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Wife Loses Family Cat, Makes Roast Dinner, Husband Says She “Failed a Test”

by Carolyn Mullet
February 27, 2026
in Social Issues

A family said goodbye to a 19-year-old cat, and somehow the roast got graded.

A teacher on mid-term break spent Monday doing one of the roughest adult chores on earth, sitting in a vet clinic, hearing the words you dread, and carrying home a beloved pet for one last night. Her husband, returning from an overseas business trip, had his own awful week too. A trade show went sideways, a colleague reportedly tore into him publicly, and he boarded a long flight home feeling low.

Normally, this couple has a rhythm. He Ubers to and from the airport, he likes the quiet decompression time, and he has even disliked surprise pickups in the past due to parking costs and hassle. This time, though, the vet appointment landed right before his flight arrived. She chose to bring the cat home, get groceries, and cook a warm roast dinner so the whole family could cuddle their old girl together.

He walked in, hugged everyone, ate happily, and spent that final evening with the cat.

Then breakfast came, and he informed his wife she had “failed the supportive wife test.”

Now, read the full story:

Wife Loses Family Cat, Makes Roast Dinner, Husband Says She “Failed a Test”
Not the actual photo

'Did I fail the ‘Supportive Wife Test’ by cooking a roast dinner instead of doing an airport run?'

My husband (46M) has been overseas on a business trip for the past week. I’m a school teacher (47F) and have been home on a mid term break.

Over the weekend, our very elderly cat (19.5 years) began to deteriorate in health rapidly.

So as soon as our vet clinic was open on Monday morning, I made her an appointment knowing they would probably recommend putting her down.

This all happened while my husband was on the longest return leg of his journey home and was uncontactable for over 10 hours,

but I left messages on our family chat informing he and our (adult) children what was happening.

The vet could only fit us in around hour before my husband’s flight was due to land.

We hadn’t discussed how he was getting home but generally when he travels on business, he Ubers to and from the airport.

I knew my husband was feeling low before he boarded the plane.

The trip hadn’t gone as well as he had hoped and he’d had been confronted and verbally abused by a disgruntled associate in front of a number of people on...

He’s not a confrontational person, so this caused immense distress and embarrassment to him. I would have liked to have met him at the airport and the thought did cross...

However in previous years, he has been unreceptive of me ‘going rogue’ and arriving to pick him up unexpectedly.

He has complained about the cost of parking and fuelling our car, when he could claim an Uber as a work expense much more easily.

I think he also appreciates that final bit of alone time to reflect and debrief before submersing himself in busy family life.

As I expected, the vet said it was time for our beloved pet to depart this life however,

my children (20M and 22M) had not had the opportunity to say goodbye to a pet they had grown up with and had requested to see her one last time.

So the vet provided medication to keep her comfortable and I brought her home for the night.

I stopped on the way from the vet to pick up ingredients for a roast dinner.

As I was preparing to cook, I got a text from my husband saying he had landed and was aware of what was happening at home.

I messaged back and asked if he wanted someone to pick him up (because one of our sons could have driven to the airport to get him at that point)...

He caught an Uber home, gave everyone a warm hug and appreciated his roast dinner. We all spent the night cuddling and loving our beautiful moggy.

The next morning he made breakfast and as we sat at the counter eating, he told me that I ‘failed the supportive wife test last night’ by not picking him...

He said he hoped I didn’t fail it again on Sunday when he runs his first marathon.

Side note, I’m not a runner and I don’t often attend his running events as he has a big group of supportive friends who are keen on running and usually,...

There is also another little twist with this marathon. He signed up for it back in June. It falls on our 23rd wedding anniversary.

We have had multiple discussions in the months since he signed up and he knows I am annoyed that he allowed his friends to talk him into signing up

(at the finish line of a half marathon) to an event that will impact and dominate our entire anniversary weekend, without the courtesy of discussing it with me first (I...

He got to the finish line, went and saw all his friends who were still in the competitors area, signed up for the marathon and then came and found me,...

There was no reason why he couldn’t have included me in the decision making process. I was standing just metres away.

Needless to say, the accusation of failing some secret, unspecified test left me absolutely stunned!

I know he had a rough time in his last couple of days overseas but it wasn’t much of a picnic at home either!

I reminded him that I had to make a decision, just moments after having it confirmed that our beloved pet of 2 decades required euthanasia.

To either race home, drop her off and rush out to the airport or come home and prepare a nice dinner. I couldn’t do both.

I continued that I was feeling low too (because our cat, who was almost the same age as our youngest son) was dying

and I had been so preoccupied trying to keep her calm and comfortable that I hadn’t had time to do so much as plan for dinner.

I had been crying all day and watching her suffer. I also pointed out that the time span between the vet appointment

and his flight landing was finite and there was a possibility (as he wasn’t expecting me) that he could have landed

and got into an Uber before I even made it to the airport. In which case, he’d have had no airport greeting AND no dinner!

He reiterated that the roast was lovely and appreciated but he still would have preferred I met him at the airport on this occasion.

I guess after 23 years of marriage, telepathy was somehow added to the job description without so much as a memo!

The last few days have been tough on everyone. We’re all raw and emotional. So his comment to me over breakfast still echoes in my head.

Is it possible that I ‘failed the supportive wife test’ by choosing to cook a roast dinner for my husband rather than meeting him at the airport on the evening...

If there’s a “supportive spouse test,” it should come with a study guide, a calendar invite, and maybe a little warning label that says “administering during pet loss may cause permanent damage.”

This woman spent a full day in anticipatory grief, did the vet visit, honored her kids’ goodbye request, managed logistics, and still got dinner on the table. That is not neglect. That is a person holding the household together while her heart cracks. Then her husband walks in, enjoys the love, and later grades her effort like he’s the manager of Marriage, Inc.

That whole “you should have known” vibe is where things get messy, because it turns support into a trap. And relationship experts have a lot to say about traps.

Let’s start with the obvious. Support does not work well when one person turns it into a secret exam.

People often talk about “being supportive” like it means perfect mind-reading. But the Gottman Institute, a major voice in couples research, pushes the exact opposite. In one of their conflict skill write-ups, they recommend making requests explicit and direct, with the reminder that “your partner is not a mind-reader.”

That line matters here, because the husband has history. He has discouraged airport pickups before. He has flagged cost, parking, and his preference for Uber. So his wife used the information she had, plus a day that included a vet appointment and an old cat nearing the end. She even asked him if he wanted someone to pick him up. He did not reply.

If he wanted a pickup as emotional support, he had a clean path. He could text, “Please pick me up tonight, I need you.” That message is not needy. It’s clear. It gives your partner a chance to show up in the way you actually want.

Instead, he waited until breakfast and framed it as a failure. That lands as passive-aggressive “testing.” Psychology Today has a blunt warning about this dynamic. Their relationship column notes that when someone deliberately does something that jeopardizes the relationship, it can sabotage intimacy, and it connects this kind of behavior to passive-aggression.

“Supportive wife test” is basically a little booby trap, because there was no shared agreement about the rules. The only possible outcome is guilt, defensiveness, or both. None of those emotions help a couple already stressed by grief and travel burnout.

Now layer in the pet loss. Many people still treat the death of a pet like a “sad but smaller” grief. Research does not back that up. A 2026 study in PLOS One surveyed 975 UK adults and found that the conditional rate of probable Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD) after pet loss was 7.5%, and the authors reported that this rate looked similar to many types of human losses.

So yes, the husband had a rough week. Public confrontation can rattle anyone. But the wife was also in an emotionally intense situation that researchers increasingly recognize as real grief, not “just a cat.”

Healthy support in long marriages usually looks like teamwork, not scoring. It looks like two adults comparing needs out loud. It looks like, “I’m fried, I need comfort,” paired with “I’m grieving, I need gentleness.” Both can be true in the same kitchen.

Practically, this couple can fix this fast if they stop debating who “failed” and start naming what each person needed.

First, agree on a travel default. If Uber is the standard, keep it. If he wants pickups after hard trips, add a simple text code like “airport please.”

Second, retire relationship tests. Replace them with direct requests and gratitude. “I wanted you at the airport” lands very differently from “you failed.”

Third, revisit the marathon anniversary problem, because it connects. The wife already felt unheard. The “test” comment poured salt on a spot that already stung. That’s why it echoes.

This story is not really about an airport run. It’s about communication, emotional labor, and whether their marriage runs on teamwork or on hidden expectations.

Check out how the community responded:

A lot of people basically said, “Ma’am, you cooked a roast while losing a family member,” and they side-eyed the idea of a spouse handing out secret grades.

SnooBananas7203 - No, you didn’t fail. It seems like your husband is in a bad mood and looking for a fight. My condolences for the loss of your kitty.

Either_Compote235 - Your husband has no empathy, are you super woman? Well I think you are, dealing with your beloved cat, cooking a wonderful dinner.

Others called out the mind-reading expectation, especially since he has discouraged surprise pickups before.

Friendlyrat - He can't have it both ways. If he has not liked it when you picked him up in the past, he can't expect you to be psychic.

Plastic-Gas-9675 - This time however, despite everything going on, he actually expected you to read his mind.

I somehow think had you met him at the airport, it again would have been the wrong thing.

NefariousnessSweet70 - They are not allowed to give two opposite rules at the same time. And then complain when we do what they wanted. Nope that's not being fair.

Then the gloves came off, because commenters noticed the marathon-on-anniversary twist and decided he’s the one auditioning for a test.

Clean_Factor9673 - NTA. He failed the husband test by signing up for a marathon on your anniversary with no discussion.

FitzDesign - Your beloved family pet is dying and the kids are upset, yet you weren’t supportive of him because your telepathy failed. You need marriage counselling.

bronwynbloomington - Tell him you are planning a “Supportive Husband Test” based on his future actions. But you can’t tell him what the test is.

Immediate_Mud_2858 - He’s the failure. You’re not.

badassbiotch - I hate these “tests”! They’re nothing more than passive aggressive responses designed to hurt.

No, you did not fail anything. You made a reasonable call based on history, logistics, and a day full of grief. You also did something deeply supportive, you fed your family and created a warm landing spot while everyone said goodbye to a pet who lived almost two decades.

Your husband’s feelings can still be real. He came home bruised from conflict and wanted comfort. That’s human. The problem is his delivery. A “test” comment turns a need into a weapon. It invites shame instead of closeness.

If you want a repair conversation that actually helps, try staying specific. Ask what he needed that night, and tell him what you needed too. Then set a clear plan for future trips, so nobody has to guess while crying in a vet parking lot.

Also, that marathon on your anniversary deserves a separate, calm talk. If he wants support, he can start by showing it.

So what do you think? Does “support” count if someone only recognizes it when it matches the script in their head? And how would you handle the marathon anniversary situation after this week?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 3/5 votes | 60%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/5 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 2/5 votes | 40%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/5 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/5 votes | 0%

Carolyn Mullet

Carolyn Mullet

Carolyn Mullet is in charge of planning and content process management, business development, social media, strategic partnership relations, brand building, and PR for DailyHighlight. Before joining Dailyhighlight, she served as the Vice President of Editorial Development at Aubtu Today, and as a senior editor at various magazines and media agencies.

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