The Emotions
of Pet Loss
by Moira Anderson Allen, M.Ed.
"It was the most tragic, traumatic, and emotionally devastating
experience I had ever been through. I didn't know what to do.
I cried day and night." (Dorothy R., Alabama)
"I felt like someone had ripped out my insides."
(Karen A., Illinois)
"I never knew anything could hurt so bad. I cried a whole
ocean of tears. I went through self-hatred for putting my pet
to sleep, to depression, to acceptance. For a long time I couldn't
even watch a dog food commercial." (Cheryl T., Alabama)
Do these reactions to the loss of a pet touch a familiar chord
in your heart? Grief, confusion, anger, guilt and depression
are all typical responses to the death of a loved one. Only recently,
however, have researchers come to realize that a pet may also
be considered a loved one and a family member, and that its death
may evoke similar and often equally intense emotions.
This excerpt will discuss some of the most typical reactions
to the loss of a pet, as well as methods to cope with these feelings.
Keep in mind, however, that there is no absolute pattern for
grief. Your own reactions will depend on a variety of factors.
These include your personality, your upbringing, the type of
relationship you had with your pet, your personal situation at
the time of the pet's death, and your cultural and religious
beliefs. Your reactions may be different from those of another
pet owner, or even from those of other members of your household.
They may include some or all of the emotions listed above, in
different combinations and intensities.
For example, if your dog died peacefully at the age of 16--a
ripe old age for most dogs--the shock and grief you feel may
be less than if it died of an unexpected illness at age 2. If
your cat is hit by a car or your dog chokes on a bone, however,
you will probably feel more guilt than you would if either pet
had died of old age. You may feel the absence of a beloved companion
more keenly and painfully if it was your only pet than if you
shared your love with several animals. You may mourn the death
of a particular pet more strongly than you mourned pets in the
past, due to some special qualities of that pet or of that particular
relationship.
The length of time grief lasts also varies from person to
person, and may be affected by the level of attachment one feels
to an individual pet. "My personal experience was an intense
grieving process that left me emotionally devastated for several
weeks," wrote Roanne H. of New Jersey. "I am still
surprised by the ongoing feelings of love for the departed pet
that I am experiencing. The length of time it takes to begin
accepting the loss of your pet will vary."
Perhaps the most vital step in coping with the emotions you
will feel upon the loss of your pet is acknowledging them.
"Let yourself feel--write down your feelings, cry, be angry,
call someone. Know that it is all right to be so upset over losing
your pet and that it takes time to heal," wrote Susan K.
of New York.
To deny and/or repress that sense of loss would be to devalue
the love and affection that the pet brought into your life,"
said Pat H. of Pennsylvania.
You may run into people--even close friends--who don't understand
your grief, and who may tell you that it is "silly"
or "inappropriate" to grieve over the loss of an animal.
After all, it was "just a dog." It is easy to condemn
such people out of hand for what seems to you an inexcusable
lack of understanding. But before you write off these friends
or acquaintances, remind yourself that few people have much experience
in dealing with grief, either their own or that of others. Grief
makes people uncomfortable; most people genuinely want to help,
but simply don't know how--and they are painfully aware that
they lack the right words to console you or make you feel better.
The words they do find may seem clumsy or insensitive to you.
It's also a good idea to keep in mind that many, many people
have simply never had a close relationship with an animal of
any kind. Perhaps their parents never allowed them to have pets
as children, so they grew up without knowing how much animals
can mean in our lives. Different people live different lives;
be aware of the differences between your experiences and those
of people who seem insensitive to your loss. If you can, seek
out those people who have had similar relationships with pets--but
remember, even other pet lovers may not be experts at dealing
with the emotional needs of other humans!
"The problem is that our culture is extremely intolerant
of grief," writes animal behaviorist C. Miriam Yarden. "From
childhood we are taught that crying is a show of weakness--and
in the case of boys and men this attitude is even more rigid.
