Friday, 9 January 2026

A Q&A ABOUT MENTAL HEALTH BLOGGING & PET BEREAVEMENT | IT’S LAUNCH DAY FOR GRACIE’S WAY!!!

“Come back. Even as a shadow, even as a dream.”

Euripides

So, I won’t lie; I definitely changed my mind a few times on the title and the theme/contents of this blog post, and I even ended up asking Chat GPT for ideas on angles for the piece! From its answers, I though
t perhaps a Q&A would go down well but with it being fairly last minute (I’m writing this a few days before), I figured I’d best just ask AI to think up the questions – plus! It did a really good job thinking of them for this article actually on the Gracie’s Way website:
An Interview with Gracie’s Way Project Lead: Aimee Wilson | Gracie's Way! Anyhow, here’s my answers to some of the questions it thought of…

What has writing I’m NOT Disordered taught you about whose pain is taken seriously—and how did that understanding shape your decision to create Gracie’s Way?

Through my mental health journey – not solely through writing I’m NOT Disordered – I’ve definitely learnt or witnessed that there can be a huge variation in treatment of people. That one Psychiatric Nurse can have two different patients crying and can comfort and reassure one with a pat on the back and the offer of a tissue and tell the other one; “sort yourself out.” Or a Psychiatrist could be faced with two people saying they’re suicidal and they’re concerned about one and have them sectioned but will just tell the other one “ring the Crisis Team if you feel worse.” And, in all honesty, I believe that nine times out of ten the largest reason behind this is the person’s diagnosis. Reality is, I have been treat better by both medical and psychiatric professionals since officially losing the Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) diagnosis (it was overturned in April last year – I blogged about it here: “LET’S REMOVE IT FROM YOUR RECORDS, YOU’VE CLEARLY RECOVERED FROM IT!” | HOW I HAVE OVERCOME 8 SYMPTOMS OF BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER & HOW YOU CAN TOO | I'm NOT Disordered)!

I think that I’m someone who always try to see both sides in an argument or disagreement and with the stigma and discrimination against those with BPD, I try to imagine; if I didn’t have the experiences that I have, and was faced with interacting with someone who had such a diagnosis; how would I treat them? I can’t imagine ever treating someone as poorly as I – and others with BPD – have been, but I can appreciate the fear you often find yourself feeling or struggling with when you’re faced with something you don’t understand, have no knowledge or experience of, or already have misconstrued impressions of it. And I certainly appreciate and understand that fear can lead you to behave in ways that can be the complete opposite of what you would normally do… But there has to come a point where it’s not about misunderstanding and being afraid and is purely spiteful and judgemental.

Through these experiences of both myself receiving this kind of treatment and witnessing others treat with it too, I have become acutely aware, I think, of any sort of poor treatment or disregard for mine and anyone else’s thoughts, feelings, and experiences. This means that from my very first experience of it, I’ve been more than aware that pet bereavement is not treat as seriously nor is it as validated by others as human death and loss. I mean to the point where when a neighbour – who I’d considered a friend – heard of the death of my first rabbit she said, “shall I heat the stove up and get the pot out?” And I think that through I’m NOT Disordered and all of the collaborations I’ve taken on, projects I’ve completed, and content I’ve created; I’ve learnt the rewards to feeling as though you’ve taken action against something that’s wrong. I’ve experienced the beneficial thoughts and feelings you can have when you stand up and do something about the wrongdoing of either another person or another organisation. So, in discovering this inequity in pet bereavement, of course an almost immediate thought was ‘what can I do to change this?’

Through my experiences of stigma and discrimination in mental health, I’m equally aware of the impact this mistreatment can have on a person. I recognise that it can make someone who is feeling unsafe, become completely suicidal. I know it can turn someone who is depressed into being properly unsafe. I know it can lead someone experiencing hallucinations to fall completely for their delusions and lose touch with reality. I know it can cause an anxious person to experience a full-blown panic attack that leads them to thoughts that they’re dying. Now, to me, if my response to a person can have such a phenomenal and potentially life-threatening impact on them, I need to make sure I get it right! I need to make sure I treat someone well and that I’m not in any way responsible – even partially – for them taking their own life… Which is basically the sad reality of poor treatment in mental illness.

So, my end answer or decision on what I could do to change the poor response to those experiencing pet bereavement, was to create Gracie’s Way. And my previous experiences of receiving horrible comments etc served as motivation to power me through all the challenges hurled at me through the project creation process.

