Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Why Losing a Dog Can Be Harder Than Losing a Relative or Friend
The-Conversation
By The Conversation
Published 6 years ago on
April 3, 2018

Share

Recently, my wife and I went through one of the more excruciating experiences of our lives – the euthanasia of our beloved dog, Murphy. I remember making eye contact with Murphy moments before she took her last breath – she flashed me a look that was an endearing blend of confusion and the reassurance that everyone was ok because we were both by her side.

When people who have never had a dog see their dog-owning friends mourn the loss of a pet, they probably think it’s all a bit of an overreaction; after all, it’s “just a dog.”

Opinion

Frank T. McAndrew

However, those who have loved a dog know the truth: Your own pet is never “just a dog.”

Many times, I’ve had friends guiltily confide to me that they grieved more over the loss of a dog than over the loss of friends or relatives. Research has confirmed that for most people, the loss of a dog is, in almost every way, comparable to the loss of a human loved one. Unfortunately, there’s little in our cultural playbook – no grief rituals, no obituary in the local newspaper, no religious service – to help us get through the loss of a pet, which can make us feel more than a bit embarrassed to show too much public grief over our dead dogs.

Perhaps if people realized just how strong and intense the bond is between people and their dogs, such grief would become more widely accepted. This would greatly help dog owners to integrate the death into their lives and help them move forward.

An Interspecies Bond Like No Other

What is it about dogs, exactly, that make humans bond so closely with them?

The loss of a dog can also seriously disrupt an owner’s daily routine more profoundly than the loss of most friends and relatives.

For starters, dogs have had to adapt to living with humans over the past 10,000 years. And they’ve done it very well: They’re the only animal to have evolved specifically to be our companions and friends. Anthropologist Brian Hare has developed the “Domestication Hypothesis” to explain how dogs morphed from their grey wolf ancestors into the socially skilled animals that we now interact with in very much the same way as we interact with other people.

Perhaps one reason our relationships with dogs can be even more satisfying than our human relationships is that dogs provide us with such unconditional, uncritical positive feedback. (As the old saying goes, “May I become the kind of person that my dog thinks I already am.”)

This is no accident. They have been selectively bred through generations to pay attention to people, and MRI scans show that dog brains respond to praise from their owners just as strongly as they do to food (and for some dogs, praise is an even more effective incentive than food). Dogs recognize people and can learn to interpret human emotional states from facial expression alone. Scientific studies also indicate that dogs can understand human intentions, try to help their owners and even avoid people who don’t cooperate with their owners or treat them well.

Not surprisingly, humans respond positively to such unrequited affection, assistance and loyalty. Just looking at dogs can make people smile. Dog owners score higher on measures of well-being and they are happier, on average, than people who own cats or no pets at all.

Like a Family Member

Our strong attachment to dogs was subtly revealed in a recent study of “misnaming.” Misnaming happens when you call someone by the wrong name, like when parents mistakenly calls one of their kids by a sibling’s name. It turns out that the name of the family dog also gets confused with human family members, indicating that the dog’s name is being pulled from the same cognitive pool that contains other members of the family. (Curiously, the same thing rarely happens with cat names.)

It’s no wonder dog owners miss them so much when they’re gone.

The loss of a dog is painful because owners aren’t just losing the pet. It could mean the loss of a source of unconditional love. / Shutterstock

Psychologist Julie Axelrod has pointed out that the loss of a dog is so painful because owners aren’t just losing the pet. It could mean the loss of a source of unconditional love, a primary companion who provides security and comfort, and maybe even a protégé that’s been mentored like a child.

The loss of a dog can also seriously disrupt an owner’s daily routine more profoundly than the loss of most friends and relatives. For owners, their daily schedules – even their vacation plans – can revolve around the needs of their pets. Changes in lifestyle and routine are some of the primary sources of stress.

According to a recent survey, many bereaved pet owners will even mistakenly interpret ambiguous sights and sounds as the movements, pants and whimpers of the deceased pet. This is most likely to happen shortly after the death of the pet, especially among owners who had very high levels of attachment to their pets.

While the death of a dog is horrible, dog owners have become so accustomed to the reassuring and nonjudgmental presence of their canine companions that, more often than not, they’ll eventually get a new one.

The ConversationSo yes, I miss my dog. But I’m sure that I’ll be putting myself through this ordeal again in the years to come.

