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Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts

Companion Animal Psychology Book Club November 2017

"It will forever change how we see our aquatic cousins - the pet goldfish included."

A cup of coffee and a notebook by a pool full of koi. What a Fish Knows is the book for November 2017.


The Companion Animal Psychology Book Club choice for November 2017 is What a Fish Knows: The Inner Lives of Our Underwater Cousins by Jonathan Balcombe.

From the back cover,
"Do fishes think? Do they really have three-second memories? And can they recognize the humans who peer back at them from above the surface of the water? In What a Fish Knows, the myth-busting ethologist Jonathan Balcombe addresses these questions and more, taking us under the sea, through streams and estuaries, and to the other side of the aquarium glass to reveal the surprising capabilities of fishes. Teeming with insights and exciting discoveries, What a Fish Knows offers a thoughtful appraisal of our relationships with fishes and the planet's increasingly imperiled marine life. It will forever change how we see our aquatic cousins - the pet goldfish included."

Why not join us in reading the book? You can leave your comments below!

You can also follow Jonathan Balcombe on twitter.



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Talking About Animals: The Vegan and the Foxhunter

There are surprises in the language used to talk about animals. 


How people talk about animals, like this red fox in England


A vegan and a fox hunter have completely opposed views of animals. Yet analyzing how they talk shows some similarities, according to research by Guy Cook (King’s College, London). He studied interviews with a spokesperson for the Vegan Society and a spokesperson for the pro-foxhunting group The Countryside Alliance. 

Foxhunting has been illegal in the UK since 2005, and only a quarter of one per cent of the UK is vegan, so both groups can be considered outside the mainstream. 

Prof. Cook says, “These two interviews and their language provide evidence of two conflicting ideas of human animal interaction, which despite their differences provide a mirror image of each other, as it were flanking mainstream ideas and discourse.” 

“One evokes and seeks to preserve a vanishing kind of relationship, which, while intimate, was nevertheless unequivocal in its view of animals as different from humans in ways which make their killing for sport or meat morally unproblematic.  The other envisages a future moral order which supersedes that of the present, and seeks to accord animals the same moral and personal status as humans.”

Both people use ‘she’ and ‘he’ to refer to animals, rather than ‘it’. The difference is that for the vegan campaigner, it is the actual sex of the animal, whereas for the foxhunting campaigner, tradition dictates the pronouns regardless of the animal’s sex.

For Amanda Baker (Vegan Society), using these pronouns is part of speaking about animals as persons. For example, speaking about the dairy industry she says “If the calf is female she may very well, depending on who the father is, be raised to become a farmed cow for milk…” She uses human terms like son, daughter, sexism and slavery when referring to animals. 

Baker talks about how the language used might influence people’s perceptions and beliefs. She prefers the term ‘companion animal’ to ‘pet’. “One word that I started thinking about recently is ‘person’ and the concept of ‘personhood’,” she says. “We have five cats in our family who’ve been rescued from various situations and I very much relate to them as ‘individual people of the feline variety’ if you will.” Similarly she says, “a pig is a person not a meal.”

In contrast, for Tim Bonner (Countryside Alliance) the fox is always ‘he’ and a hare is always ‘she’, according to tradition. He says “’Him’ to the fox and ‘her’ the hare. Traditional. Always has been. The hare is ‘Puss’ and she’s a ‘she’ and the fox is ‘Charlie’ and he’s a ‘he’.” 

Bonner also uses language in a way that he hopes will influence people’s views, such as the way he uses words such as welfare and cruelty. Just like Baker, he is aware that his language choices are different from those of most people. He says, “a lot of people find it difficult to understand that in the same way they find it difficult to understand how you can love a fox and hunt it or have huge respect for deer and shoot them but you can and we do.” 

Both interviewees talk about emotion in relation to animals. For Baker, this is apparent in the way she talks about animals as persons, whereas for Bonner there is what Cook calls “the easily ridiculed hunter’s claim to love and respect the individual animals they kill” which nonetheless includes knowledge of the animal and its behaviour.

