Talking to Animals: Encountering The Soul of NatureWritten by Kavit M Haria
Having a communication session with your companion animal is a bit like having a psychic reading or healing, only for your "pet!" Thoughts, feelings, impressions, opinions: all come through communicator as s/he tunes in to animal's energy-many finding their way into words, sentences, phrases-conversation, from animal's point of view.Communicating with animals is sweet. It is also very rich, deep, and intense, and sometimes melancholy or even heartbreaking. An animal communicator may feel as though they have been given a key to a secret world, one richer than their own, which can be entered and resided in whenever chosen. It's a world of conscious presence, a world of deep feeling, a technicolor world of multi-sensory experience. It's everyday world of animals' experience. Everything that is alive has consciousness. Consciousness, because it is shared by all creation, communicates. To communicate with any creature, or any aspect of creation, one need only to learn to listen. It isn't a matter of "doing" anything. It is rather, a learning to allow natural flow of information - images, thoughts, feelings, perceptions - to enter and reside in our consciousness. This appears difficult because we have created many distractions. In fact, we've become so adapted to creating distractions that we've mostly forgotten how to listen, and how to trust, identify and interpret what we receive.
| | Don’t Wait 31,458 Days for Your Next VictoryWritten by Tony Papajohn
This was a slump of monumental proportions.On October, 27, 2004, after 87 years (31,458 days, but who’s counting?), Boston Red Sox finally won World Series. And, just for effect, heavens cooperated with a total lunar eclipse. Although I am hardly world’s biggest baseball fan, “Curse of Bambino” has always fascinated me. This refers to Red Sox owner Harry Frazee’s 1920 sale of Babe Ruth to Yankees. Since then, Yankees have won 26 World Series titles and Red Sox have lost all 4 appearances in 7 games. That is, until now. Over years (actually, generations), “Red Sox Nation” has attributed a legion of misfortune to “The Curse.” I’m surprised that Stephen King, a New Englander and Red Sox fan, has not turned this into one of his trademark supernatural thrillers. On a more personal level, most of us are subject to “curses” of one kind or another. These are collective beliefs of a group to which we belong by birth or affinity that we believe also.
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