How To Be Your Own Pet Psychic

Written by Stephanie Yeh


How To Be Your Own Pet Psychic By Stephanie Yeh ================================================== Those of you who watchrepparttar "Animal Planet" channel have probably seenrepparttar 130197 Pet Psychic show, where a lady psychic communicates telepathically with a variety of animals. She acts as a counselor, communicator, spiritual healer and "hierophant" betweenrepparttar 130198 human and animal kingdoms (the hierophant isrepparttar 130199 communicator between beings and worlds inrepparttar 130200 tarot deck). Watching this lady is great fun, but not as much fun as doing it yourself. Did you know you can learn to communicate with animals, too?

Magic is real and everyone is a magician. It's just part of your natural birthright as a planetary citizen. Part of that birthright is access to a host of psychic abilities. The keyword here is "access." We all haverepparttar 130201 psychic abilities that enable us to know what we can't possibly know throughrepparttar 130202 five senses, touch non-physical worlds, and communicate with our animals. It's just that without practice most of us don't know how to access those abilities.

In her upcoming ebook, "Animal Communication: A Primer," Esoteric School Expert Leta Worthington discusses how our brain works and how to get intorepparttar 130203 right brainwave to accessrepparttar 130204 ability to communicate with animals. She explains that our "normal" brainwaves,repparttar 130205 ones we use for day-to-day tasks such as driving, calculating and thinking, are too fast for us to do animal communication. What we need to do is slide into a slower, more relaxed, and more open brainwave. When we get into this brainwave, we're more open to other worlds and other types of "psychic" senses. In fact, we need to get into this brainwave not just for animal communication, but for most kinds of psychic work. So how can you start getting into that brainwave? Practice, practice, practice. Here's a short list to get you started:

Should You Express Feelings at Work?

Written by Susan Dunn, MA, Emotional Intelligence Coach


As Emotional Intelligence becomesrepparttar latest buzz word, and entersrepparttar 130195 military, business and corporate worlds,repparttar 130196 question arises: “Should you express your emotions at work?” Many people think that’s what Emotional Intelligence (EQ) is about. This question is similar to, “Do you think emotions belong inrepparttar 130197 workplace?” The answer to both is – Unfortunately, it doesn’t matter what you think, it’s a reality. We bring our emotions torepparttar 130198 work place. We also express them inrepparttar 130199 workplace. The key isrepparttar 130200 awareness. It’s already going on. EQ is about managing all this intelligently. Emotional Intelligence is about self-awareness. That’srepparttar 130201 beginning. Knowing your own feelings, understanding where they come from and how they work, managing them, and being able to make rational decisions making use ofrepparttar 130202 information they provide. Our emotions, after all, guide us. In a very real sense, we ARE our emotions. Once you can do this for yourself, you can apply this knowledge to others. We like to think it’s a matter of choice – expressing them or not – but that’s less oftenrepparttar 130203 case than you might think. I was reminded of this a couple of months ago when I was speaking on a cruise. I broke my ankle onrepparttar 130204 second day out. They put a soft cast on it inrepparttar 130205 Mexican hospital, and I awaited my return torepparttar 130206 US to get it taken care of. Yes, it hurt, and I wasn’t able to do much, but to me it wasn’t intolerable. When I went for meals, I didn’t want my tablemates’ vacation to be “inconvenienced” or to “worry” them about such a thing while on their vacation, something “unpleasant.” That’s what we get away for, right? So there I sat, eating and making polite conversation, acting as if nothing were wrong (though of courserepparttar 130207 cast was evident) but every time I changed position even slightly, I winced. The gentleman sitting across from me said, “Does your foot hurt?” “No,” I replied, not wanting to cause concern. The next time it happened,repparttar 130208 same question, “Is your foot hurting?”

“No,” I replied.

This time he challenged me, annoyed, with “Why do you tell me it doesn’t hurt when it shows all over your face?” The thing is that we DO show how we’re feeling, whether we want to or not. It can be subtle, in which case some people will miss it, but others who are more perceptive will pick up on it. When we see expressions on people’s faces we can at least tell something’s wrong, though we may not be able to readrepparttar 130209 emotion and figure it out exactly. In this case, it was rather obvious since they knew I’d broken my ankle. I asked myself why I felt like concealing how I was feeling (though I didn’t do it very well). There are reasons why we do. It could be we don’t want to make other people uncomfortable, or don’t want to appear “weak” or “overly emotional.” Perhaps it’srepparttar 130210 cultural norm you grew up with (as in my case … you don’t talk about unpleasant things ‘at table’), orrepparttar 130211 culture you’re currently in. Perhaps we’d rather ignore it ourselves, withrepparttar 130212 “stiff upper lip” philosophy, or because we think there’s nothing anyone else can do about it. Or in our family of origin, perhaps when we didn’t express a negative feeling, nothing WAS done about it, so we no longer expect it, and keep it to ourselves. But what happens when we don’t? For one thing, we send mixed messages and, as with my table companion, this annoys other people. It erodes trust. To him, I was lying. I was saying I wasn’t in pain (verbally) when I was (nonverbally,

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