🐱 I can’t get over the death of my cat. Is this normal?

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https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/i-cant-get-over-the-death-of-my-cat-is-this-normal-c7bx85qmp
https://archive.is/K16xd

I can’t get over the death of my cat. Is this normal?
Buster the cat and Anna Maxted had ten magical years together. They were extremely close — yet she didn’t expect to feel quite so pole-axed by his death

Anna Maxted
Monday January 22 2024


My cat died. Poor, thin words that make it sound like nothing. “There’s been a death in the family,” my son says, which feels more appropriate. Five months ago now. And God, I’m so tediously weighted by grief. The joy in my day is diminished. I’m functional of course, normal service resumed. Socialising, working, parenting, smiling. Though watching unhealthy amounts of mediocre television to fill in the gaps. The cracks are where the dark gets in. I’m bland and grey inside.

Buster, a beautiful brawny Bengal, was my “soul cat” — and in our ten years together I was his person. We had such a bond. I loved his slightly difficult personality. He could be irritable with my husband, who wasn’t as doting, but so patient with our boys, who understood and adored him. And he had fans: after his death the little girls next door cried, and a gruff neighbour approached me to express his shock and tell me that Buster liked joining him and his grandson in games of kitchen football.

I’ve always been a cat worshipper. I remember staying at an aunt’s as a bereaved child — her Siamese’s soft leap onto my bed, her curling up and purring. It felt magical. My first two cats, bought as soon as I moved into my first flat, died after long, cosseted lives. They were our darlings, and the vet putting them to sleep was horrendous. But they didn’t suffer. I did, as did the children. (My middle son was six, and I blunderingly told him as we walked home from a playdate — he collapsed to the ground.)

Buster’s death is worse. I let him out early one Saturday in August, and when I opened the front door around 9am he didn’t come in for breakfast. It was unusual. I work from home and would spend most of my day close to him; I know his routine. I looked for him that afternoon and kept looking. My eldest son looked. My husband looked. I messaged our street WhatsApp. The next morning I was already outside looking when a neighbour messaged me.

On his run he saw a cat that resembled Buster “unconscious” on the pavement in the next road. “Do you mean dead?” I replied. The neighbour appeared and raced with me to the spot, and there was my beloved animal, my silly, loyal and loving friend, curled up by the road, lifeless. There was no visible clue as to what had killed him. All I could do was stroke his fur and cry: “Oh my God, Buster, I’m so sorry.” The poor neighbour, who had never met me before, escorted me home as I wailed.

They are so themselves, our animals, each such a unique character, and you feel, as my husband once put it, that “he wasn’t a cat — he was a person disguised as a cat”. And it’s so brutal. This violent end. I can’t believe this could happen to something so precious, who meant so much, was so prized and loved and looked after. He slept on my bed with me every night and it felt primal. I can’t believe I can’t have him back. There’s nothing as surreal as death. I’m restless, untethered; there’s no peace. I’m fighting with my own brain, as if there’s a way of undoing this if I struggle hard enough.

My youngest, 17, was on holiday when Buster died. He sobbed. He messaged me nonstop and came home early. His pain cut through me. “I’m worried about how much I will miss my boy when I get back.” “It’s just really scary.” “I haven’t got it in me to accept this.” “I will really miss that chatterbox.” “It makes me so angry that I can’t or couldn’t do anything to prevent this.” “I feel like I will do anything other than accept this as truth.” “It’s just so unfair on him.” And, “I just want to be with my boy just one more time.”

My husband convinced our sons (21, 19 and 17) that Buster, a bit of a fat lad, had a heart attack and died instantly, painlessly. It’s some consolation for them. I try to believe it. But Buster hadn’t been where he was found when I’d searched the day before. I call a pet bereavement helpline and the woman suggests he’d been clipped by a car — not the comfort she thinks it is. I feel so bad for not finding him. It was my duty to protect him.

I suggested this article because I want the grief acknowledged. I joke that he deserves a Times obituary. Also, people understanding helps, momentarily. But for months I couldn’t write about Buster. It’s easier to be numb. I thought this would be cathartic, but it’s too painful to face the feelings head-on. I feel like a stupid little knocked-down skittle. It’s like walking into the sea and being lifted, turned and tumbled by a wave, and you’re upside down underwater, flailing, helpless against something this fierce and unmerciful.

