I go over a bit about animal communication in this video and how you can start practicing with your animal companion.

 

Transcription:

Hi everyone. Um first I want to thank ya’ll for your patience. I have been out of the loop for a while. I’ve had, um, some surgeries done on my mouth, so the videos have been sparse and they’re spread out. So if you go to my bio link, there’s other platforms on my website that there’s some videos that aren’t making it onto here. Um, they’re available there. So let’s get on to today’s topic and today’s topic is animal communication.

Um, so animal communication: they have uh, their barks are meows or their vocalizations, but they, but they also have their body language. You know like a cat’s fur standing up or a dog’s fur standing up on their back.

But the primary communication is through telepathy, which is our natural way to communicate that we’re starting to get back into now, which is why some people are having troubles remembering words. They see it in their mind; they know the concept but they can’t find the verbal word for it. It’s because we’re, we’re trying to get back to our natural state, which is telepathy. Mind to mind.

So animals communicate through feelings, emotions and mind pictures so it’s all received up in the mind-screen so to speak. So when an animal, for example is injured, um, let’s say a horse, they can limp or they can just not be themselves, but they can’t say, “Hey, look here, I’m having a problem. It’s such and such place in my body and I need you to fix it. So they can give you physical indicators, like “Don’t touch that hoof,” or “Don’t touch that paw,” but it still doesn’t tell you exactly what’s going on. Um for me communicating with animals Uh, usually they can say “Look, this is how I’m feeling. This is what I experienced. This is where the problem is in my body.” Um, I’m not a vet. I can’t say, “Okay the diagnosis is…” because I don’t know. But I can say “There’s an imbalance say around the stomach area, or the spleen or whatever.” Um, so the animals will show me, “My belly hurts.” Sometimes they’ll show me eating a full sock, and say “My belly hurts.” Not always, but they’ll say my belly hurts.

Sometimes like with horses, they’ll say, “I was messing around and I slipped and I fell and I hit my right hip. So it’s really sore. I think I knocked something out of whack on the spine or hip,” and so I highlight it and I tell the human companion and then it can be brought to a vet, this, this information and they can investigate further. So it helps them narrow things down.

Okay, so telepathy, um, now we have human telepathy. We have telepathy, uh, which is one of the communication methods to speak with the other side. It is uh a method to speak with the non-physical, non-human beings such as you know space beings. So it’s all in your head. And this is a barring any mental health issues. Okay. I’m not a counselor. I can’t I can’t address those. So animal communication is mental telepathy.

And animals, especially those who are companions to humans, have a tendency to ignore the inner ramblings of the humans because we kind of talk non-stop. Um, we always have thoughts going on and animals can usually pick up those thoughts, so what they hear is, “Blah blah blah blah blah blah.” All day long.

And one day I’m sitting on the couch and one of my cats comes up and she bites my arm, and I’m like, “What the heck? What was that for?”

And she goes, “You’re thinking too loud!”

“Oops.”

So yeah, they hear, and normally they ignore it; they learned to tune it out. So when people start practicing trying to make a conscious telepathic connection with the animal, the animal ignores them. This is just more background noise. So if you want to start working with your animal to create a telepathic communication system, um, you have to show the animal that you’re serious. “I am talking to you.” So one of the methods I recommend is, you know what an empty stomach feels like. It’s empty. It’s gnawing. It’s hungry. And you know what it feels like to start eating to start feeling that belly fill up again, right? You also know the feeling satiation, you your stomach being sated, sated, satiation? Full! We’ll go with full. So you know what it feels like to have a full satisfied stomach.

So the way to start practicing with your at home critters is, without making any move and before you’re normal feeding time, broadcasting in your mind, picturing into their mind, empty stomach. Then show them a picture in your mind of you standing up going to the kitchen or wherever you get the feed, preparing their meal, bringing it to them, they start eating and then they get a full belly. So you’re projecting these feelings and these actions in mind pictures to the animal. As soon as you’re done broadcasting this, then you get up and you do exactly what you showed them what you’re going to do. So this takes some practice and then one day they’re like, “Oh!” You see this little light bulb come on. “Oh!”

Now having said that, once one of my cats found out I was doing this; that I could communicate; she never shut up. She had a lot to say. All the time. So I took it as my fault, you know, that I have all this inner monologue going on all the time, and she thought this was normal. So “Oh, you can hear me now? So blah blah blah…” All day long. So there is that.

Um, so it does take practice to get through to them that this is intentional – it’s not just rambling and thoughts that are going on in our head that we’ve seem your broadcast all the time.

So animal communication. So one of the primary reasons I would be contacted is a runaway pet; a pet that got out.

I can’t force the pet home. And trying to see where they are from their view does me no good. Not unless they’re in my yard where I can see something familiar to me. So I usually say, “Look, your humans are really worried about you. Um, could you go home and check in with them to let them know you’re okay?” And usually within 3 or 4 hours they might go see.

However, sometimes I’ve had animals tell me, “No, my job with them is done. I have to go to, um, someone else who needs me right now.” And they’re very intent; they’re very serious about what they’re telling me.

Um, but I’m like, “You know as a human companion with my animals, I would really want you back. I want you back home in our or their herd in our pack or whatever, litter, whatever you want to call it.”

But animals do have missions as well. So if I get that message, which is not all the time, I do tell the homeowner that this is what they said.

A lot of times when somebody says my companion got out and I make contact with him – I had this, especially if it’s dogs – I have this “Yeehaw!” sensation and he goes run run run run run smell smell smell smell… everything’s opened wide and exciting. So they’re like sometimes they get carried away and they get lost. “I don’t remember where I came from and I don’t know how to get back. I don’t know the way. And so I try to show them that there is a connection between them and their human; so there’s this this trail that they can follow.

Um, so yeah. Animal communication. I find it very handy.

So, happy experimenting!

Thanks.

By Jan Toomer


 

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