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Animal Communicator Animal Communicator Partnerships

How Animal Communicators Work With Animal Behaviorists

When your pet encounters health or behavioral challenges, determining where to seek assistance can be a difficult decision. Your primary choice should generally be your veterinarian. Veterinarians possess extensive training and experience that allows them to identify the underlying causes of health issues. They are skilled at pinpointing illnesses or injuries that might be responsible for sudden shifts in behavior.

The Role of Veterinarians and Specialists

While many of our pets’ issues aren’t strictly health-related, such as alterations in behavior or difficulties in communication during training, your vet can guide you. Once health-related causes have been ruled out, your veterinarian might refer you to other specialists like animal behaviorists, trainers, or animal communicators to address problems like:

  • Aggressive tendencies
  • Anxiety-related behaviors
  • Excessive barking or digging
  • Inappropriate urination indoors
  • Compulsive licking or pacing
  • Lack of focus during training
  • Heightened sensitivity

Working with Animal Behaviorists

Working alongside an animal behaviorist can assist pet owners in comprehending and reshaping unwanted behaviors. These professionals possess substantial education and a deep comprehension of a dog’s psyche. They leverage psychological principles to achieve desired behaviors and might devise treatment strategies and training methods to correct behaviors as needed. Common responsibilities of behaviorists focused on training include:

  • Identifying specific problematic behaviors
  • Investigating the causes of these behaviors
  • Analyzing case studies to better understand specific behaviors
  • Collaborating with pet owners and animals on behavior modification, training, or conditioning
  • Recommending treatment plans or medications when necessary
  • Educating owners about behaviors and modification techniques

In each unique scenario, behaviorists collaborate closely with both the pet and the owner. They gather information from the person who has witnessed the behavior, delving into details about the environment, triggers, and observed postures. The behaviorist might also spend time directly observing the animal’s behavior and testing strategies for modification. Throughout this process, information is exchanged verbally based on visual observations, and conclusions are drawn from past experiences. This method, however, doesn’t offer the animal a chance to express its own perspective, thoughts, emotions, and experience of the situation.

Now, envision a scenario where the pet can provide its insights into the behavior. Allowing the pet to contribute its experiences can enrich the overall picture with greater depth and clarity. This is where an animal communicator comes into play, enhancing communication among the pet owner, behaviorist, and pet.

Gaining Insights from Animals

By communicating telepathically with animals, an animal communicator facilitates a conversation using thoughts, emotions, images, and sensory information. This allows them to interview the pet about its firsthand experience effectively. Just as a doctor interviews a patient about symptoms or a therapist discusses emotions, animals can be engaged to share their experiences.

Questions such as:

  • Where do you feel discomfort, and how would you describe the sensation?
  • When you growl at other dogs, are you motivated by fear or anger?
  • How do you perceive being asked to enter the car? What expectations arise?
  • What kind of relationship do you share with the family cat? As a friend, teacher or as a foe?

These queries help us comprehend intentions, emotions, and perceptions directly from the animal rather than relying on our assumptions. This level of detail clarifies misunderstandings, promotes dialogue and collaboration, and defines expectations in a way that the pet can grasp and partake in.

For instance, consider a family pet that regularly growls at approaching dogs. The owner and trainer might assume it’s due to aggression and develop a modification plan based on that assumption. However, in conversation with a communicator, the pet might reveal that fear and uncertainty are its primary emotions. Armed with this new insight, a completely different plan can be devised, one that nurtures the pet’s confidence and facilitates more socialization and growth.

In another scenario, a dog exhibits considerable anxiety during car rides, even for short distances. Based on observed behavior, the owner might conclude that the dog fears the car or experiences motion sickness. Through communication, the dog might share its past experiences of abandonment. It recalls being driven away, left in an unfamiliar place, and never reuniting with its family. The dog incorrectly associates each car trip with abandonment. The animal communicator can correct this assumption and instill an anticipation of enjoyable rides ahead. This illustrates how animal behaviorists, communicators, and caregivers can collaborate to construct a comprehensive, detailed understanding of an animal’s behavior. When training or modification plans include insights directly from the animal’s viewpoint, they are more likely to yield quicker and more successful results compared to plans based solely on observation. 

Harmonious Living

Subsequent communication sessions can further clarify any misunderstandings the pet might have, fine-tune expectations for future training, acknowledge the pet’s progress, and further strengthen the evolving partnership. When animals and humans work together as partners to problem-solve, negotiate, plan, and execute, harmony prevails in the entire household. Adding an animal communicator to your team of supportive pet professionals can offer remarkable benefits.

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Animal Communicator Partnerships

6 Professionals That Should Partner With An Animal Communicator

Open communication leads to understanding. That’s the truth. Whether we are discussing human relationships or the relationships we share with our companion animals, opening a conversation leads to a healthier relationship based on a deeper understanding of one another. One of the best ways to have communication with your animals is to hire an animal communicator.

Improving Relationships with Your Pet

Whether your animal companion is a lap cat, an agility champion dog, or an endurance horse, you must partner with many professionals to keep your pet happy and healthy. These professionals each have their own toolbox of skills, education, and experience to lend to you and your pet, but none of them can know your pet on the same level that you can.  

Animal Communicators can not only help improve the relationship between you and your pet, but they can also help you improve the relationship between your pet and the other professionals you have working with them, as well as your relationship with those professionals. 

