Animal Communication


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Thanks again for the animal communication reading. It gave me such peace of mind knowing what my horses wanted from me.
— Darlene VanLuvanee, WA
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Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. All things are bound together. All things connect.
— Chief Seattle

Pauline interviews author and psychic artist Jane de Forest on her ability to communicate with animals. Jane relates two interesting stories of her experiences ...

I have learned many things from my foray with furry four-leggeds, and one thing I found most fascinating is that animals perceive everything as interconnected. Somehow, they have an innate understanding that they are part of the web and have a right to exist.

It is my contention that everyone has the ability to communicate with animals—it is our birthright. Although animals don't speak English, they perceive and transmit information in a variety of powerful and accurate ways—survival depends on it.

By definition we ourselves are animals, so it would stand to reason that we are imbued with this same knowledge as every other living thing on the planet. You don't have to be Dr. Doolittle to find out what your cat is saying, the truth is we communicate with our pets all the time—often without realizing it.

The natural world has a myriad of languages that animal-beings utilize: visual light ranges, audio ranges, heat sensing and electro-magnetic signatures—many outside of the range of human detection. Our closest companions the dog and cat, can collect extensive information through their super-sensitive noses, sometimes even detecting cancer. 

Koko the Gorilla used over 1000 individual American sign language words to communicate observations, requests and even insults (she called her handler a “toilet”). There are many documented cases where horses and dogs have traversed great distances in search of their owners. 

While bees are positively charged which naturally attracts then to a flower’s negative one, causing the pollen to adhere to the bees little legs. With their huge feet, elephants can hear extremely low frequency communications from other elephants over great distances through the ground. 

We know our dogs, cats and horses are brilliant, loving and wise—they are  our friends and healers. But how can we get messages through the human/Animal barrier and understand what our pets are saying? Does Rex like his food? Is he happy or in pain? Where did he bury your car keys?  These perplexing questions can be answered with a little inter-species communication training.  

Let’s start with the basic strata of an animal’s existence; they operate on several different levels:

1. Instinct. A particular animal’s instinct, like a cat’s urge to hunt or a bird’s urge to make a nest, dies when the animal dies.

2. Personality. An individual animal’s personality-self is an aspect that seems to be influenced by a combination of the animal’s body and the soul.

3. Soul. A soul is an aspect that reincarnates and is eternal. Many times the same animal reincarnates within the lifetime of their human. This also includes a deeply bonded human-animal connection or a  “soul-mate animal,” a relationship which can recur in recurring lifetimes.

4. Guide. A teacher or guide level — in this aspect, the animal seems to choose the person to teach the traits and wisdom that they most need to learn, develop, or embody.    

5. Totem. An archetypal or totem aspect, which is a universal category that crosses cultural, historical and geographic boundaries. The animal’s totem energy is also used to symbolize essential ideas, such as the United States’ eagle, a family crest or a tribal totem pole.

6. Spirit. The level of a Goddess or God, represented within an animal form or an animal form mingled with the divine, such as a cat and a Goddess combined to be the Egyptian cat-Goddess Sekhmet.

 

Thank you so much for the reading. It came at a time when my best friend Gretchen is coming to the end of her life and she’s not able to tell me how she feels in words (because she’s my dog) and you were able to tell me how she felt about what is happening. You helped me to understand she’s very tired but not in a lot of pain. She’s at peace with moving on but willing to stick around a little longer for me if I need her to. Your reading included specific details about Me, Gretchen and my horse Buddy that were very accurate and insightful and captured our personalities wonderfully. You have an amazing gift and I am so thankful that you choose to share it. It is comforting to know I have someone I can go to when I need some insight into myself or my animals. I am truly grateful to you for making this difficult time a little easier.
— Tina Marshall, NH

 

Anubis The Dog

I was recently hired to communicate with a dog named Anubis. But it didn’t take an animal psychic to see that the Rottweiler was, at minimum, in a bad mood. He snarled and eyed me suspiciously while the dog’s human, Selene, shared her concerns about his health or perhaps a depression that her beloved pooch was suffering from.

I sat on the floor near Anubis and centered, following my breath. Then, I imagined myself connected to the web of all life (my secret formula and it relaxes the animal), and finally, asked for help from animal guides and angels. 

Focusing my mind, I asked Anubis the dog what was wrong and waited for his answer. Soon imagery and feelings were flowing—I drew some red angled lines on my pad with crayon. Agitation filled my body—a crash, something had broken dramatically—I heard a loud bang and felt a commotion.

 “Ok good job Anubis” I said out loud to the canine, and then reported my findings to Selene. 

“Well we break wineglasses now and again, so maybe I dropped something on the floor. But certainly nothing out of the ordinary,” Selene said as she scoured her memory. “Nope, sorry Jane, nothing like that of significance.”

I looked back at the dog. I asked again slowly, directing my mind to contact the dog’s mind, “Why are you upset?” Again, in my head I psychically “heard” a loud crashing sound and felt a deep concern—empathically.

“Anubis is saying that a loud crashing sound upset him and that he is greatly concerned.” I took another run at it.

“Well, we live next to the railroad tracks, so maybe that’s it.” Anubis’s human is a kind person and wanted to make my information fit.

We continued with the animal communication session and addressed some other issues Anubis was having. 

Selene called me several days later with a revelation—her elderly mother had fallen on the tile floor a week prior and broken her pelvic bone. Only the dog was home, he knew something was wrong and stayed by her mother’s side until the ambulance came.

Selene had an idea! She put the dog in her car and drove Anubis to the rehabilitation center for a visit with her elderly mother. It was hard to tell who was happier, she or the dog, and after some quality time together, the dog’s mood improved steadily; he began to eat and play again. Selene’s mother felt much better too.

To many of us, this is confirmation of animal intelligence, showing that they can understand complex situations and remember past events. But what touches my heart is the concern and compassionate that this canine companion truly had for his human.