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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:
SqishySqashmas · 24/01/2026 20:38

She is 18 FFS. Just put up with it. She'll be dead soon.

Allseeingallknowing · 24/01/2026 20:40

SqishySqashmas · 24/01/2026 20:38

She is 18 FFS. Just put up with it. She'll be dead soon.

Unhelpful

Getofftheunicorn · 24/01/2026 21:03

I’m sorry but I could not live in the house and allow my vulnerable toddler around this cat.
All it would take is a moment of inattention when the cat is on a chair and your child gets within striking distance - and your child loses an eye.

lookinggforadvice · 24/01/2026 21:06

Honestly I’d have the cat PTS. Sounds harsh but I imagine most people have never been attacked by a cat. I doted on my cat, he too would swipe and hiss on occasions, then one day he completely lost control and attacked me full on my leg and arm. I couldn’t get him off. Luckily my son was home and forced him into the kitchen.
I had to go for tetanus and stitches at A and E and 4 different lots of antibiotics over a month long period to clear the infection.

when I phoned the vet he said they don’t put down healthy cats and I should take him in to be checked over and look at a behavioural expert. He took one look at me and agreed to put the cat to sleep.

People saying they don’t compare to dogs. I assure you my cat could have seriously harmed, possibly killed a baby. It’s never worth the risk.

I loved my cst but not enough to risk my grandchildren

Ponderingpondering · 24/01/2026 21:12

Does the cat go outside?

MapleSyrupOnToas · 24/01/2026 21:32

As the cat is 18, I'd try rehoming to your FIL. The cat is likely to only live months or possibly a year or two at most. If not I'd keep it and work out a way to keep your toddler safe.

LemaxObsessive · 24/01/2026 22:10

Heatingneedstobeontoday · 20/01/2026 11:31

Last in first out..
Can you ask a family member to have your dc until dcat passes?

I beg your pardon? You’re telling op to consider turfing her baby out in favour of the cat? Potentially for another 2/3 years?! WTF

mrspick · 24/01/2026 23:09

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.

I have worked in rescue and have never heard of training a cat this way! And no rescue would condone it. It would actually make the behaviour worse. This woman is talking utter rubbish!

mrspick · 24/01/2026 23:34

whomoon · 20/01/2026 20:51

Not actually looked into that before. Perhaps too stressful for an old cat? I will have a look though thank you.

It's illegal in the UK because it's cruel. Honestly, people on this thread giving absolutely ridiculous suggestions.

ThisTipsyGreyCrab · 24/01/2026 23:37

Is the cat on pain relief? Because if not, I’d definitely ask vet if it’s worth a proper pain trial (weeks). Up to 90% of cats over 12 years of age have some form of painful focus (teeth / joints etc). Often this manifests as lack of tolerance with touch (and more). Also worth considering a consult with a vet behaviourist too especially if insurance will cover the costs.

Marieb19 · 24/01/2026 23:46

The cat has to go. If it lashed out and clawed your childs eye it could cause irreparable damage. If this were a dog would people be a quick to defend the animal.

Groomofthestool · 25/01/2026 00:43

I’d put the cat to sleep. No hesitation

Maisey1991 · 25/01/2026 00:45

Can the cat been seen by the vet and get some anti anxiety meds? Might help it stop being so stressed and aggressive x

Catladywithoutacat · 25/01/2026 01:13

Evil doing that to a 18yrsr old cat

Catladywithoutacat · 25/01/2026 01:15

Notmycircusnotmyotter · 20/01/2026 11:52

Including your child?

The child isn’t asking this are they? It’s the selfish irrational human partner that is

Trillie · 25/01/2026 04:38

I wouldn’t try imposing an ultimatum on your partner, personally that would be grounds for splitting up whatever the issue was.

Farticus101 · 25/01/2026 04:57

Heatingneedstobeontoday · 20/01/2026 11:31

Last in first out..
Can you ask a family member to have your dc until dcat passes?

This is a joke, right?! 🤔

Farticus101 · 25/01/2026 05:08

OP, your toddler is vulnerable and needs their parents to protect them. A cat swiping at a child and scratching them badly is not the right thing for the child at all as no one wants to live with something that causes them harm.

My cousin's young kids had a volatile cat (less aggressive than yours) and they were anxious around it and just dodged it room to room. It got rehomed but was quite young and better for the cat as it was constantly on the alert and seemed anxious too.

I would sympathise a lot with DP but explain that the child deserves to be calm and happy in their own home rather than being on cat alert mode all the time.

MangaKanga · 25/01/2026 05:14

I'm a dog person but from my point of view

  • the cat is an old lady and was here first.
  • babies absolutely need to be kept away from pets until they can be trusted with them
  • your parents should not have let you pull around cats in boxes. We raised our DC on the mantra " puppies aren't toys" but surely it's the same for any sentient creature. You treat them with gentleness and respect only.
  • if my DH had asked me to get rid of the dog I had had when we met, it would have been bye-bye DH.
  • Your kid should not have been near enough to be swiped. That's on you.
Ahwelltoobad · 25/01/2026 05:40

Reading the title: of course you can't!
Reading the full post: of course you must! Already 17 months of this, your patience with the cat is well beyond what any sane person could ask. Hope your partner comes to his senses.

Puffin69 · 25/01/2026 06:06

Crazyfrog44 · 20/01/2026 11:28

You might be able to change the behaviour. I did it with a semi feral cat. Every time they swiped (usually due to overstimulation like yours, the odd stroke or walking by) I would scruff them, say no, I'm the boss you don't so that in a firm voice them let them alone for half an hour. Then I would go back and talk nicely to them and give them one stroke. It took eight months of this, numerous times daily, but it worked. It took us from needing four people to hold him down at the vets, to me just stroking him whilst the vet did their stuff. I also do this with the rescues I take in (some stay, some get rehomed). It seems to work as all my cats are friendly and settled with humans and cats in a multicat household.

The cat is 18. At 18 even docile cats are easily upset. Grabbing them by the scruff could reallly hurt a cat who is old and probably sore.

MangaKanga · 25/01/2026 08:00

If I saw my partner grabbing my elderly pet by the scruff, yelling at them, waving their hands at them, any of this stuff mentioned on this thread, they would be my ex so fast.

Cherrytree86 · 25/01/2026 08:57

Notalotanota2026 · 24/01/2026 19:16

Why would you bring a baby into this situation?

@Notalotanota2026

yes, OP shouldn’t have had a baby should she knowing the cat wouldn’t like it. Poor cat.

Cherrytree86 · 25/01/2026 08:59

MangaKanga · 25/01/2026 05:14

I'm a dog person but from my point of view

  • the cat is an old lady and was here first.
  • babies absolutely need to be kept away from pets until they can be trusted with them
  • your parents should not have let you pull around cats in boxes. We raised our DC on the mantra " puppies aren't toys" but surely it's the same for any sentient creature. You treat them with gentleness and respect only.
  • if my DH had asked me to get rid of the dog I had had when we met, it would have been bye-bye DH.
  • Your kid should not have been near enough to be swiped. That's on you.
Edited

@MangaKanga

you see confused. The cat is not an old lady, it’s a cat. An animal. And humans trump animals. Especially small children. Hth

ChamonixMountainBum · 25/01/2026 09:17

Cherrytree86 · 25/01/2026 08:57

@Notalotanota2026

yes, OP shouldn’t have had a baby should she knowing the cat wouldn’t like it. Poor cat.

At this stage on this thread I genuinely dont know if this is satire or not.