Pet Loss & Bereavement
Losing a companion animal disrupts your daily routine and emotional stability in ways that often surprise owners. In my time managing veterinary helplines, I have guided thousands of families through the difficult transition from palliative care to saying goodbye. We focus on validating 'disenfranchised grief'—the sorrow that society sometimes fails to recognize—ensuring you feel supported and understood during this profound loss.
This section provides resources on navigating the practical and emotional aspects of bereavement, including quality-of-life assessments and memorialization. Whether you are facing an upcoming euthanasia decision or processing a sudden loss, our guidance relies on established grief counseling principles and veterinary protocols to help you find a path forward without guilt or isolation.
Helping a UK Family Grieve a Pet Loss in Summer Holidays
A compassionate UK guide to supporting children, choosing burial or cremation, and helping a surviving pet through bereavement during the summer break. Practical steps, charity resources, and age appropriate language for families navigating loss together.
Pet Bereavement Counselling in Canada: 2026 Comparison
A practical Canada wide comparison of pet bereavement counselling for July 2026, covering provincial coverage, virtual versus in-person care, costs, and child specific support. Learn how to verify credentials and pick the right practitioner for your family.
Digital Pet Memorial Platforms and Virtual Farewells
Online tribute pages and virtual memorial ceremonies help pet owners honour their companions after loss. This guide covers how these platforms work, from AI photo montages to charitable integrations.
Understanding Pet Loss Guilt and How to Process It
Guilt after a pet's death, especially following euthanasia, is one of the most common and misunderstood grief responses. This guide explores why self-blame occurs, how to reframe it, and when to seek professional support.
Create a Living Memorial Garden for Your Pet
A step-by-step guide to designing a pet memorial garden with safe plants, personalised markers, and eco-friendly burial options. Suitable for any garden size and the whole family.
Why Pet Bereavement Leave Should Be Workplace Policy
Pet loss grief is a clinically recognised psychological experience, yet most workplaces still offer no formal support. This guide explores the research, global policy trends, and practical tools for proposing pet bereavement leave at work.
Grieving a Pet You Shared With an Ex-Partner
Losing access to a pet after a breakup can trigger profound, often unrecognised grief. This guide explores disenfranchised pet loss, coping strategies, and when professional support is warranted.
Pet Memorial Garden in Spring: A Safe Planting Guide
A step by step guide to creating a pet memorial garden this spring, covering pet-safe plant choices, engraved marker materials, biodegradable urns that grow into trees, and the grief healing power of tending a living tribute. Includes important safety notes for surviving pets.
Helping Children Grieve a Family Pet's Death
Losing a family pet is often a child's first encounter with death. This guide covers age-appropriate conversations, memorial activities, warning signs of complicated grief, and whether getting a new pet too soon helps or hurts.
Home vs Clinic Euthanasia: Your Questions Answered
Owners facing end-of-life decisions for a terminally ill pet often wonder whether home or clinic euthanasia is the better choice. This FAQ guide covers what each option involves, costs, finding a mobile vet, and the aftercare decisions required that day.
Anticipatory Grief When Your Vet Recommends Euthanasia
Anticipatory grief begins the moment a veterinarian raises euthanasia as an option. This guide walks through the emotional stages, quality of life assessments, and practical steps to prepare yourself and your family before the appointment.
Helping a Child Process the Death of a Family Pet
Losing a family pet is often a child's first encounter with death. This guide covers age-appropriate conversations, memorial activities, and signs that professional support may be needed.