How do we stay spiritually in tune all the time? So far, my experience indicates that, while it’s our most important quest, we’re unlikely to achieve a state of permanent at-one-ment as long as we’re incarnated humans.
Every time we find a way to be detached and accepting regarding a particular challenge, life or the Universe seems to step up immediately with a new one. My sense is that we signed up for exactly this experience, to hold that goal in front of us while we navigate situation after situation, learning and growing each time, and in so doing we build spiritual muscle and acquire deeply anchored wisdom.
Different guides require different types of responses makes wonderful sense, especially in light of the staggering variety of influences surrounding you. However, rather than requiring different responses, I think what they benefit from is a different kind of hookup. Let me explain.
There’s no question that animal guides usually trigger a primal heart connection, especially for those of us who have that same kind of connection with the Earth. Human guides also use emotional or physical connections, as well as mental hookups. “Alien” guides (Like Geometric Shapes) are often most effective with a less emotional or physical connection and generally seem to work best in terms of a pure energy which is often even beyond intellectual reach.
The field of animal behavior has, in recent years, expanded and entered the mainstream. Last year’s award-winning HBO docudrama about renowned autistic animal behaviorist Dr. Temple Grandin is a testament to this. This has coincided with the development of animal advocacy organizations which espouse a compassionate attitude towards animals. Skeptics and non-believers have maintained, as their defense, the view that animals just aren’t as evolved emotionally or psychologically as humans.
However, science has stepped in not only to prove that animals do in fact experience emotions, but that they actually feel compassion and empathy—and even clairvoyance, intuition or psychic phenomena. One of the pioneers in animal behavior, Rupert Sheldrake, a British biologist out of Cambridge University in England, was one of the first to garner attention and respect for his studies of animal behavior. Sheldrake not only concluded that animals are possessed of intelligence and emotions, but that they are also capable of making psychic predictions and communicating telepathically.
Perhaps we have all heard about phenomena involving animal responses prior to natural disasters such as hurricanes or earthquakes. For example, prior to China’s largest earthquake (magnitude 8.5) in 1920, wolves were running around in packs, dogs were engaged in bizarre behavior and sparrows were flying around chaotically. There have been numerous such reports documenting unusual animal behavior prior to natural disasters in countries all over the world.
Rupert Sheldrake’s experiments have involved the discussion of such phenomena, and also the study of animal’s behavior as it relates to predicting and anticipating the owner’s arrival, leading him to actually pioneer the new field of animal telepathy. Writes Sheldrake: “My research on telepathy in animals led me to see telepathy as a normal, rather than paranormal phenomenon, an aspect of communication between members of animal social groups.” (“Dogs that Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home: And Other Unexplained Powers of Animals: An Investigation,” by Rupert Sheldrake.)
Today, with the explosion of the Internet, one can find reports of countless psychic animals. For example, Paul, the recently deceased octopus, correctly predicted a host of World Cup winners. There are also the psychic cats of 3rd Street Promenade in Santa Monica: Nostradamus, Wizard and Cassandra. One asks a cat a question and the cat chooses a scroll with a fortune inscribed on it. Numerous message boards feature the pleased proclamations of clients who claim that the cats’ predictions have been amazingly accurate and helpful.
So, then, how does this affect us and our treatment and attitudes towards animals and, besides sharing such fantastic anecdotes at cocktail parties, what can we do with this information?
Dr. Michael W. Fox of the University of Washington is one of the pioneering forces in the field of animal clairvoyance. He has coined the term “empathosphere,” referring to the empathic connection between beings, which, he says, humans have disconnected themselves from, citing animals’ psychic ability as a manifestation of this. Perhaps, therefore, we can learn from our animals and cultivate our lost interconnectedness to other beings.
In his book Cat Body, Cat Mind, Fox gives guidelines for human cat owners or guardians for interpreting their cat’s telepathic behavior. Such interpretations and connectedness to our animals can help us to help our animals when they are attempting to communicate their distress.
Fox believes that animals are worthy of our respect, because they possess the ability to heal and teach us. Learning to understand their psychic communication can help us to utilize the teaching and healing they have to offer us.
While such notions might initially set the alarms of skeptics a-ringing, they can actually be seen now in such mainstream fields as equine therapy and animal assisted therapy where children with autism and those with paralyzing disorders have, in fact, been healed by their interactions with animals.
Even police dogs are said to rely, in part, on intuition. “This is an extremely important trait for a guard dog as well as with police dogs, where intuition is the key to success,” according to the online Boxer Dog Guide.
Marc Bekoff, Professor Emeritus of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Colorado, Boulder states that “understanding our connections with animals better and studying these telepathic links will help us reconnect with the animal kingdom.” Through this connection we can once again experience that part of us that has been snuffed out or silence by our contemporary industrialized life.
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