You were raised in the big city and not on a small farm living the dirt poor share croppers life, weren't you? I have no problem trying any wild or domestic meat. You lose you pickiness real fast when money is real short, and rationing meat is a reality. We only got paid when the crops came in, and then the landlord got at big chunk of that, plus the little bit that came in from selling the milk from about a dozen milk cows. Yes we had a big garden, and we raised dairy cattle, pigs, chickens, ducks, and rabbits for FOOD. We only could afford to butcher a young bull, on very rare occasions. We made one chicken feed six people, and NEVER were we allowed seconds. So we hunted and fished, to put meat in the freeze to get by through the Spring and early Summer until the wheat crop came in. If somebody got sick and had to go to the Doctor, the money came out the food budget.
Let me see if you would eat all of the wild game and fish and country delicacies we had to eat to get by. Frog Legs, Turtles, Pigeons, Black Birds, Wild Rabbits, Squirrels, Possums, Raccoons, Bullheads, Carp, Bass, Pike, Blueguills, Crappie, Trout, Catfish, all kinds of Wild Ducks, Wilson Sand Snipes, Quail, Doves, Eel, Crawdads, Deer, Pheasants, Mountain Oysters (look it up if you have not heard the term), brains, pickled pigs feet, Boiled Chicken Feet, natural casing homemade sausages made from all the leftover parts after butchering, fried grass hoppers that I actually bought in the grocery store and chocolate covered ants, and a lot of things that I probably forgot about, as well as road kill stew.
Those are just the local mid-west Country Folk delicacies, and then I went over seas in the Air Force to Turkey and Okinawa were I tried all kinds of foods, some I liked and some I did not. Raw Octopus and boiled Whale Blubber were not on my winner's list. Some Raw fish was good, some not so good. I had lots of foods in Turkey that I had no idea how it was prepared or what was in it, nor did I care. If I wasn't sure what it was, out of respect, I would eat a little at first, and if it tasted good, I would ask for more. So you must have lived a very sheltered life. No I was not shocked by your boiled cat story, haven't you ever watched as you personally tossed a live lobster in the boiling pot of water? Of course you haven't. Haven't you ever slaughtered and butchered your own cows, pigs, ducks, chickens, and rabbits? Of course you haven't.
If I am right about all of this, and you really lived a big city sheltered life, the look on your face when you read what Mt. Oysters are, would definitely be a big LOL.