Anonymous wrote:$6,000 could pay for a lot more cats. No way would I pay that for a cat's surgery when you could get several new cats for free.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now I feel really sorry for the OP's SIL. The woman had less than 6k in savings, but the cat meant so much to her that she spent it all to save it. What if her disability means she won't ever have a family, or get married? She must have felt so ashamed and small to have to ask her brother, with his wife and family, for money to save her cat.
I have a family member like that and I have to force my kids to be cordial to him, and I pray he doesn't know it. Life is really short, people, and love is not distributed evenly in this world. What if the only thing you had and would ever have to love was a cat, and you knew it?
If she had set up a GoFundMe, I would have contributed more than $50.
Suuure you would
I donated much more than 6k to charity sources last year. I feel sorry for you that you cannot contemplate or consider giving to help others who are less fortunate. I hope I am never the kind of stingy, materialistic person who hoards resources for myself and sneers in incredulity at others who choose to give.
Wow a whole 6k and you feel morally superior to op. What a humble brag. I feel sorry for you that you gave so little. Despite the fact that you feel like mother Theresa, op is under no obligation to put her hard earned money toward her relative's financial choices.
You have no idea how much I gave; I never said exactly how much, and I won't. I don't feel morally superior to OP, who is clearly a sensitive and compassionate person or she would not be thinking about this issue at all: if she were as heartless as some posters on here, she wouldn't have posted about the dilemma at all. I do feel disgusted by the people who can't seem to fathom that this poor woman's cat might be the only being in the world she has to love: she's disabled! Your cat dying would make you sad, but her cat dying would be worse, and might emphasize to her that she's disabled and alone. It is more than a cat. As I observed earlier, love is not evenly distributed in this world. Life is really short, and if you have all the love you need, then money shouldn't matter so much, so why not share it with someone who doesn't have the good fortune to have everything that you have?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now I feel really sorry for the OP's SIL. The woman had less than 6k in savings, but the cat meant so much to her that she spent it all to save it. What if her disability means she won't ever have a family, or get married? She must have felt so ashamed and small to have to ask her brother, with his wife and family, for money to save her cat.
I have a family member like that and I have to force my kids to be cordial to him, and I pray he doesn't know it. Life is really short, people, and love is not distributed evenly in this world. What if the only thing you had and would ever have to love was a cat, and you knew it?
If she had set up a GoFundMe, I would have contributed more than $50.
Suuure you would
I donated much more than 6k to charity sources last year. I feel sorry for you that you cannot contemplate or consider giving to help others who are less fortunate. I hope I am never the kind of stingy, materialistic person who hoards resources for myself and sneers in incredulity at others who choose to give.
Wow a whole 6k and you feel morally superior to op. What a humble brag. I feel sorry for you that you gave so little. Despite the fact that you feel like mother Theresa, op is under no obligation to put her hard earned money toward her relative's financial choices.
You have no idea how much I gave; I never said exactly how much, and I won't. I don't feel morally superior to OP, who is clearly a sensitive and compassionate person or she would not be thinking about this issue at all: if she were as heartless as some posters on here, she wouldn't have posted about the dilemma at all. I do feel disgusted by the people who can't seem to fathom that this poor woman's cat might be the only being in the world she has to love: she's disabled! Your cat dying would make you sad, but her cat dying would be worse, and might emphasize to her that she's disabled and alone. It is more than a cat. As I observed earlier, love is not evenly distributed in this world. Life is really short, and if you have all the love you need, then money shouldn't matter so much, so why not share it with someone who doesn't have the good fortune to have everything that you have?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now I feel really sorry for the OP's SIL. The woman had less than 6k in savings, but the cat meant so much to her that she spent it all to save it. What if her disability means she won't ever have a family, or get married? She must have felt so ashamed and small to have to ask her brother, with his wife and family, for money to save her cat.
I have a family member like that and I have to force my kids to be cordial to him, and I pray he doesn't know it. Life is really short, people, and love is not distributed evenly in this world. What if the only thing you had and would ever have to love was a cat, and you knew it?
If she had set up a GoFundMe, I would have contributed more than $50.
Suuure you would
I donated much more than 6k to charity sources last year. I feel sorry for you that you cannot contemplate or consider giving to help others who are less fortunate. I hope I am never the kind of stingy, materialistic person who hoards resources for myself and sneers in incredulity at others who choose to give.
Wow a whole 6k and you feel morally superior to op. What a humble brag. I feel sorry for you that you gave so little. Despite the fact that you feel like mother Theresa, op is under no obligation to put her hard earned money toward her relative's financial choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now I feel really sorry for the OP's SIL. The woman had less than 6k in savings, but the cat meant so much to her that she spent it all to save it. What if her disability means she won't ever have a family, or get married? She must have felt so ashamed and small to have to ask her brother, with his wife and family, for money to save her cat.
I have a family member like that and I have to force my kids to be cordial to him, and I pray he doesn't know it. Life is really short, people, and love is not distributed evenly in this world. What if the only thing you had and would ever have to love was a cat, and you knew it?
If she had set up a GoFundMe, I would have contributed more than $50.
Suuure you would
I donated much more than 6k to charity sources last year. I feel sorry for you that you cannot contemplate or consider giving to help others who are less fortunate. I hope I am never the kind of stingy, materialistic person who hoards resources for myself and sneers in incredulity at others who choose to give.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just pay the $1,000 on her credit card. Give her money! No need to make it a loan when 1. You can easily afford it and 2. You would become just one more debtor she'd have to pay because she dared to save her beloved cat's life. 3. Clearly, this surgery put her in debt. Even at interest free she'll find it difficult to repay. Why not give her a tiny bit of a breather.
You know, I don't think I could sit and watch a family member struggle in this way when I have enough to help her in my back pocket. The $1,000 won't hurt you, but it will help her a great deal. So why not? Just make it clear to her that's all you're giving.
This only works if you're prepared to fund her lifestyle henceforth, PP. She will get into the habit of asking you to be bailed out.
Anonymous wrote:Just pay the $1,000 on her credit card. Give her money! No need to make it a loan when 1. You can easily afford it and 2. You would become just one more debtor she'd have to pay because she dared to save her beloved cat's life. 3. Clearly, this surgery put her in debt. Even at interest free she'll find it difficult to repay. Why not give her a tiny bit of a breather.
You know, I don't think I could sit and watch a family member struggle in this way when I have enough to help her in my back pocket. The $1,000 won't hurt you, but it will help her a great deal. So why not? Just make it clear to her that's all you're giving.
Anonymous wrote:I would consider spending 6k on my cat if I thought the surgery was a permanent cure and my cat would have a good quality of life afterwards. I probably wouldn't give a family member 6k for a vet surgery though. Pet owners shouldn't have pets if they can't afford them. I also dislike the notion that I have to pay for everything just because I have money. I am not an ATM machine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now I feel really sorry for the OP's SIL. The woman had less than 6k in savings, but the cat meant so much to her that she spent it all to save it. What if her disability means she won't ever have a family, or get married? She must have felt so ashamed and small to have to ask her brother, with his wife and family, for money to save her cat.
I have a family member like that and I have to force my kids to be cordial to him, and I pray he doesn't know it. Life is really short, people, and love is not distributed evenly in this world. What if the only thing you had and would ever have to love was a cat, and you knew it?
If she had set up a GoFundMe, I would have contributed more than $50.
Suuure you would