HEALING  COURSES

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A Different Grief:  Coping with Pet Loss

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lesson 1 - Pet Loss:  An Introduction
By Marty Tousley

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Moment of Reflection
  • As you begin this first lesson, take a moment to ponder the quotation below:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"I have held the hands of friends as they died, baptized stillborn infants, helped families decide when to disconnect life-support systems and worked with parents whose children were murdered. Each of those experiences was painful. Nevertheless, at the moment my cat died, her loss was the very worst kind of grief for me in the whole world . . . Never apologize for grieving. Remind yourself as often as needed that the very worst kind of loss is always yours. Learn to acknowledge that your loss is worthy of grief . . ."

- Bob Deits, Life After Loss

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dear Friend,

  • Are you struggling with your pet's chronic or terminal illness, facing a decision about euthanasia, or mourning the loss of your cherished pet?
     
  • Are you surprised or even overwhelmed at the depth of your grief?
     
  • Do you feel isolated from others because they tell you "it's just a pet" and they don't understand how you feel?
     
  • Do you feel guilty because the grief you feel at the thought of losing your pet matches or even exceeds the sorrow you felt when one of your close friends or relatives died?
     
  • Is this normal and healthy?

If you are mourning or anticipating the loss of a cherished companion animal, you already know that you are in need of information, compassion and support. You deserve to feel comforted, understood and acknowledged as a person in grief, and reassurance that you are normal and healthy in loving your animal so deeply.

The lessons in this course are designed both to help you understand and cope with the grief of losing your pet, and to guide you along the way toward meaningful growth, healing and inspiration.

Why I did I write this course?

Although I've loved and lost a variety of pets over the years, it's only been in my adult years that I've come to realize and appreciate the enormous joy my companion animals have brought me, and it was the death of my very special little dog Muffin in 1986 that set me on my present course. I was astounded to find that I was totally unprepared for the whole experience - not only for my dog's sudden and unexpected death and what to do with his remains afterward, but also for the intensity of my reaction.

It wasn't that I was unfamiliar with grief - by that time in my life I had already lost to death a newborn infant, my father, my mother-in-law, my sister-in-law and several close friends. In my practice as a therapist I had been studying death and dying and specializing in bereavement counseling for many years.

But it was the devastating death of this particular little creature - to whom I'd become so strongly attached - that made me realize how profound the loss of a beloved animal friend can be.

Understanding the Level of Attachment

Trying to sort through my feelings and better understand my own reaction, I began to investigate the nature of people's attachment to their animals, reading all I could find on the human-animal bond and learning all I could about other people's reactions to the loss of their companion animals. I soon came to realize how important it is to understand and respect the person's level of attachment to a terminally ill or deceased pet, the role the animal played in the person's life, and the significance of the loss from the person's point of view. Over time I began to understand and accept my own profound loss and was able to find meaning in the midst of my grief. Today my work with bereaved animal lovers combines my background and training in counseling with my respect for the bond people have with their animals, and with my own experiences of healing from the loss of both human and animal loved ones.

Why do I refer to pet loss as A Different Grief?

When you lose a cherished pet, you may feel embarrassed or uneasy about expressing your grief. You may even be left with the feeling that you don't have a legitimate right to grieve. Our culture simply isn't comfortable with the subject of death, and few of us know how to cope with the pain of loss and grief in general, much less with that of losing a beloved pet. In our society, grieving over a pet is not generally accepted behavior. There isn't much support offered to grieving animal lovers, and you may feel very isolated and alone.

However well meaning their intent, some people may not recognize the closeness of your relationship with your pet or the significance of your loss, telling you that "it was just an animal" or "you can always get another."

When a pet dies, there are no formal and public rituals where sorrow and tears can be expressed and shared. Unlike what usually happens when a person dies, in this instance there is little opportunity either to talk about your loss or to receive empathy and support from others.

