The rendang finishes.
And somewhere in a housing area in Cheras or Puchong or Sungai Petani, a cat that was someone's Raya prop gets left behind on a kerb.
This is not new. And that's what makes it worse.
The Pattern Is Predictable — So Why Does Nobody Prepare for It?
Every year, shelters and independent rescuers across Malaysia sound the same alarm. Before Raya, before Chinese New Year, before Christmas — adoption rates spike. People want the cute kitten in the family photo. The fluffy puppy running around the living room when relatives come over. Then the festivities end, and the animal becomes an inconvenience.
Chelsia has seen it firsthand. She rescues kittens. She's raised funds for strays needing surgery — Katty Moondrop's surgery fund alone hit RM5K, and that was just one cat. Multiply that by the hundreds dumped every post-festive season, and the math is devastating.
A pet is not a seasonal decoration. It eats, it hurts, it grieves — long after your guests go home.
The shelters don't have room. The feeders don't have funds. The vets don't have time. And the animals don't have a voice.
Guilt Is Not Enough — Structure Is
Here's the unpopular opinion: guilt-tripping doesn't fix this. Sad reels get shared, people cry in the comments, and then the next Raya rolls around and the same thing happens.
What actually helps is structural.The Animal Welfare Act 2015 exists, but enforcement is inconsistent. Abandonment is technically an offence. But how many cases actually get followed up?
Shelters and rescue groups carry the weight that the system drops. And most of them run on personal savings, WhatsApp groups, and sheer stubbornness.
That's not sustainable. That's just love running on fumes.
Adoption Is Beautiful — When It's Honest
Chelsia has written about being grateful for clean water, three meals, a warm bed, the safety of a loving home — and the guilt that comes with having all that while others don't. She extends that same awareness to the animals around her. Her home is a home for rescued cats. Not because it looks good on Instagram. Because she made a decision and stuck with it.
That's the difference. Adoption is beautiful when it comes from honesty. When you've thought about the vet bills, the 3am emergencies, the fur on your black baju kurung, the years — not months, years — of commitment.
If you're not ready for the hard days, you're not ready for the animal.
Nobody's saying you have to rescue. But if you choose to bring an animal into your home, you owe it the full picture. Not just the cute part.
The Real Test Comes After the Fireworks
Festive seasons reveal character. Not during the celebration — after it. When the house is quiet again and the cat is still there, needing food, needing attention, needing you.
Chelsia once posted about the world being a cruel place, and the weight of knowing you have comfort while others suffer. That tension doesn't go away just because you close your eyes to it. It sits with you. And for the animals abandoned every post-Raya, every post-CNY, every January — that cruelty isn't philosophical. It's a locked gate and an empty bowl.
Malaysia can do better than this. Not with more sad posts. With more honest conversations about what it actually takes to care for a living thing. With laws that have teeth. With communities that hold each other accountable — not just during festive season, but in the boring, unglamorous months after.
The fireworks are done. The animals are still here. That's the part that matters now. 🐾
Raya Is Over — But These Animals Are Still Waiting
The open houses wind down. The kuih gets stale.


