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Emotional Support Dog Tears Apart Precious Memento Plushie, Hinting At Shared Heartbreak

by Jeffrey Stone
December 2, 2025
in Social Issues

A family dog accidentally destroys a precious memento from the older brother’s late partner, plunging the household into emotional turmoil. The elder son, who shoulders most of the rent after his parents’ financial struggles, feels devastated by the loss.

Meanwhile, the younger brother depends on the pup for mental health support and won’t consider rehoming it. Parents face a heart-wrenching choice between honoring grief, preserving family bonds, and managing tight finances.

Emotional support dog tears memento plushie apart, sparking family ultimatum over grief, mental health, and rent woes.

Emotional Support Dog Tears Apart Precious Memento Plushie, Hinting At Shared Heartbreak
Not the actual photo.

'WIBTA for making our son get rid of his ESA?'

We have two sons. Danny (19M) has depression and anxiety and has an emotional support dog named Teddy who has helped him a great deal.

Tyler (24M) moved in with us last year to help us pay the rent after some financial difficulties

(I had an injury which caused a lot of medical bills and forced me to quit my job for a lower-paying one).

He pays way more than his fair share (60%) just so we can stay here. Tyler lost his girlfriend to cancer a few months ago.

She made him a crocheted plush toy a few weeks before she passed that he values a lot and I’ve sadly seen him crying with it at multiple times.

While Tyler was at work, Teddy explored inside his room, saw the toy on the bed and tore it apart.

Tyler was devastated and inconsolable and we felt horrible for him.

He said he can’t look at Teddy anymore without hating him with every fibre of his being so either the dog will have to go or he’ll have to move...

We know Teddy just made a mistake but we can’t afford the rent on our own.

It’s already below market rate because we’ve cultivated a good relationship with our landlady. We’re so torn.

Moving right now would be completely infeasible. I know we should’ve planned for eventually not being reliant on Tyler for rent but we didn’t in this time frame.

Should we talk to Tyler and try to get him see Teddy’s importance to Danny’s mental health or tell Danny Teddy needs to be rehomed?

Update: We spoke to Danny about the ultimatum. He said we can choose to get rid of Teddy if we want

but he’s going to leave with him and get a job and his own place to stay.

He said we can sublet his room out to help him afford it. We don’t want that,

we don’t think it’ll be easy for him to work for long enough hours to afford rent

(even with our help from renting out his room) so we’ll try talking to Tyler again.

Update #2: Tyler isn’t changing his mind, he said he understands Danny’s struggles with mental health

but he can’t jeopardize his own mental health by living with a dog that causes him uncontrollable anguish every time he looks at it.

We now know we can’t rehome Teddy either because while Danny says he can work 12+ hours a day to afford a new place,

we know he won’t be able to and will just have to move back in.

(A lot of people have suggesting getting a smaller place. Our landlady hasn’t raised our rent in 7 years.

We can only afford 40% of that substantially below-market place rent. A 2-bedroom apartment at market rate within the city,

and without Tyler‘s help would be significantly more expensive, even if Danny gets a job.

It would be unaffordable with my medical debt. We’re seeing if we can afford a place to stay outside the city and still pay for gas.

Our gas expenses will skyrocket because my wife and I both presently work at a walking distance and would later have to drive in from outside the city,

but this is the only option I can see now).

In this Reddit story, an incident happened. One dog, as well as an emotional support animal, found it way to a room and tore the plush toy bearing memories of the late girlfriend. What took place had turned their home into a therapy session gone wrong.

The core clash begins as Tyler, the elder brother, can’t bear the sight of Teddy after the dog demolished his cherished crocheted plush – a final gift from his girlfriend who passed from cancer.

Meanwhile, Danny relies on Teddy like a lifeline for his depression and anxiety. Parents are desperate to avoid eviction, clinging to Tyler’s oversized rent share amid medical debts and a sweetheart landlady deal.

From Tyler’s side, the pain is visceral. That toy was a tangible thread to his lost love, evoking tears he’s hidden in private. Forcing him to coexist with the “culprit” feels like daily salt in an open wound, especially while he’s already paying the lion’s share to keep the family afloat.

Flip the script to Danny: Teddy isn’t a pet. He’s prescribed emotional armor. Rehoming him could unravel years of progress, pushing Danny toward instability or even an unsustainable solo move he insists on making.

The parents’ panic is relatable. After all, who hasn’t juggled finances like a circus act? But prioritizing dollars over Danny’s well-being risks signaling his struggles are disposable.

This mess spotlights broader family dynamics in multigenerational homes, where grief, mental health, and money collide. A 2023 Pew Research Center report notes that 59% of U.S. adults aged 18-29 lived with parents post-pandemic, often due to economic pressures, amplifying tensions over boundaries and shared spaces. In such setups, unaddressed resentments fester like forgotten laundry.

Drawing from expert insights, Joanne Cacciatore, a researcher at Arizona State University, notes in a study on grief support: “Animals may be an especially important source of emotional support during conditions involving social isolation… or during experiential conditions such as the loneliness so common in bereavement.”

