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Working with animals and pain

Posted on Thursday Aug 27 10:30:00 BST 2009

Recently I've noticed I've been working with a fair number of horses experiencing physical pain. It makes me realise that I often go through phases of working with uncannily similar underlying issues - sometimes so much so that I get to the next animal and think, "You can't have these problems - they’re exactly what the last two horses had!" 

 

All the animals I work with have been seen, or are currently being seen, by their veterinary practitioner and often a host of other professionals, and yet sometimes no physiological cause can be identified.
 
Animals, like us, experience pain in a multitude of different ways.  And working with them can prove a great lesson in just how similar animal's experience of pain is to our own, and how connected it is to their current mental and emotional state.  Ain't this logical so far?  We are all animals, after all.

 

When trying to identify pain, I'm using a variety of tools to gain information.  How specific this information is depends on how much time we have together, but they can include. 

 

1.  Kinaesthesia - feeling the pain in my body

 

2.  Clairvoyance - looking at a photo and being drawn to different areas; or having the animal indicate where it hurts, either by moving his body or showing an image, representation or symbol of where it hurts.

 

3. Feeling with the hands around the animal's energy body.  

 

However working in these ways alone, it’s not always easy to interpret the exact intensity of that pain as the animal experiences it.  As a result, it can also be helpful to use a pain scale. 

 

A pain scale is commonly a scale of 1 to 10, where 1 (or 0) is no pain, and 10's the worst pain ever experienced, but you can use any kind of gauge from thermometers to car rev counters or speedometers.  They've even been adapted into cartoon faces for young children, ranging from a happy face all the way through to downright miserable. With most animals, I find the numbers work very well. Using a scale also makes it quick and easy to compare different or closely related parts of the body, and also a way of comparing ‘before and after’ pain, allowing me to see what’s changing and by how much.

 

So once the animal has communicated an area of discomfort or pain I'll ask him to rate it on a scale of 1-10, and the response is usually a pretty accurate guide to what's going on.  If it’s 15/10 there’s a problem.  If it’s 3/10 it may just be a grumble.  And anything above 5/10 is where working with the emotions starts making things a lot more interesting.

 

For a start, any animal that tells me he's got 15/10 pain will also be giving me a lot of emotional information.  Imagine having agonizing back pain, someone still wanting you to give them a piggy back and the doctor telling you there’s nothing physiologically wrong, and you’ll have an idea of what some of these feelings can be:

 

I can’t take this anymore

This is unbearable

They don’t understand

They’re not listening to me

They don’t see me

 

These statements, thoughts and feelings are the clue to what’s really going on underneath the pain. All those statements could lead to a past trauma or significant negative event.  And when an animal expresses such feelings, as a therapist what I want to know is:

 

What is it you really can’t take any more of?

What’s making it unbearable?

Who doesn’t understand?

Who isn’t listening?

Who isn’t seeing you?

 

In my experience, these questions are rarely answered in the present, or in the pain itself. And usually you can't begin to help that animal with his real pain until you’ve answered them.

 

The best bit of all for your vet is that, by dealing with these deeper underlying issues, it’s possible to help the animal benefit the most from modern veterinary science and manipulative therapies.

 

The best bit for you is that it gives your animal the potential to make a full emotional, mental and physical recovery without repeating a pattern of trauma or injury. This should be the goal of any holistic treatment.

 

Blessings to you and your animals, 

 

Brige
 

 

Brigid Reilly
Animal Intuitive Therapist

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Top logo/header photo of horse (c) Jeanne Hatch, dreamstime.com
 
 
 
Brigid Reilly
Therapist, Communicator & Healer
 
0800 977 4767
 
 

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