
I’m sitting in a circle of women (and one man) in a living room lined with overstuffed chairs, small porcelain replicas of cats and dogs, and flowered wallpaper. A golden retriever sleeps at my feet, and a tabby cat wanders the room looking for friendly laps. The instructor starts the beginners Becoming an Animal Communicator workshop with the obligatory question – What made you sign up for this course?
“I recently met a woman who says she’s an animal communicator,” I say. “Intrigued but too shy to ask what that even meant, I felt myself wishing I too could talk to animals and hear what they have to say back.”
I think it would be amazing to be able to talk to the elephants, cheetahs, and zebras in the groups I lead for my work as an African Safari Specialist. But I can’t imagine how to become an animal communicator.
“Truthfully, it seemed like the woman I met was part of a cult. I’m here purely out of curiosity,” I tell the others in the class. I’m completely clear that entrance to this cult of animal communicators belongs to a chosen few. And I’m not one of the lucky ones.
Carol, our teacher, doesn’t resemble what I imagine a professional animal communicator looks like. She’s middle-aged and petite with no spiritual or otherwise woo-woo aura about her.
“Anyone can do this,” she repeats several times. “We all have this inside of us, we just need to reconnect to it.”
Becoming an animal communicator
After guiding the class through a couple of exercises to learn to listen to and trust our instincts and get out of our heads, Carol leads us in a visualization/ meditation through a meadow to a golden beam of light.
“This light is what we will use to communicate with the animal in the photo you are each holding,” she says.
I had given a photo of my dog Zia to a participant named Kristie, and she had given me a copy of a photo of her dog Ollie.
I stare at the black and white image of my ‘client’ Ollie, having no knowledge of him except his gender and name, and that he had recently died.
“Just write in your journal, without questioning anything, whatever comes to mind as you look at the photo you are holding,” Carol had instructed us.
For a few minutes, I stare into Ollie’s eyes staring back at me from the photo. I focus on blocking out my surroundings, looking as deeply as I can into Ollie’s eyes, until I have the sensation of being inside a capsule that holds only Ollie and me. I send him my beam of light.
Then I begin writing:
I miss morning time sitting on the blue sofa watching TV; I had a food bowl with little pictures of bones all over it; and I wore a red collar. Tell her it’s Ok to get another dog now…
Images and statements like these flow into my mind’s eye. I don’t question anything; I just write everything as it comes to me.
Thirty minutes later, Kristie and I sit across from each other, reporting on what we had written down. The purpose is to get validation, or not, about what each of us had received from the other’s animal companion.
“It felt like Ollie was there next to me,” I say, and begin with the blue sofa. I tell Kristi everything in my notes without making excuses or qualifying any of it, although I’m nervous that what I’ve written is a list of nonsensical, made-up statements.
Is Animal Communication Real?
Kristie confirms each of the things I read from my notes and starts crying. I’m shocked.
That afternoon, I completed other readings from photos with three different owners and pets. Each time I’m watching (in my mind’s eye) the animal in its surroundings, behaving, and giving messages that are unique to them.
My mind searches to make sense of what’s happening. How is it possible to get this information from dogs and owners I’ve never met before this moment? Is it luck that I happen to get accurate messages?
Only after getting validation from each reading do I begin to understand that this couldn’t be lucky guesses. Something is happening that my rational mind can’t make sense of.
During a break in a private moment, Carol, the teacher, tells me she rarely sees someone in her beginning classes able to be as accurate as I am with my readings. Have I actually tapped into the innate ability we all have to become an animal communicator?
“Maybe because you spend so much time in Africa and grew up with so many animals, your abilities are still intact,” she says. “You should do this for a living,” she adds.
The following day, I call Carol, confused. “I feel like I’m in a trance. I’m not sure what happened to me.”
In her down-to-earth, this is all normal sensibility, she validates my feelings, guides me out of my altered state, and presents a clearer picture of what working as an animal communicator would mean.
I have since studied with some of the top animal communicators across the globe. I’ve also co-designed and taught a couple of classes with Carol, including communicating with wild animals.
I now understand that the animal and I are using a Universal language. It’s the way animals communicate all the time. Their default. But for us humans, it’s our least familiar way. We are born knowing it, but lose our ability (and belief in it) as we become acculturated. Training helps us remember.
Yet still, years later, before each session I have with an animal, I question my ability. I worry whether it will work this time, and whether I am making up the information that comes to me.
It’s only when the owner validates what I learned in my session from their animal companion that I allow myself to trust the process.
When I tell people I’m an animal communicator, I often get a strange look. I’m assuming they think I’m part of some woo-woo cult. And that’s just fine with me.
Want more about Becoming an animal communicator?
– Read my post about a session I did with a chicken named Butter.
– Schedule a session for your animal companion.
One Reply to “Becoming An Animal Communicator”
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Hello Lori, I came across your FB profile as we have a shared FB friend. And out of curiosity I browsed through your posts. I’m.a wildlife photographer and firmly believe I make a spiritual connection with the animals and birds I photograph. Also maybe a bit woo-woo as you described it. My favorite subjects are birds-in-flight, and specifically vultures. But often my path crosses other animals. And elephants are always special. Last year I came across a lone elephant on a hill in the KNP. This elephant drew my attention as he was chasing up small birds as he was strolling. And I started to photograph him. And I noticed he started to move closer to me. And kept on to photograph him. It was only me and him. I realised at one stage he is very close to my car. And I have put my camera on my lap. He was standing a few meters from me. In peace. He was not aggressive. And he looked at me. Initially I thought he is too close to me. I stayed calm. And I wondered what is he telling me? The only words I could find is “you are beautiful”. He walked slowly behind my car. And I watched him in my side mirror. He stopped. And turned his head to me one last time and strolled further into the grasslands. This made a profound impression on me. I have came across many other elephants which blocked the road. And they would chase me back. Why? What happened that made the elephant so annoyed? I don’t regard myself as an elephant whisperer. I have a healthy respect for their personal space.
Even when I scroll through my photos of Bearded Vultures in the Drakensberg Mountains, I have captured photos where the vultures actually made eye contact with me.
I only wanted to share my special moment with you.
Kind regards
Belinda Vermeulen