Like most, I’ve suffered multiple bereavements. Sometimes life feels like a fight against slow suffocation beneath an accumulation of losses. Now, this death — it feels like a terrible mistake that needs to be rectified. If only I could explain. No, see, this wasn’t just “a cat”. This was our boy. He was so important. We loved him so much. I feel wool-headed and so tired I could go to bed for the day. I am desolate and I don’t know how to recover. It’s like Waiting for Godot: you’re killing time, waiting for the thing that never happens (Buster coming back from the dead). “I don’t want Buster to come back from the dead,” my husband says mildly.

My sons and I list what we loved about Buster. He liked encouragement when getting comfortable, curling around making kittenish mews, and we’d say: “Park your bottom down.” His habit of sitting on a coat hanger or the edge of a book and me removing five items from beneath him. That he’d jump hard onto my stomach in the dead of night. That if needs must he’d pee in the bath plughole (so clever — some cats use the sofa). His enduring hatred of Heathcliff, our other cat, ex-feral, equally revered. That he’d butt his head into his bowl before you’d emptied the food into it. That he’d come indoors and flop on the floor. Also: eating prawns loudly; stretching out so long; finding a spot to sleep we didn’t know about; everyone in the street knowing and admiring him; being so gentle and handsome, letting you hug him then struggling away; seeming standoffish but actually loving and needing us and enjoying being with us. The happiness of opening the door and him appearing.

My sons send me videos, one of Buster engrossed in cat TV (YouTube footage of birds and squirrels) on a laptop. I zoom in on the thousands of photos so his face is cat-sized and I kiss the glass. It’s wonderful and terrible because I can spend time with him and I’m like an alcoholic wanting one last drink so reality is staved off a while longer. It’s confusing because he’s not receding into the past — I literally just saw him. And then I go to bed and he isn’t there. My 17-year-old’s girlfriend paints an incredible portrait of him, it’s like his soul is still with me.

I tell you this sounding mad and wild, but my mourning is quiet, necessarily tucked away, neatly folded, made small — one can’t bang on. Eventually I book a session with Wendy Andrew, the “pet loss lady” of the Scottish Pet Bereavement Counselling Service, who’s kind and wise. It helps. I derive comfort from seeing people in the street or online with their beloved animals. Impulsively I post about my sadness on a Bengal owners’ Facebook group and receive hundreds of heartfelt responses — I realise I’m not a weird anomaly. One woman, whose cat died in similar circumstances, writes: “I’m killed inside.” I reply to every one.

I’m defensive — ready to condemn anyone withholding sympathy for their failure of humanity. But I know others mourning people and I feel guilty. The truth is, not one person tries to minimise this. Friends hug me. Colleagues send notes. My son’s best mate turns up with flowers. Their generosity is so touching. And fellow cat lovers remind me that grief isn’t a competition. Never feel guilty for loving, one says. And I don’t, not really. I’ll always be grateful for what I had, for the great gift of that small animal, and all he was to me. Despite the emotional cost.
 
When someone or something you love dies, you never truly get over it. The pain scars over and will bleed if you pick at it. (Note: this may differ with really weird people.)

I hate the "fur baby" losers, but I'm not going to mock someone for being sad their buddy is gone.

Also, CatParty: we're glad you're back.
 
I don't think five months is a strangely long amount of time to still feel a lot of grief over a beloved pet dying

Never improving emotionally over a year or longer probably should get that looked at, cat dying triggering a larger depressive episode or something
 
I just had to put my dog to sleep on Saturday. He wasn't even six yet, but he started having seizures on Christmas day. Got him on medication and he was just finally getting over the side effects and becoming his old self again when he had another seizure last Monday morning. He never seemed to come back around, got worse each day, his whole body sagging and zoning out on his feet. I knew he wasn't going to recover. He was my best friend. My rock. My constant companion. Because I work odd hours, he was the only one who was always there for me. I had a pretty bad accident at work on Sunday and it was so hard knowing he wouldn't be there for me when I got home.

But I'm moving forward. As much as it hurts to have him gone and as badly as I miss him, I've got a life to live and a family to support and wallowing in grief will only hold me back. I'm grateful for the time I had with him and the special bond we had together. I've only ever had such a special bond with one other dog before. Instead of dwelling on the sadness I feel or the anger over having lost him so soon, I'd rather focus on how happy he made me and all the good times we had together.

Losing a pet or loved one is never easy, and it's OK to feel sorrow over their loss. But we also have to make the right choice to move on and live life, especially when we still have others that we love who are still with us. It's not fair to them to completely shut down because we're feeling sorry for ourselves.
 
I mean, people are lonelier than ever, and a lot of it has to do with animals just factually being better companions than most people.