We often do not allow our children to mourn or feel a loss, let
alone show it. Most often it is such owners who espouse the attitude
of hard determination to never get another pet because 'I can't
go through this again.' Of course they can't go through this
'again,' considering that they haven't gone through 'this' in
the first place! It is also they who suffer the most."
You may not wish to admit the strength of your reactions even
to yourself. If, for example, you think it is silly or weak to
feel such overwhelming grief, you may try to convince yourself
that you aren't feeling it, that everything is fine. Kathi W.
of Florida is one of many pet owners who has realized the danger
of this course of action. "I have come to learn that it
is natural to feel grief over the loss of anything we attach
ourselves to emotionally," she wrote. "No matter how
large or small our loss may be, we must openly discuss our feelings
or our grief will not be resolved. By attempting to ignore our
pain, we may become withdrawn and face serious medical and psychological
problems at a later date."
You can't begin to cope with your emotions until you let them
out. If you feel guilt, you can't address the cause of the guilt
or find a solution to it if you are busily saying "What,
me, guilt? No--everything's great!" For decades psychologists
and psychiatrists have been pointing out the dangers of repressing,
ignoring or denying emotions. Repressed emotions don't go away
simply because you don't want to admit they are there--instead,
when denied an outlet, emotions churn around inside you until
they find their own outlet--often when you least expect it and
are least prepared to handle it. If you deny your anger over
the death of your dog, it doesn't go away: Instead, you may flare
up and shout at your child or your husband for no reason, causing
more hurt and misunderstanding. Since that outlet still doesn't
bring what's really bothering you into the open, the cause of
the anger or other emotion isn't resolved, so it continues to
churn inside you. I have heard from pet owners whose unresolved
emotions have kept them bitter and hurting for years.
Acknowledging your emotions may hurt--these emotions are painful,
after all--but it provides you with the opportunity to control
their outlet. You may decide, for example, that you need to take
a day off from work and simply cry your heart out, scream your
anger to the skies, or pound out your guilt on the floor. Far
from being childish, this action lets you get your feelings into
the open. There you can look at them and begin to understand
them, which is a healthy start on releasing them once and for
all. Only by looking at your reactions honestly can you begin
the process of working through them and coming out whole and
happy on the other side.
"Grief consists of several steps, which ought to be taken
one at a time," Yarden says. "It is also an experience
that will recur over and over after a loss, and through that
repetition comes the slow easing of pain. Each time, one experiences
a little more consolation, a little more healing. Some of the
stages one goes through are shock, denial, anger, loneliness,
self-pity, guilt, and regret--to name a few. Everyone who has
lost a loved relative or close friend experiences loneliness
and the feeling that no one can fill the emptiness that person
left behind. One may suffer from guilt, thinking that one 'should
have' or 'could have' or 'might have' done certain things while
the lost friend was still alive. The feeling of anger is at ourselves
for not having noticed that something was amiss, for not having
sought medical help sooner--or it is sometimes redirected at
the deceased for dying and leaving us."
Of the complex jumble of emotions that may follow the death
of a pet, four stand out as being particularly difficult to acknowledge
or understand, and therefore to work through: anger, guilt, denial
and depression. A pet owner who "sticks" at one of
these reactions faces a major obstacle in the grief swamp. If
you find yourself dwelling on one of these emotions, or spending
an inordinate amount of time "denying" the emotion,
it is important to work on a more realistic understanding of
the situation. Otherwise, your feelings may distort your entire
perspective on the loss of your pet and your role in its death,
and seriously hinder your recovery.
Anger
When a person is hurt, a natural response is to look around
for the person or thing that is causing that hurt. Pain is something
one often sees as being inflicted from outside, rather than something
that just happens. Historically, when no obvious cause for trouble
is found, people have made scapegoats out of strangers, supernatural
forces, or even God. Finding something or someone to blame for
one's pain enables one to "strike back," if only by
declaring, "It's your fault, you did it."
Focusing anger on a target of blame is a distraction. On her
national radio talk show, psychologist Toni Grant often noted
that a person can focus on only one strong emotion at a time;
thus, if you have focused all your energy into anger, you have
little time to feel your pain. Striking back can be gratifying;
you may get a surge of satisfaction from telling off your "persecutor."
