• 048: Lighting a Lamp in the Darkness: Robin Singh's Mission to Reduce Animal Suffering
    Jan 19 2026

    Billions of animals suffer each year because of human choices. While rescue saves individual lives, preventing suffering at its source creates lasting change.

    In this episode of the Better Life for Animals Podcast, Cheryl Moss talks with Robin Singh, co founder of Peepal Farm, an animal rescue, veterinary clinic, and awareness organization in India.

    Robin shares how his pursuit of happiness after leaving the tech industry led to emptiness, until meeting an elderly woman caring for abandoned dogs shifted his life toward purpose. That experience became the foundation for Peepal Farm's mission.

    The conversation explores why rescue alone is not enough, how sterilization and education prevent future harm, and how storytelling through social media and animation has helped Peepal Farm reach millions with messages rooted in compassion rather than blame.

    Robin also reflects on his book Happiness Happens: Happiness For Those Who Have Everything Else and why purpose is the antidote to disconnection and despair.

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    29 mins
  • 047: Designing Sanctuaries Around Animals: How Piedmont Farm Animal Refuge is Transforming Rescue Care
    Jan 12 2026

    What would sanctuary life look like if animals were not housed for human convenience, but instead were given environments designed around their instincts, ancestry, and emotional well being?

    In this episode, Cheryl Moss speaks with Lenore Braford and Paul Drake of Piedmont Farm Animal Refuge in North Carolina. Lenore is the Founder and Executive Director, and Paul is the architect behind the refuge's innovative approach called animal centered design.

    You will discover how studying animal behavior changes everything about how sanctuaries are built. For example:

    Cows avoid enclosed barns because they need open visibility
    Ducks feel safest when they can quickly retreat to water
    Goats prefer to sleep at elevated heights
    Chickens thrive in shaded, forest like environments

    This conversation explores how environment affects healing, trust, safety, and dignity for rescued animals, many of whom have experienced trauma before arriving at sanctuary.

    We also highlight the new documentary Forever Home, created by Emmy winning filmmaker Allison Argo, which follows the stories of animals at the refuge and the evolution of animal centered design.

    Learn more or get involved:

    Forever Home documentary
    https://foreverhome.love

    Piedmont Farm Animal Refuge
    https://piedmontrefuge.org

    Better Life for Animals
    https://BetterLifeForAnimals.com/047-Piedmont-Farm

    If this episode inspires you, please share it so more people can learn how thoughtful design and compassionate care can transform the lives of animals.

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    35 mins
  • 046: How to Heal After Losing a Beloved Animal — A Conversation with Kaleel Sakakeeny
    Jan 5 2026

    Why Losing a Pet Hurts So Deeply — with Animal Chaplain Kaleel Sakakeeny

    Did you know that more than 20,000 people every month search for help coping with the heartbreak of losing an animal companion? That number tells a powerful story. The grief that follows the loss of a beloved animal is real, intense, and often misunderstood. For many, it is one of the deepest emotional wounds they will ever experience, yet society doesn't always acknowledge the depth of that pain.

    This is the life's work of Kaleel Sakakeeny, grief educator, ordained pastor, animal chaplain, and Executive Director of Animal Talks. After losing his beloved cat Cairo and experiencing profound heartbreak, Kaleel discovered that true healing doesn't come from suppressing grief — it comes from honoring it.

    In this episode, Kaleel shares:

    • Why grief after pet loss can feel overwhelming
    • The difference between grief (what we feel) and mourning (how we express it)
    • How the loss of ritual has left many people emotionally adrift
    • Why losing a pet often reawakens older, unresolved grief
    • How animals invite us into deeper compassion, love, and presence
    • Why grief is not a problem to fix — it is love searching for somewhere to go

    Kaleel believes animals are "the angels of our better selves." They soften us, ground us, and open our hearts. When we lose them, the pain can feel life-altering — but meaning and healing begin when grief is expressed, witnessed, and honored.

    If you or someone you love is grieving the loss of an animal companion, this conversation offers comfort, validation, and a path toward emotional healing.