Frank T. McAndrew, Cornelia H. Dudley Professor of Psychology, Knox College

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

 

DON'T MISS

After Long Drawn-Out Drama, Parlier Fires City Attorney Costanzo

DON'T MISS

Sierra Unified Puts School Bond Measure on the Ballot for First Time Ever

DON'T MISS

US Rep. Ilhan Omar, a Member of the Progressive ‘Squad,’ Wins Democratic Primary in Minnesota

DON'T MISS

Huge Fentanyl Seizures ‘Tip of the Iceberg’ of What’s Coming: Sheriff Zanoni

DON'T MISS

Arizona Will Vote on Abortion in November: Could That Give Democrats an Edge?

DON'T MISS

Clovis Unified Doubles Down on Cellphone Restrictions. Will Other Local Districts Follow?

DON'T MISS

Officer Faces Murder Charge in Shooting of Pregnant Black Woman Who Was Accused of Shoplifting

DON'T MISS

Benny Morris Calls Genocide Accusations ‘Absurd’ in Debate with Mehdi Hasan

DON'T MISS

San Francisco Prosecutors Charge 26 Pro-Palestinian Demonstrators Who Blocked Golden Gate Bridge

DON'T MISS

California Task Force Seizes 2.2 Million Cannabis Packages Mimicking Kids’ Candy

UP NEXT

Sierra Unified Puts School Bond Measure on the Ballot for First Time Ever

UP NEXT

US Rep. Ilhan Omar, a Member of the Progressive ‘Squad,’ Wins Democratic Primary in Minnesota

UP NEXT

Huge Fentanyl Seizures ‘Tip of the Iceberg’ of What’s Coming: Sheriff Zanoni

UP NEXT

Arizona Will Vote on Abortion in November: Could That Give Democrats an Edge?

UP NEXT

Clovis Unified Doubles Down on Cellphone Restrictions. Will Other Local Districts Follow?

UP NEXT

Officer Faces Murder Charge in Shooting of Pregnant Black Woman Who Was Accused of Shoplifting

UP NEXT

San Francisco Prosecutors Charge 26 Pro-Palestinian Demonstrators Who Blocked Golden Gate Bridge

UP NEXT

California Task Force Seizes 2.2 Million Cannabis Packages Mimicking Kids’ Candy

UP NEXT

Clovis Approves Live-In Terminal Care Facility Over Neighbors’ Objections

UP NEXT

Police Investigate Fatal Shooting in Southeast Fresno

Huge Fentanyl Seizures ‘Tip of the Iceberg’ of What’s Coming: Sheriff Zanoni

14 hours ago

Arizona Will Vote on Abortion in November: Could That Give Democrats an Edge?

15 hours ago

Clovis Unified Doubles Down on Cellphone Restrictions. Will Other Local Districts Follow?

16 hours ago

Officer Faces Murder Charge in Shooting of Pregnant Black Woman Who Was Accused of Shoplifting

16 hours ago

Benny Morris Calls Genocide Accusations ‘Absurd’ in Debate with Mehdi Hasan

16 hours ago

San Francisco Prosecutors Charge 26 Pro-Palestinian Demonstrators Who Blocked Golden Gate Bridge

16 hours ago

California Task Force Seizes 2.2 Million Cannabis Packages Mimicking Kids’ Candy

16 hours ago

Clovis Approves Live-In Terminal Care Facility Over Neighbors’ Objections

17 hours ago

Police Investigate Fatal Shooting in Southeast Fresno

17 hours ago

Newsom Tries Shifting Blame for Homelessness Crisis to Local Officials

17 hours ago

After Long Drawn-Out Drama, Parlier Fires City Attorney Costanzo

After a long drama months in the making, the city of Parlier fired its attorney, Neal Costanzo. The 4-1 vote out of closed session at a spec...

27 mins ago

27 mins ago

After Long Drawn-Out Drama, Parlier Fires City Attorney Costanzo

32 mins ago

Sierra Unified Puts School Bond Measure on the Ballot for First Time Ever

10 hours ago

US Rep. Ilhan Omar, a Member of the Progressive ‘Squad,’ Wins Democratic Primary in Minnesota

14 hours ago

Huge Fentanyl Seizures ‘Tip of the Iceberg’ of What’s Coming: Sheriff Zanoni

15 hours ago

Arizona Will Vote on Abortion in November: Could That Give Democrats an Edge?

16 hours ago

Clovis Unified Doubles Down on Cellphone Restrictions. Will Other Local Districts Follow?

16 hours ago

Officer Faces Murder Charge in Shooting of Pregnant Black Woman Who Was Accused of Shoplifting

16 hours ago

Benny Morris Calls Genocide Accusations ‘Absurd’ in Debate with Mehdi Hasan

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend