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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:
whomoon · 22/01/2026 13:13

ThisHazelPombear · 21/01/2026 19:05

Cats are reactive anyway not aggressive.

But react with aggression

OP posts:
RunYouJuiceBitch · 22/01/2026 13:28

Have a vet check to look for any signs of medical issues (arthritis is prevalent in cats, even those under the age of 10).

Then seek the assistance of a good feline behaviourist.
https://cat-astrophes.com/
https://www.lucyhoile.co.uk/
https://www.kittysitty.net/

Realistically, nobody is going to change this cat's personality. But there will almost certainly be ways to optimise her environment/routine to help everyone cope a bit better.

Personally I would not re-home before completing these steps. YMMV.

Good luck.

CAT-astrophes - Feline Behaviour Consultancy Specialist

We are experts in cat behaviour and provide a consultation service aimed to address any behavioural issues that you might be experiencing with your cat.

https://cat-astrophes.com

WiddlinDiddlin · 22/01/2026 14:01

ThisHazelPombear · 21/01/2026 19:05

Cats are reactive anyway not aggressive.

Of course cats can be aggressive.

Aggression is a set of behaviours used to defend, stop something happening, get more space (by making a threat back off).

It can be used offensively - ie the animal will approach the threat - this is generally a sign something is very wrong as this is maladaptive behaviour.

It can be used defensively - the animal will stay put but respond if the threat approaches, escalating as the threat gets closer.

It can be normal - a cat in pain growling if you touch the painful area.
It can be abnormal - a cat in pain offensively aggressing if you walk in the same room, to stop you touching the painful area.

It can be safe - a cat that gives lots of warning, is very clear on exactly what triggers it, is defensive not offensive.

It can be dangerous - a cat that gives little to no warning, is very vague, is triggered to use offensive aggression when the threat is a long distance away.

Aggression generally triggered by fear - there are cases where this is not the trigger (learned behaviour in dogs who have grown past the fear but found using aggressive behaviour is innately reinforcing and gives them a big adrenaline kick, is one example) but this is unusual in cats.

Aggression is not predation - many people confuse the two since both will potentially involve violence and harm to a victim, but normal aggression is about creating more distance, predation reduces distance, which is why aggression used offensively is abnormal, maladaptive behaviour. Aggression is meant to stop something happening, keep the aggressor safe - approaching the threat increases risk.

I can't think of a single animal that will not use aggression if pushed to do so - insects use it, fish use it.

The OP's cat appears to be defensively aggressive - ie, she stays put, she does not approach the threat. However her behaviour is dangerous because she is choosing to be in spaces she then feels uncomfortable in when you add human proximity and she is somewhat unpredictable/hard to read in her responses. She sounds as if she escalates to doing physical harm pretty quickly, though if her more polite responses have been systematically ignored over the years (as is extremely common) then that may be why she has dropped or reduced such responses. If you warn someone politely to go away and they ignore you, eventually you stop warning and just start swearing or thumping!

She is likely choosing those spaces (sofas, corner of the stairs) because they meet her need to feel physically comfortable and safe, ie, off the ground, something at her back, views of entry points - and then gets defensive when that same choice results in her being close to humans/where humans also want to be.

If she were my cat I'd gate off the kitchen so she was confined but not isolated, and supply suitable alternatives to human seating somewhere that humans weren't walking past all the time (bed up on a sideboard or shelf if she can access that) and then try pain meds - but the chances are she is now too old for that and the causes of that pain have gone unaddressed for too long.

Even if you did get her totally pain free (damn near impossible even in many humans) she's likely to expect and fear pain and respond the same way. It is also really difficult to get the early warning signs - the freeze, stare, silent hissy face/teeth displayed, quieter growl- back, once they've been extinguished.

So the reality is that euthanasia is almost certainly the kindest option here.

PacificState · 22/01/2026 14:25

I love it when an expert turns up 💃

weusedtobeapropercountry · 22/01/2026 18:16

This reply has been deleted

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weusedtobeapropercountry · 22/01/2026 18:25

AdaDex · 22/01/2026 11:05

I take it you haven't seen the dog apologists who still let a pit bull sleep with their new born baby in it's mouth. When it bit the babies leg off last week he was just 'playing'. If he'd really meant business, he'd have swallowed the baby whole. In fact, it will be the babies fault for tasting like lunch.....

Did you make that up just so you could get mad about it 😂

People are batshit about their pets. It's not confined to dog people. As evidenced by this thread, cat people can also be bollock raving insane.

Zillyzillyzillymouse · 22/01/2026 19:29

weusedtobeapropercountry · 22/01/2026 18:25

Did you make that up just so you could get mad about it 😂

People are batshit about their pets. It's not confined to dog people. As evidenced by this thread, cat people can also be bollock raving insane.

