AITA for starting a fight with boyfriend for leaving the sliding door cracked when we have a cat?

A cracked sliding door may seem like a tiny detail, but for one woman, it became the center of a surprisingly intense argument. After her cat managed to escape into the courtyard four separate times, she started paying close attention to how carefully the door was being shut. When she noticed it left open again before bed, frustration quickly replaced patience.

Her boyfriend, however, insisted she was making too much of it. He believed he knew exactly how wide the door could be without the cat slipping through. What followed wasn’t just a disagreement about airflow in a stuffy condo—it turned into a debate about trust, responsibility, and whether worrying about a pet’s safety counts as overreacting.

AITA for starting a fight with boyfriend for leaving the sliding door cracked when we have a cat?

The tension first surfaced after several stressful escapes

My boyfriend (42M) and I have a cat, Luna. A few times now, he’s accidentally left our sliding door open just enough that Luna has managed to get out into...

The other night before bed, I noticed the sliding door was open about 4 inches. I got really upset because I felt like if Luna was determined, she could push...

I closed it before he saw, and when I brought it up, he said he had left it open just enough that she wouldn’t be able to get out. He...

The following morning, the same issue came up again

This morning, I saw him sitting by the same door with it cracked open the same amount, but this time he was supervising. I told him calmly that this was...

and that I don’t feel comfortable with it being left like that if Luna is unsupervised. He got upset again, saying that since he actually saw Luna try and fail...

He feels like I was being unfair and over the top, and I still feel like I was justified in being worried because of the past escapes.. So, AITA for...

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Later, she added extra context to clear up assumptions

Edit to add: it’s a new home, this hasn’t been an issue previously. We are waiting for a screen to be installed and it is fairly hot and stuffy. We...

This is not an intentional behaviour, he loves the cat and it has been his since she was a kitten; she’s an old gal now. We have been together 10...

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He treats her great, it’s more just inattention and defensiveness that is the real issue here. Zero chance he is doing anything to intentionally hurt the cat, definitely not abusive.

I’ve never posted on Reddit before so didn’t realize how specific I needed to be, and people will judge regardless

At its core, this disagreement is about more than a door. It’s about perceived risk and emotional security. The poster has experienced four stressful escapes already, so her worry feels grounded in lived experience. From her perspective, even a small gap represents a real possibility of something going wrong again.

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On the other hand, the boyfriend seems to rely on direct observation. He saw the cat fail to squeeze through and concluded the concern was unnecessary. That difference—anticipating risk versus reacting to visible proof—often fuels household arguments. One partner feels anxious about what could happen, while the other feels confident because it hasn’t happened under specific circumstances.

Relationship researcher Dr. John Gottman from The Gottman Institute has long emphasized that many recurring arguments aren’t about the surface issue. As he explains, “Behind every complaint is a deep personal need.” In this case, her complaint about the door may reflect a need for reassurance and shared responsibility, while his defensiveness may come from feeling accused of carelessness.

A practical solution could involve simple structural fixes, such as installing a temporary barrier or setting a shared rule that the door remains fully closed unless someone is actively watching the cat. Beyond logistics, the more important step may be acknowledging each other’s intentions. If he reassures her that he values the cat’s safety, and she acknowledges he isn’t acting maliciously, the tension could ease significantly.

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Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

Many users strongly supported her concerns about the cat’s safety

ScreamySashimi − Leave the boyfriend and keep the cat. This is ridiculous. He's doing it on purpose, either to stress you out or "lose" the cat, but probably both. This...

arterialrainbow − NTA. Just because your cat couldn’t get out that time doesn’t mean she can’t in the future. I’ve had cats most of my life, including one with some...

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She’d try and fail to open a door, sometimes even using her entire body to try. Then try again. And again. Until eventually she could open just about anything that...

Lucky_Volume3819 − Girl he's doing it on purpose. NTA.

Advanced_Ask_2053 − This isn’t about overreacting, it’s about basic pet safety. If you both care about the cat, the easy compromise is just… shut the door when you’re not there

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Elegant_Anywhere_150 − nta 4 inches is plenty for a cat to get through theres no way he did that on accident. He wants the cat to escape and get lost....

This is a common tactic certain types of men do when they actually hate the pet and/or intend to abuse you by hurting your pets.

He's either going to let her escape or he's "waiting and watching" to try to crush her in the door "accidentally" while trying to "stop her from escaping. " Predictable...

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holymacaroley − NTA, and no way this isn't on purpose.

Other commenters offered harsher or more skeptical takes

MrBreffas − Cats can slide under a door that is 1 inch off of the ground. They are built with mobile shoulders and spines. Your boyfriend is a jerk, and...

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There is no other reason that he would insist on doing this repeatedly. So this means that he also does not give a flying f__k about your feelings. You do...

rocket-c4t − NTA. Your boyfriend is either purposefully trying to get rid of the cat or is a fool (can’t use the word I actually want on this sub)

andromache97 − NTA is he stubborn and dumb enough to die on such a silly hill instead of closing the damn door, or does he secretly hate the cat and...

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Aggravating-Spread28 − NTA. Tell the boyfriend that the door stays shut or you and your cat are leaving before he gets the cat killed

And a few tried to bring humor into the heated debate

Waste_Worker6122 − Your boyfriend does not like the cat. NTA.

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PeepingTara − Why the heck is he leaving a screen door cracked open anyway? !?? It’s not for air flow because it’s a screen door. I’d have to ask him...

MaySeemelater − There's a screen door? Meaning you can get airflow without needing it actually open? And the only additional thing leaving it open would do is then also allow...

And the guy admitted he left it slightly open on purpose? Your boyfriend doesn't like the cat and wants the cat to get out. There is no other reason for...

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EDIT: OP HAS CLARIFIED IN COMMENTS THEY DON'T HAVE A SCREEN DOOR AND THAT THEY MISSPOKE IN THE POST. ALSO THAT THEY HAVE NO AC AND THE BOYFRIEND IS LEAVING...

rumshpringaa − My cats can push open sliding doors. Easily. And for awhile there were many posts on the cat subreddit about cats who were allowed on a second story...

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intolerablefem − Either he’s an i__ot or he wants the cat gone. There are no two ways about it. Neither one is excusable at this point. You have a responsibility...

What began as a cracked door turned into a much bigger conversation about trust and shared responsibility. She sees repeated close calls and worries history could repeat itself. He sees direct evidence that the cat can’t squeeze through and feels unfairly criticized. Neither seems to question their love for Luna, yet frustration keeps building. When small household habits spark big emotions, the real issue often runs deeper than it first appears. So what would you do—close the door without debate, or trust the test that “proved” it was safe?

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