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Healing through Death — A Journey
in Animal Communication
by Dawn Baumann Brunke
I first made the acquaintance of Queen, a brown tabby cat with yellow eyes and a
tiny orange spot on the top of her head, just as she was approaching death. Her human
caretaker, Rain, was understandably sad, but wanted to ask Queen a number of questions.
At the time, I was learning some basic skills in animal communication. The idea that
humans and animals could connect to telepathically share feelings and thoughts was
of great interest to me. While reporting on the subject for a series of magazine
articles, I had spoken to numerous professional animal communicators (who would have
known you could have such a job?!) and I even had several experiences of my own where
I was able to communicate with a different species.
The ways in which this heart-to-heart, mind-to-mind connection with an animal works
may at first seem a bit mysterious. But as I was told, and eventually experienced,
time and again, is that this silent form of communication (what some refer to as
our "first language") is perhaps the most natural form of relating to others
that we possess. Indeed, as we relax the ordinary, logical mind, we easily open to
more intuitive, feeling-based states, including telepathy. In this relaxed, connected
state of consciousness, we can receive information from animals in many different
ways, such as through visual images, inner feelings and intuitive flashes. It is
then up to the communicator to "translate" these inner impressions into
words that other humans can understand.
The regal stature
When I centered myself and connected with Queen, she immediately reflected the regal
stature of her name. Queen was calm and firmly centered in her heart as she responded
to the barrage of Rain's initial questions with an elegant and simple manner, "She
already knows all the answers."
Queen related that she was preparing to die or, as she put it, "dreaming myself
away." Queen explained that, for her, dying was like being on a road or path
that she could explore little by little.
"I walk down part of the path to see what it is like," she said, "and
then I come back and feel my body."
Queen asked Rain not to worry, reassuring her that the path was well marked. As if
to emphasize this, Queen shared with me a vision of other cats on this path, which
looked like a golden trail through sun-dappled woods. She explained that in the past
she had been afraid of death. In this ending of her life as Queen, she was working
to lose that fear by easing herself into a deeper appreciation of death. Queen related
that she wanted some time to consciously move through the "walkway of death,"
meeting friends and teachers along the way, coming back into her body to ground this
experience into her present consciousness. Queen told Rain that this time was for
herself and that she specifically chose to be with Rain not only to help her, but
because she felt Rain would allow her to die in this manner, allowing her this precious
time to finish her work.
Quiet her mind
Queen invited Rain to come near and sit with her, to quiet her mind and tune in so
as to share in her experiences.
"I invite you to see," said Queen. "Please don't feel bad for me.
I had a great life as Queen. I know I was loved and I hope you know that I loved
all of you, even the mice and birds and bugs. It was a great life and I learned many
things.
"We all go on. Know that I am really where I want to be. My body is finished
and will be gone soon, and that is how it is with all of us. But I am still alive
and I will always be alive, just as you will always be alive. If you quiet yourself
and ask to go very deep inside yourself, there you will find me, and many others
too ... even yourself. In this quiet space, you find the deeper you."
Like Queen, many animals impart heartfelt messages of comfort to their humans while
offering valuable opportunities to share in some of the most profound moments of
healing and elevated awareness. Rain was comforted by Queen's teaching and deeply
touched by her invitation to take a more conscious role in the process of her death.
In doing so, she began to see both death and life with new eyes.
As we open ourselves to ideas beyond our usual frame of reference, we open to greater
levels of knowledge and experience. In this sense, communicating with animals takes
us to a deeper place of communion, not only with the natural world and the many animals
and fellow humans who share our planet, but within ourselves as well.
Dawn Baumann Brunke is the author of Animal Voices: Telepathic Communication in
the Web of Life, published by Bear & Company. For more information, visit her
website at www.animalvoices.net .
Copyright (c) 2002 Dawn Baumann Brunke |
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Dec
2002
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