• Oct 13, 2025

Back Then, My Abby Legacy Wall

It has been exactly four months since my beloved dog left me.

In these four months, my life has turned upside down. Years ago, I had already been preparing myself mentally for my dog’s passing—after all, he was very old. But when the day of our separation truly came, all that preparation collapsed.

When I stroked his head and watched him take a long breath, then slowly stop breathing, those images kept replaying in my mind. They made me cry, ache, and even tremble. I began to understand why some owners can’t bear to stay when their dogs are dying. I once swore I would be there with him until his last moment, but now I understand—it’s too cruel a process, one that leaves a long and painful trauma.

 

After my dog passed, during the first stage

I couldn’t eat or sleep. I couldn’t work, didn’t want to talk, and had no strength even to walk. I kept crying nonstop. I couldn’t find a reason not to want to follow him.

In the second stage, I started drinking heavily

 There was a time when I would start drinking right after waking up—drink until I passed out, wake up, and drink again. I didn’t want to face the world. I didn’t even want to open the curtains. Seeing the bustling streets and the spring blossoms outside only made me sadder. I kept thinking, why has the world stayed the same, while my child is gone?

In the third stage, I began to binge eat

It felt like there was a huge hole inside me that nothing could fill. I looked like I could function normally at work, but I often spaced out, stared blankly, and rarely smiled. I was constantly cold—even in warm weather, I would shiver. My weight increased rapidly, but I didn’t care. I was unkempt every day. The only thing that interested me was getting tattoos—the pain brought me brief moments of peace.

Now I’m in the fourth stage. I work normally, eat normally, talk normally, and still drink every day. I now equally dislike every human being.

The biggest impact of losing my dog is that I no longer believe in love. Because I have felt my dog’s love, I now know what love truly is. And the truth is—no human being will ever love me like that, and I will never be able to love a human the way I loved my dog. That realization feels hopeless.

Now, when I walk down the street and see others walking their dogs, I feel an overwhelming envy. I can’t help but stare at them, until they start to feel uncomfortable under my gaze. In my heart, I think—every owner who still has their dog doesn’t know how lucky they are in their ordinary days. But one day, they will part too. Happiness is as fleeting as fireworks. A dog’s life lasts only over a decade, a blink of an eye.

And at the time, it all just seemed so ordinary.

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🌸 Mourning Record 🌸

2025-10-16 Susan Webb donated a memory flower
2025-10-17 Alicia Ellis donated a memory ball
2025-10-17 Charlotte Clark donated a soul candle
2025-10-20 Valentina Solomon donated two memory flowers
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