*Learn How to Talk to Animals with Professional Animal Communicator, Val Heart › Forums › Animal Talk Coaching Club Forum › Gold members submit your questions of February 10, 2018 QA call
Tagged: QA call
- This topic has 1 reply, 10 voices, and was last updated 6 years, 2 months ago by Pamela Ferarese.
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01/13/2018 at 7:23 pm #44663ModeratorModerator
Our next Gold Member Live Q&A Monthly Call is Saturday, Febuary 10 @ 8:30 am Pacific / 10:30 am Central / 11:30 am Eastern.
NOTE: The Live Q&A Monthly Coaching Call is an opportunity reserved for Gold Members Only who are in good standing in the Club (membership dues are paid up). If you’re not a Gold Member and want to participate, email ContactVal@ValHeart.com and ask to be upgraded now.
Calling All Questions! If you’d like a chance to get a hot “love” seat in the next call to interact personally with me, then post your question here no later than 24 hours ahead of the class time to assure that they are included on the call. Questions are normally answered in the sequence in which they are posted, so it is best not to wait until the last minute. Be sure to post before the deadline of 12 noon Eastern on Friday, the day before our QA call.
Remember to let us know if there are specific topics on which you would like more teaching.
Prior to the Call, I’ll review the questions posted and will choose how to best answer them in the time we have. Some questions may be combined or adjusted, answers combined to be of great interest to the group. Typically questions are answered in the order in which they are received and we may not have time to answer all questions during the call. Come prepared with your questions as this is your time to get the answers you need to move forward in deepening your animal communication skills. If you have a deep, personal or urgent question, you may be better served by signing up for a personal session.
There will be a recording of the call available after the call within 48 hours. However, student interaction can be the catalyst that produces remarkable insights, and your participation is vitally important. Please plan to be on the live call.
Thank you for being a member of the Coaching Club and for sharing your love of animals with all of your fellow students. I’m looking forward to hearing what’s on your mind and discovering how I can best guide you on your journey!
Love,
ValModerator
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01/16/2018 at 7:22 pm #44723Pamela FerareseInactive Member
Hi Val, I just listened to your session recording with MJ that was done in 2007 with a client of yours. You spoke about how a cat should not have dry food (kibbles). My cats would be as skinny as KoKo if they only ate wet food. My question is that if a cat has, all its life, eaten and likes kibbles to go ahead and continue with it, of course in addition to the wet food? I have recently switched to healthier brand dry foods without the grains. I can understand if I have a new kitten and reared him/her with eating only wet food it would be so much easier. Do you muscle test to check if a food is good? or do you/did you check with the MJ directly to get a specific number?
Pam, Pammie, Pammie Jean, Pamela.... you can call me any of these names.
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01/16/2018 at 7:28 pm #44724Pamela FerareseInactive Member
Well, I take back what I said about my cats being as skinny as KoKo if they only ate wet food….of course they would not; I am sure they would be healthier, but if dry food is what they know and they are 11 and 14 yrs old…
Pam, Pammie, Pammie Jean, Pamela.... you can call me any of these names.
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01/29/2018 at 10:21 pm #45118Cheryl D CuttineauInactive Member
Hi Pamela,
I hope I am not stepping on toes here, but I thought I would share my knowledge about this subject, for whatever value it is.
Wet food vs is Dry food, especially for cats, is a controversial issue. The main concern is three-fold: is your cat getting sufficient fluid in its daily diet; is dry food harder to digest and does it cause inflammation; and, what are the ingredients in dry food?
If your cat drinks plenty of water from the faucet, water bowl, etc, a little dry food is ok. If not, you need to find other ways to supplement fluids in the diet, either by searching for a wet food your cat loves, adding some tuna water to the food, or experimenting with some of the refrigerated or frozen raw food now available at specialty pet stores. When a cat becomes dehydrated, it can lead to death or the very least an expensive vet bill.
Is dry food harder to digest? Can it cause inflammation? This should be a no-brainer, but convenience comes at the cost of common sense. How many animals eat kibble in the wild? Unless they are starving and there is nothing else to eat, our dogs and cats do not eat commercially processed dry kibble. Cats are obligatory carnivores, meaning they must get their protein from meat, NOT peas, corn or brocolli. Dogs, on the other hand, will eat their own poop. At least that’s organic. There is a recent research report from a veterinary university that shows that a steady diet of dry food in dogs DOES cause inflammation. (Sorry, I couldn’t find the link).
