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Written
by Invitation for "Paws in Thought." This article
is now expanded into a beautiful new book, The Animals'
Viewpoint on Dying, Death, and Euthanasia. To order the
book, click on Books & Tapes.
What
Do Animals Think About Euthanasia?
By Elizabeth
Severino, B.A., M.B.A., D.D., Reiki Master
I'm
an animal communicator. When Dana O'Donnell asked me to
write for this publication, she assured me you, the readership,
deeply cared about animals and their well-being. I knew
I had many things I could write about. I asked the animals,
"What topic?" They answered, "Euthanasia."
I was
sure I wasn't ready to write on such a controversial
topic. The
animals, however, are incredibly powerful, wonderful, and
self-less teachers for me, and have been my entire life.
Since Dana asked me to write for her, and the animals chose
the topic, they immediately started teaching me newly about
dying, death, and euthansia. It was clear they had a very
important message they wanted me to understand and then
share.
As
is true for most of us, my life has been powerfully impacted
by death. In one 18-month period as an adolescent, my father,
grandfather, two uncles, and all of my beloved animals died
or were killed. I have been (briefly) dead myself. Even
so, the lessons of the past few months have added immeasurably
to my understanding of this phase of life.
My eternal
gratitude and love go to the exceptional animals, out of
form and in, each with an awesome and inspiring story, who
have come into my life to teach me about death, dying, and
euthanasia, including but not limited to: Freda; Pepper;
Tara; Max; Bear; Bea; Lucky; Tanuka; and Mario.
Euthanasia.
The
very word evokes an emotional response in most people. The
meaning . . . the morality . . . the legality . . . the
religious and spiritual implications . . . the questions
. . . the decision . . . the aftermath.
Euthanasia.
In Greek, which as a Dean's List Classics Major at Vassar
College, I studied for years, it means a painless, happy
death. Eu means well; and thanatos,
death. An easy and painless death; a painless method of
dying.
Often,
we use the word euthanasia as a verb, to euthanize, to mean
the causing of death painlessly, so as to end suffering.
This is most certainly our intention, one would hope, whenever
we make the choice to euthanize a beloved companion animal
who is suffering and/or incurably ill.
Accepted
and even expected in certain circumstances in certain cultures,
in our culture, that is, in the United States, euthanasia
is controversial. Performed on humans, in the U.S., it is
exceptionally controversial, and mostly illegal. Performed
on animals, in the U.S., it is occasionally controversial,
and for companion animals, almost always highly personal
for the humans making the decision(s). Often, the humans
making such decisions for their companion animals experience
exceptional pain and suffering and grief.
Among
health professionals, euthanasia has been advocated by some
for millennia as a way to deal with victims of incurable
diseases. English Physician John Arbuthnot (1675-1735) said:
"The kindest wish of my friends is euthanasia." Dr. Jack
Kevorkian's work is thought-provoking and controversial.
Among
the religious communities, the issues relative to animals
deal with questions ranging from, "Do animals have souls?
Does it even matter?" to "Isn't euthanasia just another
word for murder?"
Legal
issues include animals as property and owner's rights to
the disposition of that property.
Spiritual
issues recognize the One-ness, the kinship, of all life;
and the innate need of the soul, regardless of its form,
for gentle honoring.
The
questions agonizing humans frequently ask themselves in
their times of profound love and pain, anticipating the
extraordinary grief of separation from a beloved companion,
include, "Is euthanasia really right at all?
Is it just another word for murder? When
should I do it? How will I know?"
The
aftermath, in addition to the deep sense of loss, often
also includes guilt, especially if some of the factors the
human entered into the equation of the decision included
knowledge of expensive yet iffy interventions declined;
the inconvenience of caring for the very ill; and pressure
from well-meaning friends. And then there's doubt.
But
this is all from the human perspective. Desert
Dan once said, "There's opinions about animals, and
there's facts about animals. If you want opinions, ask the
humans. If you want the facts, ask the animals."
What
about the animals? What do
they think about it? Do they want it, or not? And if they
do want it, is there a time that it is better for them?
If so, under what circumstances?
I've
communicated with over 4,000 animals in 9 countries. In
person. One at a time. In multi-animal households, singly
and collectively. In groups, at seminars, workshops, presentations,
and animal communication gatherings. Over the telephone.
Via the Internet. Many of the animals have been suffering.
Many have been elderly and infirm. Many have been in extremely
compromised health, in varying stages of dying.
I've
"stayed with" many of them, giving healing energy, sometimes
helping with transitions and more often, reading what they
need to return to health now, working with their veterinarians,
and communicating their reactions to various interventions.
Many of the animals have lived. Some of them have died.
Some of them have been euthanized. Some died "naturally."
Interestingly, all of the animals who have transitioned,
have asked their humans for some form of ritual honoring
their passage.
