When Your Pet Dies: A Guide to Mourning, Remembering and Healing
J**R
This one helps
Losing your pet sucks. It just sucks. This book is so far the best one I've read in the 3 1/2 months since having to say goodbye to my sweet little feline miss a week shy of 18 years old after a years long fight against CKD.It was tough finding a book that fit. This was practical, kind, and comforting. It has some helpful prompts but isn't a glorified journal. It's not overly concerned with religion/spirituality or an afterlife. It's for you, here, now. The one left behind, trying to continue forward. A good companion is Sara Baders The Book of Pet Love & Loss, a collection of anecdotes from celebrities/public figures with some original work.
P**Y
Very, very helpful
I bought three different pet loss books after we had to put our almost 14-year old labrador to sleep in August, and this is the book I kept. I liked it so well that I ordered a copy for each of my young adult kids. This is a short book, with chapters on mourning, remembering, and healing. Each chapter addresses the very real grief that we experience when a pet dies, and the author is so wonderful about acknowledging how important our pets are to us, and that our grief is real, just like when a person dies. The book includes little stories from others whose pets have died and also touches on the feelings we have when we have to put a pet to sleep, when a pet dies in an accident, etc. And, there is a section where you can write your memories of the pet. Our dog's death was (and still is...) heartbreaking, but this book has helped. I keep it on my bedside table, and reread sections when I need a little comfort.
M**C
Effective and easy
I bought several reflective journal style books on pet grief when I lost Molly after a sudden bad turn of health. This book was thin, but effective. In my early stages I wasn't really feeling like concentrating on reading and this book was very simple and effective. It contains prompts to write as well as some information. I think its good overall to have a book that validates the loss you feel for your pet when even your family or loved ones just want you back online and can't understand why your grief is lingering.
M**L
Brief, helpful guide to healing after loss of a pet
This is a concise guide to grieving, mourning and healing after pet loss. My grief is fresh as my husband and I unexpectedly lost our best-ever cat, Headley, five days ago. We've lost many pets in our lifetime (we counted nine in just the last nine years), so we're quite experienced with the situation, unfortunately.I took this to bed and read it in one sitting. Much of it is the same advice and guidance I've heard and read over the years on pet loss and bereavement. However, perhaps because it is so brief and there's no fluff, it was helpful. I never consciously realized there is a distinction between grieving and mourning. He lists helpful websites in the back and I've visited some previously but it's nice to have them listed in one place.I want and need something a bit deeper and this was not it.The book is only 96 pages, so it's a quick read.
K**A
Heartbreaking & comforting
I cried throughout most of this book. My little dog is terminal and I am preparing to let him go when it is time. I appreciated this wonderful book even though it’s a tough topic. Thank you to the author and all who shared stories of their beloved pets in this book.
J**I
Perfect book for any heartbroken pet owner who lost they love of their live
This is a wonderful book for any pet owner in mourning. I lost my boy mid December, it’s almost been a month. I’ve been reading this book trying to find some positivity. It’s been very very hard for me without him. My boy Sid was the love of my life, my entire world. My heart will never be the same without him, but this book helps me understand all the changes and emotions I’m currently going through. It includes short stories from owners who previously lost a pet. It also includes pages for you to write recommend memories, or topics about your loved one, even insert photographs. I keep this book right next to me on my night stand by Sid’s urn and little shrine I have for him. This is definitely a recommend must have for any pet owner in loss. My condolences to each and everyone of you. My heart goes out to all of you.
P**N
Very Helpful
Nothing in this world could have prepared me for the unexpected death of my pet. One morning, I found my beloved Choly dead. I remained in a state of shock for many days. I perceived neither hunger nor sleepiness, neither a need for coffee nor a need for water."When Your Pet Dies" offered me invaluable insight into the grieving process. What I also liked about this book were the exercises it provided us with: it asked us to write about our first encounter with our pet, our most treasured moments with our pet, and other things we wanted to share. I spent many, many hours writing about my experiences. I also spent many hours reading and re-reading important paragraphs in the book that I had highlighted during my first read. Needless to say, I spent hours and hours shedding tears of grief.What type of pain is worth acknowledging? This book will reassure you that the answer is entirely up to you. No one in your life is entitled to tell you that you cannot grieve your deceased pet or that you cannot allow yourself to celebrate and remember your pet's life. This book offered me tremendous comfort. I felt proud that I was allowed to privately, intimately, and painfully mourn Choly's sudden death.Until this day, I still choke up when someone asks me how Choly and his littermate are doing. I hope he did not suffer during the hours preceding his death. I understand that every variation of pain is different for each individual. If you have difficulty connecting with someone who understands pet loss or if you simply feel the need to grieve privately (as was my case), I would recommend this book to you.