But acknowledging your pain is an essential part of the grieving
process, so while the distraction of anger may temporarily seem
to ease your feelings, in the long run it only serves to prolong
an already difficult situation.
Whom can you blame for the death of a pet? Pet owners have
come up with a surprising number of possibilities. They may blame
pet deaths on veterinarians, animal shelters, the person who
caused a fatal accident or injury, the illness that was responsible
for the death, and even the pet itself.
Veterinarians frequently come under fire for the loss of a
pet, because a vet is often the last person to be responsible
for a sick or injured pet. Instead of asking the logical question,
"Why couldn't you save my pet?" a grieving pet owner
may ask, "Why didn't you save my pet?" as though
the veterinarian had a choice. Since so many treatments seem
virtual miracles, why couldn't the vet have pulled off the final
miracle needed to keep a beloved pet alive? To some, this failure
may seem deliberate, neglectful or uncaring.
Susan G. of Nebraska blamed her veterinarian bitterly for
the death of her St. Bernard, Junior. "Was surgery the only
alternative?" she wrote. "At the time it seemed that
we could trust this vet. Now I feel he couldn't have cared less
about my baby! We thought he would save Junior's life. Instead
I felt like he murdered him and put him through torture by that
surgery... If he felt his surgery might kill my dog, why did
he decide on it in the end? Do they do this just so they can
practice on helpless animals?"
To read Susan's letter is to read the story of a dog with
virtually no chance of survival--but to Susan, the dog's killer
is the tangible, accessible veterinarian who had the final responsibility
for her pet, not the mysterious disease that brought the dog
to the hospital in the first place. Two years after her original
letter, Susan wrote to me again, and her anger and pain still
simmered beneath the surface: "I feel I will always be bitter
about what happened and I could never trust any professional
(medical or other) again!"
An assumption of negligence, ignorance, cruelty or lack of
care on the part of a veterinarian makes the death of a loved
one easier to understand than if one had to write it off to fate
or an incomprehensible act of God. It makes the question of "why
did this have to happen to me?" or "why did my pet
have to die?" easier to answer, enabling one to say, "Well,
it wouldn't have happened if only..."
When Laura P. of California lost her pit bull puppy to parvovirus
only a few days after she adopted it from an animal shelter,
she felt considerable anger toward the shelter. "They were
so concerned about whether I had a secure yard that they didn't
even notice the pup was losing weight and getting dehydrated,"
she wrote. Yvonne M. of New Jersey had a similar experience,
and demanded, "Why does the state allow such places to exist?"
She was infuriated by the shelter's promise to replace a pet
if anything went wrong. "How can you develop a love for
an animal and then replace it awhile later?" she asks.
If someone causes the death of your pet through a malicious act
or through carelessness, it's certainly natural to feel anger
toward that person. When Vivian R.'s dog was shot near its New
Hampshire home, "all my husband and I could think of was
to go home and find whoever did this terrible thing," she
wrote. Vivian's situation demonstrates the need to maintain a
level of common sense along with one's anger. She and her husband
did locate the shooter, a neighbor, who was eventually required
to pay damages. She stopped short, however, of having the man
arrested because of her concern for the suffering this would
cause the man's wife and two young children, who had nothing
to do with the incident.
In this case, Vivian's anger was channeled into a constructive
action that eventually cleared the way for her grief and for
sympathy toward others. But Vivian was fortunate: She and her
husband were able to track down the person responsible and had
the legal resources to achieve a certain amount of justice, though
no amount of money can ever replace a lost pet. All too often,
the person who caused the death of a pet cannot be found, or
no legal means of retaliation may be open to you. You may cause
yourself far more suffering if you try to retaliate by taking
the law into your own hands. If you are spending an inordinate
amount of time concentrating on rage and hatred toward the faceless,
untraceable driver of the speeding car that struck down your
pet, you may be seriously impeding your recovery from your loss.
Some people feel anger toward the illness that kills a pet.
