|
Intuitive Communication
with Your Pets
LEARNING THEIR LANGUAGE
by Marta Willaims
A New Way of Talking
There are two parts to intuitive communication with animals: talking
and listening. I will begin by teaching you how to talk to animals
intuitively. This is by far the easier of the two skills to learn,
but it may require a shift from the way you talk to animals now.
In the approach I’m suggesting, you assume that animals are
as intelligent and as emotionally complex as you are. This can be
a stretch even for confirmed animal lovers. I talked to animals
before I got involved in this field, but I was not aware of how
well they could actually understand me. All of us have been taught
to think of animals as limited when compared to humans, certainly
in terms of their ability to understand us. Because of my experience
with intuitive communication, I now believe that animals understand
us perfectly when we talk to them; they also comprehend every thought
and feeling we have toward them.
My favorite story about how animals actually do understand us comes
from a Canadian newspaper article about a cat named Pierre. Pierre
had a peculiar habit of going around to all the neighbors and bringing
clothing and sheets back home to his person. She, in turn, would
wash the articles and put them in a basket on her back porch, informing
her neighbors that if they were missing something they were welcome
to check the basket. The neighbors took to leaving their dirty laundry
outside for Pierre to fetch. Pierre’s person said that she
was spending a fortune in laundry soap. The biggest thing Pierre
brought home was a set of flannel sheets that he dragged halfway
up the driveway.
One day the woman’s daughter came to visit. The two women
were sitting in the living room with Pierre when the daughter remarked
that she had forgotten to bring her jogging suit, and she was disappointed
that she would not be able to go jogging. The mother turned to Pierre
and said, “Pierre, did you hear that? Why don’t you
go get her a jogging suit?” They both laughed, and the daughter
told Pierre that she wanted a maroon jogging suit if he could arrange
it. The next morning, a maroon jogging suit was on the floor in
the living room, in exactly the daughter’s size.
Talking As If They Understand
The talking experiment I suggest you try — with your
own or a friend’s animal — is this: for the next two
weeks, hold the belief that the animal perfectly understands everything
you say out loud and everything you think or feel toward her. I
realize that this requires a leap of faith, but just think of it
as an experiment. If it doesn’t feel right or doesn’t
work, you can always go back to your old way of relating. I suspect,
though, that when you do this experiment you will find that the
animal will begin to relate to you in quite a different manner,
and you will become fascinated by the changes you see.
It is hard to imagine how it is possible for an animal to understand
spoken language or to receive our thoughts and feelings. The translator
box image is one way to conceive of this process. It is as if there
is a translator box located somewhere between you and the animal
you wish to contact. Whatever you say, think, or feel toward the
animal goes into that translator box and comes out the other end
in a form the animal can understand. It doesn’t really matter
what language you speak, whether the animal has ever heard the language
you’re using, or whether you simply send a feeling or a thought
to the animal instead of saying something out loud. Everything you
send will be transmitted to the animal because that is your intention,
and it will then be translated into a form that the animal can comprehend.
Some animal communicators assert that animals are limited in their
intuitive abilities and can only send and receive information via
images. In my experience, animals can send information intuitively
with the same, if not more finesse as humans — using either
words, feelings, ideas, or images. I often suggest to my clients
that they try this experiment of talking to animals as if the animals
understand, and I’ve received hundreds of responses about
how well it worked. Here are a few of them.
Deb Steinberg sent in this story about her mare, Star:
I have six horses and one of them WILL NOT TRAILER. She is an older
quarter horse mare who is lame, and she refuses to load into a trailer.
We recently bought new property and had to move our horses. I read
your Web page about how to talk to animals, and I decided to try
it on Star. I started talking to her about the move two weeks before
the scheduled date. I told her that she could not stay behind; all
her friends would be leaving and she would need to get in the trailer
when the time came. I explained that it was too far to walk and
that the new people who bought our place would not let her stay.
I told her that I knew she was frightened by the trailer, but that
I hoped she would decide to join us in the new place. I talked to
her every few days after that, reminding her that the time was coming
and that I hoped she would be brave and come with us. She actually
looked as if she were listening to me.
So when the day finally came to move the horses, I decided to move
Star and her best friend first. I loaded her friend, and then as
I haltered Star I reminded her of our conversation and told her
that this was the day. That old girl practically dragged ME to the
trailer and then she hopped right in! After we unloaded her at the
new place, she acted like she was proud to be the first one there.
As I brought the other horses, Star was right at the fence to whinny
to them that she had checked it all out and it was fine!
