Ruminations

Blog dedicated primarily to randomly selected news items; comments reflecting personal perceptions

Saturday, April 24, 2021

Communication Between Pets and Owners By Telepathy


"If I had someone who wanted me to listen to their pet psychic [then] I would have pooh-poohed it. In the last five to seven years, I’m not really skeptical any more."
"I had a cat who was having a breathing problem and the owner spoke to an animal communicator, who said the cat needed acupuncture."
"Animals are very empathetic and can pick up on their owners’ feelings,:
"When I first started vet school everyone thought acupuncture was voodoo medicine; now it’s very accepted by mainstream veterinarians. I think in the future we might find there is something to psychic medication."
Dr Aleda Cheng, New Jersey-based veterinarian
 
"People want company, but they don't necessarily want to raise a child."
"The cost of owning a pet is a lot less than raising a child."
Ariel Hu, telepathic communicator, course teacher on talking to animals
 
animal-communication
Pet psychics are growing in number and popularity. They are people who undergo training sessions to prepare them to become more sensitive to the fact that people have telepathic capabilities, they just have to be guided toward understanding the power they have and how to use them. A powerful incentive is speaking to the dead, the dearly departed, to communicate with them and to find solace and peace in the knowledge that this can be done, once the subconscious powers of telepathy have been unleashed. 
 
Animal pets now have their very own psychic consultants, those who specialize as intermediaries acting on behalf of the pet owner, the human companion of a dog or a cat or any other pet; all have the capacity to communicate with the assistance of a skilled intermediary. Their owners find comfort in the assurance that with the help of these pet communicators, a long-mourned dead cat or dog can be reached and asked questions about their well-being, for example, and whether when they return to life they would want to meet again.
 
Taiwan has become the centralized location of more pet telepathic professionals than anywhere else on the planet. Some attribute this to Daoism and Buddhism with the cardinal belief in reincarnation and the life of spirits. Many others may consider that this is a way to deal with grief when a beloved animal dies, leaving the pet owner bereft of its constant companionship. According to experts a plausible explanation lies in the fact that the belief in telepathy is an urban, middle-class phenomenon fed by a sense of isolation.

Equine-Therapy
During this time of a global pandemic and the need to exercise social distancing, masking, avoiding physical interaction with others and any exposure to the SARS-CoV-2 virus causing COVID-19, people are more anxious, unsettled and unhappy than ever before. With a companion, depression can be set aside, and a growing number of Taiwanese have adopted pets for company and the sharing of a physical space. 

In Taiwan, the growing body of in-demand pet telepathy experts -- or as they prefer to call themselves, animal communicators -- this cottage industry has grown in demand in lock-step with the expanding number of new pet-owners in the island state. The Taiwan Animal Communication Center sees new classes of students graduating every few months. They maintain a roster of over 80 certified professionals whose expertise can be hired out.

Other animal communicators have been trained at home by other teachers, or even overseas, including in the United States and Britain where the movement toward pet telepathy first emerged. Nowhere, however, has the movement attained the popularity it has in Taiwan; to the extent that it can take months to reserve an appointment with the most in-demand pet communicators. "There are more communicators per capita in Taiwan than anywhere else I've seen", observed Lauren McCall, a British-American animal communicator who operates student workshops in Taiwan.
 
professional animal communicators can help you know what your pet needs to tell you
In the past ten years there has been a steady rise in pet ownership with registered dogs and cat ownerships peaking at 2.5 million in 2017, close to double the numbers in 2005. Taiwan reported 2.3 million dogs and cats in 2019, rates out-numbering those of children under age 15 in five counties. Dogs can be seen carted about in strollers in Taipei. Businesses offering massages or swim classes and yoga for dogs have no difficulty finding clients.

Funerals can be arranged for departed animals with monks officiating, chanting last rites complete with ceremonial joss paper burning to enable their spirits to live well in the afterlife. Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen has two cats and three dogs, all of which were featured in her pre-election campaign last year, and remain part of public relations, helping raise her popularity level. A pet communicator was also one of the president's campaign managers.

Taiwanese seem to have lost their enthusiasm for having children, replacing them instead with adopting animal pets, citing rising living expenses, a lag in wages and living in densely populated cities. All of which gave Taiwan a shrinking population for the first time on record, in 2020. As more animals enter households, their owners turn to communicators where services such as finding lost pets or divining the relationship between owner and pet in a past life, are all available.

And it is not only dogs and cats  that are communicated with on behalf of their owners, but also pet hedgehogs, birds, turtles, dolphins and ... plants.
"The IAABC is an evidence-based organization promoting best practices in animal behavior and training. While we understand that belief-based practices inspire passion and conviction in some people, there is no scientifically verified evidence that these methods are based on anything more than faith."
"[Pet psychics may seem harmless, but] belief-based practices can lead clients and practitioners to see change and improvement where there is none, potentially causing harm to the animal."
Marjie Alonso, executive director of the International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants

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