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The Pet Loss Companion
📖 Ebook

The Pet Loss Companion

A Field Guide to the Grief Most People Are Not Allowed to Show

by Dr. Yelena Aleksandrova

Language: EN
$9.99

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About this book

<b>Pet loss grief guide from a veterinarian and grief counselor: 55 chapters on healing after losing a dog, cat, or pet -- the field guide for grief most people are not allowed to show. (2026)</b> <p>People come into Dr. Yelena Aleksandrova's clinic and say the word almost in a whisper: "quality of life." She sits down across from them -- because, as she writes, "this is not a conversation I can have standing up" -- and asks them to tell her about the last week. Not the diagnosis. The week. After thirty-one years as a veterinarian and sixteen as a pet-loss grief counselor, she has sat on both sides of the exam-room table. She made the decision herself for her own dog, Maks, on a Saturday in August 2019, with the foghorn going out near the bridge, and she still, with all her training, is not entirely sure she chose the right day. <i>That</i> not-knowing, she tells you, is not a failure of love. It is the residue of it.</p> <p>Pet loss grief is the grief most people are not allowed to show -- dismissed by coworkers asking if you are "better yet," minimized by family members who never loved the animal, erased by a culture that does not issue bereavement leave for a dog. This pet loss book treats that grief as what it actually is: real, disorienting, and capable of ambushing you at the kitchen sink six months later when you find a bowl you forgot to put away. Dr. Aleksandrova walks through 55 specific hard moments -- the euthanasia decision, the first morning without the sound, the bowl and the leash and the bed, the anniversary, the guilt that returns, and the question of whether to adopt again -- with the precision of someone who has counseled thousands of grieving pet owners and the intimacy of someone who has been one.</p> <h4>Inside this pet loss grief book:</h4> <ul> <li><b>The euthanasia decision, in full honesty</b> -- Dr. Aleksandrova writes: "You are the chooser. No matter how many vets tell you it was the right call... you will spend a long time circling around the fact that you decided." Chapter 2 walks you through how to carry that weight without being crushed by it.</li> <li><b>Chapter-by-chapter grief milestones</b> -- from the first sleepless night through Month Three, Month Six, and the First Anniversary, each stage mapped with what is normal and what actually helps.</li> <li><b>The social grief -- the hardest part no other book covers</b> -- specific strategies for the coworker who asks if you are "better yet," the family member who said "it was just a dog," and the vet visit you drove past three months later and could not explain why it wrecked you.</li> <li><b>The kitchen, the walk, the spot on the couch</b> -- the physical rituals that collapse after a loss, and how to rebuild them on your own timeline without guilt.</li> <li><b>Guilt, euthanasia regret, and the chapter titled "Saying Yes Too Soon, Saying Yes Too Late"</b> -- Dr. Aleksandrova names the specific guilt that returns at the one-year mark and gives it a framework that actually holds.</li> <li><b>What other vets wish you knew</b> -- drawn from Dr. Aleksandrova's conversations with colleagues, the things veterinarians want to say to grieving pet owners but rarely do, including the truth about cost-of-care decisions.</li> <li><b>The question of another animal</b> -- five chapters on the adoption decision, including "When You Decide Not to Adopt Again," a choice the pet loss literature almost never addresses.</li> </ul> <p>Losing a pet is losing someone you loved. The pet loss grief that follows is not a smaller version of grief. It arrives in the body the same way: the waking at three in the morning, the forgetting for one half-second that they are gone, the reaching down to where they used to be. This pet loss healing guide will not rush you through that. It will sit on the floor with you, the way Dr. Aleksandrova does with her own clients, and stay there until you do not need it to anymore. The day you realize you are okay -- the title of the final chapter -- is real. It comes. This field guide shows you how to get there.</p> <p><b>For readers of Russell Friedman's "The Grief Recovery Handbook for Pet Loss" and Nel Mead's "The Hardest Goodbye: Navigating Pet Loss and Grief."</b></p> ---

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