Shasta is a cat who has been away from her family for more than a year. She disappeared one day while they were living in a rural location. They were heartbroken to have to move to the city without her and without knowing where she was. I don't normally do any kind of tracking or lost animal connections, as I don't have the skill or experience and it's too sad for me. For some reason, I felt like trying today, just to connect and see if I could tell what it felt like — whether the animal was still in physical, how she is doing, where she is. I was open to anything that came in. Gentle energyWhen I first tuned in, Shasta met me with sweetness. She was very gentle and soft-spoken. I had remembered reading that one thing to ask a lost animal is if they are hungry or what they are eating. It can give you a clue if they are in spirit or still on earth with physical needs. When I pictured Shasta eating, I immediately felt she appreciated fish, tuna I think, and it's something she gets a lot of. I felt strongly that she was safe and warm and healthy in a home. She wasn't distressed, but her heart was elsewhere with her family. I see her on a bed with a red and gold bedspread. She is alone in the room, which feels a little like a spare room. There doesn't seem to be anything on the walls. The bed frame is a light wood with some ornateness carved into the wooden headboard. It feels like perhaps an older couple lives here. There may be another cat in the house, but Shasta keeps her distance, which is why she is in the spare room. She is treated well and loved. I see a green tractor with yellow writing on it. I asked Shasta if all she is showing me is a memory. She assured me it's happening right now. When I asked if she could show me the difference in how it feels if she were here or in spirit. She said she can't do that because she is only here. Fox HuntI then asked her if she could show me what happened on the day she disappeared. She showed me that she followed a butterfly or something flying through a field. At some point, she encountered a fox (are there foxes in the area?). She ran! She made it to a big tree and climbed high. I asked if the fox was able to climb after her. She said he did, but couldn't climb as high as she did and gave up. She stayed up there for a long time (feels like more than a day). She was scared to come down and didn't really know how anyway. Finally, as she was shifting positions, she actually fell from the tree to the ground. She was unhurt, but wasn't ready to come down or prepared to meet up with the fox again, so she ran. By this time she was not sure where she was. She was too afraid to pay attention. The next thing she knew, she was at a house with some nice people and they fed her. She was able to hide there and calm down for several days. I think this is where she still is and she has been afraid to go exploring again, even to look for home. New home, new nameAt this point, I wondered how much of this I was actually hearing or seeing. I wanted to make sure it was true.
I said to Shasta, "Your family loves you so much and they miss you. They looked all over for you." She listened intently to this and said she felt the same way, then asked, "How do I get there?" I admitted I don't know. "Shasta, your family had to move from that house to one that is farther away, but they are still trying to find you. I think I would stay where you are if it's safe and let them try to find you there." I wondered, "Can you tell me what you see when you look outside the house?" Nothing really came in clear for me. Initially I saw wheat-colored fields. Then I thought I saw a dog on a long leash out front, gray and looking like an Irish wolfhound or a greyhound with longer fur. The house seems to have a porch and the colors are gray and maroon. I asked, "What do they call you?" I heard something like Texi or Tiksy. --- Read Part 2 here.
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