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Animal Communication is the transfer of pictures or images from
the animal's brain to the human. This exchange is also knows
as telepathy.
There is a small number of people that are able to communicate
this way, but there are fewer still that do it in a regular basis
with animals. Even the government of United States has conducted
several studies with a number of Telepaths to learn more about
this innate ability.
This is nothing new, the ability to communicate through space
has been around since the beginning of time. In Australia, still
today, we can find the oldest human race in the known world still
communicates with telepathy. They are called aborigines. In the
desert of Australia they live as their ancestors did, walking
the land in search for food and water. Their walkabout can take
as long as a year, walking from morning till dusk. One scout
is dispatched ahead of the tribe, which usually is between 20
to 50 individuals. This scout goes in search of water for the
day, and each day a different person takes on the responsibility.
If the scout is lucky he would cross paths with an animal or
two to feed , therefore allowing the tribe to continue on their
journey. Aborigines worship the animals they eat as emissaries
of God. They pray for their souls to find a good life next time
and thank them for giving them the gift of life.
When the scout finds water he lets the rest of the tribe know
by sending a telepathic message. This message might say for instance:
I found water 3 hours ahead. Or there is a river due East, past
the first hill and to the right.
Usually the tribe's leader, Chief or Shaman will receive this
message and gathering the members will follow the directions
received by telepathy, until reaching the scout.
They have no phones, no radio, no other form of communication
except telepathy, and they have been doing this throughout centuries.
We in the civilized world, have forgotten how to listen. We
have machines to capture radio waves, TV waves, ultraviolet rays,
we capture pictures on paper, pictures on personal computer screens,
even pictures of our bones, blood and organs can be capture by
machines. But we have lost the ability to capture pictures in
our minds, to speak over long distances without a machines, to
use our mind as a receptor and as the most wonderful machine
ever built.
The good news is that we can train our mind to receive the
images again, and thus learn about our animals, about their feelings,
wants and hurts.
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