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Animal Communicator Pet Resources

Celebrate National Pet Month by Enhancing Your Pet’s Life

As a loving pet owner, whether you own a dog, cat, lizard, hamster, horse, or parrot, you want your animals to be happy. During National Pet Month, we celebrate all of the benefits and joy that pets bring to our lives. It is also an ideal time to consider ways that we can add to their well-being. 

Our pets enhance our lives in countless ways. They provide us with unconditional love, companionship, entertainment, and laughter. They can also reduce stress, encourage us to exercise, and even improve our moods. It’s only fair that we bring them happiness, as well.

What is happiness for a pet? 

We all seek to understand our pets more deeply, including their needs, behaviors, and what brings them joy. Naturally, we tend to assume that what makes them happy is similar to what makes us happy, and it is difficult to shift our perspective to that of our pets. 

One way to understand the difference between our point of view and our pets is to imagine that you and a friend are standing on opposite sides of a room. The two of you may be looking at the same scene, but because you are seeing it from a different angle, it appears completely different. 

To make our pets happy, we need to look at the world and how they experience it through their eyes. For example, if you have a spacious fenced yard where you allow your dog to roam, you may view it as a lovely place for your canine to play while keeping them safe. But your dog might see that fence as a barrier, limiting their ability to explore the outside world.

Trying to understand how a situation might feel to our pets allows us to enhance their wants, needs, and desires. 

Our pets are constrained by human boundaries because we make all of their life decisions for them, from what they eat to who their friends are. So how can we enrich our pets’ lives? Give them choices! 

Here are six ways we can provide our pets with a greater sense of autonomy:

1.     The choice to be petted (or not!) 

You may think it’s an ideal time to pet and snuggle your cat, but he may have other ideas. If you put your cat in your lap and they struggle and immediately leap down, it’s a sure sign that it’s not an ideal tie for physical bonding. Don’t force the issue! Let him walk away. 

2.     Choosing where to walk

Dogs love to follow their noses. If possible, allow your dog to choose the route s/he follows for her walk. This allows exploration of new places and smells.

3.     A choice to retreat to a safe place

Like humans, every animal is different and has fears and desires. Your dog who is terrified of thunderstorms or fireworks may choose to retreat to an enclosed space, such as a bathroom when the noise gets to be too much. If he’s safe, don’t coax him out. Allow him to stay where he feels secure and protected.

4.     Deciding where to sleep

As much as your daughter would love to have your dog sleep in her room, your pup may feel more comfortable sleeping in your room. Many dogs prefer to sleep with whoever they perceive to be the leader of their pack – and that’s often an adult. Don’t force the issue if she chooses to sleep in your room rather than your daughter’s. 

5.     Choosing to train (or not!)

If your parrot is being especially uncooperative, exhibiting aggressive behavior, or acting disinterested during training, take a break. Don’t push them! Let him retreat to his cage. If he is refusing to participate, it is a sure sign that this is not a good time to teach him to perch on your shoulder.  

6.     Choosing favorite foods 

When it comes to feeding, one way to provide your pet with choices is by separating ingredients. For example, for a dog, you could split its different types of food into individual bowls. Which one does he choose more often? This will tell you what he prefers. If possible, you can alter his diet to include more of his favorites.

Ask your pets!

Are you struggling to figure out what makes your pet happy? I can use telepathic animal communication to help you understand your pet through their eyes, including what makes them happy. Want to learn more? Schedule a consultation. 

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Animal Communicator Animal Communicator Partnerships

What Is an Animal Communicator?

Did you recently bring home a rescue dog who is skittish around strangers? Is your horse exhibiting troubling behavioral changes? Does your parrot resist training? If you’ve ever experienced anything like these, or similar, and thought to yourself, “I wish I could tell what my pets are thinking,” you may benefit from working with an animal communicator.

We communicate with our pets every day, using verbal commands or praise, physical gestures, and touch. But we still might yearn for a deeper understanding, whether it’s due to a behavioral or health concern, or simply because we desire a more meaningful connection. 

Animals are complicated creatures! While they don’t have verbal language, they do communicate with other animals and with humans. You need only to observe your dog, chicken, or cow’s body language to understand they most definitely experience emotions such as joy, fear, and grief. And there is plenty of scientific research that bears this out! 

Animal communication helps us better understand the health and behavior of our pets. It is an excellent complement to the actions you are already doing to take care of your beloved pet. Used in tandem with training and veterinary medicine, this valuable tool can help you see your pet’s point of view and clarify assumptions that we make as humans about our animals — which may (or may not) be accurate!  

To understand how an animal communicator assists their clients and their pets, it is helpful to understand exactly what an animal communicator is and what they do. 

What is an animal communicator and who works with them? 

An animal communicator connects you and the animals you love through telepathic communication. Anyone who owns an animal, or is a professional animal caretaker, such as vet techs, animal rescue workers, dog trainers, and zookeepers, can benefit from working with animal communicators.

How does telepathic animal communication work? 

Animal communicators act as translators between nonverbal animals and verbal humans. All thought is electrical or energetic signals. Scientists have learned that they can measure human brain waves even while we are not speaking because they can see those waves moving and changing as you imagine words and pictures, creating an electronic signature. 

A useful analogy for telepathic animal communication is to think of TV or radio broadcasts that use transmitters and a receiver. Invisible signals pass through the air as digital information. Most of the time, we are oblivious to them because we are not tuned in to that channel, but they are always there.  

Animal and human brains function similarly. To communicate telepathically with animals, animal communicators intentionally “tune in” to the frequency or broadcast of a particular animal, just as if they had tuned in to a specific channel. 

This allows the animal communication professional to hear or see the animal’s personal “broadcast” which they can experience as thoughts, feelings, and images. They may receive visual imagery, physical sensations, or emotions from the animal and can even feel their fear or joy as if they are experiencing it for themselves. They then act as a translator between you and your animals, translating your animal’s nonverbal communication so that they can be better understood.  

Want to know more? Ask!

I am an expert in telepathic animal communication. Our animals are part of our families. Therefore, we want them to be happy and yearn for a deeper understanding of them. Chances are, your animals probably already have the answers you need and are eager to share. They just don’t have the words! As the voice that speaks for your pets, I can help.

Want to learn more? Check out our FAQs. Do you still have additional questions? Ask Me!