Grief
Hierarchy of Death? When Your Dog Dies, You're Never Alone
When you lose a pet, you won't grieve alone. Why?
Posted February 19, 2012
Do people respond differently to different kinds of deaths?
Is it easier to offer comfort to someone grieving the loss of a pet than someone grieving the loss of a human? Are people more comfortable with pet-inspired grief than with people-inspired grief?
When someone you love dies, especially if it's the shocking taken-too-soon death, nobody knows what to say. There's a lot of apologizing for your unspeakable loss and offers of "if there's anything I can do." These are all genuine and appreciated responses, of course. But everybody stumbles and mumbles around it. They don't want to make you cry or say something in advertently insensitive or wrong. They want to delicately indicate their support and sadness, and then let you decide what you want to do with it. And you're so fogged up in the shroud of grief you have no idea what to do or say. You spend most of your days just trying to stay upright.
Are Some Losses Easier to Comfort?: In the early days, weeks and months of grieving the loss of a human, nobody really knows how to get in there with you and walk in the muck. It always seems to be too soon. Nobody says - ‘Hey, my brother died, too, and it's the worst pain ever. I know just how you feel.' Whatever it is, there's a lot that goes unsaid.
When a Dog Dies: When your beloved old family dog dies, all bets are off. The world wraps its collective arms arounds you and you never grieve alone. Why?
Read more: When Your Dog Dies, You Never Grieve Alone