I lost my beloved cat 3 days ago. It was 12 years old cat name Rysia. It was and still is very difficult subject for me. I come across couple people who works in the euthanasia sector and some other people, and one thing stick with me, it is not direct quote but it was something like "don't let anyone tell you that your grief is incorrect because it was animal, they are part of our family." So I won't say he is lucky that at this age only grief he ever experienced was to fact that his hamster died. Grief is real fucking thing, and sometimes we feel it more after our pets die rather than even human family members, because animals are here always for us, don't judge us, support us whenever what.
Yeah them clips on tik tok are slightly milked. They always cut to the big laughter after jj said it. But in the true version they didn’t laugh straight away.
Right?! I was looking for this (Well I actually wasn’t but ik that I’ve seen this before then it was taken down but I’m glad it’s back up and I’ll see this every now and then for a good laugh)
At least we can see from the whole clip that the laughter started from the absurd thought of a hamster biting off its own leg. And then they just couldn't stop! 🤣
I had this conversation with ksi on omegle. I talked to him about losing my friend and he took his time and was so nice to me. Eventough there were 30.000 people looking for him on the app. That made me a fan of jj for ever
I get it, my hamster is my baby.. any pet can be important to someone. The reason he bit his limbs off is from stress.. he probably didn’t have enough space or toys, hamsters need more than people think ☹️ Also, that car and balls can be so damaging to them.
I feel like when it comes to grief it depends on your connection. You can become attached to any animal and have it be the thing you look forward to seeing when you get home and having that connection. Even with people I'm more likely to cry if I had a connection with that person, sure I may be sad to see a person pass but true grief comes from how connected you are no matter what the animal is
Ive never really dealt with grief either. All in one week my friend died of leukemia my ex moved half across the country with my son we found out my mother had cancer and had 3 months at most left ( she made it 18 months where i was her carer 24/7 so she didn't have to move into a home) and i almost lost my transplant and while in hospital fighting pretty much for my life my fiance dumped me on text on my birthday and i still 2 years later haven't got a clue why. I didn't even cry once and after that the world is in sepia pretty much. I think it was too much all at once. I didn't even cry when my mother passed or at her funeral which is weird. I have no clue why im writing this other than to say that grief is weird and take weird forms.
Ethan laughing is one of the funniest things, ever! How can someone laughing crack me up so freaking much. Fking love the guy wholeheartedly. Brings me way too much joy 😂🥰
This is what real friends look like, they will laugh at your face for a tragedy that your going through while everyone else will just say the same thing “sorry for your loss”. My great grandmother died and I told my friends that I felt guilty for her death and he proceeds to state “YOU SMOKING THAT GREAT GRANDMOTHER PACK 😂” I love my bro
@@Christina_ily Most clips I saw of this moment skipped over a lot of what they said, like JJ talking about the "special one" of his hamsters. Made it seem like the rest immediately started laughing at JJ for almost no reason
Jj kinda stupid for not seeing this happen. Their reaction would always be like that. I mean he’s talking to Ethan, Josh and Simon. It was always going to end in them laughing. Different with Vik and Tobi.
This is the first time I’ve seen the full clip. They made it seem way worse the way they edited it. They were laughing at the one that bit off the it’s leg, not the dead one
I'm surprised that a 30 year old has never had a family member die. I'm guessing he's only counting "family" as far as uncles and grandparents, but that's still very fortunate.