And then there is the pandora’s box of ingredients. It is too broad a subject to address here.What ingredients, where do they come from, how are they processed and where, etc. If you want to immerse yourself in research, look up https://www.thetruthaboutpetfood.com, 11 years of articles and research into the pet food industry. OR you can save yourself a bundle of time and look up my Blog at https://www.nepenthesgarden.com where I specifically address dry food, wet food and name names.
Hope this helps.
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01/29/2018 at 4:48 pm #45114Barb GroutInactive Member
I am finishing up my very first month of accountability:
What I am noticing is my inability to stay focused in my conversations with animals and my meditations. When I write down the conversation as I am having it, I can stay with it but if I am not writing I either forget what we talked about or I start thinking of something else. Do you have suggestions for staying present?-
01/30/2018 at 2:50 pm #45141Barb GroutInactive Member
I just received the answer to my question: improve the connection so that it is very strong through grounding; being in heart space; and smile when connection is lost then reboot. This all came this morning during my meditation.
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02/01/2018 at 11:13 pm #45177Jeane TakedaInactive Member
Is it possible to connect with an animal very quickly, then all of a sudden, it stops or you get a busy signal? I’ll place her picture in front of me and I can barely hold on to the image. Is it possible that my protective shield isn’t allowing her to come in? I use a protective shield because of my neighbor. Long story short, ever since I began this class, meditated on connecting with an animal, my neighbor and I seem to be magnets. It’s very disturbing to say the least. Any advice would be much appreciated.
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02/02/2018 at 3:54 am #45195Chigusa SansenPlatinum Member
I’m still very new and perhaps I require more practice. However it would be great to get an advise here. When I connect with animals, I can pick up things that they choose to tell me, but when I try to ask follow up questions, I have hard time getting relevant responses back or keeping the conversation on topic. I feel like I am more like tuning into a radio frequency than a two way radio communication. How do I make my communication go both ways more effectively?
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02/02/2018 at 11:20 pm #45206Ana ZuluagaInactive Member
I am still new to animal communication and I know practice is fundamental to the process. I would like to know how can I establish and maintain a strong connection? And how to be able to connect with animals while you are in the middle of every day activities? In order for me to connect with an animal I have to go to a quiet place and meditate for a litlle while. I can’t be interrupted or other wise I can’t focus and I would start thinking about things that have nothing to do with my intention to connect. I know that professional communicators can tune in pretty much anywhere and when they need to.
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02/03/2018 at 6:27 pm #45216Patty MillerPlatinum Member
Hi Val, if there’s time, could you check in with Cooper and see what’s going on with him please? You’ve probably seen my post(s) on the FB page about what’s been going on with him, so I won’t take up time or space to post it again here. Thanks so much!
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02/03/2018 at 7:45 pm #45219Patty MillerPlatinum Member
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02/05/2018 at 6:53 pm #45239Lydia PyunGold Member
Hi Val,
My dog, Binky, has twitches or bobbing of head out of the blue at various times of the day. I’ve had a vet check him out, but was inconclusive. I tried communicating w/ him, but difficult to do as I’m new to animal communication and also because he’s my baby I tend to get anxious, which blocks me from connecting with him. Any insight or guidance into his condition OR type of treatment I should seek for him, would be greatly appreciated. TYIA.
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02/05/2018 at 9:09 pm #45242Cheryl D CuttineauInactive Member
Question 1: Can very young animals, such as puppies and kittens, with limited life experience, communucate telepathically at the same level as adult-age animals? I have not been successful at all either tuning into them or getting any credible responses.
Question 2: Is telepathy with wild life and marine life different from communicating with domestic animals? I recently read Penelope Smith’s account of her encounter with a very large rattlesnake and how she was able to communicate with it but could not get her young cat’s attention. Do we use the same process, or are there differences? I have read Teresa Wagner’s work with whales and it seems like marine life would have a very different frame of reference for communicating with us.
Question 3: Is cognitive perception a legitimate form of animal communication like kinesthetic and visual modalities? -
02/05/2018 at 9:31 pm #45243ModeratorModerator
The topic on the February Q&A call will help you find a way to help when you encounter and experience animal health problems.
Instead of being in the agony of feeling their pain, wishing you could figure out a way to help them feel better (or yourself)…You CAN take action and do something that relieves their pain, eases their tension and anxiety.