In what ways did your work challenging the pathologizing of mental distress prepare you to recognise pet bereavement as grief, rather than something to be ‘got over’?

Now, you guys know I’m always honest in my content online, so I’ll be absolutely frank and open about the fact that I had to check what was meant by ‘pathologizing of mental distress’ and I thought I’d be honest about it because others might be questioning it too and I don’t want anyone to feel stupid or embarrassed for that! So, according to Chat GPT(!) it means that someone is seeing mental distress as a person defect or medical diagnosis and not as an understandable response to a life event etc.

In answer to the question… I’d say that it wasn’t me challenging that notion around mental distress that prepare for me recognising pet bereavement to be what it is – grief! It was me experiencing pet bereavement. That’s what taught me a thing or two about it! Sadly, I do believe that pet bereavement is something that you can’t truly understand or appreciate unless you experience it, battle it, overcome it, or struggle through it. I mean, a common thought or response amongst those with the experience on being mistreat or hearing of another being mistreat, is actually: “maybe that person (the one responsible for the mistreatment) never owned a pet.” But I also recognise that it’s something which – even if you don’t have that personal experience of – you should still never pass judgements, make assumptions, or invalidate another person’s journey with it. Never losing a pet is no excuse for being rude or spiteful to someone – things which are experienced by those who disclose their pet death to those who can’t – or won’t/don’t want to – empathise.

One similarity between challenging the pathologizing of mental distress and preparing for pet bereavement being grief though, is the concept of ‘normal.’ I think that a desperate longing a lot of people experience during the hardest moments in their lives is around wanting whatever their thoughts, feelings, and experiences are to be normal. Wanting to know they aren’t alone. And it’s tricky because no matter what the hardship is, you very obviously don’t want others to have gone through it too; but at the same time, you appreciate the notion that you aren’t different. I think that this is because if you’re going through something no one else has, you’re often led to question what you’ve done wrong. Where you’ve gone wrong. Basically, wondering what’s wrong with you; and this can lead to a lot of self-blame that is typically both unnecessary and completely mis-directed!

This is a common difficulty through mental distress, and I’d judge it to be equally as common for those experiencing pet bereavement – it’s a huge reason for two particular decisions with the creation of Gracie’s Way:

1.       It’s why I created the resource for bereaved owners: Understanding Your Grief (you can read more about it here and request your free copy by emailing gracieswayuk@outlook.com) – to explain that their thoughts and feelings through their grief are likely, typically normal or at least, completely understandable! Interestingly, one owner who reviewed this resource left in her review (which you can read here) that it had actually stopped her from feeling isolated and misunderstood! I was like; “mission accomplished!”

2.       It was also the reason why I created resources (particularly the Pet Grief Information Pack and Grief Communication Guide – you can read more about both of these, here) for professionals – because I recognise that how they treat a bereaved owner can be truly influential on that person’s experience of their grief and the ways in which they cope with it.

How has listening to other peoples lived experiences through the blog influenced the way you wanted Gracie’s Way to feel—emotionally and ethically?

I really wanted for Gracie’s Way to be respectful and validating no matter what a person’s lived experience of pet bereavement – even if you have five people with complete oppositional experiences! I wanted all five to feel validated, trusted, respected, appreciated, normalised, and supported. I don’t want anyone looking for help during pet bereavement to turn to Gracie’s Way and come away from the website having gained absolutely nothing from it! Even if the only gain is the contact details of other organisations on the Help Directory page (which you can visit here) and the person turns to somewhere else – someone else – for help and support! It’d still feel like a win for me, to be honest!

Actually, having that mindset alone is something which has come from listening to lived experiences through I’m NOT Disordered – I’ve learned that one person recommending a helpline or a resource can be lifesaving. And that the person who takes the recommendation and benefits from it, can be so very grateful to whoever gave them it originally and hold a lot of importance towards them for the part they played in that person managing to come through whatever they were struggling with. Managing to stay alive. To stay safe. And I can appreciate that feeling as someone who has been on that side of things too – the person who has been recommended something and it’s been helpful and I’ve been full of gratitude to someone who feels all they did was “point you in the right direction.” Often, those people don’t realise how genuinely lifesaving they’ve been – but I get it. So, I would feel incredibly rewarded and fortunate if I heard that someone contacted an organisation on the Help Directory and benefited from doing so in some way.

