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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:
Applecup · 20/01/2026 12:53

Toddler trumps Cat I'm afraid. Her safety is paramount. Can you not let the cat just go outside all day. Let it back in to sleep and eat.

whyyyyyisitmonddayy · 20/01/2026 12:53

Your PPD isn’t an excuse. You’re actually being so selfish.

the poor cat might only have a few months left - cats go really suddenly in my experience. Your husband has had the cat long before you - if my partner even hinted at me getting rid of my badly behaved pony (who’s kicked me, bitten me, rammed into me) I’d tell him to F off

Parsleyforme · 20/01/2026 12:56

I’ve read your updates but didn’t see. Is there no way to keep the cat separate? Can she get over a stair gate despite arthritis? I would look to keep the cat upstairs with covered litter tray if possible. I think you could ask about upping the gabapentin. My cat can be clawy/bitey and when she had gabapentin for a health problem she was like a different cat. It is a shame to drug the cat but she sounds anxious and unhappy anyway so it might be a kindness

20thCenturyFecks · 20/01/2026 12:57

Applecup · 20/01/2026 12:50

Oh well if you have never had a cat attack a child they clearly do not exist. What a ridiculous thing to say.

I'm not saying it doesn't happen. It will if a human if any age harasses it. So, like I said train the child to leave the cat alone and it'll be fine.

Its an 18 year old domestic feline.

whomoon · 20/01/2026 12:59

Catwalking · 20/01/2026 12:48

In total agreement with this 🙂.

As OP wishes child could grow-up with a ‘normal’ kitty; maybe get another cat now before the other 1 passes? But with close advice from cat behaviorist?
My elderly parents used to have a vicious cat exactly same as described by OP. It had lived with them from 12weeks & they’d had several cats before, all variations of normal! The vicious 1 was perfectly normal with other cats, just not with humans 🤷‍♀️.

I would quite like another cat at some point, especially for toddler to grow up with one, but impossible to add one to family whilst this cat is still here.
She tolerates/swipes at us, but is next level devil cat when she sees another cat. She attacked DP badly on the arm when he tried to close the curtain of the window because she clocked another cat outside. She puffs up, growls, black eyes for ages afterwards.
I think she just hates everything! And just lives for the joy of food.

OP posts:
ChamonixMountainBum · 20/01/2026 13:00

whyyyyyisitmonddayy · 20/01/2026 12:53

Your PPD isn’t an excuse. You’re actually being so selfish.

the poor cat might only have a few months left - cats go really suddenly in my experience. Your husband has had the cat long before you - if my partner even hinted at me getting rid of my badly behaved pony (who’s kicked me, bitten me, rammed into me) I’d tell him to F off

Does your badly behaved pony live in the house?

whomoon · 20/01/2026 13:01

TheCurious0range · 20/01/2026 12:49

Find me one person in the UK killed by a domestic cat? They're not comparable. You don't like the cat because it's unfriendly and doesn't like you. Fine. You don't need to make ridiculous comparisons. .

I said caused harm.

OP posts:
Blades2 · 20/01/2026 13:01

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

whomoon · 20/01/2026 13:03

Applecup · 20/01/2026 12:53

Toddler trumps Cat I'm afraid. Her safety is paramount. Can you not let the cat just go outside all day. Let it back in to sleep and eat.

I’d be happy to let cat outside all day and provide lots of shelter for her to choose from.
unfortunately she just scratches to come back in and also gets herself into scraps with the passing cats!

OP posts:
whomoon · 20/01/2026 13:04

whyyyyyisitmonddayy · 20/01/2026 12:53

Your PPD isn’t an excuse. You’re actually being so selfish.

the poor cat might only have a few months left - cats go really suddenly in my experience. Your husband has had the cat long before you - if my partner even hinted at me getting rid of my badly behaved pony (who’s kicked me, bitten me, rammed into me) I’d tell him to F off

Have you tried keeping your pony in another room?