It’s looking like cat people are more bollock raving insane than dog people. It’s pretty much accepted that a dog would be PTS in similar circumstances.

RazorsAtDawn · 22/01/2026 22:46

I had a similar situation with one of our cats. DH had twin cats when we got together and when we moved in together and had our DS all was fine. 3 years later we had our DD and our girl cats behaviour competely changed.

I couldn't leave DD for a second because as soon as I was out of the room the cat would attempt to smother DD in her moses basket or bouncer. It was so weird as she hadn't been like that with DS. It was unnerving as I wasn't sure if she being protective of DD or wanted to suffocate her deliberately. She then refused to go out and started to foul inside all the time.

It got too much for all of us so the cat ended up at the Blue Cross. We kept her brother. She was 13.

Your cat probably hasn't got long left but I completely understand the stress this is causing you, and don't think you are being UR to at least explore the option of the Blue Cross/similar taking her, or rehoming privately.

Likeoohlaalaala · 22/01/2026 23:07

I'm a child free cat lover OP and there's no way I'd be putting up with that cat, bollox it's just her 'personality'

You've likely gone past the stage of training it to not be a shit swipe at you and now she's old and in pain it would be very hard to do, but no way I'd be letting a cat rule the roost and scratch a toddler.

And to the people who are saying it's not like a dog, of course its like a dog, it's being aggressive and just using the tools it has to be aggressive. If you had a small dog that had nipped your baby the replies would be very different on here I reckon

Allseeingallknowing · 23/01/2026 14:45

Really surprised at poll results, should be the other way round imo!

whomoon · 23/01/2026 16:10

Allseeingallknowing · 23/01/2026 14:45

Really surprised at poll results, should be the other way round imo!

Me too tbh! We must be on CatsNet, not MumsNet!

OP posts:
weusedtobeapropercountry · 23/01/2026 17:14

whomoon · 23/01/2026 16:10

Me too tbh! We must be on CatsNet, not MumsNet!

They're "cat mums" 🤪🤪🤪

Pinkpandora · 24/01/2026 18:26

The cat is 18. Leave her stay where she is comfortable. It would be wicked to make him get rid of her

Sleepysleepycoffeecoffee · 24/01/2026 18:52

your child comes first. That cat would’ve been gone the first time it went for my child if I were you

BeAzureRaven · 24/01/2026 19:00

As others said--she's 18. She's near the end of her life span. Teach your toddler to stay away from her. You can't rehome her at this point, it would be horribly cruel and she is a member of your family. There are worse stresses in life than keeping a toddler and cat separate.

BeAzureRaven · 24/01/2026 19:02

WatchingWongFilms · 20/01/2026 11:51

You can ask, but if anyone asked me to choose between them and my ageing pet, it would be them that I dumped.

My thoughts also

MyJollySloth · 24/01/2026 19:07

YANBU

I would never trust a cat like that near my kids. Very similar situation here, hissy cat that even I was scared of, pissed everywhere a living nightmare, the stressed and hate I felt was unbelievable, got rid of it before my baby could crawl. Husband was upset but after trying everything we could even vets suggested rehoming, he went to a gay couple with no kids and is having a happier life there.

Olive123456 · 24/01/2026 19:09

Toddler will quickly learn to stay away from the cat.

Withlifethereshope · 24/01/2026 19:13

YABU. Given the cat's age and temperament, it would be extremely difficult to rehome him. So that leaves the option of a shelter and very likely, euthanasia. If you and your DP are fine with that, go ahead.

Notalotanota2026 · 24/01/2026 19:16

Why would you bring a baby into this situation?

Allseeingallknowing · 24/01/2026 19:21

Olive123456 · 24/01/2026 19:09

Toddler will quickly learn to stay away from the cat.

Toddler could suffer severe injury eg. to eye. Why wait till that happens.

Buckbeak123 · 24/01/2026 19:22

Please dont scruff your cat and shout in its face as another posted suggested. Abhorrent behaviour. From a Veterinary Nurse x

Allseeingallknowing · 24/01/2026 19:22

Notalotanota2026 · 24/01/2026 19:16

Why would you bring a baby into this situation?

The cat might live to 24- why should OP put plans in hold. Babies come before cats- And I love cats!

Aussiemum87 · 24/01/2026 20:18

Take it to the vet. Animals can be medicated.

whomoon · 24/01/2026 20:34

Notalotanota2026 · 24/01/2026 19:16

Why would you bring a baby into this situation?

As previously mentioned, my crystal ball wasn’t working on the day my DP moved in together

OP posts:
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