- Thursday
Beyond One Health: Why Connection Is the Missing Link to True Wellness
- Arlana Tanner
- Pet Wellness, People and Pets, Holistic Wellness
- 0 comments
Exploring human, animal, and environmental wellness through the human–animal bond
Meet Bologna...the story of connected wellness
By Arlana Tanner – Sibelle
Certified Holistic Wellness Practitioner • Interspecies Relationship Guide • Speaker • People–Pets–Planet Advocate • Author of Moving Beyond Words — Our Shared Journey
The One Health movement highlights the connection between human, animal, and environmental well-being—but something essential is often overlooked. This article explores how the human–animal bond, nervous system regulation, and shared environments play a central role in true healing and holistic wellness.
Introduction
We are beginning to see a shift in the conversation around health—one that recognizes what many of us have long intuitively understood:
Everything is connected.
The growing One Health movement highlights the interdependence of human, animal, and environmental well-being. It challenges the fragmented systems that have separated these areas for far too long and calls for a more integrated, sustainable approach.
And while this shift is both necessary and long overdue, it is still only the beginning.
Because there is something essential missing from the conversation and we need to acknowledge and integrate it if we want to see sustainable growth and change.
Let’s start by identifying a system that is no longer working
A widely cited One Health roadmap states:
“The current fragmented framework of health governance for humans, animals and environment, together with the conventional linear approach to solving current health problems, is failing to meet today’s health challenges and is proving unsustainable.”
It continues:
“There is an ever-growing disconnect between human health, animal health and environmental and ecosystems health… A paradigm shift is urgently required to de-sectoralize human, animal, plant and ecosystem health and to take a more integrated approach to health.”
These statements confirm what many are now witnessing firsthand:
We cannot continue to approach health in isolation.
But even within this evolving model, there remains a critical gap.
The Missing Link: Connection Within the Human–Animal Bond
While the One Health framework focuses on systems—medicine, environment, and global health structures—it often overlooks something far more immediate and influential:
The relationship itself.
Not simply proximity.
Not ownership.
But the dynamic, responsive connection within the human–animal bond and the environments we share—and how this shapes the way we relate to the world around us.
Because health is not only shaped by systems—it is shaped by interaction.
How we show up emotionally
How we regulate our nervous systems
How we respond to stress—both our own and our animal companion’s
These factors directly influence both animal behavior and overall emotional wellness. Let’s break down how our communication and connection may not be working.
Behavior Is Communication, Not Dysfunction
In my work, I rarely see animals as “misbehaving.”
What I see instead is communication.
What appears as:
Reactivity
Anxiety
Withdrawal
Is often a reflection of:
Nervous system dysregulation
Environmental stress
Disconnection within the relationship
Animals are deeply perceptive—especially within the human–animal bond, where emotional and nervous system states are continuously exchanged.
They attune to our internal state.
So when we attempt to change behavior without addressing connection, we are often working against the very system we are trying to support.
Co-Regulation: Where Healing Begins
If we are to truly embrace a holistic model of wellness, we must move beyond treatment and into relational awareness and take accountability for it.
This is where co-regulation becomes essential.
Humans and animals continuously influence each other’s nervous systems.
A dysregulated guardian can heighten anxiety in an animal
A stressed animal can amplify tension and anxiety within the home
A calm, grounded presence can restore balance to both
This is not theoretical.
It is observable, practical, and foundational to both holistic pet care and emotional well-being.
What This Looks Like in Real Life
I worked with a rescue parakeet named Bologna, who was deeply afraid of people and resistant to any form of touch.
She lived in a constant state of vigilance—startled easily, withdrawn, and unable to relax in the presence of her guardian, Cassandra.
Instead of focusing on behavior correction, we focused on creating the relationship.
We began by removing expectation and allowing Bologna to guide the pace of the interaction. Routine was introduced to create predictability, and her environment was adjusted to support a greater sense of safety— not based on what Cassandra envisioned, but on what Bologna needed - because the space we share needs to accommodate both to ensure both humans and animals are able to feel safe and calm.
At the same time, Cassandra was shown how to regulate herself before engaging—using breath, awareness, and intentional presence to shift her own nervous system. Something Bologna would have sensed from their very first interaction.
This became the turning point.
As Cassandra became more grounded and allowed the interaction to progress naturally, Bologna began to respond.
Not immediately—but consistently.
She softened.
She observed.
She moved closer—on her own terms.
And over time, she began seeking connection.
What once felt unsafe became something she could move towards—and even initiate.
What emerged was not simply improved behavior, but trust.
A shared state of safety.
A relationship built through co-regulation rather than control.
Cassandra later reflected that while Bologna was healing from her fear, she too experienced a profound shift—finding calm, presence, and a deeper sense of connection in the process.
From Concept to Lived Experience
The One Health movement points us toward integration—and as Holistic Actions expresses:
“By reconnecting to the fundamental unity of people, animals, and our planet, we can at last lay the foundations to survive, thrive, and create the better world that has too long been waiting for us.”
This is the vision.
But for many, the question remains:
How do we actually live this?
Because connection is not just an idea.
It is a practice.
It shows up in:
How we regulate ourselves
How we engage with those around us, including our animal companions
How we shape the environments we share
How we extend compassion and understanding out into the world around us
How we interact and support our planet with intention
The environment we create—both physically and energetically—does not just influence behavior in our homes. It reflects a broader relationship with the world around us, where the choices we make impact not only our own well-being, but that of our animals and the health of the planet as a whole. Our beliefs and actions extend beyond our homes through how we interact with—and respect—others and the world around us.
The Future of Wellness Is Relational
The One Health movement is right:
We must move beyond fragmentation.
But the next evolution is not just integrated systems.
It is integrated relationships.
Health is not experienced in isolation.
It is experienced together, as the whole.
When we begin to:
Listen instead of correct
Regulate instead of react
Connect instead of control
We shift the entire dynamic.
Not just for ourselves.
Not just for our animals.
But for the environments we share—and the planet we are dependant upon.
A New Way Forward
The future of wellness is not only about creating systems.
It is about restoring connection.
Between people.
Between animals.
And within the environments that support us both.
Whether in our homes or in the world around us.
Because when we heal the relationship…
We don’t just shift behavior.
We transform the experience of living—
for people, for animals, and for the planet.
Call to Action
If this perspective resonates with you, exploring how connection, environment, and awareness shape your relationship with your animal companion is a powerful next step.
You can explore additional insights and resources at www.arlana.ca, including tools to support deeper connection with your animal companion and a link to her book Moving Beyond Words: Our Shared Journey.
About the Author
Arlana is a certified holistic wellness practitioner, interspecies relationship guide, author, and educator who helps guardians understand the deeper foundations behind behavior, trust, and connection. Her work integrates nervous system awareness, holistic lifestyle practices, and conscious living to support the well-being of people, pets, and the planet.
She is the author of Moving Beyond Words: Our Shared Journey and the curator of the WE Wellness Community Network
Learn more: www.arlana.ca and www.wewellness.network
Contact: arlana.wewellness@gmail.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/arlana.tanner.sibelle