Those sons of bitches! How could they look at loving eyes and think "meh, don't want that anymore, go die"?? Who the fuck punched their heads as kids? I don't know the state they live in but I really hope law is going to have a say in the matter.
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· 6 years ago
This is the purest fluff around and he deserves a heck of a lot of love
My Aunt had a cat that was real sick. It needed surgery and medicine my aunt couldn't afford. The vet said if you put it up for adoption we will make it better. So she did. She put it up for adoption. Weeks went by and she kept checking up on it every day to see how it was. Than the day came they told her tomorrow it will be put up for adoption. The next day there waiting for the vet to open was my cousin. He waited for a solid hour before they open to make sure he was the first one there. He walked in and said he was looking for an older cat. They showed him my aunt's cat and he adopted it. He took it home to my aunt. Lol it went crazy rubbing all over her loving her to bits lol.
The original vet bill would of been around 1,000+ dollars she just couldn't afford that. So after putting it up for adoption and getting it back she paid 125 dollars for it.
Sometimes giving up your pet is the only way to make sure they get help. But I would NEVER EVER take a pet to a vet to be put down.
That’s understandable. But from what the article is sayin they just didn’t want the cat so they tried to give it away an it kept coming back. So they said fuck let’s just kill it. That’s totally fucked up.
With a lot of things there isn't really a way to be comfortable. It's far more humane to put them down than to let them sit in permanent pain and confusion for however long they have left
Every single animal I've owned just about has been put down, not because I didn't WANT to spend more time with them, but because they NEEDED it. My male cat, in particular, got extremely sick with stomach cancer. Like there was no stomach left. What's more, the vet said they were surprised he was even able to walk because his joints were in such poor shape. But he had never been one to complain. It wasn't until the end that he stopped eating that we even knew there was something so very wrong. He was 9.
His sister went deaf, had chlamydia (<- not an std in cats and behaves differently. Results in very nasty eye infections), slept almost constantly, was on a multitude of medications, including pain medication, had to be taken in weekly just to be hydrated, and would end up close to dehydration before the next appointment. We were almost living at the vet with her, the bills were through the roof, but more than that she had no quality of life. She was in constant pain and would yowl from it-- particularly when she had to go to the bathroom, would wake up in confusion and often scared if I wasn't around (and I couldn't be around all the time), was ripping her nails out trying to drag herself up places she couldn't get to anymore because she couldn't jump (we did our best trying to accommodate her but can't get everything).
Both of them were suffering by the end of their lives. But they had had good lives. Keeping them alive at that point just to spend time with them would have been selfish on our parts to the point of cruelty, and so much less than they would have deserved after all they'd given us
The original vet bill would of been around 1,000+ dollars she just couldn't afford that. So after putting it up for adoption and getting it back she paid 125 dollars for it.
Sometimes giving up your pet is the only way to make sure they get help. But I would NEVER EVER take a pet to a vet to be put down.