I also
talk to spirit/souls. I read spirit/souls in living bodies,
human and animal; and I also read them when they've left
form, or are incorporeal. Since more and more people are
asking me to contact their transitioned animals, and increasing
numbers of people and veterinarians are contacting me to
help animals otherwise quite ill, I've been placed in a
very unique position of connecting some very powerful "dots"
in my life.
One,
I never used to believe in reincarnation. It was perfectly
fine with me that others did. I just didn't, myself. Until
the animals taught me, conclusively, otherwise. The animals
have a VERY different "opinion" about death from
the opinion of most humans. The animals know they'll reincarnate.
They absolutely know that death as humans know it, is a
death of physical form, only.
Two,
it never occurred to me that I, a highly trained computer
architecture designer, with a Masters in Computer Science
and Business Administration, would ever become a healer,
a spiritual mentor and energy therapist. My first book was
Guide to International Computer Systems Architecture! Nor
did it ever occur that I would use my gift as an animal
communicator, which I've had since birth, to help, beyond
the animals in my own household. And then I experienced
an epiphany during which a miracle witnessed by 7 others
saved my life, and the angels taught me otherwise.
Three,
I believed that when at all possible, let an animal or a
human live and die with grace and honor, in balance and
order, with all due respect to the various health approaches
possible, and with as little invasion of their bio-spirit
as possible. This belief, my experiences with the animals
have resoundingly confirmed.
It comes
to me to say, that I am truly one who honors all beliefs
as leading to One. I absolutely believe in the Divine, the
One-ness, in kinship with all life. Specifically, my father
was a Roman Catholic and my mother a Presbyterian. When
they married, they blended their beliefs and became Episcopalian.
My brothers and I were raised and confirmed both Presbyterian
and Episcopalian; we went to Quaker meetings and Episcopalian
schools. The teachings of St. Francis have guided me my
entire life. I am blessed in that my uncle was an animal
communicator and hands-on healer long before those words
were even in the common vocabulary. My family was affluent
and had Buddhist and Baptist servants. I live in a primarily
Jewish neighborhood. My dog is named after a Cherokee Indian.
I am an ordained minister in the Universal Life Church,
an All-Faith Religion; and hold a Doctor of Divinity Degree
in Comparative Religion. I have studied and speak 9 languages
and am currently learning Hebrew, Sanskrit, and Aramaic.
I am also an energy therapist and healer who spent years
studying the Judao-Christian Kabbalah, two summers ago spent
time in Mexico studying with Mayan shamans and this past
summer spent time in Bali studying with healers there. I
am aligned with Sathya Sai Baba and absolutely honor his
message of Truth and Love. My "official" title is the Rev.
Doctor Elizabeth Severino.
I've
known for years that some spirits, after leaving form, were
clear very quickly; and that some seemed to be quite confused,
for long periods of time, before I could effectively communicate
with them. Some spirits I have read (mostly human suicides)
are still confused, even now, years later. I haven't known
why, and over the past few months, the animals have answered
that question.
The
animals tell me there are three stages of death. They call
these stages, rather simply, Stage 1, Stage 2, and Stage
3. Killing an animal, putting an animal down, or euthanizing
it, has very different implications, during and after the
death of the physical body, depending on the stage of death
that the animal is in and the energy of intention around
the death. Basically, the differences seem to come down
to the ability or lack thereof of the physical body to recover,
including the amount and the length of time of the physical
suffering; and the amount of time and the approach, the
energetic environment, the consciousness has had, in preparing
for its separation from form.
If you
"kill" an animal too soon, too quickly, when the animal
and/or the spirit/body are not ready yet, not even in any
of the stages, and without spiritual permission, then the
spirit/soul becomes extremely confused and can take a long
time, up to 2 years, or more, human time, before it becomes
clear. Killing an animal before the 1st stage of death has
even begun, will result in this extended confusion. This
could mean that an animal which was otherwise healthy, was
killed, by accident or intention.
In the
1st stage of dying, in which, although the animals call
it the "1st stage of dying", an animal is still capable
of recovering, the animal actually knows its physical body
is capable of healing, and often can heal itself, but still
requires some cooperation from its immediate environment.
This cooperation would include proper food, rest, cleanliness
of wounds or abrasions, and perhaps some veterinary intervention.
An animal euthanized in the 1st stage will be confused for
anywhere from 6 to 12 months, human time.
In the
2nd stage of dying, an animal's physical body may or may
not recover. An animal in this stage knows it requires intervention
of some sort in order for its physical body to heal. It
is no longer able to heal itself completely by itself. An
animal euthanized in the 2nd stage will be confused for
anywhere from 6 weeks to 6 months, human time.