Pet Professionals That Partner Well with An Animal Communicator

There are several professionals that work with pets and I’ve highlighted 6 that I think make great partnerships for animal communicators. They are a:

  1. Veterinarian
  2. Veterinarian technician (vet tech)
  3. Dog trainer
  4. Horse trainer
  5. Pet sitter
  6. Animal shelter volunteer

Veterinarians and Vet Techs

Veterinarians and vet techs have a lot of experience with different animals, breeds, and medical situations but they have a very limited time to get to know your pet on a deeper level. They are limited by the experience presented to them during your brief visit. They must rely on visual observation of symptoms and lab work. Imagine how much more insight your vet would gain if they could have a real conversation with your pet, asking about where it hurts and other physical symptoms that are not externally visible such as nausea or joint pain. With even basic knowledge of animal communication, veterinary staff can help create a less stressful environment for visiting pets, conveying their intention to help and reducing fear triggers for the pets.

Dog and Horse Trainers

The expanded understanding that comes with animal communication can also benefit professional dog and horse trainers. When an animal has the opportunity to express details about their own experience of the world it can help to explain behavior patterns and triggers. Not all training techniques fit all personality types. Gaining individual knowledge directly from the pet about their unique personality and preferences can help guide any trainer to develop a program that works best with that animal. A dog that is reactive to loud noises or voices might learn better using hand signals. A horse might express a past experience that created fear of closed spaces. With knowing this, the trainer can begin the process out in the open and work on rewarding the horse when entering closed spaces. The deeper the understanding of the animal and its own unique nature, the better the trainer can react and build trust.

Pet Sitters and Animal Shelter Volunteers

The same principles are true for pet sitters and animal shelter volunteers. The deeper the understanding between them and the pets in their care, the less stressful the interaction is for all parties. Both pet sitters and shelter volunteers encounter situations where they need to provide care in close contact with animals they may have never met before. These animals are generally in a state of wariness or uncertainty when encountering new people. Life in a shelter can be deeply stressful. They just don’t know what to expect. A consultation with an animal communicator can help to open the lines of communication and understanding that can facilitate the building of a trust-based relationship. Once the pet can begin to understand the motivation of these strangers, (caretaking) and the expectations of this relationship (trust) they can begin to let their guard down and let their true personality shine through.

Aren’t all relationships based on trust and open, honest, mutual communication? Why should our relationships with animals be any different?  Don’t be hesitant about sharing these ideas with the professionals on your pet’s care team and see how it works.

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Animal Communicator Partnerships Animal Health

The Many Ways an Animal Communicator Can Help Your Veterinarian

Have you ever had a sick pet that you’ve taken to the veterinarian and after dozens of tests and thousands of dollars, there’s finally an answer to the change in their behavior? If you have, you know how frustrating this can be. If you haven’t, I hope to help you prevent having this experience.

As pet owners, our pet’s health, well-being, and safety are of the utmost importance to us. Considering this, it can be disconcerting at times trying to determine what exactly is going on inside of them – if only they could talk, right? Well, they can! Through telepathic communication, we have the ability to ask them how they are feeling, what they are feeling, and where they feel it. Having the animal communicate this information rather than making assumptions, is so much better for the animal, the owner, and the veterinarian as it alleviates guesswork. When it comes to your pet’s health, combining the services of an Animal Communicator with a veterinarian can lead to less testing and diagnostics, saving money and time and resulting in a quicker diagnosis.

Assisting Your Veterinarian

At any age, behaviors and physical changes can happen and we don’t always know the cause of these changes. This can cause us, humans, to be stressed, but it can also cause heightened stress levels in our pets, which in turn could exacerbate the issues going on, making it more difficult to determine the root issue. 

Even when the issue is not presenting itself as severe, when something changes in our pets, our first instinct is to take them to the veterinarian. This can be costly and require multiple visits and tests. Therefore, when you observe initial changes, scheduling a personal consultation with an Animal Communicator can equip you with more information to help your veterinarian focus his tests and diagnostics more effectively.

When we humans go to the doctor, the doctor interviews us and we are able to express our specific needs and feelings so the doctor can then provide focused treatment based on what we say. For instance, if you’ve noticed that your pet is not eating as much as normal and the pet is able to express that there is a tooth that is bothering them. Chances are that I can narrow down the area of where that tooth is; upper jaw, lower jaw, left side, etc. With this information, you can go to your veterinarian and tell them more specifically where to look for the issue. An Animal Communicator fills this gap so that your veterinarian can begin by evaluating the area mentioned and remedy that problem more quickly without unnecessary costs and tests.

Another example is a horse owner who reports that there are changes in their horse’s behavior and they think it may be lame. A veterinarian would have to evaluate all legs from top to bottom with a physical exam or radiographs and they may just give them painkillers to solve the problem. When working with an Animal Communicator, the horse may tell them that it has pain in the left, front leg at the knee. Combining the visual veterinarian exam with the feedback directly from the animal can enable the doctor to target diagnostic testing more quickly and accurately. In this example, the veterinarian could begin with radiographs of the knee and visually confirm the issue, saving time and money.

The Importance of Checking In Routinely With Your Pet

By giving your pet the opportunity to express themselves and truly tell you the things that are going on with them, you can broaden and deepen your relationship with your pet. It can allow you opportunities for them to let you know early when an issue arises so that you can get the necessary treatment for them or even prevent an illness. Stay on top of your pet’s wellness by scheduling a conversation with your pet communicator today.

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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!