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Pets and People Our relationships with our pets bring much love and joy. Los­ing an ani­mal friend can feel as dev
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• We are passionate about people & pets
• Pet Loss Sympathy Cards
• Grief Support Services and Counselling
• Articles and resources for grieving pet owners

Pets and People was founded by Dr Micheal O’Donoghue and Penny Carroll to provide a supportive process to help people through the grief often experienced through the loss of a companion animal. Locum Vet services available - Call - (07) 3372 1679. 49 Gleneagles Crescent, Brisbane QLD 4075

Well Done Madonna on your award for excellence in counselling.
31/10/2024

Well Done Madonna on your award for excellence in counselling.

Expert recommended Top 3 Counselling Services in Townsville, QLD. How do we actually find? ThreeBestRated.com.au 50-Point Inspection includes everything from checking reputation, history, complaints, reviews, ratings, satisfaction, trust and price to the general excellence.

Some Wisdom from Dr Sife.  Founder of APLB
02/08/2024

Some Wisdom from Dr Sife. Founder of APLB

In this article from 2005, our founder Dr Sife talks about how we can come to terms with devastating loss.

Letting Go – Dr. Wallace Sife

At first, the words “letting go” can be very upsetting to a person in mourning. In some ways it is like “closure” which is also a fine psychological term in most applications. But we have come to realize this should not be used in bereavement counseling. Both of these expressions can have a negative reaction on someone who is still suffering the shock of loss. Bereavement is trauma, and it can take a very heavy emotional toll from most of us. And it can create distortions in perspective and logic. Fortunately, this is a time process, and the intensity and pain subside.

Life is like a river, always flowing and moving us, even though we generally do not pay attention to the current. We tend to focus on the immediate prospect, and are totally enveloped in the here and now of it all. But the flow is unending. And if we look at the larger picture, everything is in a state of motion and change. That is the way of all things. We have learned that even stars, planets and galaxies are in a constant flow and transformation.

Ultimately, all life and existence is change and growth. Clinging to the past for security does not work. This can be a very hard lesson to accept. But perhaps not so surprisingly, it is one that our deceased loved ones can actually help teach us. Yet it may be nearly impossible to be that philosophical, when in deep grief. There is no quick relief. It takes time.

We are all on a very personal journey, here – with our beloved companion animals as temporary guides. Somehow, our spiritual self has to recognize this and meet itself, in this vast Oneness of all things. It is inspiring to discover that we are actually capable of reaching deep down within ourselves, to come up with some amazing insights. But that is not so easy, and it takes a lot of pain and soul-searching. And it also requires letting go of stored-up scraps of personal “baggage”. If this is achieved our dependencies and ego involvements take on a completely different outlook. And we can mourn in a dissimilar way, with far less pain. Actually, the love becomes even more meaningful and permanent, within our new selves.

Our changing Western culture is placing an ever- increasing flawed emphasis on the now-ness of everything. It is fostering a much more impersonal societal uniformity. Without fully realizing it, we have become desensitized cogs in the great mechanism of contemporary civilization, and the individual is in danger of losing some awareness and respect for who he/she really is. We are conditioned in many ways to focus on each moment, while losing sight of so much. It is like the paradox of not seeing the forest because of all the trees.

This almost irresistible recent social conditioning engenders an escapist illusion, with audio distraction and superficial gratification. We seek relief and avoidance – even from our own selves and our inner wisdom – and our essential perspectives are being submerged. The ever-present headphones and cell phones have to be put aside.

As a survival process many have reverted to a reliance on their possessions and personal “security blankets”. Status, ego involvement, ownership and dependency have become disproportionately important to us. For protection in an ever-threatening and sometimes frightening world many of us are tending to create emotional cocoons around ourselves and our most treasured things. We can safely hide there – even from ourselves. But not for long.

Death may still seem a terror and mystery without any comfortable answers. It scares and confuses most people, more than anything else, and we try to ignore it. Of course, that kind of escapism can be only temporary.

We desperately want to cling on to our own comfortable images, as well as the lives we love. But as we all really know, this is not possible. Somehow, we have to face and accept the reality of what life is – and move on. We can’t stop the river from flowing. Each death is only a part of the entire continuation of things. It is like a single punctuation mark in a vast library. We need to learn to confront and contemplate the relevance of death – as best as we can – in order to overcome the blind, reflexive fear we have of it.

It is fascinating to talk with people who have had a near-death experience – on the operating table or otherwise. Almost all of them report a sudden wondrous new tranquility and acceptance of death. They came so close, and were returned. In these people the fear is completely replaced by an
extraordinary sense of spiritual acceptance and peace. There must be a lesson here for the rest of us.

It can be a natural reaction to become over-dependent on our relationships. We are sentient, feeling, social creatures, and have a great need to find love and gratification in our lives – giving and getting. Unfortunately, we become mired in our routines and ways of thinking and doing things, and we can set ourselves up for emotional disaster when radical change is forced upon us.

