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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:
Antonania · 26/03/2025 12:09

Cat proofing the garden would make it easier to let them out. They will stop climbing curtains and walls quite soon as they fill out.

But 7 months old kittens will be adopted no problem. You'd probably be doing the rescue centre a favour if you swapped them for a pair of older cats. Mums of kittens can make great adoptees, and you could pick some who are used to the outdoors.

kinkytoes · 26/03/2025 16:59

Going back to the curtains thing again.... just buy cheap ones and so what if they get a few scratches. Better than having expensive ones folded away somewhere. 🤷🏻‍♀️

ChoccieCornflake · 26/03/2025 17:17

"All the thinking now (I keep being recommended Jackson Galaxy) is that you do play high-intensity games with kittens, and adult cats if willing, until they're panting."

This doesn't sound like a good plan - cats are not like dogs; panting in cats is usually a sign of stress, illness or over exertion

FloydWasACat · 26/03/2025 23:36

Sorry if this has already been said (and no offence to you). We have recently got rescue kittens, they are now 18 weeks old and are not crapping everywhere or destroying stuff. We also have a lovely 9 Yr old girl who sometimes lets them make a fuss of her or just let's them get on with it.

They are all female. Maybe, it would be better to accept that your family aren't the right fit for them and speak to the home to see if they can take them back to find somewhere better suited.

None of mine have ever been allowed upstairs and they only messed themselves in the first couple of days because they felt scared and unsettled. Maybe that is still the case?

Allthegoodnamesarechosen · 27/03/2025 00:00

You can take the edge of their claws with nail clippers, which greatly reduces the damage ( I did my two every week before a long car journey, they would come to sit on my lap when they saw the clippers, they don’t mind).

The breeder we got them from told us to clap our hands and say ‘no’ very firmly if there was any running up curtains. It worked fine.

They are cats, OP, not divine and fragile beings. They don’t need you to play with them if you don’t feel like it, they can play with each other ( as you have noticed). You and DH should be their calm place. I do think they can pick up on anxiety, so try to be calm. Reward them sitting with you or the family, they will soon learn that sitting and purring brings cuddles and dreamiest.

Before anyone accuses me of being some sort of monster I should like to add that both mine lived for 19 years of loud purring, and died in my arms when the time was over.

HeySnoodie · 27/03/2025 00:02

Rescue centres have always recommended keeping kittens in a fortnight only. Running around outside will help. If not, give one kitten away, then another if the household still isn’t calm enough, then another if you still can’t manage.

Excited101 · 27/03/2025 00:15

Ah they’ll be fine once they can go out! We had this with a rescue kitten- he changed completely once he could go out! Don’t rush anything yet, see how they are once they can let themselves in and out.

mainecooncatonahottinroof · 27/03/2025 01:36

2222thatsme · 25/03/2025 11:24

Thank you. Maybe I am just overthinking and being anxious. I asked on a cat forum and most people said they play with their kittens for 5-6 hours a day. I kept thinking of the thousands of people with kittens, surely most of them have jobs and kids and not a free 5-6 hours a day. Then I watched Jackson Galaxy and he said 2 1/4 hours a day, so I tried that but was only realistically managing 1 hour of play a day. Then I panicked and thought, crap I can't do this on top of everything else.

Yes, I will start letting them out in a week when I can do it gradually and consistently.

The plan is they shouldn't have the run of the house. They should just have the kitchen-diner and the living room, if others are in there. Our old mature cat had the run of the house but we're struggling to cat proof the rest of the house to the level needed for kittens, which wasn't necessary with out mature cat. However, restricting them is the plan, but in reality I'm struggling to get it to work because my children regularly forget to close the required doors. My daughter, bless her, wanders around in a daydream (she's like Luna Lovegood) and my son is usually focussed on a special interest. Both happy in their own headspace, but oblivious to their surroundings and totally unable to remember things like keep this door shut or make sure if you shut this door the cats are on the correct side. I think the constant door monitor role I've taken on is taking over my life and my headspace.

Yes, this mornings playtime was a mixture of getting them to chase the wand and then playing fetch with all the numerous toys they have, trying to work out which they prefer. Crisps packets are a good idea, thank you. This morning, two of the cats went after the same spring toy (despite the fact they have three) and kept wrestling for said toy, one wanted the cat nip pilllows to use as a kicker. They chased balls with bells through their tunnels and i kept kicking those around at the end of the play session while I made myself a cup of tea before doing some household chores.

Yes, completely litter trained although we occasionally (maybe every few days) find a poo elsewhere. Which I then put into a litter box, then thoroughly clean that area to stop them re-pooing there.

That is in the back of my head. They are still cute kittens with added adoption appeal. Something to consider, thank you.

