The Funeral.com Journal
Resources to help you create tributes as unique as the people (and pets) you love. Learn how engraving, photos, colors, and symbols add meaning; discover scattering rituals and at-home memorial ideas. We focus on the details that matter—because small choices can carry a lifetime of comfort.
Is It Good To Keep Dog Ashes at Home?
For many families, keeping ashes at home is not only “good,” it’s deeply comforting. When a dog has been part of your daily rhythm, morning routines, quiet evenings, the small...
Dog Urns by Breed: Choosing a Memorial That Feels Like Them
If you’re searching for dog urns by breed, you’re not just looking for a container. You want something that quietly says, “That’s my dog.” The tilt of the head, the...
Journaling Prompts to Help Process the Loss of a Companion Animal
The day you bring your pet’s ashes home is often quieter than you expect. Not quieter emotionally—just quieter in the house. The leash still hangs by the door. The water...
Adopting After Loss: Dealing with the Fear of Losing Another
The first time you consider adopting again after a profound pet loss, the fear doesn’t usually announce itself with drama. It arrives quietly, disguised as “being responsible,” as “doing more...
Small Animal Loss: Grieving Hamsters, Rats, and Guinea Pigs
The first thing most people notice isn’t the moment your small pet dies. It’s the quiet that follows. The wheel doesn’t turn at midnight. The water bottle stays perfectly still....
Commissioning Pet Portraits: How to Choose the Right Artist
The first time you notice the empty spot is rarely the moment you expect. It might be the kitchen mat that stays clean, the leash hook that never moves, or...
Introducing a New Pet to a Grieving Pack: Timing and Territory
The first time you notice it, it’s something small. A dog who used to sprint to the door when you picked up the leash now lifts their head, pauses, and...
Men and Pet Loss: Breaking the Stigma of Male Grief
He didn’t cry at the vet’s office. He stood straight, signed the paperwork, carried the leash out like it still had a job to do—and then he drove home with...
Pet Loss and Workplace Compassion: How Employers Can Support Staff
When an employee returns to work after losing a pet, the grief often arrives quietly first. It shows up in small pauses over email, in a sudden need to step...
Grieving a Childhood Pet as an Adult: Why the Pain Resurfaces
You can be decades removed from the day you said goodbye, and still be caught off guard by how quickly your chest tightens when you see a dog that looks...
When the Vet Bill Comes After the Loss: Financial Stress and Grief
The first days after a pet dies can feel like walking through fog. You might still be stepping around the food bowl out of habit, still listening for the familiar...
Do Animals Go to Heaven? Faith Perspectives, Grief, and What to Do When an Animal Dies
This article explores how different faith traditions and spiritual viewpoints answer the question “do animals go to heaven?” while also offering practical guidance on what to do when a pet...
How to Choose a Pet Portrait, Paw Print, or Jewelry Memorial That Feels Personal
The house can feel impossibly quiet after a pet is gone. Their bowl is still in the same place. The leash is still hanging by the door. And then, at...
The Quality of Life Scale: An Objective Tool for a Subjective Heartbreak
There’s a particular kind of exhaustion that comes with loving a pet who is declining. Not the obvious tiredness of interrupted sleep or extra appointments, but the quieter fatigue of...