DG. I’m still shaking, and honestly, I don’t know if I’ll ever fully forgive her for what she did.

I’m still shaking, and honestly, I don’t know if I’ll ever fully forgive her for what she did.

The cat in the picture is Oliver. He’s 14 years old. I’ve had him since college — through heartbreaks, layoffs, my father getting sick, losing my father, and every lonely night in between. To me, he’s never been “just a cat.” He’s been the one constant through every chapter of my life.

Last week, my apartment needed emergency repairs because of a plumbing leak and mold issue, so I asked my mom if she could keep Oliver for a few days. She agreed immediately and even reassured me by saying, “Don’t worry, he’ll be okay here.”

I packed everything he’d need — his food, litter, medication, favorite blanket, and even the little toy mouse he still carries around like a kitten.

I truly believed he was safe.

Yesterday, after work, I went to pick him up. The moment I walked inside, my mom started acting strange. She avoided eye contact and kept wiping down an already spotless counter before finally saying, “Before you get upset, just hear me out.”

The second she said that, my stomach dropped.

She explained that Oliver had been “too stressful.” He cried during the night, got sick on the rug once, and scratched at the guest room door. And instead of calling me… instead of asking me to come get him… instead of giving me one chance to figure something out…

She took him to a shelter.

She just left him there.

My elderly cat. My anxious old boy who hates unfamiliar places. The cat who needs his medication on schedule and hides whenever he’s frightened. She loaded him into a carrier, drove him to a shelter, signed the papers, and went home as casually as if she had returned an unwanted package.

I barely remember what happened after she told me. I know I cried. I know I kept asking, “How could you do that to him?” over and over again.

And she kept saying, “You’re overreacting. It’s not like anything permanent happened. Someone else would’ve adopted him.”

Someone else.

Like fourteen years of love and trust could simply be handed off to a stranger. Like he wouldn’t be terrified and confused, sitting behind glass wondering why the person he trusted never came back for him.

I drove straight to the shelter.

When they brought me into the cat room, I saw him sitting quietly behind the enclosure glass exactly like this. He wasn’t crying. Wasn’t moving much. Just staring at me with watery eyes like he was trying to decide if I was really there… or if I had abandoned him too.

That moment shattered me.

When the staff opened the enclosure, he didn’t rush toward me like he usually does. He simply leaned into my hand and started purring this tiny, shaky purr that sounded more like relief than happiness. The shelter worker told me he barely touched his food and had stayed withdrawn ever since he arrived.

I felt sick hearing that.

And the hardest part is that my mom truly believes she did nothing wrong. She says I’m being “dramatic” and acting unfairly after she was “trying to help.” My aunt even called me saying the family thinks I’m taking things too far because I told my mother she’s no longer welcome in my home.

Apparently I’m expected to move on because “he’s back home now” and “everything turned out okay.”

But it doesn’t feel okay.

Something changed in me the second I saw my cat sitting in a shelter because someone I trusted decided he had become inconvenient. This wasn’t some misunderstanding. It was a deliberate choice.

She chose convenience over compassion.

She chose silence instead of honesty.

She chose to get rid of someone she knew meant everything to me.

I can’t stop imagining how frightened Oliver must have been during that car ride… how confused he must have felt when she walked away… how long he sat there waiting for a familiar face to come back for him.

And honestly, I don’t know how I’m supposed to look at my mother the same way after knowing she was capable of doing something like that.

So now I keep asking myself…

Am I wrong for cutting her off because of this?

Am I overreacting for feeling like surrendering someone’s senior pet behind their back is a betrayal that can’t simply be brushed aside?

And if this were your pet — your family — would you ever trust that person again?

It’s been five days since I brought Oliver home from the shelter, and honestly… the apartment still feels different.

He’s here physically, curled up beside me as I write this, but emotionally something changed in both of us that I can’t fully explain.

The first night back home broke my heart all over again.

Normally, Oliver follows me everywhere. Bathroom? He waits outside the door. Kitchen? He circles my legs hoping for treats even though he’s on a strict diet now. Bedtime? He curls against my chest like he’s done for years.

But that first night, he hesitated around me.

Not aggressively. Not fearfully.

Just… cautiously.

Like part of him wasn’t completely sure I wasn’t going to disappear again.

I noticed little things I can’t stop thinking about. Every time I stood up and left the room, he’d immediately wake up and follow me. If I closed a door, even for a second, he’d paw at it anxiously. Twice I caught him sitting beside his carrier staring at it like he remembered exactly what happened.

