When we talk about how death is perceived, and even more, we wonder how it will be perceived by others, perhaps there isno better way to understand empathy, cognitive art that allows us to reconnect with others . And why not? Even with animals.
If anyone knows of empathy for animals are veterinarians. Therefore, through their experiences sacrificing sick dogs we know how they feel before dying dogs .
An example of this is in response to a vet gave her client when she asked what the hardest part of your job. The user tweeted response vet, to raise awareness about:
I asked my vet what was the hardest part of her job and told me that when he had to sacrifice an animal, 90% of the owners did not want to be in the room when injected. The last moments of the animal are often frantic and look around to find their owners.
- jessi dietrich (@jessi_dietrich) July 27, 2018
Following the success of this tuit, a veterinary hospital in South Africa sought to raise awareness about what they feel the dogs before he died and the importance of being at his side in the final moments. In his Facebook account they replicated the publication of one of their veterinarians , who with his words seeks to prevent people abandon their dogs when they are slaughtered .
According to this specialist, dogs "in every face looking to the beloved" and do not understand why his owner is not. Therefore, he insists:
Do not be a coward just because you think it's too difficult for you. Imagine what you feel when you leave them at their most vulnerable moment and people like me have to do everything possible each time to console them, make them be less frightened and try to explain why they just could not stay.
So, talking about empathy, it seems that the owners have to face the painful situation of sacrificing our dog , but not only with the decision to do so, but coming to the end: not leaving him alone in his last moments.
Because dogs before dying, feel fear, uncertainty and unrest like us.
It may sound like an existential question to ask whether dogs understand they are going to die. But in truth, empathy is the best tool to understand this process in them ; because if we ask whether they understand death in the sense that reason it out , the answer is indisputable: it is known that dogs do not reason like us.
However, if you feel. And some of their cognitive instincts, like the feeling or intuition, are much stronger in them than in us - and that says a lot about their behavior -. Well they know such a thing as veterinarians Jennifer Coates , who in his experience has been shown that dogs - and other animals have a peculiar understanding of situations involving death , either own or someone else:
I once HEADQUARTERS the family dog and placed an IV catheter through which he would administer the last injection of euthanasia solution. At this point, the family cat had stayed away. But just when I began to administer the injection, walked beside me, gently she lays down and put his paw on his friend's leg as if to say: "Do not worry, I'm here with you."
What is certain is that -and beautiful- a dog, before dying, he feels an immense love .
A dog is able to foresee what will happen, and therefore wants to be with his own - his friend before leaving. The experiences of most of those who have accompanied your dog in this process this has been proven, as some collected in the Quora website where some owners responded to the question of why they feel the dogs before he died :
He was not in India when Bugs died [...] After the funeral [...] finally my brother asked mom: " Ma, what was he doing before he died Bugs?". Tears fell down her cheeks. In a voice of obvious pain, she said, " He stopped eating. I gave everything I would like, but nothing worked. I gestured toward the tree: I went out and sat there. When he saw me there, she gave a little bark playfully jumped and fell asleep. He never woke up , "he said.
That was the tree under which mom found 10 years ago.Was he saying thank you, maybe? Or I love you? Or was it just a dance of joy? I really do not know.- Jedidiah Benhur Margoschis Wisely, Inglés Instructor (2012-present) Answered May 12, 2018Honestly, it's different for each dog, just as it is different for everyone.I've been there, at the end of three family dogs that died of disease. [ ...] None of my dogs tried to go and be alone when they were dying. Always they wanted to be with us (especially me). Layla was no different, so we spent the last night on the kitchen floor with her. I could not stand, but if he left the room, try crawl to follow.With three dogs whose deaths witnessed, their bodies began to close, but continued to maintain the will to live and love they feel for their families. In the end, their bodies fail them and it seems they are no longer aware of anything. I never had a dog left alone to die, or that was easily or while sleeping. I was always heartbreaking, but I was glad they were surrounded by love when they were.Alicia Bayer, BA Creative Writing in Inglés & Women's Studies, University of Kentucky (1992) Answered February 23, 2017This is a little hard for me! But I still try to answer what a dog feels before he died:That's Tuffy, the tontito who blessed my life while he was alive, but left me desolate and depressed when he crossed!He blessed us with their presence for about 12 years. He had developed an enlarged prostate that led to urinary tract infection (UTI). Because of this medical condition could not urinate, and subjected to a lot of medical procedures over a period of time, but his condition deteriorated, leading to multiple organ failure.On his last day he wandered in every corner of our house frantically, in every corner where loved to hang out. It seemed as if he knew his time was up, and was trying to convey the same. In his final moments he was in my arms, bleeding a little from his mouth, gasping for his last breaths before we leave for eternity. He died in my arms and my life has not been the same since.-M. Sachdev, Self Employed, Answered May 4, 2018
Any doubt that dogs love, from beginning to end?
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