..."for NOT helping the special needs cat!"
That's basically what my mom said to me today.
My husband and I had been thinking about getting a special needs kitty, one who has diabetes insipidus, which basically means he can't concentrate liquids and would have to drink and pee a lot. I had mentioned it to my mom a few days ago and she didn't really say much about it at the time.
Well, we went to meet the special needs kitty today and decided not to adopt him in the end, not because of his illness, but because we didn't think his personality would fit in with us and our cats. When I told this to my mom, she said she was proud of us for not getting the cat, that it had been foolish to even consider it, and that she was happy we had decided against it because it would have been a terrible idea.
Frankly I am downright insulted she would say this. We are still in the market for a special needs kitty; the one with DI would have been great from the standpoint that we could handle his illness, it's just that his personality wasn't quite right. My mom is insisting we adopt a healthy little 8 week old kitten...you know, the kind that is going to get adopted anyway because everyone loves kittens. We want to help a less adoptable cat, either one that is sick or disabled or even one that is healthy but older and less wanted. She absolutely cannot understand why we would want to do this.
Look, it's not like we haven't thought this through. We've talked a lot about it. We have the experience and the capability to handle a special needs kitty, within reason. There are a lot of kitties out there who are considered special need that aren't really that hard to take care of (in our opinion.) Like a blind kitty. Or an amputee kitty. All of them have a much lower chance of being adopted because they are considered special need and most people want a perfect, healthy cat. We are willing and capable of taking one of the less adoptable ones, why shouldn't we?
That's basically what my mom said to me today.
My husband and I had been thinking about getting a special needs kitty, one who has diabetes insipidus, which basically means he can't concentrate liquids and would have to drink and pee a lot. I had mentioned it to my mom a few days ago and she didn't really say much about it at the time.
Well, we went to meet the special needs kitty today and decided not to adopt him in the end, not because of his illness, but because we didn't think his personality would fit in with us and our cats. When I told this to my mom, she said she was proud of us for not getting the cat, that it had been foolish to even consider it, and that she was happy we had decided against it because it would have been a terrible idea.
Frankly I am downright insulted she would say this. We are still in the market for a special needs kitty; the one with DI would have been great from the standpoint that we could handle his illness, it's just that his personality wasn't quite right. My mom is insisting we adopt a healthy little 8 week old kitten...you know, the kind that is going to get adopted anyway because everyone loves kittens. We want to help a less adoptable cat, either one that is sick or disabled or even one that is healthy but older and less wanted. She absolutely cannot understand why we would want to do this.
Look, it's not like we haven't thought this through. We've talked a lot about it. We have the experience and the capability to handle a special needs kitty, within reason. There are a lot of kitties out there who are considered special need that aren't really that hard to take care of (in our opinion.) Like a blind kitty. Or an amputee kitty. All of them have a much lower chance of being adopted because they are considered special need and most people want a perfect, healthy cat. We are willing and capable of taking one of the less adoptable ones, why shouldn't we?
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