Free Articles, Free Web Content, Reprint Articles
Friday, June 1, 2012
 
Free Articles, Free Web Content, Reprint ArticlesRegisterAll CategoriesTop AuthorsSubmit Article (Article Submission)ContactSubscribe Free Articles, Free Web Content, Reprint Articles
ADVERTISEMENTS
 

Would You Like to Know What Your Animal Companion is Thinking and Feeling? Now You Can!

Has this happened to you? You know your dog or cat is trying to tell you ... but you can’t figure out what they want. Now you can know what your animal ... is thinking and feeling with th

Has this happened to you? You know your dog or cat is trying to tell you something, but you can’t figure out what they want. Now you can know what your animal companion is thinking and
feeling with the help of an Animal Communicator.

ANIMAL COMMUNICATION - HOW DOES IT WORK?

Animals communicate with us, but the means are nonverbal. They don't use words. They growl, bark, chirp, stretch, paw and do other things which have meaning. When you think about it, we humans communicate with one another all the time by intuitive
and nonverbal means. We sense how someone else is feeling or
‘know’ when a friend is sick, or think of someone only to have the phone ring and it’s them. Using our intuition in an intentional way with our animal companions opens doors for nonverbal communication to happen.

IT’S A HEART-TO-HEART CONNECTION

Animal Communicators are able to open up this channel for us to understand one another better. But can everyone learn it? Yes, say Animal Communicators.

"Animal communication is a heart-to-heart connection that everyone can experience," says Jacquelin Smith, an Animal Communicator with over 20 years experience ( http://www.jacquelinsmith.com ). She has communicated nationally and
internationally with thousands of individuals about their animal companions. "You just need to open, love and listen to the animals," she says. "Interspecies communication is a natural connection many of us have forgotten. It has nothing to do with being ‘psychic’. Animals desire to be heard. They are even more joyful when they know we want this deeper connection with them."

WHAT DOES CHLOE WANT?

For example, Jacquelin tells this story: "I was combing my hair and had the image of a dish of cottage cheese appear in my mind. I dismissed it, but the image appeared again. I glanced into the hallway and saw my cat companion, Chloe, sitting there
looking my way. Then I realized she had sent me the picture of cottage cheese. I had given her cottage cheese for the first time several days before this, and the picture she sent me was her telling me she wanted more."

HOW DO WE GET OUR ANIMALS TO COMMUNICATE WITH US?

"They’re always communicating with us," says Jacquelin. "You just have to explore this intuitive connection and I can show people how." Like any other skill we desire to develop in life, she says, it takes time and practice to become fluent in animal
communication.

What can this do for us? Both people and animals benefit from adding this level of communication, says Jacquelin. Besides deepening the connection with our pet and enjoying being closer, animals help us and teach us about ourselves and one another.

COMMUNICATE WITH MORE THAN A PAT OR A STROKE

How does an Animal Communicator do this? Jacquelin works mostly over the phone where she helps owners understand their pets.

"Sue called me," she says, "because she couldn’t figure out why her cat, Jane, would not use the cat door to go outside. When I asked Jane why, she shot me a picture of the cat door and
showed me that the first time she started to walk through it, she got scared and didn’t feel safe. She felt the walls might close in on her. I could feel the fear she felt with this experience. Then I communicated nonverbally with Jane and told
her she’d be safe and that the walls wouldn’t close in on her. I sent her a picture of how she could walk through it. The next day Sue called and told me that Jane was now using the cat
door."

Jacquelin can help you get the message across in ways a pat or a stroke cannot. She offers step-by-step techniques for communicating with your animal companion that you can learn with consultations, workshops, booklet or tape.

"I can’t tell you what a relief it was," says MJ Abell, one of Jacquelin’s clients, "to find out what was going on. My cat was doing destructive things while I was at work, and Jacquelin showed me what to do. It worked like a charm! My cat had been trying to tell me all along, but I wasn’t getting the message."

Visual images are important, says Jacquelin, especially when you’re trying to work with your animal companion for a behavior change, one of Jacquelin's specialties.

I think I’ll pick up the phone right now because Baby Kittee has been meowing for several minutes and I have no idea what she wants!

Jacquelin Smith, Animal Communicator, http://www.jacquelinsmith.com , offers
private consultations, workshops and other materials to help you learn to communicate with your animal. She’s the founder of the Prayer Line for AnimalsComputer Technology Articles, and author of "Talking with the Animals©." Mailto:jacquelinsmith@jacquelinsmith.com to schedule your session.

Article Tags: Animal Companion, Says Jacquelin, Cottage Cheese

Source: Free Articles from ArticlesFactory.com

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


©Courtesy Susan Dunn,The EQ Co http://www.susandunn.cc.



Health
Business
Finance
Travel
Home Repair
Technology
Computers
Family
Communication
Entertainment
Autos
Marketing
Self Help
Sports
Home Business
Education
ECommerce
Law
Other
Internet
Partners


Page loaded in 0.040 seconds