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Every dog owner has to deal with this, and no matter how many dogs you have had in your life, it never gets easier. At six years old, we experienced our first pet passing over the rainbow bridge. Our parents took us and our sister, held our hands, and insisted we were in the room when it happened. They told us that, as sad as this is, it is not something to be afraid of. That it was necessary to go through this pain so we would appreciate what we had when we had it. We're very grateful that our parents forced us to be there, to cry and wail, for even days after it happened. But a few weeks later, they also took us to look at puppies that were up for adoption, and we fell in love again.
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It's easy to give advice, but the hardest thing to do is to take your own. Why? We're not therapists, but we think it has to do with change. It's easy to see how making a change can be better for someone else, but to actually be the one making the change takes courage to leave what is comfortable, even if it's not good for you. But oftentimes, we connect with things because we feel a kinship to them, and by helping them heal themselves, you can actually heal the part of you that's hurting as well. We're not so different, in the end.
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