Dealing With Losing a Pet

Written by Lorrie Reynolds

Lorrie has been an agility enthusiast since 2002 and has taught tricks, family obedience, agility, and canine conditioning since 2005. When she's not writing articles, developing courses, or training dogs, you can find her curled up with a book in her hands and a dog warming her feet.

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This week, I made the decision to say goodbye to Xephyr. If you haven’t read Your Dog’s Bucket List, Xephyr was my 6-year-old rescue who was diagnosed with liver cancer in May. At the time of diagnosis, the most optimistic estimate was 30 – 60 days. I said goodbye on day 119, and he was still energetic enough to try to jump in the car on his own.

Grief – it’s crushing and overwhelming. It’s an exhausted woman trudging uphill wearing heavy boots and carrying a 200-pound boulder on her back. Her pockets filled with lead, every step is a struggle.

Dog going over an agility jump with an explosion of powder

Everyone experiences grief differently, and there is no “right” or “wrong” way to feel after losing a pet. Feelings can be scattered and conflicting – sorrow over the loss, relief that your pet is no longer suffering, anger over the unfairness, wistfulness about things left undone, guilt over making the final decision – all these feelings and more are normal.

Ways to Cope with Pet Loss

Your grief is your own, and what helps you will be unique. Here are a few of the things I’m doing to get through this difficult time.

Allow Yourself to Feel

You will experience many different emotions after losing a beloved pet. Don’t try to pack your feelings away or tamp them down. Allow each emotion to surface, acknowledge it, cry if you need to, and let the feeling subside naturally.

Trick dog with his front paws on a ball

Write a Eulogy for Your Pet

When people die, it is cathartic for those left behind and grieving to write about the person’s experiences, qualities, and accomplishments. You can do the same for your pet as a way to express your appreciation of your time with him or her. Your pet didn’t need to be an agility superstar or master of tricks to be accomplished. Celebrate his or her life by writing about the little things that you loved – the way he always comforted you when you were sad, how he met you with a smile every time you walked in the door, how friendly he was to strangers, or how content he was to curl up at your feet while you were working.

Seek The Company of Other Pet Lovers

Trick Dog with rear feet on a box

People who have never loved a pet may not understand the depth of your loss. While non-pet-lovers might not comprehend why you are so upset over “just a dog” or “just a cat,” pet lovers the world over will empathize. Talk to a fellow pet lover about your loss and share stories about “the best pet” together. You both had the best pet ever.

Do Something Fun with Your Other Pets

If you are lucky enough to have other pets, go on a short adventure. A walk in the sunshine will lift your spirits. A game of fetch might make you smile. Watching your cat chase a toy could even drag out a giggle. Your other pets know something is wrong, and they are there for you.

Write About Your Pet

Make a list of everything you loved, big and small. Write about an adventure you went on together. Pen a letter you would send if your pet could read it. One way to start feeling less sad is to write about good memories to help balance out the sadness.

Trick dog standing on four paw pods

Reminisce Over Pictures

Every pet owner I know has a phone full of pictures. Scroll through your photos and take a minute to remember where you were and what you were doing together. Watch your pet grow, in age and accomplishments. Relive your greatest adventures.

Create a Small Memorial to Your Pet

Two dogs sitting in front of the Christmas Tree

Creating a memorial can be as simple as hanging a leash in a special place so you can occasionally touch it as you walk by. By default, my dogs have a video memorial on YouTube in the form of playlists filled with teaching and titling videos. While it’s not healthy to obsess forever over a lost companion, a little reminder of your best friend will let you walk by and smile in the future. I promise.

Know That Your Experience is Both Unique and Common

No two grieving experiences are ever exactly alike, but we all feel the same pain of loss. Your grief will be different for a companion who has lived a full and rich life compared to the grief you feel losing a pet at a young age.

Knowing the end is coming, whether due to age or illness, may allow you to prepare, but it also may bring guilt or self-doubt if you had to make the final decision to let go. You will be wondering if you let go too soon, or too late. Your timing was perfect if you made a decision based on love and in the best interest of your pet.

Sudden loss adds feelings of shock and disbelief to your grief. The dog I lost suddenly to an autoimmune-related bleed will always haunt my thoughts with “what ifs.” A dog lost to an accident can make you feel at fault. You’re not. Things happen and you did the best you could.

Trick Dog Champion Xephyr with his Ribbon

Two Final Thoughts

First, your timeline for grieving is your own. There is no right or wrong length of time to be emotional over the loss of your pet. The second thing is that you were the best thing that ever happened to your pet. If we truly meet again over the rainbow bridge, I’m certain he will tell you so.

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Second photo (powder jump) courtesy of Howling Moon Photography.

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