It isn't fair; why did it have to happen to this pet?
One person wrote that she felt fate had played a cruel trick
on her: Her dog died of coronavirus just weeks before she read
a magazine article about the disease and the new vaccine that
had been developed for it.
It is even possible to feel anger toward the dead pet itself.
"The only time she ever hurt me was when she left me,"
wrote one pet owner. You may feel angry at it for dying and leaving
you, thus causing you pain, or for doing something that caused
its own death. For example, if your pet escaped from the yard
and ran into the road at the wrong time, or ate a poisonous plant,
or provoked a fight with another animal, you may blame the pet
for the "stupidity" that took it from you.
One pet owner felt a certain amount of anger toward her dog
for appearing perfectly healthy on the morning of its death.
This pet owner felt that if only the dog had shown, somehow,
that something was wrong, the owner would not have left it home
alone but would have taken it to the vet, who might have been
able to save it. If no other target is available, the pet may
become the focus of blame for the anger and hurt you're feeling
at this time.
You may also feel anger toward yourself, perhaps seeing yourself
as the cause of the pet's death. Anger turned inward, into self-blame,
becomes guilt.
Guilt
By becoming the caretaker of an animal, one may come to feel
responsible for everything that happens to that animal, including
events beyond one's control. Thus, if something goes wrong, whether
the owner has anything to do with or not, he is likely to feel
responsible--and therefore guilty.
I heard from several owners who blamed themselves for some
"terrible mistake," real or imagined, that caused a
pet's death. Kathy D. of Oklahoma wrote, "Cause of death:
It was my fault. She died of distemper and had never been vaccinated."
Shirley O. of California said, "I had a terrible time adjusting
to the loss of my dog; the underlying factor was my guilt. I
had ignorantly fed my dog soft pork chop bones, not knowing they'd
cause intestinal hemorrhage."
If you must make the decision to euthanize a sick or injured
pet, this can cause a tremendous amount of guilt. This type of
guilt, and euthanasia in general, are covered in more detail
in Chapter Six. Susan G., who felt such anger toward her veterinarian
over the death of her dog, offers a heart-wrenching example of
the guilt euthanasia can evoke: "How could I have been so
ignorant with something I loved?" she wrote. "I felt
it was wrong to leave him there from the first day; now I hold
it against them and myself... I'm the one who took him there.
Every day is a living hell when I think about what I put Junior
through... I feel like he trusted me and I let him down."
Sue K. also felt considerable guilt when she had her cat Titsie
euthanized, but as she discovered, that guilt extended far beyond
the act of ending her cat's life. "I doubted my decision,"
she wrote. "Maybe I could have managed him at home. Maybe
I should have tried. Maybe I shouldn't have taken him to the
vet college. I'm a nurse; I should have noticed his failing condition.
Why didn't I pay more attention? I shouldn't have gotten the
new kitten; he tired Titsie so. And the dog! Titsie had hated
Katie so much toward the end, and Katie had taken up so much
of my attention because dogs demand more by their very nature.
Maybe God was punishing me for something by taking Titsie away;
Lord knows I'm no saint. That was probably it. I should be kinder.
I should try harder to be better. I should watch what I say.
I should have lived a better life. It was all my fault. I had
killed my cat by not being what I should be."
Despite such intense feelings of guilt and self-hate, Sue
was able to work her way back to solid ground; her letter was
a testimonial to the powers of recovery that lie within us. "It's
been only three months since Titsie died," she concluded,
"and it was difficult at times to see the typewriter through
my tears. But these were honest tears--tears of missing Titsie
and of remembering his death and how alone I felt--not the distorted
tears of self-blame, guilt, and hopelessness."
Even if a pet owner can't pinpoint something about the pet's
death to feel guilty about, he may find something else to focus
on--just as Sue focused on her supposed inadequacies. He may
decide that he didn't take good enough care of the pet while
it was alive, or pay enough attention to it. This is part of
the "if only" syndrome: "If only I had known you
wouldn't be here tomorrow, I would have been nicer to you yesterday."