What is more natural and wonderful than the bond we form with our beloved pets? They provide us with a marvelous and much-needed sense of love, completion and security. It is as if we were meant to discover this and evolve together. They also become reminders, and help us identify and rediscover important parts of our innermost selves – that each of us has learned to forget, as we grow older and more “civilized”.

The bonds we develop with our beloved companion animals in many ways can be stronger, purer, and far more intimate than with others of our own species. We feel loved and secure in sharing our secret souls with them. How often can this be safely done – even with a spouse? So when a dear pet’s life ends, it is very understandable and normal for us to grieve and suffer a unique and profound sense of bereavement. It can feel as if a great part of one’s secret self has died, as well. Actually, this can be very complex, as it involves much more than the heartbreaking loss. In addition to having to suddenly learn how to cope with the death we have to deal with the termination of the dependency we created. Fortunately, the deeply personal spiritual connection remains unbroken, as an ongoing part of us. We eventually learn to understand that healing from the pain, and finding resolution is not disloyalty or a compromise of that love.

Change in our continuing growth and evolution is one of the many things in life that our beloved pets seem to be here to help us with. Learning about this from them is one of the gifts they leave behind for us. To ignore it would be such a shame and additional loss. We are obligated to our loved ones – to honor them and go on with our lives, enriched with the love, memories and experience.

The flow intimately governs our own personal timeline and identity. We learn through our tears that we still move on – always carried and changed by the current. When in deep mourning many may feel they do not want to continue living without their loved one. But that is our passion, our emotional response – which at the time can override our more rational selves. Yet something deep within each of us innately realizes that we must go on. And somehow, we do, despite the terrible anguish and seeming impossibility of it all, at the time. That beloved pet – which is part of us – is also a part of the cosmos. He or she has only shifted form and dimension.

During bereavement many of us discover a great need to develop some sense of personal spiritual connection and perspective to the cosmos. We can respond to this in various ways with traditional religious ideologies, or by a deeply personal inward journey and exploration. A new existential examination can be a legacy to us from our beloved ones.

They pass away, leaving us to remain and seek answers, and emerge as better people, because of them. As suggested earlier, even stars and galaxies are born and die, in their turn. And each leaves behind the seeds of enrichment and growth for later generations. That is the way of all things.

So many people in deep mourning are afraid of "letting go". They think it is letting go of the love and memories. But it really is the releasing of the sharp edge of the debilitating pain, so we can continue with our ongoing lives. After a while, when we finally get to the resolution stage of bereavement, we come to realize that our deceased beloved pets become an enduring part of us. That is one of the many marvels of love we are privileged to learn from them. Mourning is the terrible emotional price we all have to pay. But despite the anguish how can anyone say that the love and good we gave and got is not worth it all?

Nobody wants to live forever. Think about that. And when we can also somehow put this into perspective for our dear ones, it makes a lot of new sense. But this hard logic can be a difficult concept to accept, when grieving. It will help to also consider, if they outlived us who would care for and love them when they die? Maybe somehow, this is the best way. Death must come to all of us. And we have to reconcile ourselves to that. Denial and self-deception are futile. There is no place to hide.

It is our responsibility to ourselves – as well as our dear ones – to move on and evolve into our personal potential. But for now we have to embrace our pain, to better understand and pass through it. Life is a wonderful transition we can barely understand. Yet there is a lesson here that our beloved deceased companion animals can help us learn – in salute their memory. A joyful celebration of that life is our best memorial and tribute. We are not victims, but celebrants. And by achieving this we now honor them, and enrich ourselves, as well.

I would like to introduce you all to one of our new counsellors to our team of pet loss counsellors. Welcome Vanessa!
17/04/2024

I would like to introduce you all to one of our new counsellors to our team of pet loss counsellors. Welcome Vanessa!

I was fortunate enough to have the opportunity to chat with on podcast this week about my work as a grief counsellor. We had a fantastic conversation about Big Hero 6, how Baymax is a fantastic grief counsellor, the importance of chosen family and how grief isn't something we "get over". We also touched on two other movies I love: Up and Little Women.

Visit The Movie Health Podcast on your preferred podcast app to have a listen.

09/04/2024

Last night, I was re-watching an episode of Ted Lasso (my favourite) and I had to pause for thought. Two characters were talking about whether they’ve been to therapy, and one says to the oth…

A great post here on the value of Counselling
09/04/2024

A great post here on the value of Counselling

Last night, I was re-watching an episode of Ted Lasso (my favourite) and I had to pause for thought. Two characters were talking about whether they’ve been to therapy, and one says to the oth…

07/04/2024
Some of the highlights of the pet loss program.
07/04/2024

Some of the highlights of the pet loss program.

We just watched this heartfelt episode about the hardest part of owning pets. The letting go.  A good insight into havin...
07/04/2024

We just watched this heartfelt episode about the hardest part of owning pets. The letting go. A good insight into having a palliative care vet look after your older dog. Creating bucket list for your dog and several good ideas about pet memories.

