She Adopted Her Dream Cat Days After Her Grandfather Died, And It Sparked A Family Fallout

Grief doesn’t always look the way we expect. Sometimes it’s quiet. Sometimes it’s messy. And sometimes it leads people to make decisions that feel comforting in the moment but complicated soon after.

For one 22-year-old woman, losing her grandfather, someone she described as incredibly close to her, left a sudden emotional gap. Just two weeks after his passing, she came home with something she had wanted since childhood, a cat.

It should have been a small moment of joy in a heavy time. Instead, it turned into a painful conflict with her mother that left both of them hurt and not speaking.

She Adopted Her Dream Cat Days After Her Grandfather Died, and It Sparked a Family Fallout
Not the actual photo

Here’s how it all unfolded.

'AITA for getting a cat after my grandfather who is allergic died?'

I(22f) have been wanting a cat literally since I started talking as a kid all I wanted was a cat.

But my grandfather was extremely allergic to the point if I went to my friend’s house that had cats I would need to shower when getting home.

And I couldn’t get a cat of my own since I stayed living at home for college since the college I go to is only a 30 minute drive away....

My grandfather died 2 weeks ago and it was hard for everyone and very hard for me because him and were very were close.

Well 2 days ago I adopted a cat from a close friend. I was so sad and wasn’t really thinking about anything but temporary happiness and that was getting my...

Well I came home with it and my mom accused me of in her words “waiting the second my grandfather dies to get a cat” and called me selfish for...

She was very emotional about it and keeps insinuating that I was almost excited my grandfather died so I could get the cat.

She now wants me to get rid of the cat because it brings her to much anger and pain to look at it.

But this is my cat and also I wasn’t trying to be a selfish person I just wanted to do something I’ve been dreaming of for basically 20 years.

And she’s so mad at me about this as of 2 hrs ago she blocked me on messages when I was apologizing to her. So AITA?

Edit: to clear this up! I do not only live with my mom! It is me, my mom, my dad, and my grandma. My mom is the only one reacting...

A Long-Awaited Dream Meets an Unforgiving Moment

For as long as she could remember, she had wanted a cat. It was one of those simple, persistent dreams that stuck with her from childhood into adulthood. But her grandfather’s severe allergies made it impossible. Even visiting a house with cats meant she had to shower immediately after getting home.

So the idea of having a cat wasn’t just delayed. It was completely off the table.

Even in college, she stayed at home to save money, commuting about 30 minutes each way. The living situation stayed the same, and so did the rule. No cats.

Then everything changed.

Her grandfather passed away, and the loss hit hard. In the middle of that grief, she made a quick decision. A friend had a cat available, and she adopted it. No long discussions, no family meeting, just a quiet attempt to bring a little comfort into a difficult moment.

When she walked through the door with the cat, she probably expected surprise. Maybe even hesitation.

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What she got instead was anger.

A Mother’s Grief, A Daughter’s Misstep

Her mother reacted strongly, accusing her of “waiting for the second her grandfather died” just to get a cat. It wasn’t just frustration about the pet itself. It was a deeply emotional accusation that cut straight to the daughter’s intentions and love for her grandfather.

From the mother’s perspective, the timing felt almost symbolic in the worst possible way. The house had barely had time to process the loss, and suddenly there was a visible reminder that a long-standing boundary had disappeared.

For the daughter, though, it wasn’t calculated. It was impulsive, yes, but rooted in sadness. She admitted she wasn’t thinking clearly and was just looking for something, anything, to feel a little better.

That disconnect is where things really broke down.

Grief has a way of magnifying everything. Words come out sharper. Assumptions come faster. Her mother’s accusation suggested something cruel, that she had been waiting for her grandfather to pass. That hurt. Deeply.

But at the same time, the daughter had skipped a crucial step. She brought a living, long-term responsibility into a shared home without asking anyone first.

And that mattered.

When Comfort Turns Complicated

Adopting a pet is rarely just a personal decision when you live with other people. It changes routines, responsibilities, and even emotional dynamics in the home.

In this case, it also collided directly with fresh grief.

The daughter may have been seeking comfort, but to her mother, the cat became tied to the loss itself. Not logically, maybe, but emotionally. Every time she looked at it, it reminded her of what had just happened, and how quickly something new had replaced something old.

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It’s also worth noting that grief doesn’t follow a straight path. People cope differently. Some want silence and space. Others reach for connection or distraction. Neither approach is wrong, but when they clash under the same roof, tension is almost unavoidable.

The situation escalated to the point where her mother blocked her messages while she was trying to apologize. That says less about the cat and more about how raw everything still is.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Most people agreed she was in the wrong, but not for the reason her mom gave.

Tigger7894 − YTA. Not because you got it right after your grandfather died, but because you didn’t discuss it with everyone you live with before you got the cat.

ShortChapter4927 − YTA for getting a cat when you don't live in your own home.

Everyone who lives in the home should be on board with the decision to adopt a pet, and as it is your parents' home, they get final say regardless.

Stranger0nReddit − YTA. You made an impulsive decision without consulting the people you live with.

I'm very sorry for your loss, and i'm sure your mom's grief was also weaved into her reaction, but she was also completely blindsided with the cat adoption and she's...

Many commenters pointed out that adopting a pet is a household decision, especially when it’s not your own home. 

AKlife420 − Sorry, YTA. If you lived in your own home that would be different. Also; I can see where your mom's thinking is coming from.

Ok-Emotion6221 − who adopts a pet without discussing it with everyone else in the household? ofc YTA

Bubbly_Management144 − Soft YTA. People behave differently when they grieve. It’s very normal to want to fill the void of your grandpa with something else.

You’ve always wanted a cat, so that’s what you chose. You definitely shouldn’t have bought a cat when it’s not your house and didn’t have permission to do so.

It was cruel of your mom to say you waited until your grandpa died to get a cat though.

That’s a very insensitive thing to accuse someone of, because it insinuates that you didn’t love your grandpa and you were waiting for him to die.

That’s said, your mom is also grieving and again, grieving makes people say and do things they normally wouldn’t do.

Others acknowledged the grief on both sides, noting that her mom’s harsh words likely came from pain rather than genuine belief.

NaturesVividPictures − Move out, take the cat with you.

ImaginaryAd5712 − I feel you but YTA since you live with your mom.

FilthyMublood − YTA. You don't go and get a pet because you're looking for "temporary happiness".

A pet comes with lots of responsibility, you're taking care of another life, and you should never look at it as "I'm sad and this will temporarily make me happy".

Also, when living with other people, you ALWAYS make sure everyone is on board with adopting a pet.

What you did was very selfish, as you were only considering your own feelings and not the feelings or opinions of anyone else in your home.

In the end, it sounds like you viewed your grandfather as a boundary between you and your dream of having a cat, and you made that clear when you adopted...

I don't blame your mom for feeling the way she does about this situation.

JoyfulDelivery − Since you’re living at home then YTA. It’s not your house and you could’ve waited to get the cat so your mom wouldn’t think you were doing it...

This situation isn’t really about a cat. It’s about timing, grief, and the way emotions can blur judgment on all sides.

She wasn’t wrong for wanting comfort. And her mother wasn’t wrong for feeling blindsided. But both of them ended up hurting each other in the process.

Maybe the real question isn’t who’s right or wrong, but whether this moment can be repaired with time, patience, and a bit more understanding.

Because in the end, was this an act of selfishness, or just a human attempt to feel okay again?

 

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