Most of the interviews refer only to a small subset of animals, something also found in a 2013 study of what animals mean to people by Alison Sealey and Nickie Charles. Prof. Cook says, “In this respect, the opposed views expressed in the two interviews analysed in this article are simultaneously very contemporary, reflecting a highly reduced view of animal life on earth, but also not contemporary enough, in that awareness of impending ecological collapse does not figure in their concerns.”

This research is part of a wider project called "‘People’, ‘Products’, ‘Pests’ and ‘Pets’: the discursive representation of animals." It includes interviews with people from various organizations including the RSPCA, Badger Trust, an organic abbatoir and wildlife presenters. The project aims to provide a deeper understanding of how people talk and write about animals. If you want to know more, you can follow them on twitter
 
When you are talking about animals, do you refer to them as ‘he’ and ‘she’ or ‘it’, and does it depend on whether you know the animal?



Reference
Cook, G. (2015). 'A pig is a person' or 'You can love a fox and hunt it': Innovation and tradition in the discursive representation of animals Discourse & Society, 26 (5), 587-607 DOI: 10.1177/0957926515576639

Companion Animal Psychology is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.

Reiki for Animals

What is Reiki?
According to Wikipedia, (and this really is as good a definition as any) :
Reiki is a spiritual practice developed in 1922 by Japanese Buddhist Mikao Usui, which has since been adapted by various teachers of varying traditions. It uses a technique commonly called palm healing or hands on healing as a form of alternative medicine and is sometimes classified as oriental medicine by some professional medical bodies. Through the use of this technique, practitioners believe that they are transferring universal energy (i.e., reiki) in the form of qi (Japanese: ki) through the palms, which they believe allows for self-healing and a state of equilibrium. 

Some say Usui was a Christian.... but that really has nothing to do with it in my opinion.
When offering this definition in so many words to the curious, I am met time and time again with the same response...
The furrowed brow of bewilderment and a resounding, "What?!"  

So let me tell you a story.... A beautiful story... That will if nothing else, give you a snapshot of the energy and nature of Reiki.

I'll begin this story in August of last year, and I will leave out many details.  Suffice it to say that my daughter's best friend and companion canine of 10 years was very ill.  We as a family are naturalists and prefer natural methods of doing everything. And.... while we may consider ourselves wealthy in spirit, we did not have "extra" money for vet visits at that time.  We literally had no money or we would've taken him. Our choice of a natural life is not a religion! So we did every natural thing we knew to do for him but he only seemed to get worse.  I feel that everything in life - EVERYTHING - is a direct reflection of some facet of our personal being, of our life.  Many times the things that manifest in front of us are very hard to understand, hard to accept and much less deal with. Nonetheless, I knew that much of this scenario was for my daughter, Leo being her dog, regardless of how little sense it made.  But it greatly impacted us all as we are a very close family.

One day while my daughter was at work I performed a Reiki session on Leo, along with the application of 
a natural poultice.  Every bit of this session was felt and intuitive and by no ones rule book.  I lit incense, I entered my calm state of spirit and I let the energy flow into Leo's body.  I followed a traditional chakra pattern, placing my hands on each chakra as Leo lay on his side very submissive to the energy.
















In the process of Reiki, some sensitive or gifted practitioners often receive insights, images, or other intuitive knowledge about the subject of the session.  Sometimes the information is clear and precise, sometimes it is vague, metaphorical and mystical. Sometimes it immediately means something to the subject, other times it makes no sense whatsoever.  And yet other times when it makes no sense upon first hearing it, it will come to light and have great meaning later on.

I am one of the sensitive ones, and I tend to receive images in metaphorical, mystical imagery.
That's what happened when I did the session for Leo.

Now since Leo is directly connected to my daughter, I energetically linked my daughter into this session even though she was at work at the time.  Sometimes Reiki will reveal an "issue" or blockage or whatever else, that is the cause of an illness or situation. Some situations manifest simply to draw our attention to something that we would otherwise never notice.
Dogs are reflections of the people they are bonded closest to. Therefore I did the session for both Leo and my daughter. The point of the session, of all Reiki sessions, is to bring healing. And often times, healing comes in forms that seem very contrary.