Which is another thing learnt from experiences heard via my blog; it’s not about wanting everyone to email Gracie’s Way and request a free resource from the website because – through experiences with my blog – I know that different people are helped by different things and in different ways. Not everyone will do well ringing a helpline and talking to a trained stranger who may have to stick to guidelines or pre-determined questions and flow-chart-style pattern of questions e.g. a certain answer leads to a particular next question, and another answer leads to a different next question. Some people will more likely benefit from receiving a document and reading it and working through the activities or exercises in it at their own pace and in their own space. Others, yes; will feel better supported by a helpline. Or you might get someone who simply needs to know there’s resources and helplines out there. Who just needed to do the research and see that help and support exists if they feel worse or, if they decide they want it or need it. And I wanted for Gracie’s Way to illustrate this respect for everyone needing different things to get them through and that there’s a mutual respect that isn’t deterred or detracted depending upon which thing gets you through! There’s no judgement on Gracie’s Way.

How did your experience of holding space for complex, non-linear stories on I’m NOT Disordered inform the way Gracie’s Way approaches support, without timelines or fixes?

The act of featuring guest posts on I’m NOT Disordered, actually wasn’t exactly my idea to be honest! That first one in February 2014 (which you can read here) – the girl who wrote it actually asked me if I had considered publishing guest pieces on the blog and, to be honest, my confidence and self-esteem levels were terrible back then so I lied a bit and pretended like I’d already had the idea! And she ended up sending me that piece and I published it and began publishing others too – the next one (which you can read here) being from the girl who I was closest to as an inpatient and who helped with the layout and design of I’m NOT Disordered for the first year of its existence (because then she was discharged (she’d been admitted before me) and I was left forced to learn how to do it for myself!)!

I quickly discovered a popularity around guest posts though – I think that my audience liked to hear other stories and to see in which way these other people – sometimes with absolutely massively, wildly different experiences to my own – managed to still fit into my life somehow. Of course, seeing the increase in my audience and being able to recognise that the blog managed to maintain those people – they weren’t always just coming there for that one guest post – meant that I realised publishing the stories of other’s experiences was contributing to me being able to help more people by drawing them into reading I’m NOT Disordered. So, I continued and to tell you how many… Put it this way; if you search ‘guest posts’ in the archives of my blog posts, it takes a few scrolls to work your way through the results!

I think one reason why they’re popular is actually linked to my answer to the previous question when I spoke about people benefiting from different things in different ways… So it might be that a guest post is similar to someone else’s journey, and they feel less isolated or it might be that it’s the absolute opposite of their own journey and they find it enlightening and draw positive comparisons. But for me, another reason for their popularity is that they’re real. They’re actual, real stories of real people, going through real experiences. It’s not a professional telling you or leading you to believe that once they deem you to be in ‘recovery’ then you’ll be absolutely fine for the rest of your life! That you’ll never struggle again. Never need help again. Will never have the same thoughts and feelings you’ve struggled with so much. And doing all that you can to tarnish or defy that impression of recovery being linear, feels like a hugely important mission because if you don’t? Well, I remember my first relapse in recovery. I felt like a failure and thought it meant I was back at square one and needed to be hospitalised and sectioned again and I ended up attempting suicide because I felt so hopeless and worthless. If, however, I’d been prepared for that – if professionals had warned me that you might sometimes still struggle and that you could even end up feeling like you’re back at the beginning, I would have had coping skills ready to use and I wouldn’t have beaten myself up over it. I honestly believe, if I’d known that relapses are actually a norm in recovery and are something that you just need to work really hard at being able to add them to the list of things you’ve overcome, I might not have made the attempt! An attempt which seriously could have led to me losing my life.

I appreciate that professionals might be wary that being so honest and open about recovery and the fact that you can still struggle will leave people wondering why bother fighting so hard for things to never be perfect... But to me, it’s about the phrasing of it. It’s about providing the relapse or ‘blip’ warning without seeming hopeless and with the assurance that you’re telling them this because you don’t want them to feel hopeless for going through a hardship that they knew full well was possible and just didn’t give you the heads up about it! To say you want someone to be informed and insightful in a way that leaves them feeling like their fight to survive is worthwhile because even if they go through one million and one relapses, the important thing is they get through every single one of them!

