-
Saw this on LinkedIn and it really hit me:In Memory of all those who went over the rainbow bridge. You all have a place forever in our heartsThey tell you not to cry.They tell you that it’s just a dog, not a human being.They tell you that the pain will be over.They tell you that the animals don’t know that they have to die.They tell you that it’s important not to let him suffer.They tell you that you can have another one.They tell you it’s going to happen to you.They tell you that there is more pain.But they don’t know how many times you’ve looked into your dog’s eyes.They don’t know how many times you and your dog have looked into darkness alone.They don’t know how many times your dog was the only one who was by your side.They don’t know how much fear you haveat night when you wake up with your grief.They don’t know how many times your dog slept near you.They don’t know how much you’ve changed since the dog has become a part of your life.They don’t know how many times you hugged him when he was sick.They don’t know how many times you’ve acted like you didn’t see her hair getting whiter.They don’t know how many times you’ve talked to your dog, the only one who really hears.They don’t know that it was just your dog who knew you were in pain.They don’t know what it feels like to see your old dog trying to say hello.They don’t know that if things went wrong, the only one who didn’t go is your dog.They don’t know that your dog trusts you every moment of his life, even in the last.They don’t know how much your dog loved you and how it is enough for him to be happy, because you loved him.They don’t know that crying for a dog is one of the most noble, significant, true, clean and warmest things you can do.They don’t know when the last time you moved him with trouble… made sure it didn’t hurt him.They don’t know what it felt like to pet their face in the last moments of their life….Photo Travis Patenaude.– author Emanuele Spud Grandi
-
From the photo archives on this day in 2019.My little buddy, Desi, staring at me with love in her eyes….
-
A pet’s death can hurt more than losing a fellow human
Social norms are wrecking your grief experience.
As an adult with a puppy well on his way to being over 60 pounds, I hadn’t given much consideration to how I’d deal with other pet deaths until a friend asked me, “this is a terrible question, but what do you do when he dies?”
I dug into the question, and as I did I found that I wasn’t alone in wondering—but that there isn’t a great answer.
The experts I talked to emphasized that our relationship to pet loss has changed over the last century. “It’s not surprising to me that we feel such grief over the loss of a pet, because in this country at least they are increasingly considered family members,” says Leslie Irvine, a sociologist at the University of Colorado-Boulder. Sixty-eight percent of Americans own a pet, an increase of twelve percent since surveys of pet ownership started in the 1988, when it was already booming. Losing a beloved animal friend is made harder by the relative novelty of the experience, often being a person’s first experience with a close death, and by it being one of the few times most people chose euthanasia to end a life. And depending on the relationship, the loss of a pet can be more traumatic than the grief we feel after the death of family and friends. In part, this is because pets share some of our most intimate relationships—we see them every day, they depend on us, we adjust our lives around their needs—and yet publically grieving their loss is not socially acceptable.
We haven’t always felt this way, though. As a society, Irvine says, we’ve moved from thinking of pets as accessories or mindless pieces of furniture to thinking, feeling beings.
-
This is the first time in a long while that Desi isn’t with me. Her pillow is just to the left of my computer desk and she isn’t there looking at me or sleeping. My eyes kept misting up as I read all the loving posts that you shared about her.She was cremated after breathing her last breath around 3:30pm yesterday. Today is going to be a long day.Keep the faith, tell people and animals in your life that you love them, make a difference in this world, and be kind, always.Thank you for caring.I really appreciate it!DFW