Even your religious beliefs may lead you to conclude that such pain over a dead pet is exaggerated or unjustified.

If you've had little or no experience with the grief that accompanies the loss of a beloved pet, you may be caught off-guard and feel totally unprepared to deal it when it happens to you.

Consider these questions:

  • Do you know what to expect in this grief of yours?
  • Are you wondering whether your reactions are normal?
  • Are you prepared for what lies ahead as you journey through this loss?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Do you need additional guidance, support or information?

Click link(s) below to order, access, or learn more about resource.

This week's suggested Web site:  www.petloss.com

Consider posting a message in the "Loss of a Pet" Forum at our Grief Healing Discussion Groups site.  See http://www.hovforum.ipbhost.com

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Closing Thoughts

Few of us are prepared to face the excruciating pain associated with the death of a beloved pet. We think we cannot bear it, that to feel such sorrow is abnormal, as if we're going mad. We think there's something wrong with us, or something unnatural about our feelings. Yet pain over the loss of an animal friend is as natural as the pain we'd feel over the loss of any significant relationship. Our pets offer us a kind of loyalty, devotion and unconditional love that cannot be found in the more complicated relationships we have with relatives, friends and neighbors. Is it any wonder that we feel so devastated when all of that is gone?

When you're armed with some knowledge and understanding of the grief that accompanies the loss of a cherished companion animal, and know what reactions you can normally expect and how to manage them, you'll be able to face the weeks and months ahead more readily. This course is designed to help you do just that.

In Our Next Lesson

We declare your rights as a grieving animal lover.

In Peace,

Your Friends at Self-Healing Expressions

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Course Number 4; Lesson Number 1

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Course Outline

Course Length:  20 lessons
Recommended Course Pace:  weekly receipt of lessons


Course Reviews


Enroll in this e-course now!

About the Instructor

Marty Tousley, CNS-BC, FT, DCC, is a certified hospice bereavement counselor who has focused her practice on issues of loss, grief and transition for more than 40 years. As both a bereaved parent and a bereaved child herself, she joined Hospice of the Valley in Phoenix, Arizona as a bereavement counselor in 1996, and now serves as moderator for its online Grief Healing Discussions Groups. A frequent contributor to healthcare journals, newsletters and magazines for the lay public, she has authored a number of books, booklets and articles addressing various aspects of loss and grief. With her special interest in grief and the human-animal bond, she facilitated a pet loss support group for bereaved animal lovers in Phoenix for 15 years, and now serves as consultant to the Pet Loss Support Group at Hospice of the Valley and to the Halton-Peel Pet Loss Support Group in Ontario, Canada. Her own Grief Healing Web site, www.GriefHealing.com offers information, comfort and support to anyone who is anticipating or mourning the loss of a loved one, whether human or animal. She is the creator of three online e-mail courses for Self-Healing Expressions :
     The First Year of Grief: Help for the Journey
     A Different Grief: Coping with Pet Loss
     A Different Grief: Helping You and Your Children with Pet Loss


And author of these Healing E-Books:
     How To Write a Eulogy: Guidelines & Examples for Paying Tribute to Your Loved One
     Life Lines: How to Write an Obituary
     How to Write Heartfelt Condolence Letters
     Helping Another in Grief
     Help for Writing Sympathy Thank-You Notes
     Grief: Coping with Holidays and Other Celebration Days
     Explaining the Funeral / Memorial Service to Your Children

Marty can be reached via e-mail at tousleym@aol.com. 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Copyright © 2001-2013 by
Martha M. Tousley. All rights reserved.
Please maintain this honor code:  Unless otherwise indicated on the overview for this course on the Self-Healing Expressions site, with the exception of one print copy for the personal use of each subscriber, the copyrighted material from the Self-Healing Expressions courses may not be reproduced, forwarded, or redistributed by any means, print or electronic. The material may not be incorporated into other programs/training.  www.SelfHealingExpressions.com

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

  Bookmark and Share