What follows are my notes from that session.  They will most likely make no sense to you, but I will interpret the significant part afterwards.
ROOT - Base, water, primal, nature, reptilian
SACRAL - Owl in a tree - bare-ish, white sky, old small white barn/shed. Monkey climbs up tree, shakes tree, tree is now green, web covers tree, turns bare.
SOLAR PLEX - Modern, abstract, gray & orange, black bird, laborious, fire & molten rock, sinus pressure.
HEART - Deep, sea creatures & colors, vessels, chambers.
THROAT - Secret path right in plain sight, covered with leaves, leads to deeper secret garden = Leo walking healthy & happy - 
white beads/pearls, white flowers -  chocolate environment,head pressure, cheek tingle - smell rosemary.
3RD EYE - forest/jungle paradise - panning around, large round trees, water - lake - waterfall - low gentle green, very green.
CROWN - Purple infusion
lighted passageway - optional

Now the imagery in this session was very strong for me.  Sometimes it is faint and becomes too foggy to describe.  But this was very definite.  So I immediately set out to decipher the imagery's meaning.
In a nutshell, I remember the monkey shaking the tree violently!  Monkey's represent agility and therefore transition.  The violent shaking was telling us to "let go".  White owls represent wisdom, death, renewal. Before doing the research for this Reiki, I didn't really know these things.
A week later Leo passed.
The secret garden was my daughter's heart.  I still have a very vivid image in my mind of him walking into the secret garden with her.  He looked back at me strong and healthy.  All the waters and greenery was the peace and health of being on the other side.  He left that message for his beloved Jessi, and his family.  He became a window to the other side for that brief moment, in my opinion because he was so close to it. Animals have no agenda, no convoluted schemes and twisted ideals to cloud their lives.  Leo was pure love, and somehow I feel my daughter needed that "eternal" message.
We all know his energy, or his spirit, is still watching over us.

Losing Leo was the most difficult thing my daughter has ever experienced in her life.  He was not "healed" in a physical sense from the Reiki I offered.  But there was a beautiful message that resulted that my daughter and the whole family can cherish and be encouraged by.  It was as if Leo shared his glimpse of the other side to let us know he's still here and everything's wonderful!  And that has allowed much healing for us.
And honestly, I don't know what else may have been healed in the depths of my daughter's soul.

This is a snapshot of Reiki.
It is not a religion.
Its just energy.
And its sole purpose is to bring healing energy where it is needed.
It is not mine to control.
It belongs to all.

Yin-Yang-DOG T-shirt at this PG911 approved link! 


Don't Leave Pets Behind!!!

Don't Leave Pets Behind!!!

Ok, here we go.... Hurricanes are linin' up.
There's only ONE RULE for people with animals:
Be safe and never leave animals behind.
Yes, that is ONE RULE.
Prepare to stay.
Prepare to leave.
Whatever you do, do with your animals included.
Human children are a pain in the ass and you don't leave them behind sayin', "I'll be right back sweetie... soon as this weather passes..."
Be responsible.  They are yours.  They depend on you.
Not the sheriff, not the fire department, not the humane society, not the local high school shelter... YOU!
Don't whine, don't cry, don't blame anybody for not rolling out some magical red carpet for you!
They are your responsibility and if you can't take care of them.......
You know you live in Florida.
California has earthquakes.
The desert has scorpions.
New Orleans floods.
Minnesota has snow.
And Florida has gators, sharks and hurricanes....
If you're not prepared to live in the natural environment that surrounds you, then it may be wise to change environments.
I currently have a recovering large dog in my family.  Getting him around ain't easy!  But there is no option.  Where I go, he goes.  No matter what.  I know this ahead of time, and I will be prepared with whatever means I have. Period. The End.
Don't leave animals behind.
You have plenty of warning and plenty of time to find solutions that are good and right.

If you need assistance, here are some resources:
http://www.pinellascounty.org/emergency/petpreparedness.htm

PFS means Pet Friendly Shelter
http://www.petfriendlytravel.com/pet_shelters
http://www.floridapetfriendly.com/pet-friendly-hurricane-shelters.htm
http://www.spcaflorida.org/community-resources/disaster//

Be Safe and Never Leave Animals Behind!!!