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spelling Lee 2076-0760 MDPI AG General Social Sciences http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci8070217 <jats:p>This article is an autoethnographic examination of my experiences as a pet owner during a particularly challenging time in my life. Beginning with a summary of a critical incident, it shows the way in which fears for the safety of my pet cat, Lily, and my relationship with her impacted my health, wellbeing and identity. Depicting self-knowledge as partial, local and culturally located, I deconstruct the relationship I had with Lily in relation to the particular set of circumstances in which it was situated. I was seen by my doctor and prescribed a course of cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) during this period, and so, my account draws on my medical records, CBT notes and my CBT thought diary in an attempt to understand how and why my anxiety was manifested in my concern for Lily. The article calls for cognitive behaviour therapists to carefully evaluate external stressors before fears are dismissed irrational and reformulated as alternative thoughts. This article also demonstrates that familiesare diverse, and there are many ways of ‘doing family’. For many heterosexual and same-sex couples, pets give stability to a partnership and elevate it to family status, if only within the privacy of the home. Human–animal attachments can be comparable to human–human attachments, and where attachments to pets are as strong as those toward humans, fear of harm can be devastating.</jats:p> Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity Social Sciences
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title Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity
title_unstemmed Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity
title_full Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity
title_fullStr Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity
title_full_unstemmed Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity
title_short Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity
title_sort keeping lily safe: an autoethnographic exploration of human–animal attachment during adversity
topic General Social Sciences
url http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci8070217
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description <jats:p>This article is an autoethnographic examination of my experiences as a pet owner during a particularly challenging time in my life. Beginning with a summary of a critical incident, it shows the way in which fears for the safety of my pet cat, Lily, and my relationship with her impacted my health, wellbeing and identity. Depicting self-knowledge as partial, local and culturally located, I deconstruct the relationship I had with Lily in relation to the particular set of circumstances in which it was situated. I was seen by my doctor and prescribed a course of cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) during this period, and so, my account draws on my medical records, CBT notes and my CBT thought diary in an attempt to understand how and why my anxiety was manifested in my concern for Lily. The article calls for cognitive behaviour therapists to carefully evaluate external stressors before fears are dismissed irrational and reformulated as alternative thoughts. This article also demonstrates that familiesare diverse, and there are many ways of ‘doing family’. For many heterosexual and same-sex couples, pets give stability to a partnership and elevate it to family status, if only within the privacy of the home. Human–animal attachments can be comparable to human–human attachments, and where attachments to pets are as strong as those toward humans, fear of harm can be devastating.</jats:p>
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description <jats:p>This article is an autoethnographic examination of my experiences as a pet owner during a particularly challenging time in my life. Beginning with a summary of a critical incident, it shows the way in which fears for the safety of my pet cat, Lily, and my relationship with her impacted my health, wellbeing and identity. Depicting self-knowledge as partial, local and culturally located, I deconstruct the relationship I had with Lily in relation to the particular set of circumstances in which it was situated. I was seen by my doctor and prescribed a course of cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) during this period, and so, my account draws on my medical records, CBT notes and my CBT thought diary in an attempt to understand how and why my anxiety was manifested in my concern for Lily. The article calls for cognitive behaviour therapists to carefully evaluate external stressors before fears are dismissed irrational and reformulated as alternative thoughts. This article also demonstrates that familiesare diverse, and there are many ways of ‘doing family’. For many heterosexual and same-sex couples, pets give stability to a partnership and elevate it to family status, if only within the privacy of the home. Human–animal attachments can be comparable to human–human attachments, and where attachments to pets are as strong as those toward humans, fear of harm can be devastating.</jats:p>
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spelling Lee 2076-0760 MDPI AG General Social Sciences http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci8070217 <jats:p>This article is an autoethnographic examination of my experiences as a pet owner during a particularly challenging time in my life. Beginning with a summary of a critical incident, it shows the way in which fears for the safety of my pet cat, Lily, and my relationship with her impacted my health, wellbeing and identity. Depicting self-knowledge as partial, local and culturally located, I deconstruct the relationship I had with Lily in relation to the particular set of circumstances in which it was situated. I was seen by my doctor and prescribed a course of cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) during this period, and so, my account draws on my medical records, CBT notes and my CBT thought diary in an attempt to understand how and why my anxiety was manifested in my concern for Lily. The article calls for cognitive behaviour therapists to carefully evaluate external stressors before fears are dismissed irrational and reformulated as alternative thoughts. This article also demonstrates that familiesare diverse, and there are many ways of ‘doing family’. For many heterosexual and same-sex couples, pets give stability to a partnership and elevate it to family status, if only within the privacy of the home. Human–animal attachments can be comparable to human–human attachments, and where attachments to pets are as strong as those toward humans, fear of harm can be devastating.</jats:p> Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity Social Sciences
spellingShingle Lee, Social Sciences, Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity, General Social Sciences
title Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity
title_full Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity
title_fullStr Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity
title_full_unstemmed Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity
title_short Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity
title_sort keeping lily safe: an autoethnographic exploration of human–animal attachment during adversity
title_unstemmed Keeping Lily Safe: An Autoethnographic Exploration of Human–Animal Attachment during Adversity
topic General Social Sciences
url http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci8070217