B**T
Must read
This is a must read if you are mourning the loss of a fur baby.
C**S
I’m so grateful for this book
Alan Wolfelt’s work on grief has been something I have appreciated professionally since I learned about him 5 or 6 years ago. Now, on the passing of my own beloved dog, I had a personal opportunity to make use of his work - and I am so very grateful for this book.The book is short, easy to read in brief sittings. Wolfelt’s teaching on grief and mourning is excellent, and his assertion that our grief over the loss of our animal companions is just as valid as grief over the loss of humans is so affirming and reassuring. The journaling questions were very helpful to me and I am going to treasure these written remembrances of my dog in the years to come.One other reviewer said something like “if you get only one book on grief over the death of a pet, get this one!” And I agree (though I have to admit I didn’t read many others… but I didn’t need to)! Thank you reviewer for that excellent recommendation. (That said, I will also add that the children’s book “The Invisible Leash” is also very meaningful. And “Sacred Sendoffs,” written by an animal chaplain, also has a unique perspective and helpful information.)This book was written in 2004, so the one thing that might be worth updating if a 2nd edition ever comes out is replacing the use of the traditional phrase “pet owner” throughout the book. Though it is interspersed with other phrases like “animal companion,” “animal family member,” “pet parent,” - “owner” for me doesn’t accurately reflect the human/other-than-human-animal bond. But to be fair in 2004 I don’t think as many folks were thinking about that sort of language as they are now. And it is clear throughout the book that Wolfelt values the human/animal bond deeply, even sharing incredibly meaningful stories of his own beloved furry family members and his own experience of grieving their deaths. He gets it.I’ll be getting this book for others in both my professional and personal life.Highly recommend.
K**I
His general grief books are much better
I didn’t find this book useful following the loss of my cats. The writing is far too human-focused (what animals do for us etc.) and the stories from various people who had lost companion animals are overwhelmingly about dogs and horses, with an odd fish thrown in. And I am sorry but losing a fish after a few days simply isn’t the same as losing a cat companion after almost 2 decades. I think there was one story about a cat. It also don’t find other people’s stories of their animals’ disease and demise useful or necessary. I find them mostly triggering. This book could have been written much better.
C**E
Supporting, Sweet and helpful
I've lost my cat, she was my best friend. I felt guilty for being in such grief and this book really helped me . I understand that grief and mourning it's a process and I need to work in practical ways to heal myself. The stories are lovely and sweet, the tips and exercises are practical and trully helpful.
A**R
Lovely helpful book
This book has been very helpful in helping me understand my grief and helping me with ideas to mourn the death of my rabbit. Tilly.
K**.
Out of the three books I bought regarding grief-over-pet-loss/how-to-deal, this is my top pick
This booklet helped me a lot when my cat died in November 2013. Besides basically being a reliable "guide on grief", it has various people's personal stories peppered throughout (no more than a paragraph to a page each), some of which brought me to tears. The one about the Beta fish, for example ? I know, it's a fish, but something key that the mother writes in that story is possibly one of the most achingly true--but also kinda beautiful--things about the relationship between owner and pet.The book allowed me to take time out of my day to process my grief. After he died, I thought I had handled it well, was processing just fine. But many of us tend to brush past the event and then it's onto the next thing, because when life is busy it tends to sweep us up in its current. I did the affirm-life-after-tragedy-by-grabbing-life-by-the-balls-and-enjoying-myself-to-the-fullest thing after my cat died, predominantly by befriending an up-all-night partier a couple weeks after and losing myself in that for a few months. I don't regret that, this guy's gone on to become a good friend. But those quiet bus rides back and forth from meeting up with him downtown, during which I would pull out this book and read a passage or chapter or two ? Provided the healthy balance between livin' it up and dealing with grief.I do miss my cat when I think of him, 'specially when I come home and wanna scoop him up, or when sitting in my chair and wishing for a lap cat...this barely scratches the surface...
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