Animals aren't going to harangue you for your personal beliefs or bugbears or habits or hobbies or political opinions. Animals don't have cameras on them ready to point at you when you've done something stupid or can be framed as unsavory. Animals aren't continually threatening your life or livelihood because you don't meet their moral standards. Animals don't believe in identity politics, so you can count on them being honest with you instead of sizing you up against the current zeitgeist.

Animals are the truest and best friends people have nowadays. If people out there really aren't getting over the deaths of their animal companions, it isn't hard to figure out why.
 
So speaking from experience. Yeah it's not normal to grieve that much. Take a day to get the most out and a week to get the rest out. After that move on. I still miss her from time to time but sounds like the author is a blubbering mess.

Honestly it sounds like the author has a lot of other unresolved issues that she's projecting onto the loss of the cat, if that makes sense. She mentions "multiple bereavements" without going into detail. It's like the loss of the cat was just the final straw. And I get the sense that part of the grief is about seeing her kids witness mortality and change, and not wanting to face the implications of that.

It's the kind of thing that once upon a time could have been helped by a trip to a therapist who could tell her "Look, this isn't really about your cat." Of course these days the therapist would just tell her she needs to castrate one of her sons, so I guess she'll have to deal with it by herself.
 
I had to put two dogs and a cat down over a 2 year period about twelve years ago. They were all old and pets I had since I was young. It was the right thing to do, but I don't think I ever moved on from the experience. I still have very clear memories of each of their last moments. I've never had a pet since because I don't know if I could do it again.
 
Similar situation. Cat for ten years had to put her down a couple months ago. The big C got her. Buried her in my backyard (200 bucks to get her ashes back in a previate cremation. 90 in a public cremation no ashes back. Fuck that.)
My cat Hotdog died at home last week. I keep expecting to see her on the couch when I get up in the morning.

I haven't been able to bury her yet because the ground's been frozen.

I also looked into cremation and yeah it's expensive.
 
My father died a couple of years ago, and I would have felt like a massive faggot to go on like the above about it, even though my dad deserved the feels.

I wasn’t impassive, either, it’s just there’s kind of a lie that it “helps more” if you burden other people with your own problems and make everything public.

I really despise that. It’s a form of vampirism, in my mind, to try to force your emotions on other people. If you’re sad, make other people sad. If you’re mad, make other people mad. That’s all bullshit.

I don’t associate with people who try to use others for their personal trust fall exercises. Carry your own burden.
 
My cat Hotdog died at home last week. I keep expecting to see her on the couch when I get up in the morning.

I still get that from time to time. Keep expecting to see my cat (Kat) in my office on the chair. Be talking to my wife and thought I saw her walk by in the corner of my eye. It's bittersweet to have reminders of her life but also her death.

Sorry for your loss friend.

I haven't been able to bury her yet because the ground's been frozen.

I had to deal with rocky ground. Probably took an hour or two just to get a couple feet in before I had to tell her I can't dig any further. Sweating it out in 45 degree weather. At least I had plenty of rocks use to make sure her grave is undisturbed. Don't need a bear or coyotes digging her up.
 
I feel this, though over time you do learn to accept death. When you have a pet that is part of your daily routine it really feels like a gut punch for a while when they arent there. It took me a while to stop getting the urge to ask my mom how my childhood cat was doing when we talked on the phone. Or to call to him when I went to visit. I lost my ferrets a couple years back too and because they required so much daily maintenence it felt very empty in the house for a while. Its probably unhealthy to grieve as if the death was fresh for an extended period of time, but losing a beloved pet does cause deep grief.
 
Animals don't believe in identity politics, so you can count on them being honest with you instead of sizing you up against the current zeitgeist.

We had to put our dog down last year simply due to failure to thrive.

Our Lab was really anxious. She loved being near me, but would also get freaked out and run away if I coughed. Then she'd stare at me from a safe distance as though I'd done something wrong. It would make me feel guilty.

The interesting thing was that she didn't give a shit if anyone in the house coughed. Someone else could be coughing up a lung and she wouldn't even wake up.
 
Ten years is not young.but it's not terriblly old for a cat either. I hope for both our sakes that my eldest lives longer than that. I can understand her grief in principle but she should make.an effort to have a little.more.compusure.
 
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Losing a friend, or loved one, or a pet fucking sucks. But the reality is get fucking used to it as our standards of living are stripped away over the next twenty years.
 
I kind of expected people to be assholes, not for this topic to end up so sad. You've made me feel feels kiwibros, I'm all too familiar with losing a pet.
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