I wanted for this message to ring true through Gracie’s Way’s bereavement content too (particularly in the Pet Bereavement Coping Guide – which you can read more about here and there’s a review on it, which you can read here) – to spread the word that you might feel you’ve overcome your grief or are simply newly coping super well with things, and then a whole new reminder or challenge comes up, and you can’t see straight because you’re so overwhelmed, upset, and struggling! I want for people to know that’s completely acceptable and that it doesn’t mean you’ve done something wrong. It doesn’t mean you’ve deserved more pain. It doesn’t mean you hadn’t overcome everything you thought you had. It doesn’t mean you’re going backwards and will have to face all those same things again. It might feel like you’re losing your loved one all over again, but that honestly doesn’t mean you’re back at square one too!

In addition to the bit about linear recovery and journeys, that question mentioned ‘fixes’… I think this is something else I try to make clear generally in Gracie’s Way – there’s not always a ‘fix’ for something. Sometimes it’s about learning to cope or manage a thought or feeling or simply being able to recognise where it comes from and why you’re experiencing it, and not necessarily fully overcoming it or totally stopping it from occurring! And again, not every possible helpful thing is helpful for everyone e.g. the Creative Writing Workbook (which you can read more about here) and the Wellbeing Activity Guide (again, more about that here but there’s actually also a review about this one on the Testimonials page, here!) won’t be for everyone! They won’t be everyone’s cup of tea or have methods in them that everyone is interested in or which everyone will benefit from.

What did the blog teach you about language—especially the harm of ‘helpful’ clichés—and how has that shaped the words you use around pet loss?

Oh my goodness I’ve learnt so much about language from my thirteen (yes, I’m NOT Disordered celebrated its thirteenth Birthday just a few days ago – you can read the blog post for it here!) years as a Blogger! And yes, a huge amount of those lessons was around how damaging or how unhelpful cliches – even those which might be commonly defined as ‘helpful’ – can be! So, I’ve definitely used those lessons in my language when creating Gracie’s Way and all the themes and contents etc of the content for it.

One area I’ve tried – because you can’t be perfect when it comes to language online – to be especially careful around has been the use of ‘loss’ because I want to make it clear that the website and all of the resources it can provide, is about death and bereavement and the grief associated with those ‘losses’ as opposed to – but is just as important and valid as – that which might stem from when a pet goes missing etc. So, as hard and upsetting as it can be, I try to fully avoid using ‘loss’ in the content for Gracie’s Way because I want to be clear about who the resources are for – I’d rather people realise in reading the website that these resources aren’t for them and what they’re struggling with than request a copy of one and discover whilst hopefully reading. In all honesty that would make me feel as though I’d been dishonest and misleading in my language and those thoughts and opinions of myself could be really oppositional against my motivation, passion, and determination for this project.

Another part of Gracie’s Way that I’ve been wary of in my language, is the mental health side of it and this is where I feel especially very fortunate to have been a blogger in this industry for so long because it’s meant I feel pretty confident with this side of things. I’m not exactly a newbie who is figuring things out as I go anymore. I feel like I’m very well-educated in language around mental health, suicide, and self-harm and that I’ve learnt a heck of a lot of lessons over the years about it.

One key lesson being around the harm that can come from avoiding the ‘right’ words for something. By saying you’re ‘really sad’ instead of depressed or hopping around ‘suicide’ with other descriptions and terms and long-winded sentences! It can actually be offensive to a person who is experiencing these things because it’s their reality and they’re sat there reading your avoidance in paragraphs and are thinking ‘I wish like hell, I could avoid it too!’ It makes them think there’s something wrong with it and it can leave a person feeling hopeless and as though the right help isn’t out there for them if everyone avoids even using the right words! Like, if you can’t say one word, why would you provide resources or support that address the entire topic for someone to gain help?!

Tips for people struggling with language around these topics? Do what you believe in and what you think is right because at least then, if you’re wrong; you can feel somewhat confident in defending yourself against anyone and everyone who is likely to point out your wrongdoing – another tip? Be prepared to be called out for it and don’t try to battle anyone – report nasty comments to the responsible platform or company, but don’t argue with strangers online. State your point, recognise theirs, apologise where necessary, and make any relevant changes. Don’t get into a row that will likely escalate any horrible comments or start raising attention that influences others to jump in on it too!

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