
Thats awful.
My son James came up to me one day and said his rabbit, that he loved to bits wasnt very well.
James was about 9 at the time.
I went down (this was first thing before work) and he was right. Gpt ready for work with Floppy in my arms to keep him warm as he was cold. Rang work said I would be late. Took Sam my youngest to school and told them James would be late.
I took James to the vets with me and the vet discussed the options. he needed an xray and it didnt look good.
Took James to school as thought he would be better off there. Had a phone call at 11 for me to make the decision what to do. I chose PTS as it was best for Floppy.
Rang the school, told them the situation, went and picked Floppy up (who had been PTS) and then picked James up at lunch time. He spent half an hour cuddling his dead rabbit before we went down the bottom of the garden and buried him.
Took James back to school for the afternoon.
Now to me, I believe doing that helped him come to terms with his rabbit dying. If I had just brushed over it then I believe it would take him alot longer.
I CANT believe anyone would lie to a child about death :(
The only thing they are doing is making it harder as the children get older. And certainly a 14 year old woyld know that the dog was dead and surely they would resent the parents lying to them :(
My old girl Gemma seems to be getting older by the day, but when the time comes, I am hoping not for a while yet, my children will KNOW what is going on, and probably even come to the crematorium with me, as she has been with them all thier lives.
Lea.