thatsme · 24/03/2025 14:36

NewNameBridget · 24/03/2025 14:20

Three is a lot.

We got one adolescent cat last year (10 months old) and BOY did we regret it for a while, she was wild, scratched furniture to smithereens, would eat everything and anything (ex stray, so a scavenger), including string (three days of poo mashing until it came out). She single handedly (pawedly) destroyed the Christmas tree...

And this was despite regular playing, games, puzzles, etc.

It all changed when she started going outside on her own. She's now 15 months old and is a different cat, she'll still try to eat a bunch of roses, but the scratching and general wildness had passed. She's a lovely snoozy, sociable, little thing now.

Thank you. Some of these posts are giving me hope that going outside will help burn off some of their energy.

OP posts:
2222thatsme · 24/03/2025 14:37

Gettingbysomehow · 24/03/2025 14:19

What on earth persuaded you to get three. One kitten is more than enough trouble. In fact I avoid kittens generally. Your existing cat must be pissed.
Absolutely bonkers.

The rescue wanted all three to go together as bonded littermates.

OP posts:
2222thatsme · 24/03/2025 14:39

HereintheloveofChristIstand · 24/03/2025 14:15

Why did you get so many?

The rescue ideally want kittens up go in pairs and they wanted these three to go together as bonded littermates.

OP posts:
2222thatsme · 24/03/2025 14:40

Pleatherandlace · 24/03/2025 14:24

Get a cat flap

That's the plan, once they've done the 6-8 weeks indoors the rescue asked for.

OP posts:
LoztWorld · 24/03/2025 14:40

I don’t think you should keep them when you’re only a month in. The longer you keep them the worse you’ll feel about rehoming them so just do it now.

Cats bond more to places than people so if you haven’t let them out yet now’s the time to re home, before they’ve fully got into the mindset that your area is their territory

gerispringer · 24/03/2025 14:42

I’d start letting them out. Have you got a cat flap? You should train them how to use it.

Matsukaze · 24/03/2025 14:42

I'd be putting them outside to play (assume they have been chipped, neutered/spayed and vaccinated). I've got an 11 month old kitten. Had cats before but this chap was absolutely mental. He was allowed out when he was old enough and it has really helped. He still has his moments but he is maturing a bit now anyway.

2222thatsme · 24/03/2025 14:42

Mancala · 24/03/2025 14:20

It sounds like you've got enough on your plate without this. It will improve I'm sure, but nobody seems that into the cats, and I think littermates are always going to be more into each other than you. Contact the rescue to see if they will take them back and learn from this experience - don't get any more pets, it doesn't work for you.

Edited

That's the thing. It worked perfectly with our previous cat. We played together for ten to fifteen minutes a day, she's mooch around the house and hang out with me and climb onto stuff and have evening zoomies, but without the destruction. I just didn't quite realise either how much energy and how much entrainment 8 month old kittens have and needed respectively.

OP posts:
2222thatsme · 24/03/2025 14:44

Matsukaze · 24/03/2025 14:42

I'd be putting them outside to play (assume they have been chipped, neutered/spayed and vaccinated). I've got an 11 month old kitten. Had cats before but this chap was absolutely mental. He was allowed out when he was old enough and it has really helped. He still has his moments but he is maturing a bit now anyway.

That's helpful to know, thank you. Yes, all vaccinated, sprayed/neutered and chips since six months old. The rescue said to wait 6-7 months until they were used to the house. That's given me hope that going outside helped you'd kitten. I wish I could harness their energy. I could power my house and others!

OP posts: