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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To ask DP to get rid of cat?

624 replies

whomoon · 20/01/2026 11:15

My DP and I moved in together 6 years ago and he brought his cat with him. I love cats, have grown up with many over the years and had a cat myself before DP moved in before my cat passed away at an old age.

I was happy having his cat and accepted that she is not a typical cat. She is a ‘character’. Basically, you can’t go near here unless she allows you to and she will only offer you her back for 3 or 4 strokes before she’d turn round and go black eyed ready to swipe you if you dare go in for a 5th.

If you walk past her too many times she’d go for you. She wouldn’t move, she’d stand her ground. You can’t approach her from the front for a stroke. You can’t go near her to move her if she’s on your seat, I have to get a cushion and shoo her away, as she hisses and would take a swipe if she gets angry. On an evening she will sit on your lap like a normal cat, and you could get a couple of head strokes in before she settles but you can’t touch her again after that.

There are many many more examples of this. I’ve never known a cat like her. All my cats through the years have been loving, cuddly, just normal really. Yes, all have their quirks and personality but no issues living with them and dealing with them when necessary. For example I have never even picked this cat up, ever. Never to move her, or even just to hold her. She would claw me apart if I did. My DP manages to if needed and for vets visits, but that literally is it.
I have my thoughts on why she is like this but it’s not really relevant because she is like she is, and 6 years of me living with her has not changed anything. But, we’ve all lived together fine and accepted who she is. Other than warning guests to our home not to touch her, it’s just our normal I guess

So the issue now is, we had a baby in 2024. Baby is now a toddler and I cannot leave them in the same room together. We have to keep the cat behind the kitchen door, behind the dining room door, or behind the door to the stairs to ensure our toddler is both safe and free to move around. This is because our cat has swiped our toddler a few times since they were baby and started moving from 8 months, with the last time being a deep cut on their arm which has scarred. As a typical toddler, they want to touch the cat, but also play near the cat unknowingly being ‘too close’ to her which could set the cat off.

My DP says we just need to teach our toddler how to be with the cat. Yes, with a NORMAL cat that’s what we would do. Gentle hands, give space, don’t pull or poke. But when we can’t even go near the cat ourselves, how do we tell an excitable toddler this, a toddler who has been on the move since 8 months old and wouldn’t even understand until recently what not to do.

My stress and anxiety levels around this is reaching boiling point. The cat scratches at the door constantly to be let out. When the cat moves between rooms we have to watch every millisecond of where our toddler is, if they’re getting too close or in running distance if they get excited to see the cat. Even worse, our toddler now mimics our behaviour with the cat. Shaking their hands at her, shouting (we try to not shout, but hey, it’s stressful to get the cat out the room) and because of my fear of the cat lashing out, when the toddler does get near I panic and rush over going ‘no, no, no’ out of instinct so they don’t get hurt. I don’t want my toddler growing up with this stress, either being scared or hating cats.

I loved my cats growing up. I slept in their cat beds with them, pulled them around in cardboard boxes, wrapped them in blankets. Now I know my toddler won’t have that and that’s okay, but I don’t want the opposite of them hating cats, that would be awful.

today, the cat swiped me for walking past too close. Bearing in mind I do not interact with this cat, and in no way do either of us mistreat her, but because I dared get too close and she swiped me. I shouted so loud my DP was in shock. He knows I’ve reached the next level of my stress with this situation and an ultimatum is coming. I’m a calm, go with the flow person, and our house is our sanctuary. My peace is disturbed and I just can’t relax now.

but how can I ask DP to get rid? Cat is 18 years old and he’s had her since a kitten. But is that really worth his families’ stress and anxiety, closing ourselves off in our already small house to keep ourselves separate from the cat?

Our toddler is at a lovely age and playing really nicely and exploring the house safely. I want them to have this freedom and not have me follow making sure the cat isn’t anywhere near.

Has this happened to anyone, and did you put up with it or rehome the cat?

DP knows I’m not happy and sees cat as part of the family, so would be very reluctant to rehome, which I would feel with one of my own cats but there has to be a point surely!?

So:

YABU = cat is part of the family, DP will never forgive you if you make him get rid of the cat

YANBU = it’s just a cat, toddlers safety is the most importantly and your peace and sanity is also important!

OP posts:
JustGotToKeepOnKeepingOn · 20/01/2026 17:13

I’d definitely be getting rid of the cat. Either rehome it or PTS. Your toddler could get seriously hurt.

Climbinghigher · 20/01/2026 17:25

My 18 year old cat spends most of her time in her bed next to a radiator in the warmest room in the house. She gets up to eat and then heads back to bed. Wakes up if our younger cat tries to play with her (to tell him off) or if a neighbours cat appears (sees her off). Is your cat much livlier? It would be easy to keep ours away from a toddler because her bed is behind a dining room table and awkward to get to and she is happy curled up in there.

DPs dad sounds a good option though. Maybe ask him?

Herewegoagainandagainandagain · 20/01/2026 17:28

CallMeEvelyn · 20/01/2026 12:20

YABVU

The cat hasn't got long left, that's one. She'd die in a shelter.

The cat was there first. You knew what she was like. You brought a baby to the mix and made all your lives miserable, including the cat. You don't get to dump an 18yo cat just because she doesn't fit the lifestyle you imposed on her.

I have a loving cat and a bitchy cat. DC knows not to approach the bitchy cat and doesn't. You are also BU not waiting it out to teach your child properly and just getting on with temporary measures keeping them separate.

Somebody comparing it to a dog is totally unreasonable, a cat is a completely different and not comparable scenario, they act and react differently and the risks are completely different too.

You brought a baby to the mix and made all your lives miserable

Don't be so ridiculous. Are people meant to put off having their families now because of a viscous pet cat?

It is not the cats fault, but the cat is not happy and the toddler is at risk and the situation should not continue or if that now mobile toddler ends up with an injury it will be its parents fault.

Whether it is a cat or dog is irrelevant - what is relevant is the risk of injury is very real.

The cat obviously is too old to try to rehome through a shelter. If the OP knows someone who has a more appropriate home for this cats temperament that may be a good option. If she doesn't know anyone who will take the cat on, it is of course sad, but also fair to consider humanely PTS for the baby's safety.

MauriceTheMussel · 20/01/2026 17:31

Yeah, I got to the bit where the cat had swiped the past.

I’d have rehomed it on the very first swipe.

ThisHazelPombear · 20/01/2026 17:44

I think insisting an 18yo cat go to a shelter is definitely something that will be bought up in arguments for the rest of your time together.

carpool · 20/01/2026 17:50

I think it's a no brainer. Of course the child has to come first and if OP thinks her home is an unsafe environment for them then she will have to leave. I second the vet visit option though, see if there is anything can be done/medication etc to make cat less angry or if not then pts seems a reasonable option given cat cannot be happy if it behaves like that. We had a cat (who was lovely) and when the DGC came round he mostly just hid somewhere out of their way. When DGD was very small, she would come in the door, see him, say 'cat' excitedly and run after him. He got very good at avoiding her but never attacked. As she got older she learned how to treat him and he would let her stroke him. Sadly we lost him last year to cancer and we have now (about 6 weeks ago) taken in a cat which used to live with a friend of ours who lived in a care home. He died at end of last year and she is now with us and we have had some of the problems you mention with her. She seems OK with me mostly, but doesn't like DH so much as will run at him, hissing and growling with claws out randomly for no (obvious) provocation at all. We will have a few days of peace and then it will happen again out of the blue. I am now worried about having the DGC here as I don't trust her with them (although they are much older now than OP's child and can properly understand not to go near her). As we do a lot of school holiday childcare for DD this is going to be a problem if we don't get it sorted. I think the vet visit advice on here is good and I am going to arrange a mobile vet to come out to her I think, as getting her into her carrier would be a nightmare. I'll have to warn them what she is like however so they come prepared and wearing a suit of armour!

Cherrytree86 · 20/01/2026 17:50

ThisHazelPombear · 20/01/2026 17:44

I think insisting an 18yo cat go to a shelter is definitely something that will be bought up in arguments for the rest of your time together.

@ThisHazelPombear

ok….so….what? OP continues to put her child at risk? Is that better? Cos I would think that there would be a hell of a lot more arguments if the cat claws the child’s eye out, no?

YouAreTheCauseOfMyHeadache · 20/01/2026 17:50

whomoon · 20/01/2026 16:56

We are living with DP’s solution currently. Keeping both separately, supervising when in the same room. I think he thinks this is the final solution where I still can’t deal with it.
Vet visits will be next to see the cats health and go from there

Separating is a working solution.

But its not your solution, which is to get your partners elderly cat that you don't like "got rid of" which translates to re-homed (highly unlikely at her age) or her life ended early to suit your requirements (most likely).

Mumsnet's role in this is to reassure you that's okay, which is the entire point of this thread.