Gina Richards tried the talking technique one hot summer day with
her cat Missy. She went into the bathroom where she found Missy
resting in the tub and said to her, “Missy, it is such a hot
day, I really think it would be more comfortable for you in the
closet where it’s cooler. Why don’t you try it?”
Gina was shocked when Missy pointedly got up, walked through the
studio to the edge of the closet, stuck her nose in the closet as
if to sniff and test the temperature, and then looked up at Gina
as if to say, “No, I don’t think so, Mom.” Missy
then turned right around and went back to her preferred bathtub
retreat.
Suzanne Martin sent me this story about her horse named Paco:
The first couple of times I fed apple cider vinegar and garlic
to Paco, I noticed that he did not eat all of his grain and that
he didn’t seem fond of the taste. The next day, after I had
given him his grain, I noticed that he hadn’t finished it
and had walked away to go eat his hay. I was standing outside his
stall looking down into his feed bucket, and then I looked at him.
He turned to look at me and walked over to see what I was doing.
(He was now standing over his feed bucket facing me.) I said, “Paco,
you need to finish your grain. I know it may taste funny, but it
has stuff in it that is really going to help you feel better. It’s
also going to help heal the sores on your ankles.” Paco then
looked down into his feed bucket, looked back at me, and proceeded
to eat the remaining grain. At first I couldn’t believe what
I was seeing. After a couple of seconds of not knowing what to say,
I told Paco that he was a good boy, and that this stuff really was
going to help him feel better. I am happy to report that, from that
day forward, he has eaten all of his funny-tasting grain and no
longer leaves any in his feed bucket.
Petra Gout tried the technique with her enormous orange cat named
Tom. Tom was acting very cheeky to the other cat in the house and
generally being disagreeable. Petra got stern with him and explained
that if he did not shape up she was going to adopt three additional
cats and then he would have his hands full. After she made this
pronouncement, Tom began to howl and moan in a most uncharacteristic
way. He would not stop until Petra told him she was just kidding.
Communicating with your animal as if you are talking to an equal
can be especially effective when you are dealing with a behavior
problem. To do this, speak from your heart and explain everything
you are feeling about the situation and the animal’s behavior.
You can talk out loud if that feels more comfortable, or you can
close your eyes and just think or feel the messages you want to
convey. Your animal will understand either way. Explain why you
want the animal to change and describe your hopes and dreams for
the future. Try to maintain a feeling of equality in the discussion;
negotiate rather than giving an ultimatum. Offer some incentive
— either a reward or some action on your part — that
would encourage the animal to behave as you wish. When you learn
in later chapters how to hear what your animal is saying, this process
of negotiation can become a two-way conversation, but for now it
will be one-way.
Once you have discussed all the issues, finish up with a segment
in which you say to your animal, “This is what I would like
to have happen.” Then close your eyes and imagine scenes,
as if in a movie, of the outcome you most desire. If visualizing
is not your strong suit, just imagine the feeling of things working
out the way you would like them to. Your animal will receive this
template for the future, and will understand precisely what it is
you want.
This talking technique, of course, is no substitute for a good,
positive training program, and it won’t magically turn your
animals into well-behaved angels. But it can help shift things,
sometimes quite dramatically. That’s what Myrna Krohn found
when she tried this new way of talking with her warmblood gelding,
Bear. He was not doing very well in his training practice sessions,
and at the dressage shows he got so nervous that he always performed
poorly and came in last. When I do intuitive consultations, I often
give people advice about how to resolve unwanted behaviors and where
to go to get professional help with their animals. For behavior
problems, I take what I call the “kitchen sink” approach:
I relay every potential course of action that comes to me intuitively
during the conversation with the animal, as well as everything I
can think of from similar cases that might prove helpful. When I
talked with Bear, he complained of how boring dressage practice
was. It also became clear as I talked with Bear that both he and
Myrna had anxiety about competing. I suggested that Myrna talk to
Bear during her practice sessions and tell him that if he did very
well at something during practice, rather than make him do it over
and over she would take him to see the donkeys, which he loved,
or take him out on the trail for a bit. Myrna did this, and Bear’s
behavior in practice turned stellar almost overnight.
For the shows, I advised Myrna to dose Bear and herself with Rescue
Remedy (a flower essence formulation that has a calming effect),
work to slow and deepen her breathing when riding, and continually
remind Bear that if he tried his best and they had fun, that was
all she cared about. At their next show, she implemented this program.
While saddling, she kept talking to Bear saying, “Don’t
be nervous, it’s just a warm-up.” She said that Bear
walked out of the barn supple in his back, with his head low and
his ears relaxed; he led the way for the other horses who were nervous.
