My Spouse Refuses to Help With Our Sick Pet Because ‘It’s Just an Animal’

**My Spouse Refuses to Help With Our Sick Pet Because ‘It’s Just an Animal’**

Last week, our dog Max started coughing—a deep, rattling sound that made me sit straight up in bed. By morning, he was sluggish, barely touching his food, and I knew something was wrong. I called the vet, booked an appointment, and spent the rest of the day worrying.

When I got home, Max was curled up on the rug, still wheezing. I crouched beside him, stroked his fur, whispered, “Hang in there, buddy.”

“Mark?” I called into the kitchen. “Can you help me get him in the car? He needs to go to the vet.”

Mark didn’t even look up from his laptop. “He’ll be fine. He’s just an animal.”

I stared at him, not sure I’d heard right. “*Just an animal?* He’s sick, Mark. He can barely move.”

He sighed like I was being dramatic. “You spend way too much money on that dog. It’s not like he’s a kid. Pets get sick. Sometimes they die. That’s life.”

My throat tightened. “So you’re saying you won’t even help me get him there?”

“Not wasting my evening on that,” he muttered. “If you care that much, take him yourself.”

So I did. I hauled Max’s seventy pounds of dead weight into the car alone, crying harder than I’d like to admit. At the vet, they said it was pneumonia but treatable. They gave me medicine, instructions, and hope.

When I came home, Mark barely glanced at us. “How much did that cost?” was all he asked.

I looked at Max, wrapped in blankets on the couch, and then back at the man I married. And I realized something sharp and painful: I trusted my dog’s loyalty more than I trusted my husband’s.

That night, while Max slept with his head on my lap, I made a decision.

I told Mark flat out: “If you can’t care about the things I love, we don’t belong together. Max is family. If you think he’s ‘just an animal,’ then maybe I’m ‘just a roommate’ to you.”

He scoffed, called me ridiculous. But I wasn’t bluffing. The next morning, I packed a bag, loaded Max carefully into the car again, and drove to my sister’s place.

And as I watched Max wag his tail weakly, grateful just to be with me, I realized: I’d rather fight alone with a sick dog by my side than live with someone who treats love like it’s disposable.

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