Laura P. of California, who lost two dogs she had owned since
age 7, expressed this type of guilt in her letter: "I felt
sad and heartbroken, but mostly I felt guilty for any and all
bad things I had done to Tiny and Pebbles over their lifetimes.
When I was younger I just didn't respect my pets and was mean.
I remembered the times I ignored them or forgot to give them
water. I cried remembering the times I would just say 'hi' through
the back screen instead of petting their little heads or scratching
their tummies. I cried thinking of the times they needed brushing
or a walk but had the gate closed in their faces. I cried thinking
of how little they asked in return for their loyalty and love.
I will never again shun any dog for getting old; in fact, I want
to devote my life to dogs, training them and telling others how
to care for them."
Just as anger can make you unable to recover from grief because
it diverts your attention from your deeper, more painful reactions,
guilt can be an equally dangerous distraction. Guilt causes you
to focus on your supposed inadequacies and failings rather than
on the reality of your loss. Though anger can distract from your
pain, guilt adds to it by convincing you that, since you are
at fault, you "deserve" to suffer. Guilt distorts your
self-image, destroying your self-confidence and undermining your
strength. Instead of focusing on the positive aspects of your
relationship with your pet and on the happy memories, you focus
upon the negative memories (real or imagined), the pet's illness
or death and your "bad guy" role in it.
Even if you did make some tragic mistake or decision
that caused the death of your pet, clinging to guilt not only
prevents you from recovering from your grief, it prevents you
from moving on to a better and wiser relationship with future
pets. Guilt does not help your departed pet, it does not help
you, and it does not help any pets you may own in the future.
Instead of helping you learn and grow from the experience of
your mistakes, guilt drags you deeper into pain and, if carried
to extremes, can block your route out of the grief-swamp.
Denial
Like anger, denial can be a way of focusing your mind away
from pain. Denial is not so much a distraction, however, as a
mechanism of ignoring reality, of hoping that if you don't feel
the pain, it will go away. Unfortunately, this rarely works;
instead, pain is likely to wait until you let your defense mechanism
slip, and then lash out at you when you are least prepared to
cope with it.
Denial has been described in detail by researchers who study
the terminally ill. Dr. Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, in her landmark
book On Death and Dying, noted that dying patients would
often insist that they were not ill or that they were getting
better. The reality of impending death is, understandably, often
too painful to accept on a conscious level. Denial is a way of
avoiding the mental anguish that comes with the realization that
death is inevitable.
Pet owners often practice a similar type of denial. C. Miriam
Yarden wrote of a woman whose dog was diagnosed as being terminally
ill. Whenever Yarden asked the woman about the dog, the woman
insisted that the dog was fine, that it was getting better, that
nothing was wrong with it. In a few months the dog died, and
the woman was devastated. In a case such as this, denial robs
a pet owner of vital time in which he could be preparing himself
emotionally for the inevitable loss and trauma that is to come.
Carried to extremes, denial can even be physically harmful
to a pet. Just as a human patient may fearfully deny the seriousness
of his symptoms and postpone visiting a doctor until it is too
late to halt the course of an illness, so might a pet owner deny
the seriousness of a pet's symptoms until it is too late for
a veterinarian to help. Even when one does take the pet to the
vet, ignoring the seriousness of the illness can lead to significant
problems in coping later, as Celia P. of New York discovered.
"You must be realistic," wrote Celia. "Cam
had blood in his urine periodically for a long time. We convinced
ourselves that it was the same old urinary problem that he'd
had before. Not smart. Pretending that an aging animal is going
on forever just makes it harder to accept the final outcome.
We just 'tuned out' any suggestion from the vet that this could
be something more serious (it was cancer) and stuck to the old
'he's got a bladder problem--probably passed a stone again' assumption.
Please don't do this; it just makes the shock a hundred times
worse."
Denial can also take place on a subconscious level. You may
know, intellectually, that your pet is dead, but at a gut level
be unable to accept that fact. You may still believe that somehow
you will see your pet again; you might fear, for example, that
your pet was not actually euthanized and is still alive somewhere.