The warm-up went smoothly. She reassured Bear mentally and sent
him the thought that if he did his best that would be good enough
for her. None of his old bad habits from previous shows surfaced.
By the end of the show, she and Bear had won two first places, one
second place, and the high-point ribbon. As they exited the arena
with their awards, they received a standing ovation from all their
friends who knew of Bear’s previous difficulty in showing.
She said that Bear was beaming.
Myrna tries to listen to Bear now when things go wrong, and she
tries to read the signals he is giving her so that she can change
what he doesn’t like. In her words, “I’m trying
to make him feel like a partner instead of a slave. Now I can bring
out the horse I always knew was in there.”
Are They Listening?
When I talk with animals intuitively, I almost always do it with
my eyes closed, and the animal is usually not nearby. Therefore
I have little awareness of how the animal is physically reacting
to being spoken to in this way. But that is one of the first things
people want to know when they call for a consultation. They ask,
“Do I have to put my animal up to the phone? Should she be
awake and alert? Did you talk to her at 8:00 this morning? Because
at exactly 8:00 she stopped what she was doing and sat with her
head cocked for twenty minutes.” In truth, I never worry about
getting the animal’s attention. The animal doesn’t have
to be right by the phone or sitting politely in front of me when
we talk. Intuitive communication can even occur when the animal
is asleep; it really is quite different from spoken language. However,
I can offer a few observations of how animals react when you engage
them in intuitive communication. In my classes, most of the animals
attending are dogs. Sometimes we will have a whole room full of
dogs, and before I got smart and started screening dog participants
a bit better, there could be a whole roomful of rowdy, barking,
brawling dogs. But invariably, no matter how hyper the dogs, when
the people in the room closed their eyes to begin an intuitive communication
session, each dog in the room would almost immediately get calm
and lie down, often closing his or her eyes as well.
I have done in-home consultations with groups of cats in which
all the cats scattered when I arrived, but emerged again to sit
in a row staring at me after I closed my eyes and began the session.
I’ve found that horses tend to approach me, drop their heads,
and close their eyes while we talk intuitively. In one case, I was
sitting in a chair in a horse’s pasture. As I spoke with her,
she continued to graze. I had my eyes closed, and I opened them
now and then to check on her when writing notes. At one point in
our conversation, she brought up an issue that she said was “the
most important thing she had to say.” At that moment, I felt
her mouth on my hand. I opened my eyes to find her staring intently
into my face, as if to say, “Did you get that? It’s
the most important thing!”
Talking from a Distance
Intuitive communication can be done just as easily from
a distance as in person. I work with people all over the world without
ever meeting their animals. Most of the time, I work by telephone,
receiving only a description of the animal, not even a photograph.
For foreign clients, I work almost entirely by e-mail. Whether in
person, by phone, or by e-mail, the results seem to be equally accurate.
For instance, Elaine Ho e-mailed me from Hong Kong with some questions
for her dog, Coffee. One thing she wanted to know was what Coffee
liked and didn’t like. He told me that he liked his herbs
(medicines), sleeping in bed with his people, the bathtub, people’s
feet, going visiting, and his fruit treats. He didn’t like
getting old, painful teeth, cats, and rain. Elaine e-mailed back
to say, “That’s him! That’s my Coffee!”
Being able to talk from a distance is useful for connecting with
your animals if you have to be away from them, either when at work
or when traveling. Some of my clients have found it to be an effective
aid in combating separation anxiety, a common problem in dogs. In
these cases, I advise that you talk to your animal before leaving
the house. Tell her where you are going, why, how long you will
be gone, and when you will return. Just speak normally, as if you
were talking to a person. I believe that animals can understand
the concept of time as we do. So saying something like, “I
will be gone for about six hours and back at about 5:00 tonight,”
works just fine. There is no need to explain where the sun is or
how many moons will pass before your return! Then, while you’re
away, tune in mentally and emotionally to your animal as often as
you like, sending her your love and an account of what you’re
doing. Also remind her when you will be back.
I always recommend that my clients investigate holistic veterinary
care. In my experience, the combination of a natural diet and holistic
care regime produces much happier, healthier, calmer animals. In
severe cases of separation anxiety, I urge clients to get massages
for their animals to help calm them, and to try flower essences
and herbs, too. These techniques have proven successful in many
cases. The resources section of the book gives information on how
to locate a holistic veterinarian. When you plan to be away for
a business trip or a vacation, explain the particulars of your trip
to your animal well before your anticipated departure. Tell your
animal why you are going and why she can’t come along. Tell
her your departure and return dates, and describe how she will be
cared for in your absence. Then promise her that you will talk with
her from a distance while you are away, and make sure to keep that
promise.
