Dear Susie,
Our dog died last night. My sons are
just five and 2 ½. This is going to be such a hard conversation!
I'd appreciate any thoughts you can share.
Dear Parent,
I'm so sorry! We always had a houseful
of pets and I loved each and every one of them. This never gets
easier, does it?
As with any "tender topic,"
I think the best rule of thumb is to say the smallest true thing you
can. Your child's questions will lead the rest of the way.
You can start with, "Something very sad has happened in our
family. You know that Muffy lived a long, long time. [I sure
hope this is the case. If not, modify. I'll talk more about
this in my next post.] She had a wonderful, happy, doggy life.
She got very old and finally her body stopped working and she died.
I'm going to miss her so much."
Then let the questions come. Try to answer them simply and honestly. Please try not to worry that you may cry
during this talk. The topic is sad – and your sadness, though a
little upsetting, will make sense to your kids. Crying gives
them permission to grieve too. Faking a stoic attitude would create a mismatch between your words and your demeanor. This would be awkward for
both you and your kids. To a certain extent, you will all be comforting
one another, which is part of family life and family love. Your
child's mirror neurons (related to empathy) will be firing like
crazy. That's how we learn to care about, and care for, each other.
Your younger child may be a little
baffled by everything about this conversation. For him, the biggest
challenge will probably be to grasp the permanence of death. He may ask for
Muffy a lot in the coming days. It could take weeks for him to
understand that Muffy's not coming back. Your five-year-old may
already have an understanding of death as permanent. He could be comforted by starting a little
“memory book” of pictures and recollections that you can all
contribute to, over time.
I'm a big believer in pet funerals.
Doing something simple but ceremonial at home honors life and seals a
memory. Let the kids help plan and carry out the funeral or
memorial. When I was a little girl, we buried them under my favorite
tree, right near my swing. I followed suit with my own kids.
(Please don't flush Swimmy down the toilet! It's a clean and
practical thing to do, but think of the message it sends.)
Questions may come fast and furious, or
very gradually. What kinds of questions might your older one ask?
We as adults tend to get past the nuts and bolts of burying or
cremating a pet and focus on how sad we are. But for a four- or
five-year-old, often the emphasis is on “the science of death.”
Is Muffy asleep? Can she feel her body? Is she thinking? I would
never liken death to sleep (this can be scary) but sometimes kids who
see a dead animal wonder if it's sleeping. If, and only if, your
child expresses curiosity about this, point out that death is not at
all like sleep. When Muffy was alive, she was doing a lot of things
while she slept – her lungs were breathing, her heart was beating, her brain was dreaming,
her stomach was digesting food. Now none of those things is
happening because her body has stopped working. (A solid understanding of this makes the idea of
cremation or burial a lot less upsetting.)
Parents have sometimes told me they
didn't want to have small pets such as goldfish or hamsters “because
they die.” I would argue that this is one very good reason to have
them! Experiencing the life cycle on a manageable scale informs and
steels your child for the profounder losses that will follow
throughout life. Without suffering loss, a child cannot learn that
loss is survivable. Maybe I should state that another way:
suffering a loss will teach your child that it's survivable.
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