Apparently, even professional animal communicators still doubt what they hear or see sometimes. So it's no wonder those of us just learning consider this a major hurdle! Some amount of doubt can actually be a good thing, as it keeps you striving for higher truths and more accuracy, rather than simply settling for whatever comes in. At the same time, trusting what you are seeing or hearing or feeling is one of our best tools. A Speak! blog post called Turn Off Your Mind's Autocorrect mentioned a study that showed how our intuitive accuracy quickly goes downhill if we hesitate enough to let our minds take over and begin analyzing and interpreting things. I proved this in a recent animal connection. It was with a cat I had talked with a couple of months ago. His person contacted me recently and told me the cat was found with a major injury. They had no idea how it happened and were hoping I could connect to find out. I'm still pretty anxious about trying to get accurate information (especially medical!) in crisis mode. But I pushed through my own fears because I knew an animal (and human) were in need. Before I even connected, my mind was already trying to construct scenarios and reasons why this cat was injured. I tried to dismiss those, even though there was a chance I was already connecting in some way and the information I was getting was accurate. My mind continued "leading" when I finally did connect and it came up with yet another scenario that explained the injury. I dismissed this one, too, and instead asked the cat if I could see what he saw. Immediately I was viewing a scene from ground level, just where a cat would have. I felt the grass under me and the shrubs around me. I was looking across a road at a home with distinctive coloring and styling. As I stepped toward the home, suddenly a bicycle came from nowhere and hit me. It was so easy to dismiss this vision as well, thinking my mind constructed it. The feeling when I got it wasn't too different from when my mind brought me the other things. So how to distinguish what's real or not? I'm still working on that part. But I did report this third scenario to the cat's people and guess what? There is that color and style house across the street and a bicycle injury seemed likely, despite the vet's guess of the cat taking a fall. And another thing I almost dismissed when I tried to do a body scan, was a vision of a medical-style illustration of the injured area, red inflammation around parts, and a throbbing epicenter. This also turned out to be accurate! Something made me dismiss things my mind was bringing me and put my trust in other visions and feelings that perhaps came from a truer place. Somehow, I knew which things to trust and which to discard. In the end, the important thing is that I got there. But figuring out how I got there will be invaluable. Stay tuned for future breakthroughs!
0 Comments
|
AuthorMy name is Josh and I'm a learning animal communicator, hoping that sharing my journey will help others. Categories
All
Archives
February 2020
|