(That's why many pet owners recommend that you stay with your
pet during euthanasia, a point that is discussed in Chapter Six
of Coping with Sorrow.) I experienced this feeling upon
the death of my cat; even though I had held his body in my arms
and said good-bye to him, I still found myself watching the streets
for him at night as I drove home from work. A part of me seemed
to have stuck at the memory that he had not come home that night,
while refusing to accept the memory of the discovery of his body.
Denial can surface when you contemplate obtaining a new pet.
You may find that this decision makes you feel guilty or disloyal,
as though you were somehow betraying the deceased pet's memory.
This reaction may mean that in a very real sense, you have not
let go of the old pet, for it is still alive enough in your mind
to be "replaced" by a "usurper." Bringing
a new pet into your home can be the ultimate admission that your
old pet is gone.
Depression
Though depression can result from a variety of things, including
purely physical causes, we often associate this condition with
an event or ongoing situation that has caused significant emotional
pain or high levels of stress. This type of depression can range
from a sense of "feeling low" to what can amount to
a state of emotional near-paralysis. It can last for a few hours
or a day--or drag on for weeks and months.
The death of a pet is certainly the type of event that one
would expect to trigger depression. It is traumatic, painful
and stressful; it creates a situation that plunges a person into
a whirlpool of emotions, and is an event that one may very well
wish to withdraw from rather than confront. But, though depression
is a logical result of pet loss, it is also a state of mind that
can impede a pet owner's recovery from that loss.
Shirley O., who felt such guilt over feeding her dog the bones
that caused its death, also suffered from the classic symptoms
of depression. "The sudden death of my dog left me so devastated
that I'd walk around the house wringing my hands and crying,"
she wrote. "I lost my appetite and powers of concentration,
and wondered if I was losing my mind." A California pet
owner experienced another typical manifestation of depression:
She found herself virtually unable to carry on with her day-to-day
routines. "Frankly, I didn't get much done and had lost
interest in living," she wrote. Even getting out of bed,
eating and performing simple tasks was an effort. Severe depression
can make living seem intolerable, and rob one of the willpower
and strength to put forth even the most minimal of efforts.
Shirley's situation was a little unusual: Three months before
the death of her dog, her husband had died of a lengthy illness.
She felt considerably more anguish over the death of the dog
than of her husband, and wondered if perhaps the dog's death
had triggered pent-up feelings that she had not released the
first time through. She discounted that possibility, however.
"My husband had wanted to die for years," she wrote,
"and made himself and those around him so miserable that
it was a relief when he didn't suffer anymore."
Despite Shirley's disclaimer, it seems likely that the death
of her dog was the proverbial hole in the dike that let a whole
flood of painful emotions, perhaps bottled up for years, burst
through. It also seems likely that, due to the difficulties in
her marital relationship, Shirley developed an unusually strong
bond with her dog, who probably provided the love and support
that was not forthcoming elsewhere.
This type of situation is not as uncommon as it might sound.
If your life is in turmoil--if, for instance, problems are occurring
in relationships or careers or family situations--your relationship
with your pet may be the only stable thing in your life. No matter
how bad things get everywhere else, a pet will continue to offer
unconditional love and acceptance.
Even when the trying times or stressful changes are past,
you may still feel an intense attachment to that pet. "I
couldn't have survived without him," you might say. "He
was my good luck charm." You might even fear that your life
will fall apart completely without that "anchor," even
if the crises that the pet anchored you through have long since
resolved themselves. If they haven't been resolved, the loss
of the pet can be even more traumatic, because you may then feel
completely cut off from any source of love and support.
Thus the loss of a pet should be viewed not just as an independent
event, but in the context of your life at the time of the loss.
If you find yourself reacting far more severely to the loss than
you anticipated--perhaps more severely than you have reacted
to deaths of earlier pets--you might wish to examine other possible
sources of stress in your life. Was your pet helping you cope
with painful emotions arising from some other problem? Has the
death of the pet left you not only with your grief over its loss,
but with an unpleasant situation or backlog of stress that you
must now face alone, without the pet's "moral support"?