Following three families as they honour and treasure the last precious days with their beloved dogs.

Volunteering for animals is not only good for them, but also good for your own mental health.
26/03/2024

Volunteering for animals is not only good for them, but also good for your own mental health.

How volunteering for animal shelters, rescues and nonprofits improves your mental and physical health

Some great guidance about end of life care.
04/02/2024

Some great guidance about end of life care.

The American Association of Feline Practitioners (AAFP) and The International Association for Animal Hospice and Palliative Care (IAAHPC) have released their 2023 AAFP/IAAHPC Feline Hospice and Palliative Care Guidelines.

04/02/2024

Great to see!

30/12/2023

Dogs certainly can grieve their loss.

If you are looking for pet loss support over the holidays the pet loss chat rooms are always a good option.
24/12/2023

If you are looking for pet loss support over the holidays the pet loss chat rooms are always a good option.

Because we know grief doesn't stop for the holidays we have scheduled additional online chat sessions. If you have lost a beloved pet you are welcome to join us. There is no cost. Find out more at: https://www.aplb.org/chat-room-welcome/

There is no doubt animals grieve especially when there is great love.
09/11/2023

There is no doubt animals grieve especially when there is great love.

"A magnificent killer whale named Tahlequah
gave birth and caught the world’s attention.

Her calf died only thirty minutes after being born, each of those blessed minutes a sacrament to the progeny of love.

But the real reason journalists and photographers and millions of viewers followed this mother’s story, was her willingness to grieve unbidden, to become a thing utterly governed by kinship.

After a year and a half of growing this enormous life inside of her belly, and the immense feat of labor, and a half an hour of looking into one another’s eyes, Tahlequah proceeded to carry her dead baby on the tip of her nose for seventeen days, traveling more than a thousand miles all throughout the Salish Sea.

And some people think that grief is not
inexplicably beautiful. But perhaps it’s because those people (who are us people) no longer see grieving enacted publicly as a plea for sanity, as a way of feeding that which grants us life.

There was no real grieving at my mother’s funeral––

sniffling and shoving tears back up into our eyes, yes, but no keening. No collapsing into the bottomless cavern of one another’s trembling arms, no crying out into the insufferable heat of that late-summer day, and certainly no carrying my mom’s dead body as a holy procession all throughout the places she ever knew and loved.

So I continued to carry her mostly on my own.

I wailed in the privacy of my own home long after the funeral was over, with only the hurting eyes of my husband to behold me––a kind of holding that was never meant to be done alone.

I imagine that if killer whales were not endangered, Tahlequah would have swam those seventeen days with a grand procession of many other glistening, black and white giants all across the ocean.

Or perhaps she swam for one thousand miles
to personify the loneliness of her grief in a world spiraling toward oblivion.

And our savagery for not swimming alongside her; for taking pictures, for watching her exquisite ceremony on our little screens as if it were pure entertainment, as if that couldn’t be any one of us, carrying our dead children out into the dark and emptied streets."

From ‘The Progeny of Love' by April Tierney, Artwork by Lori Christopher 🐋

Extra pet loss support available in chat rooms. See below for details
03/11/2023

Extra pet loss support available in chat rooms. See below for details

The APLB is offering an extra pet loss support chatroom session on Saturday, November 4, 8-10 PM, ET. If you are grieving the loss of a beloved pet, join us. There is no cost.

Dr Mike was interviewed on ABC radio conversation hour on what to do when your pet dies.
01/11/2023

Dr Mike was interviewed on ABC radio conversation hour on what to do when your pet dies.

From pet cemeteries to pet cremation services , in this edition of The Conversation Hour the team look at how the way we mark the end our pets life is changing along with a greater recognition of the grieving process.

A beautiful human animal bond story
13/10/2023

A beautiful human animal bond story

It was so good to share and discuss pet loss and grief at the Grief Centre. To share how Pet loss can be different but j...
03/10/2023

It was so good to share and discuss pet loss and grief at the Grief Centre. To share how Pet loss can be different but just as intense and heartbreaking as any other kind of Grief

It was great to meet Dr Michael O'Donoghue from Pets and People in Australia yesterday who dropped by to discuss pet loss and grief.

The Grief Centre supports all people living through loss including those who are experiencing the unique grief associated with losing a beloved pet.

As Dr O'Donoghue says:

"Every pet owner dreads the time they have to say goodbye to their beloved companions. It’s a life event that people don’t like to think about and most people don’t know how to handle with sensitivity.

Those grieving often suffer in silence because the lack of understanding in the outside world means sympathy is hard to come by. Pet owners are often told, “it’s just an animal” or “you can always get another one” – comments which can understandably be hard to hear.

In reality, their pet was a family member, a source of constant companionship, a staple in the owner’s daily life, so much so that when they pass away the loss leaves a gaping hole in their routine and heart."

For grief counselling for loss of any kind including pet loss please contact us.

📞 0800 331 333
📨 [email protected]

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