Ethos Veterinary Health
  • Veterinary Teams
    • Ethos Discovery
    • Clinical Studies
    • VetBloom CE
    • Ethos is Hiring
    • Learning & Development
  • About Us
    • About Us
    • Executive Team
    • Our Hospitals
  • Advancing Medicine
    • Meet Our Medical Leadership Team
    • Medical Excellence
    • Medical Operations
    • New Product Committee
    • Specialty Advisory Board
    • Veterinary Science Consultancy
    • Blood Bank Programs
    • Clinical Studies
      • Open & Enrolling Studies
      • FAQs: Clinical Studies at Ethos
    • Ethos Discovery
  • Ethos Updates
  • Careers + Development
    • Ethos is Hiring
      • Career Opportunities
      • Employee Benefits
      • Meet Our Talent Teams
      • Referral Program
    • Learning & Development
    • VetBloom
    • Careers Unleashed
    • Veterinary Nursing Programs
      • ER Immerse Nursing
      • Approved Veterinary Assistant (AVA) Program
      • RECOVER Certification
      • Fear Free Certification
    • Veterinary Student Programs
      • Vet Student Externships
    • Veterinary Programs
      • Internship and Residency Programs
      • ER Immerse
      • ER ABVP
      • 6 Tips for a Stress-Free VIRMP Application Process
    • Veterinary Conferences
Ethos Veterinary Health
  • About Us
    • About Us
    • Executive Team
    • Our Hospitals
  • Advancing Medicine
    • Meet Our Medical Leadership Team
    • Medical Excellence
    • Medical Operations
    • New Product Committee
    • Specialty Advisory Board
    • Veterinary Science Consultancy
    • Blood Bank Programs
    • Clinical Studies
      • Open & Enrolling Studies
      • FAQs: Clinical Studies at Ethos
    • Ethos Discovery
  • Ethos Updates
  • Careers + Development
    • Ethos is Hiring
      • Career Opportunities
      • Employee Benefits
      • Meet Our Talent Teams
      • Referral Program
    • Learning & Development
    • VetBloom
    • Careers Unleashed
    • Veterinary Nursing Programs
      • ER Immerse Nursing
      • Approved Veterinary Assistant (AVA) Program
      • RECOVER Certification
      • Fear Free Certification
    • Veterinary Student Programs
      • Vet Student Externships
    • Veterinary Programs
      • Internship and Residency Programs
      • ER Immerse
      • ER ABVP
      • 6 Tips for a Stress-Free VIRMP Application Process
    • Veterinary Conferences
  • Veterinary Teams
    • Ethos Discovery
    • Clinical Studies
    • VetBloom CE
    • Ethos is Hiring
    • Learning & Development

Our Blogs

How to Memorialize a Pet: 5 Meaningful Ways

Man and dog sitting on hill looking out

By Vickie Jean, Client Care Hospital Service Manager PESCM

After the loss of a pet, owners must make some tough decisions: Burial or cremation? Wooden box or urn? Save ashes or scatter them?

Once home, there are bowls, beds, and toys to toss or donate, and they remind us that something special has been lost and is not coming back. There may be other household pets looking for their friend, not understanding where they have gone. It’s a lot to handle, and after the immediate decisions are made, there’s a hole left that is hard to know how to fill.

Owners may find themselves feeling alone in this grief and confusion, not knowing how to express to friends and family their devastation and – most important for processing grief – how to find a meaningful way to remember their pet.

Before facing these feelings head-on, it’s a good idea to think about your special relationship to your pet, consider how you process grief and what might help in making you feel close to them once they are gone. Because while loss is universal, recovering from loss is extremely personal.

Here are five ideas for memorializing your pet in a way that may resonate with you:

Make Something

Are you someone who journals or draws to process your feelings? You may consider making your own memorial. Painting a picture, pasting together a photo collage, or even just creating a memorial shelf with special items – having a physical manifestation of your feelings, made by your own hands and heart, can be incredibly healing. Make it a family project to help children understand that even if a pet is gone, their essence can be celebrated in creative ways, and memory held close.

Commission Something

There are countless things to order online that bring your pet’s memory to life in unique and stylish ways. A professional painting done from a photo; ashes put into a necklace pendant; your pet’s face embroidered on a pillow – the choices are endless. Having something physical made in your pet’s image can give you something to hold onto – literally and figuratively – while you mourn and move forward.

Plant Something

A beautiful way to remember your pet is to use a biodegradable urn and plant your pet’s ashes along with a new tree or flowering bush. What can be better than watching a tree grow, or flowers bloom, while you remember your pet, who has been rejoined nature in a new form? This is another great family activity for celebrating life, death, and renewal.

Do Something

Was your relationship with your pet all about activities? Did you run together, go to the beach every weekend, or take long walks through the neighborhood each evening after dinner? You may feel closest to them by continuing to do these things in celebration of their memory. Exercise and connection with the outdoors can be a great salve for grief and loss and making a point of continuing to enjoy the things you loved doing with your pet, even though they are gone, reaffirms the joy you shared together.

Donate Something

If you want to honor your pet’s memory by donating to your local humane society – time or money – you can do so in your pet’s name. Especially for owners of rescue pets, this can be a special way to pay it forward, allow yourself some time with animals without committing to getting a new pet before you are ready, and further the likelihood of another lucky person having the opportunity to experience life with a wonderful rescue pet. You may also donate in your pet’s name to other places, like veterinary funds, foster funds – there are many animal organizations in need of your help.

Losing a pet is painful. But walking through that pain with their memories intact – within a painting, a tree, a daily run – is not only a gift to your pet, but one to yourself.

 

Share

Related Posts

  • Emotional Before and After Stories: Pitbulls and Other Pets
    Read Article
  • 7 Important Lessons We Should Learn From Senior Pets
    Read Article
  • Caring for an Ill Senior Cat and the Lessons I Learned Along the Way
    Read Article
  • Living with a Senior Dog: The Signs of an Aging Pet & Everything That Comes With It
    Read Article
  • How to Include Your Pet in Your Wedding (7 Fun Ways)
    Read Article
  • 5 Reasons to Have a Primary Veterinarian
    Read Article
Ethos Veterinary Health
  • Veterinary Teams
    • Ethos Discovery
    • Clinical Studies
    • VetBloom CE
    • Ethos is Hiring
    • Learning & Development
© 2025 Ethos Veterinary Health Privacy Policy
Website Design by Jackrabbit