Losing a pet leaves a hole that words can barely touch. Pet loss isnโt โsmall griefโ โ itโs real, raw, and often misunderstood. If youโve ever felt the weight of pet loss grief and wondered how to cope with pet loss grief, youโre not alone.
Here are some gentle, practical ways of coping with pet loss while honoring the love you shared.
Society often tells us that grief over animals isnโt valid, that itโs somehow โlesserโ than human loss. But the pain of losing an animal companion can be just as devastating as losing a human loved one.
As someone who’s experienced profound pet loss multiple times, I understand the deep ache and emptiness that follows.
The journey through pet grief requires both short-term coping strategies and long-term healing techniques.
Related: How To Cope With the Loss of a Pet: 8 Things
6 Strategies For Coping With Pet Loss
1. The First Days: Surviving the Shock
In those early days, the pain can feel relentless. One of the most helpful things Iโve learned is to temporarily put away the triggers. Food bowls, collars, cratesโanything that forces the loss back to the front of your mind every time you see it.
Youโre already grieving; you donโt need the constant reminders.
And please, donโt rush into replacing your pet. That impulse makes senseโyouโre hurting and want to pour your love somewhereโbut bringing home a new pet too soon just delays your grief.
It doesnโt make it disappear. It just pushes it down until it resurfaces later, even harder.
2. Let the Grief Move Through You
Grief moves in waves. Some moments youโll be overwhelmedโsobbing, unable to think. Other times, it lifts, and you feel strangely okay. Thatโs not denial or weakness. Thatโs your system taking a break from the emotional strain.
Let the pain come and go. When itโs strong, feel it fully. When it subsides, rest.
Donโt shame yourself for the depth of your sadness. Pet loss grief is valid. The worst thing you can do is try to suppress or talk yourself out of it. That doesnโt help. It just stores the pain for later.
3. Donโt Forget the Basics
Even though nothing tastes good, and nothing feels fun, you still need food. You still need sleep. You still need other people. Your body and brain are working overtime to process the loss.
Give them what they need. This isnโt about forcing yourself to โmove onโโitโs about keeping yourself afloat while the storm passes.
4. Once Youโre Functioning Again, Start Healing
When youโve stabilizedโwhen youโre back at work, talking to friends, not crying every hourโthatโs when long-term healing can begin.
Thereโs often a set of unspoken regrets that show up after loss. Things like โthank you,โ โI love you,โ โplease forgive me,โ or even โI forgive you.โ
These may seem unnecessary or too late. Theyโre not. Say them out loud, write them down, or just hold them in your thoughts. These expressions can open the door to real closure.
5. Gratitude Comes LaterโAnd Itโs Powerful
People mean well when they say โat least you had 15 good years.โ But early on, that kind of gratitude feels hollow. It comes later, when the sharpest pain has dulled.
When it does, remembering the bond, the joy, the silly habitsโthose memories can begin to feel like gifts instead of wounds.
Related: How To Cope With The Loss Of A Pet
6. You Wonโt ForgetโBut You Will Feel Better
Some grief never leaves completely. Thatโs okay. Youโre not trying to forget your pet. Youโre learning how to live with the love and the loss. Over time, the pain will hit less often. When it does, it wonโt last as long. Thatโs what healing looks like.
This video guides you through proven methods to process your pet loss grief authentically. You’ll learn practical steps to honor your feelings and move forward without rushing or suppressing your emotions.
Written By Dr. Scott Eilers
Originally Appeared On Dr. Scott Eilers


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