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CONTACT:
Shiri R. Joshua, M.A., OACCPP   About Shiri Joshua
Tel. (416) 571-1175
[email protected]

Pet Loss Bereavement not to be taken lightly: Resources for coping now available!

For the most part, grief over the loss of a pet is still not considered to be "legitimate" or "serious enough" in our present society, and is often looked upon as "inappropriate," "bizarre," or simply "wrong."  Frequently, statements such as "it's just a pet," or "just get another one" can be heard, a response that tends to hinder the grieving process, increase sense of isolation and of being misunderstood, and increase embarrassment over one's feelings of grief.

Shiri Joshua, M.A. (Couns. Psych), is a child, adolescent and adult psychotherapist in private practice, a journalist, and the director and founder of Mental Health Resources Canada, an online community of mental health professionals. For years, she has been fascinated by the issue of the Human-Animal Bond, and the incredible contribution animals provide to human life, and the associated physiological, emotional, and social benefits of owning a pet.

Her great interest in this area of study brought her to begin training in the field of Animal Assisted Therapy (AAT), a unique psychotherapeutic technique of utilizing trained animals such as dogs, cats, rabbits, or dolphins, as therapeutic while attending to different children's conditions such as ADHD, Autism, Anxiety, and other behavioural disorders. In October 2003, Shiri attended a professional seminar specific for this fascinating topic in Pasadena, California, and later conducted a personal interview with Dr. Aubrey Fine, one of the leading psychologists in the field of AAT. Her report will be featured in Business Women Canada magazine in the new year.

After attending a number of seminars and researching the area of Pet Loss Bereavement, Shiri, a long time pet owner herself, found that among the millions of pet owners in Canada, almost all will experience the loss of their companion animal at some point in their lives, with many remaining alone in their grief, often unable to find acceptance and legitimacy to their feelings. Some populations also present a risk for developing further complications such as clinical depression, complicated bereavement, and at times even suicidal wishes. 

With Shiri's personal and professional background, she was able to combine her compassion for people and animals by utilizing her clinical skills to offer support groups and individual counselling in the areas of Coping with Pet Loss Bereavement in various locations such as Newmarket, Brampton, and Toronto.

Shiri's work was featured in The Toronto Sun, Hospital News, On The Line: Live with Christine Williams (CTS TV), and an upcoming feature articles in Business Women Canada, and Dogs, Dogs, Dogs magazines (Feb-March). 

The next cycle of groups will begin in January, March, and May of 2004, with an ongoing support and resources for participants throughout the process.  She is hoping to allow her clients the opportunity to find support, acceptance, and expression to their loss, while offering resources, coping strategies, and education about the process of bereavement in general, and in regards to pet loss in particular.

For more information on MHRC and the Pet Loss Bereavement project, please contact Shiri R. Joshua directly at the numbers provided above.

MHRC
Mental Health Resources Canada
www.MHRC.ca 


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For More Information Contact:

ILovedMyPet.com
Email: [email protected]
Internet: https://www.ilovedmypet.com/

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