OMG I am a lifelong cat owner, and I've never ever played with a cat that much or anywhere near it!! Give them lots of cardboard boxes, paper carrier bags with the strings cut, catnip mice - there's three of them; they can entertain each other!! I had kittens growing up but they were generally outdoors as we lived rurally.

We got our own two kittens when we bought our first house and jeez, they wrecked the place! One used to climb my back to sit on my shoulder and my back looked like I'd been in a war zone! This was before we had children and before we 'accidentally' acquired two more... The kittens were 8ish when our kids started to come along, and the cats weren't used to children and were afraid. Plus they were indoor only and there's no child that can be trusted to close doors! I don't know if this would be an option for you even temporarily but we built a room in the back half of our garage. We had carpet, furniture, toys, climbing frames etc so that we could separate children and cats. The other thing that all my cats have loved is those white broad tapes you get on parcels? They do prefer a human on the other end of them but they do love them! Get your children involved in playing with them - it creates a bond and it's good for both child and cat.

I'd never get kittens again, cute as they are. We currently have three; all children well grown up. We got them from rescues aged 5, 18 months and 18 months. The first 18 month one was the craziest cat I have ever known, by a long way, but three years in she has calmed down a lot.

I am surprised that a rescue rehomed three young kittens to a family with young children. I don't think most rescues would do that. You can't expect children your kids' ages to remember to close doors. If you can persevere, I think your cats will be really good for your children. My own children were reared with cats and they're obsessed with them as adults 😀which I love! Three kittens was a huge undertaking with everything else you have on your plate.

Would you be in a position to get a catio? Do you live somewhere that is relatively safe for cats? So many get killed on the roads or become the victims of cruel people. A neighbour's cat who used to visit our garden regularly was poisoned some years ago.

Finding random poos is part of being a cat mum I'm afraid! I found a turd the other day on the arm of my sofa! And I found my boy trying to cover one on the floor the other day!

Part of me wants to say, rehome them for their sake, but another part thinks that you are actually attached to these little souls?

mainecooncatonahottinroof · 27/03/2025 01:47

BCSurvivor · 25/03/2025 11:37

Quote
The plan is they shouldn't have the run of the house. They should just have the kitchen-diner and the living room, if others are in there. Our old mature cat had the run of the house but we're struggling to cat proof the rest of the house to the level needed for kittens, which wasn't necessary with out mature cat. However, restricting them is the plan, but in reality I'm struggling to get it to work because my children regularly forget to close the required doors. My daughter, bless her, wanders around in a daydream (she's like Luna Lovegood) and my son is usually focussed on a special interest. Both happy in their own headspace, but oblivious to their surroundings and totally unable to remember things like keep this door shut or make sure if you shut this door the cats are on the correct side. I think the constant door monitor role I've taken on is taking over my life and my headspace.

These are three kittens who have bundles of energy and aren't yet allowed outside.
Containing them to just one room - or two if someone is in there - really isn't workable long term, even when they are allowed outside.
It's not really fair on the kittens, now or in the future.

It's a good short-term solution. Presumably they were confined to some extent in the rescue? So long as they have space to race around and play with each other, it would prevent some of the destruction until they are more mature, so long as they're not locked up 24/7!

The 5 year old I adopted 3 years ago from Cats' Protection was confined to a small pen on her own. Unfortunately they weren't able to tell us that she wanted to be an 'only' and we adopted two more.

Our other two were adopted from a small, local rescue who were able to advise about the temperament of the cats, hence #2 and #3 became really bonded really quickly.

mainecooncatonahottinroof · 27/03/2025 01:58

2222thatsme · 25/03/2025 12:03

Thank you. We all need to get out of a negative headspace, yes.

I'm not sure how to have the furnishings up and not have them completely destroyed, at least not for the time being while the kittens have so much energy. I posted a picture of the damage to one of the pairs of curtains above, and that's just one night's worth. Do your cats do that much damage?

When I had kittens, they used to regularly scale the curtains. There were more plucks than anything. One night one of them was sitting on the back windowsill. Something outside startled her. She jumped straight through the curtains making holes, landed on the dining table, skidded along scratching it, before she fell off the other side! Luckily she was very very cute and it was funny!

One of my current three sleeps overnight in the family room and I had to take the curtains down because if she got stressed at all, she pissed on things. They've been down for three years now!

When I got the first two of my current three, we needed a new sofa. Previous rescue stray had scratched the feck out of my previous sofa IN HIS TEENS!!! 6 months in, the two girls were doing fine, so I ordered a new one which took 6 months to be delivered. Leather sofa, and all was well.

Then we decided to adopt #3... he and #2 decided to use it as a ratrun and my year old sofa was scratched to bits...

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