FOUR-LEGGED SUPPORT
If you paw through the staff
directory on the website of Sillinger Family Funeral Home in Greenfield,
Indiana, be sure to scroll down to
catch a photo and biographical glimpse of Butler,
a long-eared and furry employee that’s also featured on another page pertaining
to “Grief & Healing.” Like his
human colleagues, the facility’s Golden Retriever, trained for grief therapy,
receives customer feedback via his own e-mail address.
As a staff member at the DeJohn
Funeral Homes & Crematory in the Cleveland, Ohio area, Magic, a
Portugeese Water Dog, has his own business cards as well as Facebook
followers. At the Michigan
Memorial Funeral Home in Flat Rock, Michigan, Zoey’s business cards are given to guests as a keepsake to remind them of
the comfort the Golden Retriever offered during their experience there. Also, the pooch’s name is written as
the first entry in a guest register book at funerary events.
A page on the website of the
G.H. Hermann Funeral Homes in Indianapolis and Greenwood, Indiana, features two “facility dogs” that grace the
premises. An overview of job
descriptions for these licensed grief counselors, Lady
and Jax, includes the names of the locations
where they work. Both tail-waggers
can be contacted by way of their singular e-mail addresses. Multiple Facebook comments directed
toward Lady suggest that these compassionate associates have quite a following!
Many organizations around
the country have been training and registering dogs for healing ministrations
in different types of community settings and under varying circumstances. Often they are summoned for visits to
places where tragedies have occurred.
But, increasingly, their value is being realized at nationwide funeral
homes.
You can find:
Jovie, a German Shepherd mix, at the Life
Changes Grief Management Center of Caldwell & Cowan Funeral Home in Georgia;
Moses, a Golden
Retriever, at Westville Funerals and Cremation in South Carolina;
Bogan, a
miniature Australian Shepherd, at the Brunswick Memorial Funeral Home in New Jersey;
Dakota, at the Life Tributes
Funeral Home & Cremation Service in Spencer, Wisconsin;
Otis, at the Gwen Mooney Funeral Home in the Cinncinnati region;
Kibbi, at the Morris Baker Funeral Home
& Cremation Services in
Johnson City, Tennessee;
Seger, a Chocolate Lab, at Duffield &
Pastrick Family Funeral Home in Coloma, Michigan;
Aragon at the Turner
Funeral Home in the Pittsburgh area.
These are but a few of many
working “therapists” addressing the needs of grieving individuals and lending
cheer at arrangement conferences, visitations, funeral services, and
other affairs, while sometimes serving alongside a two-legged staff member as a
greeter at the door. For example,
by viewing a website video, one can observe Sage,
a Golden Retriever at Elm Ridge Funeral Home & Memorial Park in Muncie, Indiana, mingling among a group surrounding an open
casket.
In assuming their
professional roles, the cordial dogs (attired in service vests) integrate into
gatherings in a manner that makes a stunning impression on funeral directors
who often observe an uncanny and intuitive honing ability. That is, there is a perceptible
tendency for them to find and offer their solace to the individuals whose grief
seems to be the most pronounced.
Invariably, they tend to gravitate toward members of a decedent’s
immediate family.
The concept of grief therapy
dogs appears to be a burgeoning phenomenon because of the benefits that have
been reported by those who have adopted it. The theoretical basis relates
to physiological processes, such as:
lowering of blood pressure and heart rate, decrease in levels of
cortisol; release of neurotransmitters and hormones ((dopamine, oxytocin, serotonin, endorphins, etc.) that improve mood; and a reduction in the incidence
of depression.
But empirical reality may be
more influential. Stroking the soft fur of a sedate dog can evoke
serenity. Unlike humans, “man’s
best friends” can be counted on to provide unconditional acceptance and
affection; they won’t judge someone who shows up in torn jeans and a ratty
hairdo.
For The News-Herald article by Jacob
Lammers (“Therapy dog works his ‘magic’ at funeral home”), in referring to their therapy dog, Patty DeJohn has
noted that "Magic brings comfort to people when words can't. People try to be comforting and say the
wrong things. With animals, it's an energy of love."
According to Felissa Elfenbein’s Two Little Cavaliers blog
entry (titled “Therapy Dog:
Funeral Home Greeter”), during a
family arrangement session at the Fawcett, Oliver, Glass and Palmer Funeral
Home in Chillicothe, Ohio, the
funeral director, Terry Palmer, observed a poignant moment when their therapy
dog approached someone who was particularly distraught. Wilson,
the Labrador consoler, walked over to the woman and gently laid his head on her
lap.
It goes without saying that
deciding to employ Hollie, a Driftwood
Golden Retriever, probably was a no-brainer for funeral directors of Betzler
Life Story Funeral Homes in
Kalamazoo, Michigan, since one of the
communities they serve is Paw Paw.
But a number of establishments are offering this amenity as a soothing
gesture, regardless of name incentives or whether or not their clients are well
heeled. It’s up to individual
families to decide if they’d like to have the
no-cost inclusion of a canine presence.
no-cost inclusion of a canine presence.
Mourners who welcome the
participation of these atypical stewards invariably reap consolation from their
therapeutic intervention. Even momentary contact can unleash suppressed
emotions. As reported
by Amy Rabideau Silvers in JSOnline (“Funeral home mourns therapy dog
Oliver”), at the Krause Funeral Home in Milwaukee, there was a time when a young boy who had stopped talking after a
sibling’s death actually talked at length to their veteran therapy dog, Oliver.
Personnel at various facilities often comment that, in spite of being dressed in suits and fine attire, folks attending events don’t hesitate to sit down on the floor to commune with the dogs.
Terry Palmer believes that
it’s important for a funeral “home” to feel like a home (as the name implies),
rather than like a mortuary. In an mlive.com article by Linda S.
Mah (“Canine comfort for the grieving: Golden retriever a welcome
friend at the funeral home”), Scott
Betzler reinforced this point when he reflected upon the usual manner of death
management prior to the advent of designated facilities. In previous eras, funeral activities
used to occur in the place where a decedent had lived – the rooms where
children played and meals were shared, with pets nearby on the sofa. He suggested that a funeral home, like
someone’s residence, is less intimidating when a pet is there to greet you.
So when fetching a funeral
home, maybe you’ll want to collar one that is literally going to the dogs! If personnel at an establishment you
favor tell you you’re barking up the wrong tree, at least you can hound the
funeral director a bit by suggesting this type of addition to their staff
roster. With a little prodding now,
perhaps by the time services are rendered your folks may be among those who
will appreciate the warmth and gentility of
a comforting canine attendant.