OP posts:
Isithalftermyet · 20/01/2026 13:05

There is such a thing as an old age home for cats if that is something your partner would consider so feisty cat can live out the last days in peace? It is quite expensive but might be an option? It can't be good for any of you to be living as you are and if you could pay to re home in a safe environment that would look after them for the rest of their days surely that would be better all around?

whomoon · 20/01/2026 13:06

Parsleyforme · 20/01/2026 12:56

I’ve read your updates but didn’t see. Is there no way to keep the cat separate? Can she get over a stair gate despite arthritis? I would look to keep the cat upstairs with covered litter tray if possible. I think you could ask about upping the gabapentin. My cat can be clawy/bitey and when she had gabapentin for a health problem she was like a different cat. It is a shame to drug the cat but she sounds anxious and unhappy anyway so it might be a kindness

Yes that’s fair, she’s been on gabapentim for some time now but will ask the vet anyway to see if it can be upped.
I have mentioned my house set up so not possible for isolate for a length of time (unless she settles and goes to sleep) and she scratches to try and get out, even at the stair gate. Whic drives me mad

OP posts:
Jellybunny56 · 20/01/2026 13:07

As the cat is 18 I’d put up with it and keep them separate knowing that they really are unlikely to be around for much longer and realistically an 18 year old cat is not going to be rehomed.

Crunchymum · 20/01/2026 13:07

I have to ask @whomoon what did you think would happen when you added a baby to the mix?

I mean surely this was discussed? Even if the baby was unplanned you knew you had a spicy cat in the house so options should have been discussed in 2024.

There is no good or easy option here. What is your DP's stance on things?

BakedBeeeen · 20/01/2026 13:10

OP, I can’t believe the replies you are getting. Of course your child should be your priority, of course you are extremely anxious and stressed because of the constant risk of your child being badly injured in your own home. It sounds awful.
I think keeping the cat is madness.
I hope you can have a sensible and realistic chat with to your DP about it.

ChamonixMountainBum · 20/01/2026 13:14

Crunchymum · 20/01/2026 13:07

I have to ask @whomoon what did you think would happen when you added a baby to the mix?

I mean surely this was discussed? Even if the baby was unplanned you knew you had a spicy cat in the house so options should have been discussed in 2024.

There is no good or easy option here. What is your DP's stance on things?

Edited

Yes, the cats feelings should have been front and centre of any discussions when family planning.

Purplebunnie · 20/01/2026 13:15

Cat has arthritis and bad on its back legs.

Is it on any pain killers?

I had a feral cat who was not very happy with being stroked, he would lull you into a false sense of security showing his tummy to be tickled and then every sharp instrument at his disposal would be locked into your flesh. He was like this with everyone apart from youngest DD. He never swiped when we walked past him though. Unfortunately he met with an accident and we never got to see if he would have mellowed in later years.

BellesAndGraces · 20/01/2026 13:17

My child will always take priority over a pet so that cat would have been out of my home ages ago.

TwoBagsOfCompost · 20/01/2026 13:23

Hand on heart, if my husband asked me to "get rid" of my elderly cat I'd divorce them. I'm not even joking. The cat's age is roughly of a 88 year old human.

JanuaryJasmine · 20/01/2026 13:23

Heatingneedstobeontoday · 20/01/2026 11:31

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

🤣🤣🤣🤣

TwoBagsOfCompost · 20/01/2026 13:27

FetchezLaVache · 20/01/2026 11:36

Long shot and I'm guessing the answer would be no, but any chance your DP would be able to fit claw caps so the swipes wouldn't draw blood?

Or, you know, trim her claws so they're blunt...? The cat gets seen by a vet according to the OP, so can they not have the vet or nurse get her claws trimmed short...?

YodasHairyButt · 20/01/2026 13:28

I have always had cats my whole life and loved them all and their different personalities and needs unreservedly. However this cat is a danger to the toddler and with the best will in the world, no matter how vigilant you are mistakes will happen. It’s old and being medicated for pain. Ask your DP how he would feel if the cat clawed your baby’s face and blinded them? I wouldn’t rehome, but in these circumstances I would most definitely PTS.

TwattingDog · 20/01/2026 13:29

ChamonixMountainBum · 20/01/2026 13:14

Yes, the cats feelings should have been front and centre of any discussions when family planning.

Actually, yes they should. Because taking action to sort the cat out before a baby is even conceived would have been good planning.

FlyingApple · 20/01/2026 13:33

We rehomed our cat after having a baby and it was the best decision.

Caerulea · 20/01/2026 13:35

Apologies if this has been mentioned, but could you install internal cat doors so the cat can take itself away? You can get some very cute ones that look like actual tiny doors & you can shut & lock them.

Does it have high spaces to get away to? Like a floor to ceiling tree of some sort?

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