Talking with Animals Who Have Died
I believe that you can communicate intuitively with the
spirit of an animal after she has died, and I do this for clients
all the time. However, in those cases I’m working with people
who are convinced that animals have spirits, so they believe that
what I am doing is real. If you don’t believe it’s possible
to do this, you can just skip to the next section. There is no way
I can prove to you that this is possible and you don’t have
to believe in it to be able to communicate with animals intuitively.
If you believe in this concept, you can try it for yourself in the
exercises that follow. It is possible to talk to the spirit of an
animal regardless of how much time has passed since the animal died.
As we’ve already discussed, anything you say will be heard
by the animal. Once you have some practice at hearing what animals
are saying to you, your conversation with the spirit of an animal
can become a two-way exchange.
Exercises: Talking As If They Understand
Here are the exercises I described in this chapter. Try
them out at your own pace. Be sure to record your results in your
notebook.
Exercise 1: Talking As Equals: For two weeks,
try this experiment: talk to your animals as if they hear and understand
everything you say out loud to them and everything you think or
feel about them. Also, hold the belief that they are just as evolved
and intelligent as you are, and that you are dealing with beings
who are equal, although quite different from you. For this exercise,
all you will do is record any changes you note in their behavior
as a result of this experiment.
Exercise 2: Problem Solving: If you have a particular
behavior problem with your animal, try approaching her using the
talking and negotiating method. Find a time to sit quietly with
your animal. Send love from your heart, even if the situation is
making you angry. Try to leave your anger at the door, so to speak,
so that you can start anew with your animal. Explain exactly how
you feel about the situation, from your heart, as if you were talking
to an equal human being. Tell the animal why you feel the way you
do about the situation. Discuss what you are thinking of doing if
the situation can’t be resolved. Request the behavior that
you would like to see, and offer some incentive to the animal for
complying. Now close your eyes and imagine (in feelings and pictures)
exactly what you would like to have happen. Tell your animal, “This
is my dream for how things could be.” End by sending love
again. Do this at least once each week. If there is any improvement
whatsoever in the animal’s behavior, make a huge fuss —
praise, treats, the works — and continue the experiment. Record
your results in your notebook.
Exercise 3: Talking from a Distance: When you
are away from your animal at work or on vacation, you can tune in
to her intuitively at any time by sending her love and a quick mental
greeting. You can also send her a reassuring thought about how you
are doing and tell her your estimated time of return. If you are
on extended travel, you may want to have a longer session in which
you sit in a quiet area, close your eyes, and imagine or feel your
animal right there in front of you. Say the animal’s name
and send love. Then you can either talk out loud or send thoughts
about how you are doing and how long it will be until you get back.
You can also tell her anything you want her to do while you are
away and send her an image of everything going well at home. These
sessions can be done daily if you wish, but should be done at least
weekly.
Exercise 4: Talking with an Animal Who Has Died:
You can do this exercise with any animal from your past who has
died, even the cat you had when you were three years old. Sit in
a quiet place by yourself, close your eyes, and imagine the animal;
either feel or see her right there in front of you. Say the animal’s
name and send love to her. Now say whatever is in your heart and
mind. If you felt guilty about something related to the animal,
talk about that in detail. Ask her if she can forgive you and give
you a sign of her forgiveness. If you are still grieving and can’t
get beyond the tears, tell her that and ask her to help you learn
to be happy again. Say whatever it is that went unsaid, and ask
her to let you know in some way that you have been heard.
Exercise 5: Ask for Some Help: If you are having
problems with something in your life — a mean boss, a difficult
project, a puny bank account — try asking your animal to help
you resolve the problem or achieve your goals and desires. You may
be surprised at the results. Do this in the spirit of experimentation
and see what happens. When Petra Gout heard this idea she immediately
went to her cat Tom and told him she was sick of apartment living
and wanted a nice house in the country. Within a month, she and
her husband fell in love with a house they happened upon while touring
the countryside one weekend. They found themselves unable to resist
buying the house, which wasn’t something they had been planning
for at all. We’re not sure whether Tom had a hand in this
coincidence. Perhaps he helped manifest Petra’s dream the
same way we would do it, by visualizing her in a cottage in the
country and asking the universe to help make that happen.
Excerpted from Learning Their Language by Marta Williams.
Copyright © 2003 by Marta Williams. Excerpted by arrangement
with New World Library. All rights reserved. $14.95. Available in
local bookstores or call 800.972.6657 ext. 52 or click
here.
|
|