Showing posts with label therapy dog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label therapy dog. Show all posts

Friday, June 26, 2015

Feelings Friday: Kubler- Ross's Guide to the Grief Journey


Grief is a personal journey that takes time.

Are we there yet?

Losing a pet evokes the same emotions as other losses and for some children it is their first experience with the finality of death.  For the past seven years Suki has been a comfort to many children as they have done their "feelings work." This month I am helping those same children understand grief as they process Suki's death. Many of my clients have dealt with loss before, but Suki is a catalyst to talk it through again.

Grief work is good work.

Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross was an innovative Swiss Psychiatrist who spent over thirty years studying grief in her work with terminally ill clients and their families.  She is credited for founding the Hospice Movement and her legacy includes a reliable guide to grieving.  I first learned about Dr. Kubler-Ross when I was an undergraduate and I still use her stage model in comforting children and adults. It is a useful tool to predict feelings at an otherwise unpredictable time.

Stage One: Denial.  Even if you are prepared for a death (due to illness or aging)  there will be some times when you forget or disbelieve that your loved one is dead. Thoughts of expecting to see them in the next room or waking up and questioning if it was a bad dream are common. Numbing and a sense of unreality are the feelings within this stage.

Stage Two: Bargaining.  This stage is marked by "What if . . ." thoughts.  What if the doctors had done tests earlier, what if we hadn't gone on that trip, . . . Feelings in this stage feel muted, as if in a fog. Anger, anxiety, sadness, and confusion are present but mild.

Stage Three: Anger and Guilt. For many people this is a tricky spot.  Either they are uncomfortable with anger- so they gloss over it- or they get way too comfortable with the anger and linger too long. Anger is directed at others who might have helped more, at self for not recognizing signs or for what was undone in the relationship, or at the deceased for dying. Angry or guilty feelings are powerful and unsettling. Some people describe their feelings in this stage as "restless."  

Stage Four: Sadness and Depression. The permanence of death is intensely sad and depressing.  At this point in grieving- the reality of death is internalized and the work of surviving the loss becomes a daily work.  The sadness of grief-work has a time table that is unique to each person and is not a symptom of mental illness.  Signs of concern are extended periods of lack of interest, withdrawal, poor eating and sleep, and a wish to die. 

Stage Five: Acceptance. A grieving person is always sad about the loss. Acceptance is finding a "new normal" of living without the loved one. The turning point is in the ability to develop a different loving relationship without a physical presence, learning to live with the separation. Ultimately resolution of loss involves memorial (traditions, memories, legacy), a full range of feelings, and hope for the future.

It is not uncommon within a family to see several different stages of grief, even though they experienced the loss at the same time. We have a guide but we don't all  follow the same path and sometimes we will re-experience the stages multiple times before we arrive at acceptance.  

As I process Suki's death with my clients who have come to expect her in my office on Wednesdays, I realize that Suki continues her work as a therapy dog even now. I am hearing incredible stories of loss and we are traveling together. It is nice to have a companion on our journey.

I hope this post helps you with loss and will be a tool for you in your walk with others on the the path.

Please share the link if you find it helpful. Thank you for reading.








Monday, October 28, 2013

Monday Affirmation


I CAN EXPRESS MY PLAYFUL SPIRIT










    Suki will be our Monday muse:  

  • Reminding us to live in the present 
  • Accepting ourselves without conditions
  •  Radiating positivity throughout the week.

An affirmation is a positive statement that guides our thinking and emotional mindset.  Psychologists use affirmations to assist people who are struggling with low self-esteem, anxiety, depression, and negative habits.

Start the positive habit of weekly affirmations!





Wednesday, August 31, 2011

A Dog Will Love You Forever

Some of my clients purposefully schedule their appointments for Wednesday afternoon so they can work with my furry co-therapist, Suki.  I completely understand.  Suki Marotta is a natural.  I have watched her calmly assist a dog phobic child, moan with a stressed single parent, sooth an angry teen, and lay across the legs of a grieving widow. She greets our clients with a sniff and a lick, wagging her tail in hospitality.  In addition to her unconditional love, embodies the therapeutic tool of focusing on the nonverbal message.  She is a mirror to human emotions.
Suki is a special dog, but much of that is in her training.  She attended puppy school, basic obedience, canine good citizen, and then “sat” for the Therapy Dog International (TDI) certification.  In other words, she has graduate level training. Therapy dogs are being utilized in a variety of settings; making visits to hospitals, libraries, geriatric centers, courtrooms, and disaster sites.  The most recent TDI newsletter included an article written by  a volunteer who sought out the comfort of therapy dogs during 9/11:

“I can’t remember the first time I saw one, but I remember the feeling—like being picked up and held close. It was like being recognized and then embraced by an old friend.”
“The dogs gave me a reason to get up, and when I did, they found my pain and held it for me.  I shed my first tears . . . and after I did, I felt the weight in my chest start to lift.  The dogs sat with my grief so I could sit with my clients’.” Sarah Sypniewski (AmeriCorps/American Red Cross)

Researchers struggle to prove that dogs are empathic, but ask any dog owner—they have data on a daily basis.  I was moved, but not surprised to see the story of Hawkeye the Labrador’s expression of grief during his master’s funeral.                                                 
“A dog will love you forever is the motto of TDI.”
I couldn’t agree more. What dogs have brought you comfort?