In the
3rd stage of dying, an animal knows its physical body can
no longer be healed without a Divine intervention. It begins
the separation of soul/spirit from form. The spirit/soul
of an animal euthanized in the 3rd stage can be sufficiently
clear to be contacted within 24 hours, and is usually completely
clear in 4 to 6 weeks, human time. I find the same is true
of human consciousness. My best friend's mother suffered
with Alzheimers for years. She was clear within an hour
of the death of her physical body. Animals euthanized in
the 3rd stage react very, very similarly to animals who
have died naturally. It is almost the same for them as dying
naturally, and they are fine with it. Some are quite clear
that their primary experience, from entry into the 3rd stage
on, will be pain and progressive failure of the body.
Human
words cannot do justice to the extraordinary range, the
difference, the distinctions, the continuum from the exquisite
peace and clarity of an animal euthanized in the 3rd stage,
to the painful, explosive confusion of an animal leaving
form even before the 1st stage. Nor can human words appropriately
stress how extraordinary it is and how important it is to
know that the 3rd stage is so similar in its spiritual impact,
to natural death. Once I finally "got" this lesson, it became
mandatory for me to understand what clues or keys the animals
could give us, so that we would know when they were in the
3rd stage, so as to not euthanize them too soon. And it
became mandatory for me to share the knowledge.
This
discovery has been a dramatic one for me. I still get tears
in my eyes when I recall the week of lessons when I "got"
it, really understood their message to me, and remember
the animals, some of whom quite literally gave their lives
so that I could understand the stages and their distinctions,
energetically; and their deep plea that I share this understanding.
I remember the week as clearly as I am now sitting at my
computer writing this.
And
in that incredible week, toward its end, amazingly, almost
every veterinarian I work with, somehow, suddenly, had a
reason to contact me. I was able to tell them what I am
now writing to you; and every one of them medically understood
exactly what I was saying.
A suffering
companion animal's entry into the 3rd stage is marked by
a very sudden change in behavior, a change dramatic enough
and different enough so that its humans notice. Please note
we are talking about suffering, dis-eased, or old and infirm
animals. An animal who has never bitten, will bite. An animal
who has never experienced seizures, will experience fits.
An animal which has never "sounded" excessively (barked,
screeched) will sound excessively .(Exception: an elderly
cat, doing what I call vocalizing, is doing something very
different . . . it is NOT an indicator of 3rd stage). An
animal which has always been familiar will become distant.
An animal
either entering into or already in the 3rd stage, will suddenly
start to react as if it were (in human terms) delusional,
relating to and or responding to, figures that to human
eyes "aren't there." What's happening at this point, is
that the animal's consciousness is starting to separate
from form, and it is actually starting to more clearly see
energies, sometimes incorporeal human or animal, and often
angelic, which most human eyes can't readily see.
If you're
a caretaker for a suffering animal, are convinced your animal's
physical body cannot recover, and you suspect but aren't
sure if your animal is in the 3rd stage, ask it. Breathe
deeply and center yourself as best you can; clear your mind
as best you can; remember foremost your love for your animal
and the highest good; turn your energy intently to your
animal, and ask, "Are you ready to leave form now?" Breathe
deeply again. Your animal will answer in that breath.
If you're
not sure of the answer, repeat the procedure, and this time,
ask, "Will you please give me a sign, a behavior change,
if and when you become ready, if and when you enter the
3rdstage?" The animals will always respond,
"Yes," to this question.
Then
you wait and watch. And if you're still not sure, repeat
the procedure, and add, "Will you please make it very
obvious if you're in or when you've entered the 3rd stage?"
Virtually
every animal I've assisted at this time, has asked for an
honoring ritual, to assist its' spirit's separation from
form.
The
clearer an animal gets, the sooner it can move its essence
energy on to its reincarnation. In many cases over the past
few years, I've found animals that were so clear after separating
from form, they could and did tell their humans whether
or not there was a chance that they would be together again
in this lifetime; and if so, have told the humans the approximate
geographical location, the approximate timing, and the form,
into which they would reincarnate. Several are indeed now
together again.
So,
if this relates to your life, to the animals in your care,
please know that the animals are OK with being euthanized.
Please also know that they will love you whatever you do
and whatever you decide. It's easier on them ultimately,
however, if euthanizing is done in the correct time. Look
for the signs of being in the 3rd stage. It matters. To
all of us.
Elizabeth
Severino, B.A., M.B.A., D.D., Reiki Master, is an animal
communicator, intuitive reader, spiritual guide, and energy
therapist. As of this writing, she has communicated with
over 4,000 animals in 9 countries. In addition to being
the author of 4 books (a fifth, on animal communication,
is being written now), she is also an entertaining and informative
speaker and workshop leader and a radio & TV personality.
Her passionate hobby is ballroom dancing.
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