You want more heart centered communion, mind to mind connection, and lots more harmony, peace and love between you. And you’ll definitely want these techniques and strategies in your Animal Talk Mastery Toolkit if you have any thoughts about going pro yourself.
Join us for Val’s best connection, communication, confidence building and training techniques.
Moderator
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02/05/2018 at 9:32 pm #45244ModeratorModerator
The topic on the February Q&A call will help you find a way to help when you encounter and experience animal health problems.
Instead of being in the agony of feeling their pain, wishing you could figure out a way to help them feel better (or yourself)…You CAN take action and do something that relieves their pain, eases their tension and anxiety.
You want more heart centered communion, mind to mind connection, and lots more harmony, peace and love between you. And you’ll definitely want these techniques and strategies in your Animal Talk Mastery Toolkit if you have any thoughts about going pro yourself.
Join us for Val’s best connection, communication, confidence building and training techniques.
Moderator
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02/06/2018 at 3:28 am #45251Jeane TakedaInactive Member
How do I tell Kitty she might stay with someone else for a few hours or a weekend? The weekend stay isn’t until March 2nd – March 4th; therefore, unsure how I’m supposed to get her ready? Am I supposed to use images or is it verbal? Should I be setting her up on a daily basis or weekly basis? Presently, I’m using images with her, but I’m not quite sure if I’m getting through. I normally don’t get the response I’m looking for.
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02/06/2018 at 3:38 pm #45253Ana ZuluagaInactive Member
Great question. I was asking that myself this morning. Thank you for sharing.
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02/06/2018 at 7:38 pm #45265Cheryl D CuttineauInactive Member
I would always tell my kitties several days in advance that I would be gone for a few days but I would be back in so many number of “darknesses”. Also, if someone was coming in to care of them, I would explain that too.
Now that I am petsitting, I communicate with the animals in advance and let them know I am coming to take care of them while their owners are away. A day before their guardians are due to return, I tell them, but they seem to know that already. Some are very unhappy when I leave but get back into their routine in a short time.LOL
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02/10/2018 at 1:32 am #45334Meggan VandermastInactive Member
Hi Val, My question pertains to the traditional spaying/neutering of animals. I’ve spoken to a few medical doctors who said the effects of the loss of hormones from these surgeries is devastating to the animals’ health as they progress in life & yet the majority of the veterinary community unbelievably doesn’t recognize this. This is personal research that I’ve been doing for a long time now. Like my question regarding animals enduring horrific treatment being raised as food in the agricultural system is this yet another injustice done to animals that they need to endure until we wake up as humans?
Thank you~
Meggan Vandermast -
02/10/2018 at 7:05 pm #45362ModeratorModerator
Jeane – Cheryl’s suggestions above are a great way to prepare your animals for your travel.
Early on getting to know Val we were at a conference across the country and i told her about my new to me rescued kitten Rumery. Val asked if I told him about my trip in advance. “Oh no” I said, “travel upset my prior cats so I didn’t want him to get upset.”
WRONG ANSWER
While they may not understand and will miss you, your (aka my) responsibility is to explain to them in advance, during and after what, why, how, where, with whom and the whens of what is happening. Val made me telephone my cat at that moment and explain all the details to him and apologize for not telling him sooner and promising to keep him update once or twice a day while I was away. Yes, literally telephone him. After that phone call I was allowed to communicate (about which I knew nothing at the time) telepathically. And yes she did check each day of the conference to be sure I had sent the telepathic message even if I didn’t know if it was received. Val generously did check to be sure the messages were received and understood.
On travel home day I was to send even more telepathic messages to keep Rumery informed of my travel, surroundings, what I’d learned, etc. As I drove up the road near my home I told Rumery where I was. And though it was 3 am, he greeted me at the front door and after a quick sniff and energy check the purrs roared.
Later when I was checking my phone messages, Rumery literally leaped up onto the voicemail recorder, listened to his message again then left. He only listened to HIS message. Guess he was checking to be sure we were complete and perhaps feel Val’s supportive energy in the background. They’ve been close buddies ever since. In fact, one time when Val was anxious to reach me and I’d missed her calls, as I was headed to bed he stopped me at the voicemail message machine and actually played her message for me, not any of the others. I still don’t know how that actually occurred but it did and I called Val immediately and was able to contribute to the urgent situation.I still practice telling Rumery days in advance of travel, updates during and summary after as well. And yes, even when it is the wee hours of the morning he greets me at the front door upon my return.
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