What If Your Pet Had a DNR? Planning for Peace When Crisis Hits
Author: BrightHaven Caregiver Academy
April 15, 2026
Duration: 24:06
Most of us have heard of a DNR — a Do Not Resuscitate order — in the context of human medicine. It's a deeply personal document, a loving act of planning that says: when my time comes, let me go in peace.
But here's a question nobody in the pet care world is asking yet: what would it look like if your pet had one?
In this episode of Peace of Mind for Pet Parents, Karen Wylie and Gail Pope have a remarkably candid and deeply personal conversation about the gap between the end-of-life care plans pet parents make — and what actually happens when a crisis arrives. Drawing on their own experiences with DNRs in human medicine, and decades of witnessing peaceful natural deaths in the animals they have cared for, Karen and Gail explore why planning ahead — before panic sets in — may be one of the most loving things you can ever do for your pet.
In this episode you'll hear:
— Why DNR conversations in human medicine begin early — while the patient is still well — and why the same principle applies to planning your pet's end-of-life care
— Karen's personal story of navigating seven years of cardiology appointments with her husband, and what that experience revealed about the power of thinking ahead
— Gail's deeply personal account of her husband Richard's final crisis — including the moment he verbally revoked his own DNR — and what it taught her about the gap between our intentions and our instincts under pressure
— Why pet parents who are committed to comfort care often end up in an emergency clinic anyway — and what happens to the dying process when they do
— Gail's unforgettable story of returning to a veterinary clinic to find her cat peacefully and naturally dying on the table — and what that moment taught the entire veterinary team present
— Why consistent, committed comfort care — not crisis intervention — is what makes peaceful natural death possible for animals
— The idea of a Comfort Care Commitment for pets: what it might include, why timing matters, and what Karen is developing as a next step for pet parents who want to think this through before they need to
This is a conversation that needed to happen. We're so glad you're here for it.💜
🐾 Next episode: Karen promised Gail a brand new planning tool for pet parents — tune in next week to see what she delivers!
📌 Related Resource:
📖 BrightHaven Caregiver Academy: brightpathforpets.com
📖 BrightHaven: brighthaven.org
📖 Animal Hospice Group: animalhospicegroup.com
📖 The BrightHaven Way: Lessons from 700 Animal Teachers PDF: https://brightpathforpets.com/brighthaven-way-book/
📖 Download the PEACEFUL Quality of Dying Guide: Signs of a Peaceful Passing at: https://brightpathforpets.com/resources-html/
📖 Walking The BrightPath: A Pet Parent’s Guide To Home Hospice And Natural Transition - https://brightpathforpets.com/blog/pet-hospice-guide
📖 Soul-Centered Care: Seeing Pet Death DifferentlyA BrightPath TRANSITION Series Booklet - https://brightpathforpets.com/soul-centered-care-booklet/
🌹 Join our monthly Rose Ceremony (free online pet celebration): https://brightpathforpets.com/rose-ceremony/
💬 If this episode touched your heart, you’re not alone.The BrightHaven Caregivers’ Hub is our supportive membership community for pet parents navigating caregiving, anticipatory grief, and all the moments in between.
We gather to share stories, ask questions, and care for each other as we care for our animals. If you’re walking this path, we’d be honored to walk it with you.
🔗 Learn more about the Hub: https://brightpathforpets.com/caregivers-hub/
📌Thanks for listening! Don’t forget to subscribe and leave a review 🐶⭐🐱
📌About the Hosts:
💜 Karen Wylie, EdD is the Executive Director of the Animal Hospice Group and Co-Founder of BrightHaven Caregiver Academy. With decades of experience as an educator, caregiver, and organizational consultant, Karen has personally navigated the caregiving journey with cats, dogs, and horses through chronic illness and end-of-life transitio