Funeral Therapy Dogs Provide Furry Comfort to Mourners

If you’ve ever lost a loved one, you know how very difficult those first few weeks can be. If you had pets at the time, they were probably a major source of comfort for you as you grieved, their fur absorbing plenty of your tears.

To help mourners cope, the state of Texas got its first certified funeral therapy dog in 2017. Kermit, a Border Collie mix, was trained in how to deal with grieving people. (Based on my experience with my own dogs, I’m guessing minimal training is necessary.)

Kermit belongs to Melissa Unfred, who works for Affordable Burial and Cremation Service in Austin. She used to take Kermit to work with her before he became certified, and she noticed his demeanor changed when he was inside the business.

“A lot of people have been really surprised that he’s not hyper,” Unfred told KVUE. “You see that as a hand will go out to pet him, it’s like an immediate sigh of relief.”

Kermit can instinctively determine who’s suffering the most. “He’s something of a chameleon — he can kind of sense the energy in the room,” Unfred told KVUE. “Sometimes I will start to go upstairs and Kermit isn’t behind me. He ended up staying behind … He just moves himself into the position where he’s closest to the primary griever.”

In New York, a Goldendoodle named Lulu has been comforting mourners at Ballard-Durand Funeral & Cremation Services for the past few years.

Just like Kermit, Lulu has “an uncanny knack for knowing who needs her,” Matthew Fiorillo, president of the funeral home, told TODAY. “She’ll park herself right next to an older person to let them pet her one minute and the next she’s prancing around with kids. It’s been really impressive to watch.”

Humans need to touch, Fiorillo said. “Even just petting her can be a subtle distraction from the tremendous amount of grief people are going through,” he told TODAY.

Vinny, another Goldendoodle, is currently training to become a funeral therapy dog at the Kuhn Funeral Home in West Reading, Pa.

“Death is hard for all of us,” Michael Kuhn, the funeral home’s president, told WFMZ. “Death is sometimes, I think, even harder at younger ages, so to have sort of a distraction and a loving creature next to you, I think that’s going to serve really well.”

Kuhn told WFMZ the idea of having a funeral therapy dog on the premises “kind of immediately resonated with me. It just makes a lot of sense.”

It really does make sense. Just as therapy dogs comforting hospital patients have become commonplace nowadays, more and more funeral homes across the country are adding therapy dogs to their staffs. As Kermit, Lulu and Vinny have proven, funeral therapy dogs truly help make the process of mourning a little less painful.

If you think your compassionate pet has the makings of a great therapy dog, check out these tips for how to go about making it happen.

This story was originally published on Care2.com.

Photo: henriethaan

Shelter Dog Bruno Becomes Indiana’s First Law Enforcement Comfort Dog

When the sheriff of Lake County, Ind., adopted Bruno from an animal shelter four years ago, the two-year-old American Bulldog was in really bad shape. He had been beaten. He was skinny, malnourished and in serious need of medical care.

Bruno was nursed back to health by members of the Lake County Sheriff’s Department. Among them was Joe Hamer, a deputy who became Bruno’s handler, mainly because the dog liked to follow him around most of all. But Bruno needed to have a job to do.

Hamer, chairman of Indiana’s Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) Critical Incident Memorial Team, had an idea. Bruno was calm and caring. He had the perfect personality to become a comfort dog for law enforcement officers, first responders, and their families.

“That was the whole concept. We didn’t know of any dogs specifically for law enforcement,” Hamer told the Chicago Tribune. “And that’s when he became Sheriff Bruno.” The former shelter dog was likely the first law enforcement comfort dog in the state of Indiana.

As a comfort dog, Bruno’s duties include providing support for police officers having bad days on the job, and for the families of officers killed in the line of duty. Bruno attends the funerals of fallen two- and four-legged police officers.

“He will actually gravitate toward people when they are sad. When they cry he goes to them,” Hamer told WSBT. “That is not something that we taught him. That is just him. He does all that on his own. He reacts that way.”

After working in Lake County for a couple of years, Hamer and Bruno moved to Missouri in 2017 when Hamer became the program director for Concerns of Police Survivors (COPS), a nonprofit that helps the families and co-workers of fallen police officers rebuild their lives.

Earlier this year, Hamer and Bruno joined the St. Joseph County Sheriff’s Department in Missouri. Sheriff Bill Redman knew Hamer as a fellow member of the FOP Critical Incident Memorial Team. He was also aware of Bruno’s amazing qualities and wanted the dog to join his department.

“Seeing Bruno do his work, bringing joy to the family members, especially the children, I knew he would be beneficial to our community,” Redman told the Chicago Tribune.

Hamer said Bruno is the best dog he’s ever had in his lifetime. I believe it — Bruno reminds me a lot of my late, great Leroy Brown, who was also a Bulldog mix and one of my best dogs ever. Good ol’ Leroy reacted the very same way whenever someone was crying or otherwise stressed out and in need of some furry consolation.

Bruno, Hamer told the Chicago Tribune, “has the most amazing attitude for a dog that was abused, beaten and neglected. The way he has changed his life has been amazing.”

Bruno was born on May 15, which happens to be National Law Enforcement Memorial Day. For the first time ever this year, a dog had the honor of placing a flower at the Peace Officers’ Memorial Service in Washington, D.C., in memory of K9 officers killed in the line of duty. That dog was Bruno.

“I don’t know how to explain the reaction people have to him,” Hamer told the Chicago Tribune. “He has this spirit about him that everyone sees.”

You can see Bruno’s spirit (and send him a friend request!) on his Facebook page.

Photo credit: Sheriff Bruno/Facebook

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