    Full post at: www.betterlifeforanimals.com/podcast/046-kaleel

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    37 mins
  • 045: Dana Wilson on Ending a 400-Year Tradition of Dancing Bears and Saving Begging Elephants
    Dec 29 2025

    Ending a 400 Year Tradition of Dancing Bears: How Wildlife SOS is Transforming Animal Protection in India

    What happens when someone leaves a long corporate career to follow a calling rooted in compassion for animals? In this episode of the Better Life for Animals Podcast, host Cheryl Moss talks with Dana Wilson, Director of Marketing and Communications for Wildlife SOS, about what real animal protection looks like on the ground in India.

    Dana shares how his early volunteer work with animals eventually led him into full time nonprofit work. Today, Wildlife SOS operates inside one of the strongest wildlife protection systems in the world, helping animals while also supporting human communities.

    One of their biggest achievements was permanently ending the 400 year tradition of dancing bears in India. Wildlife SOS rescued 628 bears and helped entire families transition to new livelihoods, placed 15,000 children in school, and created vocational programs for women. A full generation is now growing up without ever seeing a dancing bear.

    Wildlife SOS also operates 24/7 snake rescue hotlines so snakes can be safely relocated instead of killed when they end up in homes, schools, or neighborhoods. Their work protects both people and wildlife.

    Dana and Cheryl talk about the deep trauma suffered by elephants who are forced into begging. One powerful story is Perry, an elephant rescued with broken bones and severe injuries who now moves with confidence and trust. Wildlife SOS has rescued more than 50 elephants and has a goal to remove all 300 remaining begging elephants from India's streets by 2030.

    Their work spans rescue, sanctuary care, rehabilitation, medical treatment, wildlife conflict resolution, and the release of animals back into protected habitats whenever possible. They also transform the lives of former poachers and handlers by training them as wildlife staff and caregivers.

    This conversation highlights the power of compassion, strong laws, education, and collaboration among sanctuaries worldwide. Real change happens when systems shift and hearts open.

    You can support Wildlife SOS here:
    wildlifesos.org
    give.wildlifesos.org

    Cruelty is not permanent. Compassion spreads.

    https://www.BetterLifeForAnimals.com/podcast/045-Dana-Wilson

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    40 mins
  • 044: From Local News to National Reach: Animal Sanctuary PR Strategies with Heather Ripley
    Dec 22 2025

    What if national media coverage for your animal sanctuary did not start with a big pitch or a major publication, but with your local newspaper?

    In this episode of the Better Life for Animals Podcast, host Cheryl Moss sits down with Heather Ripley, founder and CEO of Orange Orchard PR, to unpack what actually works when it comes to media visibility for animal sanctuaries.

    Heather shares how a successful career in traditional public relations evolved into purpose driven work after she went vegan and aligned her professional skills with animal advocacy. That shift led her to create Orange Orchard PR, an agency dedicated to helping sanctuaries and animal advocacy organizations tell their stories with clarity and impact.

    In this conversation, Heather explains:

    • Why local media coverage is the foundation for regional and national visibility

    • How clear and consistent messaging builds trust with reporters and producers

    • Why sanctuaries must think like businesses to achieve long term sustainability

    • How donor connection and animal focused storytelling lead to recurring support

    • When investing in professional communication delivers lasting results

    This episode is packed with practical insight for sanctuary founders, board members, staff, and advocates who want to grow awareness without losing the heart of their mission.

    If you care about helping sanctuaries move beyond survival and into stability, this is an episode you will want to listen to and share.

    https://www.BetterLifeForAnimals.com/podcast/044-Heather-Ripley

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    30 mins
  • 043: From Restaurants to Rescue Work: Deborah Blum on Goatlandia Farm Animal Sanctuary
    Dec 15 2025

    Goats can see nearly 340 degrees around them. That single fact alone changes how most people think about goats and farm animals.