And maybe I’m projecting human emotions onto a cat, but I swear something in his eyes looks different now.

More uncertain.

More fragile.

I’ve barely slept because I keep replaying the entire situation in my head wondering if I somehow failed him too. I know logically I didn’t abandon him, but I still handed him over to someone I trusted and he ended up alone in a shelter wondering where I went.

That guilt sits in my chest constantly.

Meanwhile, my family keeps acting like I’m creating unnecessary drama.

My aunt called again yesterday and actually said, “Your mother is devastated you’re punishing her over an animal.”

An animal.

I don’t know why people say things like that as if it somehow minimizes the bond you have with a pet. Oliver has been with me longer than most humans in my life. He sat beside me after my dad passed away when I couldn’t stop crying for weeks. During the pandemic when I barely spoke to anyone, he was the reason I got out of bed some mornings.

He’s family to me.

And honestly, I think that’s the part my mother never understood.

To her, pets are temporary inconveniences. To me, they’re commitments. Emotional ones.

The situation became even worse two days ago when my mother showed up at my apartment unannounced.

I didn’t even know she had a spare key still hidden in the old flower pot outside until I heard the lock turn.

The second Oliver saw her voice before I even reached the hallway, he bolted under the couch.

That absolutely crushed me.

This cat used to love her. He’d sit in her lap during holidays. He recognized her voice instantly for years.

Now he hid.

My mother immediately started crying and saying, “See what you’ve done? You’re turning this into something horrible.”

I honestly couldn’t believe it.

Not once did she apologize.

Not once did she say, “I understand why you’re hurt.”

Instead she kept defending herself.

She said she was overwhelmed. She said Oliver kept her awake. She said she thought someone else could “give him more attention in his final years.”

That sentence made me see red.

His final years?

Like he was some object nearing expiration instead of a living creature who has loved us unconditionally for over a decade.

I finally told her something I’d been holding in since this happened.

I said, “You didn’t just betray me. You betrayed a defenseless animal who trusted you completely.”

The room went silent after that.

Then she quietly asked, “Are you really willing to lose your relationship with your mother over this?”

And maybe that’s the question haunting me most now.

Because despite everything, I still love my mom.

That’s what makes betrayal hurt so badly. If a stranger had done this, I’d be angry. But because it came from someone I trusted completely, it feels deeper than anger. It feels like grief.

Like suddenly realizing someone you thought was safe maybe never understood you at all.

Since then, I’ve ignored most family calls.

Apparently the story has spread through relatives and now everyone has an opinion. Some think I’m justified. Others think I’m emotionally overreacting because “at least Oliver is okay now.”

But here’s the thing people keep missing:

This isn’t only about the shelter.

It’s about what her decision revealed.

If someone can look at an elderly animal trembling in confusion and still decide getting rid of him is the easiest solution… what does that say about their compassion?

What scares me most is imagining what would’ve happened if I’d waited another day to pick him up.

What if someone adopted him immediately?

What if he’d ended up terrified in another unfamiliar home separated from the only person he’s known most of his life?

I can’t even think about it too long because it genuinely makes me sick.

The shelter staff actually told me senior cats often struggle emotionally after surrender because they don’t understand why their environment suddenly changes. Hearing that nearly destroyed me.

Since bringing him home, I’ve tried rebuilding his sense of safety slowly.

I moved his favorite blanket beside my bed again. I’ve been keeping soft music on when I leave the apartment so he doesn’t panic in silence. Yesterday was actually the first time he fully relaxed enough to nap across my lap again.

I cried when he did.

It felt like he was finally telling me, “Okay… maybe we’re safe again.”

But trust takes time to rebuild.

Not just for him.

For me too.

Because now every memory involving my mother feels different somehow. I keep wondering whether there were other moments in life where convenience mattered more to her than compassion and I simply never noticed before.

Maybe that’s unfair.

Maybe pain is making me harsh.

But I also think situations like this reveal people’s character in ways apologies sometimes can’t erase.

Right now, I honestly don’t know what happens next.

Maybe eventually I’ll speak to my mother again.

Maybe time will soften some of this anger.

Or maybe some relationships change permanently the moment trust is broken.

All I know for certain is this:

Oliver is asleep beside me right now, curled against my arm exactly the way he used to before all of this happened.

And after the fear and confusion he went through, I’ll spend however long he has left making sure he never questions again whether he’s loved… or whether someone is coming back for him.