More Good Days Than Bad: How to Honestly Assess Your Petâs Quality of Life (Without Guilt)
The Burden of âThe Decisionâ
Thereâs a heaviness that settles in when you realize you need to assess your petâs quality of life and âThe Decisionâ is approaching.
For so many of us, the hope is for a lightning bolt momentâa clear sign that tells us, without question, itâs time to say goodbye. But more often than not, it isnât sudden or obvious.
Instead, itâs a slow fade: your dog stops meeting you at the door; their favorite toy gathers dust; walks become shorter until one day they just want to rest.
If youâre searching for certaintyâa checklist that will make this heartbreak simpleâyou are not alone.
Tools like the dog quality of life scale and the HHHHHMM scale can help you monitor your senior dogâs pain with gentle honesty. These resources donât give easy answers, but they offer reassurance in tracking changes over weeks instead of moments.
Itâs okay if you find yourself wishing for an unmistakable sign. The truth is that love rarely gives us black-and-white choices.
The âMaybeâ Trap: How We Normalize Pain
It starts as a whisper. You notice your senior dog moving slower or skipping meals. You tell yourself, âHeâs just old.â It becomes a gentle refrain to soothe the ache in your chest.
But I want you to pause with me for a moment and look at him with fresh eyes.
Age brings changes, yesâbut pain isnât something we should accept as inevitable. Too often, we fall into what I call the âMaybeâ Trap:
- Maybe heâs just tired.
- Maybe itâs normal for his age.
- Maybe tomorrow will be better.
The truth is, our dogs are masters of disguiseâthey donât want to worry us. Thatâs why we need tools to help us step outside our hopeful âmaybesâ and really listen to what our dogs are telling us.
The Calendar Method: A Practical Tool
When youâre living with a senior dog, every day can feel like a question mark. The emotional rollercoaster is exhausting. Thatâs why I want to share a simple tool that has helped many families find clarity in the fog.
How it works: Each evening, take a quiet moment to reflect on your dogâs day.
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Good Day (Smiley Face): Did they seem comfortable? Did they eat? Did they wag their tail?
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Bad Day (Sad Face): Did pain seem to overshadow everything? Did they refuse a walk or hide?
It sounds small, but over time these faces become an honest record. Itâs visual and immediate; you donât have to remember yesterday through the haze of worry.
The Metric: If you notice three sad faces in a rowâor if the frowns begin to outnumber the smilesâit is time to pause and talk with your vet.
The âSparkâ: Defining a Bad Day
Letâs talk about what a âbad dayâ really means. It isnât just whining. Often, it looks quieter:
- Hiding under the bed instead of curling up at your feet.
- Leaving food untouched no matter how tempting it smells.
- Panting even when theyâre resting (a common sign of hidden pain).
- Not coming to greet you at the door.
This is where the HHHHHMM Scale helps. It stands for Hurt, Hunger, Hydration, Hygiene, Happiness, Mobility, and More Good Days Than Bad.
If the spark that once lit up their eyes is fading, it doesnât mean youâve failed them. It means you love them enough to notice.
The Final Kindness
If youâre reading this, your heart is already asking the hardest question. I want you to know that noticing these things isnât failing your friendâitâs loving them fiercely.
There comes a moment when love asks for one last act of courage.
This phrase is not meant as pressure. Itâs a soft place for your aching heart to land. It means choosing their comfort over our longing. It means understanding that letting go is sometimes the greatest protection we can offer.
Be gentle with yourself. You are doing enough. You are loving enough.
If you are navigating this difficult time, please read our guide on Understanding Anticipatory Grief.
