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Parting With pets
The Straits Times
|October 23, 2024
More owners are seeking therapy to cope with grief when their pet dies, and honouring the memory of their animal pals with customised keepsakes
 
 When Ms Sherri Ashlee Toh's beloved Scottish straight cat Ellie had to be put down due to a brain tumour in June, she was lost and heartbroken.
"It felt like a piece of me was missing," she recalls, describing how she struggled to accept the five-year-old's sudden death.
Every time she thought she was healing, a wave of grief would pull her under again.
"I couldn't look at his photos and videos without feeling like my heart was being torn apart. But at the same time, I longed to see his face again," says Ms Toh, a content creator.
Two weeks after he died, she went on a trip to Australia with her partner and close friends, hoping a change of scenery would provide some comfort. But the weight of Ellie's absence remained when she returned to Singapore.
In an effort to keep him close, she got a tattoo of his face on her forearm, one month after his death.
After Ellie's death, Ms Toh, her family and close friends held a private funeral where they penned heartfelt letters, which were cremated alongside his body. His ashes now rest in an urn on her bedside table, which she says "offers a sense of closeness".
She kept some of his fur and made a clay mould of his paw prints.
Ms Toh also spent $600 on a life-size stuffed toy that resembles Ellie. The toy has a recording of Ellie's purrs. "It's a source of comfort on particularly rough days," says Ms Toh.
Ms Evonne Lek, a systemic psychotherapist at Reconnect Psychology & Family Therapy, says for many people, a pet is very much a loved family member and has the same importance as a child or a sibling.
As a result, owners often experience deep grief when their pet dies because pets are seen as beloved companions which offer unconditional love, emotional support and a sense of comfort, say experts.
There is greater awareness of the depth of this loss, with more people seeking support to cope with the death of their pets.
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