    In this episode of Better Life for Animals, host Cheryl Moss talks with Deborah Blum, founder of Goatlandia Farm Animal Sanctuary in Sebastopol, California. Deborah shares how her life shifted from the restaurant world to farm animal rescue and what goats have taught her about behavior, trauma, and trust.

    In this conversation, you will learn:

    • Why goats are browsers, not grazers, and how that shapes sanctuary care
    • How rescued animals experience trauma and what real healing looks like
    • Why food is one of the most effective tools for animal advocacy
    • How plant based meals help people rethink their relationship with animals
    • What sanctuary life actually looks like day to day
    • How Goatlandia supports rescue work through farming, education, and community programs
    • Why compassion for animals and people must work together

    This episode covers goat behavior, farm animal rescue, animal sanctuary life, plant based living, and ethical food choices through lived experience and practical insight.

    Listen now to hear Deborah Blum share how small choices, made consistently, can create a better life for animals and the people who care for them.

    www.BetterLifeForAnimals.com/podcast/043-Deborah-Blum

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    33 mins
  • 042: Rescuing the Forgotten: How Tim Woodward is Transforming Massive Animal Hoarding Cases into Hope
    Dec 8 2025

    When the mortgage industry collapsed, Tim Woodward took a hard look at his life and realized something was missing. A volunteer role with In Defense of Animals exposed him to the hidden crisis of animal suffering across the country and set him on a path that would change everything.

    Seventeen years later, Tim is the Executive Director of Animal Rescue Corps, a national organization built to serve communities with no shelters, no animal control, and no resources when cruelty strikes. ARC works directly with law enforcement, responds at no cost, and steps in whether the case involves ten animals or two hundred.

    What began in abandoned barns and empty big box stores is now a permanent rescue center in Tennessee capable of housing 200 dogs, treating exotic animals, and coordinating nationwide transport. But for Tim, the real victories are quieter. It is the moment a shut down dog learns to trust again. The moment survival turns into safety.

    ARC never leaves animals behind. From dogs to chickens, rabbits, horses, and even hundreds of rats in one of their largest cases, the team stays until every life is safe. Tim also speaks candidly about compassion fatigue, post-COVID challenges, and the reality of running a national rescue on limited funding.

    Named a CNN Hero, Tim uses the recognition to grow ARC's impact, not his own profile. With a budget just over one million a year, every donation directly translates into animals saved.

    If this story moved you, visit AnimalRescueCorps.org to donate, volunteer, or get involved. One decision can change the world for one animal today.

    www.BetterLifeForAnimals.com/podcast/042-Tim-Woodward

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    37 mins
  • 041: From Bullying to Brave Change: Michele Fasnacht's Journey to Solid Rock Community School
    Dec 1 2025

    Discover how compassionate education is transforming the lives of children and rescued animals in this powerful conversation with Michele Fasnacht, founder of Solid Rock Community School and the Sanctuary at Solid Rock. Michele shares how her personal journey through childhood trauma, chronic illness, and a life changing shift to plant based living shaped an education model unlike anything else in the country.

    In this episode, you will learn how rescued pigs, primates, ducks, and other farmed animals have become mentors for students, teaching empathy, responsibility, and emotional awareness through daily connection and hands on care. Michele explains how the Compassionate Humane Education framework integrates humane learning, animal advocacy, plant based meals, and sustainability into every part of a child's day.

    This episode also explores how Michele reversed years of debilitating MS symptoms after removing dairy, why her school launched a fully plant based cafeteria, and how the SAVE program prepares students for careers in veterinary medicine, wildlife rehabilitation, and animal rights.

    If you want to understand how humane education, vegan living, rescued animals, and trauma informed teaching can reshape the future of learning, this interview delivers deep insight and practical inspiration for educators, parents, sanctuary leaders, and advocates.

    Listen to the full episode and explore more interviews with sanctuary founders, animal advocates, and changemakers at BetterLifeForAnimals.com.

    Full episode: https://www.BetterLifeForAnimals.com/podcast/041-Michele-Fasnacht

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    39 mins