the first time I met her, she was doing 5 minute sample readings
La Paz for $20. I happened to have Mocha with me, so I figured what the hell. said "She says she wants her red ball, she wants her green ball." I had put away two rubber balls, a red one and a green one, in favour of a different park toy. It was that incredibly specific information that blew away my skepticism. You can't guess that my dog had two balls, a red one and a green one, that she was missing and wanted back. So this is why I'm willing to spend so much, I've had my "wow" experience, but I find that you have to have that personal "wow" experience before you'll really, really believe that she's getting accurate information from your pets. BTW, it's not just pets, it's any animal. Problem bear? Raccoons? She can talk to them too. You can't just tell them to stay away (well you could, that doesn't mean they'd listen) but you might be able to find out what they're after and how to manage wildlife without resorting extreme measures like trap and release or shooting problem wildlife. have been using psychics for decades. I think the reason why animal communication hasn't caught on in a more mainstream way is that there is a lot of resistance to seeing as feeling, thinking, independant creatures, rather than cute pets or livestock. I think that's changing slowly though. Hopefully. :) /ramble rant Why Dogs Smile and Chimpanzees Cry Wildlife filmmakers, scientists and naturalists come forward to present a compelling case that have emotional lives that rival our own. They offer surprising evidence that -' emotions are closely linked to their survival. Narrated by actress Sigourney Weaver, this 2-part program weaves together extraordinary stories of animal behavior as documented by their observers.