Cherrytree86 · 20/01/2026 17:52

YouAreTheCauseOfMyHeadache · 20/01/2026 17:50

Separating is a working solution.

But its not your solution, which is to get your partners elderly cat that you don't like "got rid of" which translates to re-homed (highly unlikely at her age) or her life ended early to suit your requirements (most likely).

Mumsnet's role in this is to reassure you that's okay, which is the entire point of this thread.

Edited

@YouAreTheCauseOfMyHeadache

well, yeah cos it IS ok.

SurferRona · 20/01/2026 17:57

OP, @whomoon I’m so sorry, I can hear you are at the end of your tether with this cat, and you cannot teach your little boy anything at his age. The ‘wait it out’ brigade don’t have to live your life, and this could continue for some years yet with risk of harm to you son. Cat scratches can infect v easily too.

First of all, try the vet again- sounds like pain is affecting behaviour, or ask about anxiety meds (tho that is a cost). Then I would make sure cat is restricted to one room and outside/a catio so putting safe space between her and your DC. If that isn’t possible you need to maybe help encourage the cat to move away from your little boy when they are too close. Introduce a little more wariness. I would get some of those gauntlets (ask the vet from where) and just go in and pick her up to remove her. Every time she’s is too close, or shows aggression. She won’t be able to harm you and she will learn that lashing out doesn’t work, and will want to avoid something she doesn’t like.

if that doesn’t work, I’m sorry but 18 is a good age - especially if she is a nasty cat, and rehoming unlikely, so I’d look to euthanise. Sorry.

YouAreTheCauseOfMyHeadache · 20/01/2026 18:01

Cherrytree86 · 20/01/2026 17:52

@YouAreTheCauseOfMyHeadache

well, yeah cos it IS ok.

Well, yeah, if you're a self serving shit its absolutely fine to refuse a working solution in favour of "getting rid" of your partners pet.

SurferRona · 20/01/2026 18:02

ThisHazelPombear · 20/01/2026 17:44

I think insisting an 18yo cat go to a shelter is definitely something that will be bought up in arguments for the rest of your time together.

As would my bringing up DH’s insistence on keeping an aggressive animal around a helpless toddler caused them permanent harm. How can anyone accept that? I don’t even begin to understand that 🤷‍♀️

CatMama2025 · 20/01/2026 18:05

Since she's food motivated she might respond to Feliway Happy Snacks which can be a game changer. KalmAid is also very effective. My two consider them both to be treats, the Happy Snacks in particular! They are VERY chilled after eating them.

gamerchick · 20/01/2026 18:11

whomoon · 20/01/2026 16:04

But that’s my experience of my cats when I was little. It’s not weird ideas, it happened. It was brilliant, they were great cats

Still wrong. Your parents should have nipped that in the bud. Just because a cat is placid doesn't mean it gets to be treated like a toy.

gamerchick · 20/01/2026 18:16

Tbh putting to sleep sounds like the best thing for her. She sounds like she's in pain and cats can inflict a lot of damage. It's not really something I'd want to risk.

LadyNYResolutions · 20/01/2026 18:19

Please consider getting a cat behaviourist to review her and offer any suggestions or strategies before you consider putting her to sleep.

https://www.cats.org.uk/help-and-advice/cat-behaviour/finding-a-behaviourist

That is actually the kindest thing to do, not just going straight to killing her like some are suggesting.

Finding a Good Cat Behaviourist | Cats Protection

If your cat has been behaving strangely, you might want to start looking for a cat behaviourist. Read our guide on finding a good behaviourist near you.

https://www.cats.org.uk/help-and-advice/cat-behaviour/finding-a-behaviourist

Mydoglovescheese · 20/01/2026 18:19

A point to consider is that if you need to seek medical help for your DS as a result of injury from the cat questions will be asked and a note made of the cause of the injury. A second incident needing medical care is likely to result in a safeguarding referral and the possibility of SS involvement.

I’ve had cats for 50 years but there is no way I’d have ever risked or tolerated injury to my DC. I’m afraid the first injury would have been the last and the cat would have been peacefully PTS. I’ve had to do this with a rescue dog and although it broke my heart he wasn’t safe with my DC or to be rehomed and risk injury to another child.

LadyNYResolutions · 20/01/2026 18:19

Mydoglovescheese · 20/01/2026 18:19

A point to consider is that if you need to seek medical help for your DS as a result of injury from the cat questions will be asked and a note made of the cause of the injury. A second incident needing medical care is likely to result in a safeguarding referral and the possibility of SS involvement.