If you can, try to separate the bereavement trauma from other
crises in your life and allot some time to it alone, so that
you can view it from a perspective that is not magnified and
distorted by external events.
The depression that results from this type of situation, or
even from the loss of a pet without outside complications, makes
a constructive approach to handling your grief difficult. One
of the symptoms of depression is a lack of energy, an inability
to focus even on simple things, let alone on the overwhelming
problem of your grief. While it is not a good idea to distract
yourself from your grief to the point of ignoring or denying
its existence, one tried-and-true coping strategy is to focus
on outside activities: your work, friends, a change of scene.
This type of healthy distraction keeps you in touch with reality,
which helps keep your grief and loss in perspective. But depression
robs you of the energy or inclination to pursue even trivial
activities, creating a spiral effect: If you cannot distract
yourself from grief, you tend to dwell upon it, which makes the
depression worse, which makes it even more difficult to break
out of the cycle, and so forth.
Powerful emotions are an integral part of grief. You won't
be able to avoid them, and in some cases, in the right proportions,
these emotions can be helpful to you in negotiating the grief-swamp.
Constructive anger, for example, can help you resolve the situation
that caused your pet's death, giving you a feeling of accomplishment.
However, anger that you hold onto because you can't focus it
constructively can make you feel helpless, and hinder your progress.
Blind anger will simply send you charging off wildly through
the swamp or keep you running in circles.
Guilt has few benefits; however, Kathi D.'s guilt over her
failure to immunize her dog caused her to be much more careful
with subsequent pets. If you are somehow responsible for the
death of your pet, your sense of guilt is useful only so far
as it prompts you to correct the error--fix the fence, keep your
next cat indoors, never feed bones to another dog. But if guilt
causes you to focus on your own supposed worthlessness and inadequacies,
you trap yourself in the swamp by convincing yourself that you're
such a lowlife scum that you belong there.
Denial can help you on a brief, temporary basis by letting
you shift your attention away from emotions that are, for the
moment, too painful to bear. It's perfectly acceptable, for instance,
to say, "I won't think about what just happened right now,
because I have to drive home on the freeway, and I'll fall apart
and be unable to function if I don't put it out of my mind. I'll
fall apart when I get home, instead." But if you try to
deny the situation for a longer period of time or altogether,
beware: The swamp hasn't gone away just because you have closed
your eyes and told yourself that it doesn't exist. You are still
in the middle of it, and by walking on blindly you may step in
quicksand when you least expect it.
Depression could surely be described as quicksand. It is a
natural reaction, and justified by the nature of your loss. But
if you feel the symptoms of depression taking hold of you to
the extent that they interfere with your day-to-day life, you
need to make every possible effort to break out of it before
it becomes a trap. This isn't easy to accomplish alone; if you
can, enlist the help of friends and relatives to keep you "moving"
and distracted. Even if your friends don't understand the cause
of your grief, let them know that you need their help and support
regardless. It's impossible to even begin to make your way out
of the swamp if you're sinking slowly into a patch of quicksand.
At this point you may be thinking, "It's all very well
for her to say, 'Do this' and 'Don't think that,' but how can
I help what I'm feeling? If I have these feelings, what can I
do about them?" The next chapter will give you some answers
to that question by presenting some coping strategies that have
been used successfully by pet owners like yourself.
"Like all counselors, I am often asked, 'When will I
get over this? Will I ever get over this?' " writes Muriel
Franzblau of the Bide-A-Wee Home Association. "Though my
answer is frequently surprising to clients, I've seen it work
well time and time again: 'You won't get over it. I don't believe
we ever "get over" the loss of someone we've loved
so much. But you'll do something much better. Gradually, and
in your own time, you'll make peace with yourself and then you'll
make peace with your loss. And you'll go on from there.' "
Coping with sorrow is easier said than done--but it has been
done, and you can do it too.
Copyright © 1987 by Moira Allen. Excerpted from |