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Spirit of Ma'at: "Animal Connections" Vol 3 September 2002 Our Pets Can Tell Us What They Need by Sara Chapin
You won't generally find me wrapped in shawls, burning incense and gazing into a crystal ball with brass bells chiming when I do my work. My college business background has helped me to develop a logical, no-nonsense approach to intuitive responses. I tend to use my capacities with the respect I feel they deserve. I originally began using my talents and experience to help medical patients and their physicians with challenging diagnoses. But several years ago, one of my clients in Colorado inadvertently steered me in another direction. On the phone, the anguished woman informed me that her horse had developed sudden unexplained and uncontrolled bleeding from the rectum. This same woman had years of experience with horses, but was unable to determine the cause, and a crisis was imminent. When receiving the phone call, I slipped into "psychic gear" to observe the animal in the described situation. Suddenly, I was aware of a piece of wire in the horse's abdomen, and I asked the owner if there were any way the horse could have ingested a wire of some sort. Initial protestations gave way, for both of us, to several silent seconds of reflection. Yet I felt absolutely sure of myself. Then, slowly, I could hear what I thought was the "voice" of the horse saying to me, "It was a little piece in my food! It is snagged in my intestine and is ripping tissue there." I quickly suggested to the client to have a veterinarian visit the horse and bring with him a metal detector. Thank God this vet was occasionally open to these kinds of insights. He called friends, located a metal detector, and beat a path out to the ranch. He immediately ran the equipment over the horse's underside, and the metal detector began buzzing when placed near the abdomen. The vet gently sedated the horse, and the medical crisis was resolved by local surgery. As we researched the story, it seems a new hire at the ranch, a fifteen-year-old, in cutting the bales of hay with the wire cutter, had inadvertently failed to remove all the dangerous metal bailing clips from the feed. Oops! The horse recovered, the client recovered, and the veterinarian well, let's just say he was even less incredulous about animal communication than he'd been before this remarkable event. With the number of animal lovers in the area, word of mouth spread over several states and I soon was sought out to assist in animal recovery through the use of telepathy. While I was teaching a workshop recently in France, one of the students approached my translator and explained her circumstances with her seven-year-old dog. She indicated that her pet had stopped sleeping on the bed at night. In fact, the canine had been pulling away from her in general. She asked if I could "read" the dog. Since the student lived in the local area and we were headed into town for dinner, I asked if we could stop at her home. There, I got down on the floor to make eye contact with the dog, who came over to me somewhat hesitantly, but soon allowed me to pet her. This is when the mental conversation began. Note: The dog was raised in a French home where no English was spoken. As I asked for an explanation from the dog for the "cold shoulder" or distancing from her owner, I was very surprised to hear her respond in English. She revealed three things to me. Firstly, the owner had decided to eliminate her "expensive" canned dog food and to substitute it with a combination of dry dog food and left-over meat juice or grease from cooking. The little pet loathed this new (what seemed to her) garbage. Secondly, the owner had recently started to profusely apply flea and tick powder, and it was burning the dog's skin. And thirdly, the owner was forcing the dog to play with an item that had been marked or sprayed by the family cat. The dog had even tried to hide this old, weather-beaten cloth slipper, but the owner found it and started the game all over again. I repeated these three communications, one at a time, to my translator. She indeed got confirmation from the pet owner that all three items were correct although she had not been aware of the cat urine on the old slipper. My relationship with this little dog became even more fascinating when the owner suddenly said, "Oui!", stood up, and quickly went into another room. At the same instant, the dog came flying across the room, jumped into my lap, and licked my hands. As it turned out, the owner had mentally decided to locate the old, cat-stained slipper and put it in the washing machine to clean it. To this day, I am sure the dog sensed the human thought of love and the action of remedy. Upon receipt of the bonding telepathy, the dog was thanking me for my intervention. Not long ago, I took an opportunity to be interviewed at an all-talk radio station. The show's director, Lynn Thomas of the American Pet Journal, interviewed me. After the show, Lynn commented on her own domestic pet situation. I suggested we return to her home and allow me to "interview" her animals. Lynn's cat, generally very shy with strangers, immediately checked me out. Actually, the timid kitty was assertive with me. She jumped in my lap, circled once, and plopped down. Then the extrasensory "chatter" started. The cat indicated to me that she was the "queen" of the house. That fact alone seemed strange, as she was the only cat. Her kingdom was populated by three dogs! The oldest of the three dogs, a pedigreed Poodle of approximately seventeen years, was nearing its transition into doggy heaven. The cat knew this and was extending much of its own energy into the diseased dog. Tearfully, I relayed this information to Lynn. As she sat with a heavy heart, she indicated her awareness of the cat's recent unusual behavior. Under normal circumstances, the cat and dog did not have the most amiable relationship, but when the dog fell asleep, the cat would come over and cuddle as close as possible. My curiosity bell went ding-dong. I turned my attention to the cat and engaged in telepathic communication. I asked why she was sleeping near the dog. The feline started purring as she closed her eyes and tenderly told me that she was assisting the "brother" in his transition. She indicated he would live only one more week (the dog died seven days later). You may be wondering what I have learned over the time invested in my animal communications. Here are a few observations that may assist you in developing this kind of rapport yourself:
There are many books and Internet sites that can assist you if you wish to learn how to communicate with your pets. Animal or pet communication is a lot simpler than you may imagine.
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