I’m an animal communicator and that involves three points of view: the animal’s, the person’s, and mine. Perhaps you’d like to know what it’s like from my perspective.
My readings are done on the phone (so I can’t see the animal) and the only information I need is the animal’s name, species (cat, dog, corn snake, etc), gender, and alive or passed on. All of this information is just to help me get the reading started quickly, without having to ask your animal these questions.
I have a room pictured in my head – it looks like a real room (with furniture, rugs, books, accessories) but does not and has never existed. Most of my information is visual so the room helps with this – and I just like it this way. I close my eyes, picture the room, and watch the animal walk in and get comfortable. It’s like watching a video in my head. Some aspects of the animal’s appearance are important and some are not, and I tell the person what I am seeing.
There are also other ways I get information. For me, hearing usually involves music. I’ve had animals play various songs from the past and the person always understands why that particular song is playing. Feeling physical sensations usually occurs when I’m asking the animal about how his/her health and well-being. These physical sensations usually let me know what the animal is feeling at that moment or at the moment we are talking about – but these physical feelings are not a diagnostic tool to find illness (you need a vet for that), just a way of getting closer to your animal and understanding how he/she is feeling right now.
I also get information in what I refer to as a download – suddenly, I just know something and don’t know why or how I know it (like when you download a file onto you computer and BOOM, it’s just there).
As the session continues, I relay what I’m seeing, hearing, feeling, and knowing to the person. I ask if it is making sense and if it is, we continue. If it is not making sense, that means I need to go back to the animal and ask for clarification (“please, explain it or show it to me in another way”).
For me, animals are funny and frequently have attitude (which is also funny) – and some have a salty vocabulary. I assume the animals bring humor to the reading because that’s what I like. If only I could always be as good, loving, and considerate as the animals.