Categories
Animal Communicator Horses

How Does My Energy Affect My Animal?

In our everyday lives, we humans tend to think of ourselves as quite different from the animals we call our pets. In fact, we are all made up of the same materials and are very closely related when you look at the details of our DNA. Despite our differences, all Beings are made of energy. This life force, or electromagnetic field is the thing that causes all of us to be Alive and to recognize this energy in one another.

Energy as a Guide

Animals of all types instinctively rely on their senses to assess their surroundings and survive in their environments. They use their sight, smell, and hearing of course, but also a sense of “feel” that allows them to sense changes in energy around them. Bats sense energy fields in order to navigate and hunt. Birds sense the earth’s magnetic field to guide their migration. Dogs are being used in medical science to locate and diagnose diseases using their senses. 

Changes In Our Bodies

Modern science is able to measure the various changes that take place in our bodies as we experience emotions, thoughts, and physical activities. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of physiological changes, occur moment by moment, such as when our body temperature changes and brain waves fluctuate in frequency. Our bodies release chemicals and hormones into our bloodstream as our emotions change. Blood pressure, respiratory rate, heart rate, and pupil dilation are constantly changing as well.

One very important fact worth noting is that all of these physiological changes take place in our bodies when we have an experience AND ALSO when we IMAGINE an experience. The animals in our vicinity have no way of distinguishing our physical danger signals as real and current or as fear we are remembering from past experiences or anticipate happening. Their response will be the same in both cases – they will believe we are in danger.

Our pets are able to sense these changes in much more detail and more accurately than we can ourselves. Anyone that spends time around companion animals has seen how they respond when we are sad or stressed. Horses are able to sense the human heartbeat from 4 feet away, this gives them information about us before we even approach. It is said that they can “feel our fear” and in truth, they can. Additionally, horses in a herd tend to synchronize their heartbeats so when one senses danger, they all know instantly. 

This type of highly attuned sensitivity has served animals well throughout their evolution and increased their ability to survive. In today’s modern society, however, sensitivity can have both its pros and cons for a companion animal.

Pros

  • They feel safe and reassured when their people are “broadcasting” relaxed energy signals
  • Animals are able to sense wellness and illness in the people they meet
  • Anger and fear energy from a person signals an animal to be wary and cautious
  • Dogs learn to respond instantly in training exercises based on the energy we broadcast, even before we can speak a command
  • In some cases, a person’s energy helps a dog to distinguish between friend and foe
  • A horse is able to adjust his speed and energy output using the rider’s signals as guidance

Cons

  • Misunderstandings can frequently occur when an animal reads our energy but chooses an inappropriate response
  • Animals can suffer from hyper-sensitivity in a world filled with sensory stimuli
  • Humans unconsciously broadcast inaccurate information to their pets and the pet is left wondering how to respond, creating anxiety and a lack of self-confidence
  • Humans tend to dwell on remembered events and imagined events that carry their own energy pattern, and a pet cannot distinguish which thoughts are real and which he should be responding to

Our companion animals come to know us quite well by our voice, personal scent, stance, and facial expressions. They also become familiar with and “evaluate” us by the energy that we “broadcast”. 

When we become aware of all the ways that our energy can affect animals, we can begin to intentionally think, imagine, visualize, focus, and act in ways that accurately lead and guide our pets to desired behaviors rather than misleading them into undesired behavior. Anxiously worrying about an upcoming event only makes them anxious. A relaxed posture and slow deep breaths can quickly signal to our pet that we are safe. We can consciously become their confident leader and broadcast information in the form of energy that our pets can accurately use to choose the right response in any given situation.

Categories
Animal Communicator

Is Your Animal Mourning?

Recall a time when you lost a pet or loved one. Do all the emotions come flooding back to you? We’ve known that people go through a range of emotional and physical feelings of grief after a loss whether this loss was of a human family member or a beloved pet. Did you know that it was long believed that humans were the only ones that mourned the loss of a loved one? Many animal lovers have reported seeing the symptoms of mourning in their family pets, but it was often questioned if humans were projecting our feelings onto them or if animals truly experience a mourning period after a loss. 

