“I don’t know what to do next.” is a common statement I hear after someone loses their pet. Obviously, they are grieving; but the question is asked because the path to navigate the grief is invisible.
When a human passes away, there are a series of societal expectations and normal customs that help someone figure out how to tell the world about their loss and how to celebrate the life that has gone. Obituaries not only serve this purpose, but they also allow anyone who may have known the person to reach out and offer condolences, or even attend the memorial service. Facilitating this connection forms a support system of shared grief that allows a family to express their feelings safely and seek comfort from others. Sharing grief is a basic ritual of healing for social cultures.
Unfortunately, pet loss grief is different.
Pet loss grief is classified as disenfranchised grief; meaning, there is no societal template—no generally accepted “normal” behavior—for someone to follow. Not only is there a lack of guidance for sharing your grief; there is a level of societal discomfort associated with even discussing the loss, as if pet loss grief were in some way abnormal or shameful.
When you don’t have a script, grief can feel isolating. You may not know who it is “appropriate” to tell, what is “acceptable” to feel, or what you are “supposed” to do next. That uncertainty is part of what makes pet loss so hard.
This lack of societal patterning for pet loss grief is rooted in the roles animals traditionally played in our lives. Animals were historically treated as tools: horses pulled a plow, cats killed mice, and dogs helped us hunt food. Only in the last fifty years has the human-animal bond been recognized, and animals accepted as companions and family members.
Unfortunately, even though pets are now widely accepted as family members, not all aspects of society have kept pace—so the way to publicly grieve a lost pet remains to be fully defined.
Even though there are not social patterns of grief to follow, it needs to be understood that wanting to have some form of memorial to celebrate your pet’s life is normal and completely reasonable.
A memorial in any form is a tangible way of acknowledging the loss—and it allows you to start processing the grief.
That matters, because love deserves recognition. And grief deserves acknowledgment. When you honor your pet’s life in a concrete way, you are also giving your heart permission to understand what happened.
Unconditional love and acceptance are the foundations of the human-animal bond. Every tail wag from your dog, purring exchange from your cat, excited whistle from your bird, nicker from your horse, or eager attention from your reptile, showed you that you are loved and appreciated. It felt good every single time you had that exchange.
Of course you want to honor the life you and your pet shared; that is a very valid need.
To address this need, you can decide how you want to memorialize your pet: in a public expression, or something more private. This is about what feels right to you—so the only rules associated with it are the ones that you set.
Some people want witnesses. Some people want quiet. Many people want a mix. None of those choices are wrong.
Examples of public pet memorials are things that can be found on the internet or seen in a public place. Examples of public memorials are:
Public memorials can be a way to say, “This mattered,” and to invite support—if that feels helpful to you.
Examples of more private memorials are things that can only be seen by individuals who are invited to view them, such as:
Private memorials can be just as powerful. Sometimes the most meaningful acts are the ones no one else sees.
If you wish to hold some form of service at your home, in a park, or a pet cemetery—where you have family/friends attend, tell stories, and share memories—that is okay.
If you feel it is more appropriate to celebrate your pet’s life privately by planting a tree over their remains on your property, that is okay.
What is most important about how you memorialize your pet is that it has meaning and value to you. Whatever the form it takes, the purpose of the memorial is to honor your pet’s life and the bond that you shared; your love was real and your grief is valid.
If you don’t know what to do next, choose one small memorial step. Pick something you can do in the next 24–72 hours—small counts.
Why do pet memorials help with grief?
A memorial acknowledges the loss and gives grief a tangible place to land.
Is it normal to have a memorial for a pet?
Yes. Wanting to honor your pet’s life is normal and completely reasonable.
Should my pet memorial be public or private?
Either is valid. The only rules are the ones you set—do what feels right to you.
What are examples of pet memorials?
Public: a post, an engraved stone/brick, a donation. Private: a planting, framed photo, memory box.