The benefits of having a pet in the home are already numerous; however, those who take in animals from rescue organizations and shelters often experience additional, powerful feelings:
- Profound Satisfaction: Caring for a shelter pet gives an animal a second chance and directly contributes to reducing animal overpopulation and euthanasia rates, fostering a deep sense of meaningful satisfaction from helping to save a life.
- Special Bonds: Many report a particularly strong bond with rescued pets, finding uncanny similarities between the animal and themselves or believing the animals are especially grateful for a loving home after experiencing hardship.
- Deep Gratitude: Many express euphoric levels of gratitude for having the opportunity to help the animal. describing the experience as lifechanging for them as well. A refrain heard over and over is "I set out to save the animal, but the animal ended up saving me."
A theme found in practically all of these cases is animal rehabilitation: The animals come into their home with some significant problem that causes them noticeable distress, but through the course of caring for them, that problem is alleviated and the animals get noticeably happier. Witnessing and participate in an animal's rehabilitation may be the most powerful factor underpinning these revelatory and transformational feelings, and more importantly, such an experience would have distinctly beneficial effects for people recovering from trauma, (as it taps into several aspects of the human-animal bond and can lead to significant emotional and cognitive benefits.)
Furthermore, we do not have to wait on the stars of fate for such an occurrence. Rather, with proper planning, an Animal-Supportive Home, and a solid partnership with a reliable and well-run shelter, situations where people recovering from trauma can benefit from animal rehabilitation can be reliably constructed/engineered.
Ignoring the most extreme cases, which require professional care to handle, it is still extremely common for rescued animals to have some lingering health or behavioral problems that are products of their former, harmful environment. Cats are amazingly resilient, though, and minor problems are often eventually alleviated simply by moving to a better environment. Animal-Supportive Homes provide such an ideal environment that they can even improve the behavior of cats who were already considered healthy and well-adjusted.
This is because, as opposed to dogs, cats are only semi-domesticated and have fairly rigid instinctual needs. Few people are aware of any of this, so most pet cats live in suboptimal conditions which regularly cause them stress; in fact, several behaviors people interpret as personality quirks are actually the result of varying stressors. However, providing cats an environment where their main stressors are removed and all their needs are taken care of makes many cats calm and docile.
A well-run rescue organization sees a steady turnover of cats, and an experienced worker there can identify ideal candidates for this concept: essentially, cats without any major problems who just need a good home to blossom. By choosing these cats rather than ones who are already ideal therapy animals, residents have the opportunity to a part of a much more impactful experience: reciprocal healing.
Many rescue animals have their own histories of trauma, abuse, or neglect. By helping these animals heal, a person in recovery can witness and actively participate in a process of transformation. This shared journey of recovery can be deeply validating and empowering. Seeing an animal learn to trust again, overcome fear, and thrive under their care can serve as a powerful mirror for the human's own healing journey. This process provides incontrovertible proof that recovery is possible, which can break down one of the most formidable barriers to therapy: hopelessness.
This experience can further aid recovery by fostering secure attachment. Trauma often shatters trust and can lead to difficulties in forming secure attachments with others. Rescue animals who have also experienced trauma can offer a safe and non-judgmental space to practice building trust with another being with whom survivors feel a shared bond. Such a bond be a survivor's first new experience with a secure and healthy attachment, especially if their trauma involved relational issues.
Fortunately, it is not uncommon to find people with professional trauma recovery experience working in animal rescue
With that, the seeds of reciprocal healing have been planted.
and empathetic worker there
Fortunately, there is a lot of crossover between
By combining all these factors
In this way, residents are set up for success
exceedingly few cats live in
're practically guaranteed
that they can even improve the behavior of cats that were already considered healthy and well-adjusted.
This is because cats very few people understand that cats are only semi-domesticated,
Witnessing the rehabilitation of an adopted rescue animal can have a profound and largely positive psychological impact on the human caregivers involved. This
This phenomenon can be leveraged to help vulnerable humans while healing animals at the same time.
is that the animals had something wrong with them
- Witnessing Rehabilitation: Rescued animals often have health or behavioral problems which are products of their former environment.
Requires a partnership with a reliable and well-run shelter to identify good candidates for the program.
Studies of animal adoption programs are replete with accounts of participants describing how
Many of these are the general benefits of having a pet.
However, there are distinct, powerful effects of adopting and animal from a shelter or rescue
HEART is an acronym that stands for "Humans Experiencing Animal Rehabilitation Therapy," which is a specialized type of animal exposure therapy that heavily relies on an animal-supportive home.
to maximize the impact of animal exposure therapy
The specific
Add to HEART: Useful for group environments, short duration when all residents are compatible with it, not permanent in case some residents end up not liking it as much, they see the cat get better and move on before getting too attached.
HEART for Trauma Recovery