I’ve had cats for 50 years but there is no way I’d have ever risked or tolerated injury to my DC. I’m afraid the first injury would have been the last and the cat would have been peacefully PTS. I’ve had to do this with a rescue dog and although it broke my heart he wasn’t safe with my DC or to be rehomed and risk injury to another child.

Absolute nonsense.

FlyingApple · 20/01/2026 18:20

Cherrytree86 · 20/01/2026 17:50

@ThisHazelPombear

ok….so….what? OP continues to put her child at risk? Is that better? Cos I would think that there would be a hell of a lot more arguments if the cat claws the child’s eye out, no?

It's a ridiculous thought anyway.
My husband felt guilty when we rehomed ours but he came to realise that the guilt wasn't about the actual cat and that it was the right decision for our family.

Purplebunnie · 20/01/2026 18:21

AdaDex · 20/01/2026 15:37

Showing their belly is a sign of trust. They feel safe enough to show their most vulnerable area. It not necessarily an invitation for you to touch it though.

We did work that eventually but he used to lie there squirming away as if he wanted to be touched, bless him.

Tableforjoan · 20/01/2026 18:23

If there is no way to constantly keep them safely constantly apart after the first scratch when the toddler hadn’t even done anything the cat would of been gone.

A child’s safety before a grumpy aggressive animal. If the cat had got the little one’s eye that could be horrific. Try explaining that away to the hospital that a known agressive animal has attacked the toddler again.

LadyNYResolutions · 20/01/2026 18:27

No domesticated cat in the history of the world has “clawed a child’s eye out”.
No hospital is going to make a safeguarding referral for a child who has been scratched by a cat twice. The amount of eye rolling SS would do for that would be monumental.

The utter tripe being spouted on this thread is ridiculous.

WiddlinDiddlin · 20/01/2026 18:30

whomoon · 20/01/2026 11:39

I hadn’t heard of this as a way to train a cat and it sounds very effective. Tbh, we should’ve done this a long time ago, but I don’t think it’d be possible now.
Cat has arthritis and bad on its back legs.
probably excuses I know, but I don’t think I have the energy to even try it.

This is a vile way to 'train' (it's not training, it's flooding, its teaching the cat that you're stronger and scarier so give up), particularly given your cat is almost certainly in pain and has been for a long time.

The poster suggesting it has clearly got pretty lucky here, other cats would have done them a serious injury and got worse, but the fact it 'worked' doesn't mean the method is good. I am sure if you threatened to kill (which is what scruffing an adult cat is) a human every day and they could not get away from you, they would also eventually submit and not dare challenge/disagree etc with you again. We'd call that an abusive relationship of course but it seems some people still think thats acceptable with animals.

Anyway - cat is almost certainly in pain, probably has been a long time. If you cannot use gates/pens to keep her and the toddler separate - so that you could try pain medication trials - then the reasonable, humane and fair option is to euthanise. I don't even know that I would do pain medication trials in a cat this old, tbh, its probably past the point of pain medication working and the side effects from lots of pain medication are less well tolerated by very old cats.

caringcarer · 20/01/2026 18:31

If the cat is already 18 and your DH had her as a kitten of course he can't dump her now when she will likely only have a couple of years left of her life. You chose to have a baby knowing what the cat was like. You could have waited a couple of years but you chose to go ahead. Did you think the cat would suddenly become more loving once a baby was around it? If you forced your DH to put the cat in a shelter the chances are it would be PTS because no one chooses to re-home an 18 year old cat. Let it live out her last year's with some dignity and love. Keep the toddler away from the cat. Take the toddler out more. Are you planning to go back to work soon and DC go to nursery because that would largely solve the issue if baby was at nursery.

DuchessofStaffordshire · 20/01/2026 18:34

LadyNYResolutions · 20/01/2026 18:27

No domesticated cat in the history of the world has “clawed a child’s eye out”.
No hospital is going to make a safeguarding referral for a child who has been scratched by a cat twice. The amount of eye rolling SS would do for that would be monumental.

The utter tripe being spouted on this thread is ridiculous.

Unless it's like the Killer Rabbit of Caerrbannog of Monty Python and the Holy Grail fame.

I'm quite sure that a pair of adult humans can figure out, between them, a plan to separate the cat and the toddler during toddler waking hours for what few years the cat has left.
I get the impression that OP had already made her mind up though before posting making my suggestion moot.