Believe it or not, there is human mourning and there is also animal mourning. Mourning the loss of a loved one can be a complex and very individually unique process. Each person, or animal, will go through this process in their own way. Some may display their feelings openly and others will keep the feelings held quietly inside. Therefore, it can be quite difficult to tell when an individual or animal is in a state of mourning. 

What Mourning Looks Like

Current research is now confirming that many animal species do recognize the death of a family member or companion and exhibit signs of mourning their loss. These species include dogs, horses, elephants, giraffes, monkeys, and dolphins.

Elephants, in particular, have been recognized to have similar mourning behavior to humans. They cry real tears and cry out in distress at the loss of a family member. They pay homage to their deceased friend, standing vigil over the body, touching it tenderly, protecting it from harm and even burying the remains. The empathy that elephants have for loved ones even brings them to visit the skeletal remains of herd members years after their death.

Horses also have been known to gather around the body of a family member to hold vigil and show signs of sadness for a deceased herd member.

Behavioral Changes in Animals After Loss

For both humans and animals, grief is the result of feeling love and happiness from connection with another creature and then losing that beloved one. Companion animals feel this loss for both their human family and also for the other animals they love.

The ASPCA says that over 60% of pets experience four or more behavioral changes after losing a companion. These symptoms might include:

  • Unusual vocalization
  • Loss of appetite
  • Withdrawal from household activities
  • Lower energy levels
  • Heightened anxiety or restlessness
  • Searching for the lost loved one
  • Sleeping more
  • Unusual aggressive or destructive behavior
  • Inappropriate elimination in the home
  • Separation anxiety

Animals may experience many of these symptoms or none of them. Each individual displays their grief in their own way based on their feelings and relationship with the deceased. A dog may even go through the mourning process for a companion that has not died but simply moved away.

There seems to be some controversy about the level to which animals can understand the process and permanence of death. Some scientists believe that dogs experience grief and loss in a way similar to a 5-year-old child mourning the loss of a companion but not understanding that it is permanent. 

When humans are separated from their loved ones they experience the sadness and depression associated with loss whether the loved one has died or simply moved far away. It may be a similar process for animals. They may believe themselves to be alone, their friend is gone and therefore they grieve. The process of mourning and the associated feelings seem to be the same in any case. 

My Experience With Loss

In my personal experience, my feelings of sadness and the loss of a beloved pet are very much about being left without them. My physical senses long to touch them and feel their soft coat, to interact and play with them, to feel them sleeping at my feet, and therefore experience the happiness and joy that this companionship brings into my daily life. My personal belief system tells me that the Spirit of my pet survives the loss of the physical body and goes on to “live” in another form. Knowing this brings me joy about their continued existence and yet my grief is very real as I remain here without them.

In my professional experience as an animal communicator, I have had numerous experiences that reinforce my belief that consciousness survives the death of the physical body. On many occasions, a family pet will acknowledge the death and loss of another family pet but reassure us that “he comes back to visit often”. These family pets seem to regret and mourn the separation from their friend yet feel comforted that they are still here in a different form. These animals seem to have a sense of death that is different from our human sense. We tend to feel that death is a final end, a permanent loss of all we knew of our loved ones. The animals have shared that it is more like saying “Bon voyage, I will see you again one day.”

I joyfully look forward to the days that I will be visited again by the Spirit forms of all my beloved and departed pets. This thought helps to ease the pain of my loss and grief.

Helping Your Pet Through the Mourning Process

You can help your family pet to move through their feelings of mourning by gently encouraging them into interaction and play or offering their favorite treats. Guiding them back into connection with others may relieve or distract them from their sadness. Be gentle, never forcing them, but offering opportunities to reconnect when they feel ready to return to their ordinary routines. Time and connection with others are the only true cures for mourning.