• @[email protected]
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    296 days ago

    When I had to put our golden retriever down (15 years old, cancer) we called an in-home vet to do it since my dog hated the vet with a vengeance. She would get anxious in the car if we even took the vet’s freeway exit. We cooked her an entire pack of bacon, and sat there feeding it to her while the vet did their thing. It’s a tough thing to go through, but the assurance that my dog wasn’t scared on her way out was worth it

    • @[email protected]
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      96 days ago

      Did the same for our cat, minus the meal, because she couldn’t eat. She hated trips to the vet, and it was honestly easier on both of us not having to go somewhere, and getting to be at home. Will do it again for the next cat, unless he just disappears one day.

  • @[email protected]
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    107 days ago

    I’m certain that meal was created with the kind of precision and accuracy to which brain surgeons aspire.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 days ago

    I choose to believe the dog is alive and well. I think they wrote “last meal for our dog” as an indication of order (e.g. the last item on the list) to ensure that the cook took extra care to make sure there is no seasonings and so it could be prepped rarer than one would typically make for human consumption.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 days ago

      This happened near me. It made the rounds on the local Facebook page with a photo of the dog eating the meal.

  • Haess
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    787 days ago

    My two are currently sleeping at the foot of the bed, I don’t even want to think about that inevitable day.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      797 days ago

      I’m a therapist, and one of my clients is putting her dog to sleep this week. Her first time. She cried through the whole session. And this was the first time I ever cried in session myself in 5 years. And I’ve heard some shit… but this got to me.

      • @[email protected]
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        467 days ago

        I started sobbing in front of my manager at work when I was telling him I needed to go home to be with my dog for his last day because I just gotten the call from the vet that we needed to put him down. Absolute no fucking control, I was a mess. Literally got four words in and just exploded

        • @[email protected]
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          107 days ago

          I keep wondering how I’m going to tell my boss when this happens because I’m not going to be able to come into work for the day and I hope he’s not going to belittle me for feeling this way about my pet. Because he’s not just an animal but my family.

          • @[email protected]
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            47 days ago

            I got my first dog, a 8 week old puppy, in December. My wife and, both 37, don’t have kids and have decided to not have any. The dog is an animal, we both know this, but he’s also out son!

      • @[email protected]
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        237 days ago

        Thank you for being there for them. I had to put down my soul pet, my cat of 20 years, in October. First time losing my pet as opposed to the family’s. It’s the hardest thing I’ve ever been through. Thankfully I was seeing a counselor who helped me through the worst of it and I’m so grateful to her. She cried too, and it touched me that she could empathize so deeply with what I was feeling.

        When I talked about losing my kitty on here, someone said the sweetest thing that will always stay with me, “May her sunspot never move and may she rest in play.”

        Being a cat person, I don’t know how relevant the sunspot part would be to a dog, but I feel like “rest in play” is such a lovely way to think about any pet’s passing.

        • @[email protected]
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          147 days ago

          My senior tiny dog loves his sunspot, so that tracks for me.

          It’s been about 5 years since we put down his roommate. It is now bittersweet. We put together a memory photo book for her and it helps to sit down and remember the good things.

          • @[email protected]
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            77 days ago

            I’m on medical leave from work and made a list of low-energy things I could do while recovering from surgery, and making a memory photo book is on that list! I’m also thinking about getting a customized stuffed animal that looks like my girl. It’s so hard to lose them.

            • @[email protected]OP
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              47 days ago

              We did the customized stuffed animal for one of our late dogs (only one of them because she was my husband’s first. They are not cheap). It looks awesome and is a great memento.

        • @[email protected]
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          47 days ago

          “May her sunspot never move and may she rest in play.”

          Not while me and Kitty are in the dusty room of the house, please.

      • BigFig
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        67 days ago

        Man, my therapist said “damn that sucks” and changed the subject…they’re not an “animal person”

          • @[email protected]OP
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            27 days ago

            I would second this. I heard many stories from clients where I couldn’t relate personally, but the whole point of empathy is to put yourself in that person’s shoes and say “Ok, if I were you in this situation, I’d feel the same way you do.”

            • @[email protected]
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              47 days ago

              Thats true I’ve had too many therapist pity me instead of empathize with me. I’ve gotten enough pity through out my life.

    • Rhaedas
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      147 days ago

      The only bright spot in thinking back to the various pets I’ve had to let go is that I know they lived great lives in the time we cared for them, and the end only came because of some reason that had made their living painful. So don’t worry about that day, focus on the time now with them because that’s what you’ll remember.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        7 days ago

        This is so true. My husband and I adopted 3 seniors dogs a few years ago because they don’t get adopted often, and we wanted to make their last few years good. One was abandoned by her owners at 11 years old because she was “too old.”

        You should have seen her shaking like a leaf in the shelter cage. She HATED it there. As soon as we took her home, she transformed. One of the most loving dogs I’ve ever owned.

        Anyway, my point is, those grey muzzles were only with us for a few years, but I wouldn’t exchange that experience for anything else. Totally worth the heartbreak.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 days ago

    Lol ultimate life hack? Just add this comment to every order you make…

    Joking of course.

  • HubertManne
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    177 days ago

    We picked up ours a beef sandwich and had it baptized. We were not sure if she would eat it because she was not eating anything but it was a nice day and we went to the forest preserve and she managed to eat the whole thing over a bit of time.

      • HubertManne
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        247 days ago

        its a term for them taking the entire sandwich and dunking it in the big vat of Au jus.

          • HubertManne
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            37 days ago

            it appears on the menu for buona beef. dry, normal, dipped, baptized

            • @[email protected]
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              26 days ago

              And now ill add that to a list of places i want to try if I’m ever anywhere near chicago (seems like thats where the chain is?) 😋

              • HubertManne
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                16 days ago

                I actually thought the chain was more far flung. Its actually sorta a fair beef, there is a lot better in the area but they are not chains.

  • @[email protected]
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    177 days ago

    My old manimal’s last meal was a burger from McDonalds. He ate it, then ate the napkins.

    Miss the old fella.

  • That Weird Vegan
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    166 days ago

    If I ever need to euthanise my baby girl kitty, I will make her SO much vegemite toast for her final meal. She loves it. I don’t give her much though, because I don’t imagine that vegemite is the healthiest thing a cat can eat.

  • @[email protected]
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    127 days ago

    Blind and old cat, last meal, I gave him sour creme and onion chips.

    Couldn’t smell it. Did one lick and then snuggled with the bag.

    He was a chip goblin all of his life. And I hope he’s stealing chips from Angels in Cat Valhalla.

  • @[email protected]
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    617 days ago

    We had an old foster who stuck with us and eventually Louise became ours. We had her for 2 years before her kidneys quit on her. With her appointment for the next day, we ran to every pet store we could and asked for the best treats they had. One store asked what we meant by best and we said “most unhealthy, best tasting dog junk food we can get.”

    They had immediate suspicions, “What do you mean unhealthy?”

    “Our dog is going to be put down tomorrow and we want to give her the best going away feast she can handle.”

    The lady understood and ran to the back and returned with two more people. They knew the assignment. The five of us combed the entire store for bacon and steak and stuffed treats the likes of which Louise had never seen. She went out full and as happy as she could be.

    Those end of life meals make a big difference to everyone involved. It’s celebrating their life.