This resonates here, as the dog offers unwavering comfort amid family tensions, potentially aiding everyone if channels for understanding open up. Her work suggests pets can teach us about compassionate responses, encouraging families to explore how animals might bridge emotional gaps rather than widen them.

Ultimately, neutral paths forward could include open dialogues to air feelings without blame, perhaps enlisting a counselor to mediate. Exploring alternatives like enhanced training for the pet or recreating the keepsake might ease the sting.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

Some argue rehoming the dog would devastate Danny’s mental health.

IReallyLoveNifflers − YWBTA. Obviously your son will be devastated about the loss of the bear but Teddy is an animal and cannot be blamed for this.

ComprehensiveBand586 − YTA. This isn't even about Tyler's mental health, not really.

It's about his money and the fact that he's paying more than he should have to towards the rent.

So if you force your son to give up a dog that he needs for his mental health,

you'll basically be telling him that his mental health doesn't matter as much as his brother's money.

mdthomas − I really hope this is fake. YWBTA It's Tyler's issue to deal with, not yours or Danny's or Teddy's.

If you rehome Teddy, you're also hurting Danny. If Tyler isn't already talking to a therapist, I'd highly recommend he do so.

If Tyler truly can't stand to be around the dog, then he needs to move out. You can find another renter.

Others insist Tyler has a right to set boundaries after his loss.

claireclairey − ESH but I’m dumbfounded by all the negativity towards Tyler.

He lost his girlfriend to cancer, he was nice enough to move back in with his parents and pay 60% of the rent,

his most prized and loved possession was destroyed… and he’s STILL willing to stay in that house and pay the rent,

provided that the animal that destroyed his property is no longer a threat to his own mental health.

HE COULD’VE JUST MOVED OUT. He didn’t. He’s not an AH. Mom is not a total AH either. Ya’ll expect her to make the family homeless over principle.

How are they going to be able to keep the dog if they’re living in their car?

If Tyler moves out, which again, he has every right to do, the family will have to move away.

There are no good options here, OP. The whole family f__ked up by not adequately training and containing the dog.

LemonLimeTaffy − I genuinely don’t understand people claiming Tyler is an a__hole. He is setting a boundary about not wanting to live with a dog.

He is not financially blackmailing anyone. He is saying this is his boundary and he is willing to move out on his own to enforce it.

Danny is a whole adult at 19yo. He is also setting a boundary: he goes with his dog.

And he is also willing to move out to enforce that boundary. I understand mental illness but adults with anxiety have jobs and live their lives.

YTA only because you aren’t respecting their boundaries. There are 3 other entire adults in the house,

why are you relying on one grieving 24yo for everything? Also, why the hell wouldn’t you train a dog?

Many blame poor training and shared responsibility for the incident.

chuckinhoutex − So this is tough. The first thing is that there are multiple layers of responsibility

and simply pointing fingers at the dog is intellectually dishonest.

1) This does underscore one of the biggest differences between ESA and actual service animals.

The cost of training that goes into making a service dog as reliable as they are often goes into the tens of thousands,

whereas ESA is basically a self-determined status that has no legal basis or requirements.

2) When you have dogs loose in the house, everyone should know to put things up or close their doors. that's just the deal.

And if he didn't close his door- he has to own part of the responsibility for what happened. No different than if he left it somewhere.

3) And yes you do need to tell him about the importance of the dog to Teddy's mental health.

Ask him if "an eye for an eye" is really the approach he thinks is best here.

So, understanding the value of the plush toy to him and how it helped him cope,

is it really his desire then, to remove a major coping mechanism from his brother's life?

4 Tyler needs therapy or counseling. Focusing the amount of hatred on the dog, for basically being a dog isn't healthy

and it's a sign of deeper things that need working on. It would be one thing if the dog was regularly problematic (again- see point number 1)

and this was just the final straw and he cannot live with it any more. But if this is really and truly the only incident

and he has gone from zero to I f__king hate this dog until the end of it's days, especially if he had ever been friendly with the dog...

truly that's a sign of a deeper problem that he needs help with and he's just projecting it on the dog.

The reality is - the absence of the dog won't make him feel any better, not any.

So my judgement is. . there's a lot going on here, but if you simply pull the trigger and lose the dog.

YTA because you aren't really dealing with anything.

dirtysouth46 − This is a bad situation all the way around, but I have to say this: Dogs can be trained not to chew up stuff.

I see quite a few comments saying "that's what dogs do", but if properly trained, that won't be the case.

I, and several other people I know, have owned dogs that were trained not to chew up stuff,

and they managed to live their entire lives without damaging anything. I really wish dog people would abandon this idea

that owning a dog means dealing with things being destroyed.

siberianphoenix − Unpopular opinion as someone who is specialized in working with the ADA:

Emotional support animals are great but should have to go through the same level of training as a service animal.

Had Teddy been fully trained he never would have went wandering to cause this mess in the first place.

In wrapping up this emotional rollercoaster, it’s clear that life’s curveballs can test even the strongest bonds, forcing tough reflections on priorities like healing and home.

Do you believe the older brother’s boundary was spot-on amid his heartache, or might more dialogue have softened the edges?

How would you steer through a similar sibling showdown, juggling support and stability? Share your insights, we’d love to keep the conversation going!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jarvis brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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