You never get over it you just learn to live with it. My dad has been gone for almost six years now and I am not over it at all. I also take in abused, stray and shelter animals and the consequences of that is that in time I know they will die and my animals are my life. A part of me died with my father and I can't get it back.
http://www.cancersurvivors.org/Coping/end%20term/stages.htm
2007-02-19 23:39:11
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answer #1
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answered by Lynnemarie 6
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It may sound cliche but Time heals all wounds. I lost my husband 5 years ago and although I still miss him dearly It does grow easier.
Even if it an animal you have lost they are still loved ones and it still hurts. Talking about your lost loved one I found is the best way to come to terms with the loss don't ever bottle it in. You go through so many emotions also denial, anger, sorrow and they will change from day to day. Some days will be easier that others and small things people say or do, places sounds or smells are likely to set you off in a wave of tears however let these emotions flow and don't try to hide them or pretend to be strong, go with the flow and let the grieving process take it's course every one around you will understand your ups and downs.
2007-02-19 23:44:25
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I have lost many loved ones, the pain is always difficult to bear. My grandparents all passed away before I ever made it to my teens, so I grew up never knowing them. My aunt died 18 months ago after a 15 year bout with cancer. My fiance shot himself almost 25 years ago, and his death was probably the hardest for me to get over. Most of my friends from my youth are gone, taken by car accidents, drugs, suicide and murder. Cancer took a few of them. I was five months pregnant when I lost a child.
I don't know how I ever got through these times of grief, but I did. We all do. The grieving process takes a year or more, with myriad emotions ranging from denial and anger to hopelessness and despair. Some days you feel just fine and then the smallest memory (those tend to be the most precious) sets the tears flowing. But you cope because life demands that of you.
At some point, you will find that you have gone an entire day without thinking of the one you have lost, and you realize then that the healing has begun. At that point the grief seems to be dulled just a little, and each day after that becomes easier.
What's even worse than losing a loved one to death is not knowing them while they are alive. My father disowned me 28 years ago, when I became an atheist. That's over a quarter of a century, an awfully long time, and I can count on one hand the number of times we've seen each other. Our conversations are short and tense, with neither of us knowing how to talk to the other. We have missed out on the best years of our lives, my children don't even know him.
He's in his 80's now, his health is poor, he suffers dementia. It's too late to set things right with him, and that breaks my heart because I waited too long. I'll never know him, and of both my parents I loved him the most.
What I'm trying to say is, rather than dwell on those we have lost, we should spend more time with those who are still with us. Someday soon, it will be too late.
Please accept my condolences for your loss.
2007-02-19 23:40:28
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answer #3
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answered by iamnoone 7
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That's a tough question. No easy answer. It just takes time and you should keep yourself as busy as possible so you don't think about the loss, because it will only make you feel more depressed. Spend time with family and friends. Their support is vital at such a bad time in your life.
2007-02-19 23:38:01
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answer #4
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answered by Tina 3
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there is complaint councilors which you will confer with that would help yet do no longer be shocked if it takes you an entire year to heal or maybe longer. surely everyone seems to be diverse whilst it contains the therapeutic technique after a pal has surpassed on. I lost an uncle an aunt and a grandfather plus my brother who i grew to become into rather on the brink of all with in months of another. I wasn't to close with my uncle and aunt and that i assume my grandfather i purely envisioned him to circulate faster or later so i wasn't all that on the brink of him to boot so their deaths rather did no longer result me all that plenty yet whilst my brother surpassed on at in basic terms 27 years previous i grew to become into completely devastated i went right into a deep melancholy and my existence has rather on no account been the comparable because its been almost 4 years because his loss of existence and im nonetheless to immediately suffering granted its no longer as undesirable now because it grew to become into the 1st year the 1st year grew to become into the worst it progressively have been given slightly greater ideal as time went on, yet I even have basically blanked out 2 years of my existence no longer all of it yet i do no longer undergo in recommendations distinctive what i did in those 2 years. I had given up on distinctive issues that i take advantage of to love to do and attempting to get decrease back into them has rather been a project. I did see a complaint councilor presently after he surpassed yet that did no longer help me i had to heal by myself and in a feeling im nonetheless therapeutic. once you lose somebody on the brink of you it does take time to heal, how plenty time relies upon on the guy.
2016-12-18 07:03:12
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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I think, more than anything, you allow yourself to grieve. It doesn't matter if it's a person, a pet, or a plant - if you loved it and it dies, then grief is a natural response; give yourself the time and space to grieve its loss.
2007-02-19 23:41:09
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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cherish the times memories times you have had and shared with themm. last winter my dad . dieed in florida of emphesemia. juust before he died he layed in a hospital just short of his 70th birthday as a materr of fact 2 days short of turning 70. i held his hand as he lay dying and his last words were memorabiale. he was a heavy smoker most of his life. he sat up in the bed and sputterted out with oxygen tubes runing up his nose. he loked at me and said pointing at his foreheadd you know they can put all the junke they want on the market pills this that. he was talking about patches pills too help you quit smoking. anyways he says its all up here, in your head. 2 minutes later he was gone. all of a sudenn the bitternes that i had for him as a child wrre gone, we never were really raised around him growing up, my mother was shacking up with another younger man fathered bye two other step brothers. i thought i never truly, knew my real dad. divorce was out of the question in his mind back then. ounce there gone, like i thought if only i had truly knew him holding his dying hand in that hospital, bed. years later as i was climbing the corporate lattter, i never took the time too spend with him--
2007-02-19 23:53:01
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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we bury the animal or person thats it the maximum we can do when theyre dead or if theyre lost in any other way then just think bout em cry a bit and then forget it!
2007-02-19 23:37:16
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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You have to find sumone or sum other animal to fill up the gap of the one you have lost.
2007-02-19 23:37:23
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answer #9
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answered by medhruv 4
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Think of them as a butterfly that has broken free of their cocoon. Butterflys are free to fly, fly away, fly, fly. Elton John Song.
2007-02-19 23:38:02
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answer #10
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answered by LuckyChucky 5
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