Our Animal Communications Experts

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Attuning ourselves with nature
is easy and natural.....

Leading our team of animal communicators:

Laura Simpson

World-renowned specialist in Animal Communications and Vibrational Medicines, featured on the Discovery Channel's Science Mystery series about Animal Telepathy.

Laura, a gifted animal communicator, has been featured by the Discovery Channel's Mystery Series, in Ladies Home Journal, Cats Magazine and in many other publications. She has been a guest on many radio and TV programs, internationally. 

Laura Simpson, born and raised in Fairfield, Iowa, well known for her work in communicating with animals and finding lost pets, seems to have been a practicing psychic from day one of her life.

She says, "My mother recognized early on that I had the ability to talk to and hear animals. She could do that, too, so she helped foster it in me. Now I have dedicated my life to the work because I feel so strongly that the animals need a voice." Having trained with North America’s leading animal communicators, Laura is now teaching others to help animals have a voice.

How Will I Know If My Pet Is Talking?

Laura engages in telepathic communications with animals - and nature.   It's a trick she picked up as a child and decided to develop as a skill as an adult. 

Now a professional animal communicator  for more than five years,  reputed to be one of the best, Laura takes as many as 30 calls a week from clients all over North America.

She believes her most important work is in helping clients to understand the dynamics operating in their relationships with their pets.

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Laura Simpson: Animal Communicator, Holistic Healing, Transitional Assistance...

More about Laura and her work on communicating with animals and vibrational medicines.

Laura Simpson gets the facts straight from your pet. She learned as a teenager taking riding lessons that horses are really telepathic.   "If you are afraid to jump and already have pictured in your head that you will fall, that horse will oftentimes refuse to jump because you didn't have your heart in it," says, Laura, "Animals, read your feelings all the time."

After graduating from college, she worked most of her adult life in daycare and as a nanny, but while working as a secretary for a local psychic who told her she could be doing the same thing, Laura decided to build her natural ability to communicate with animals into a full-time career. 

Simpson has great fun laughing at herself, but she's serious about her role as an animal advocate.  "Our animals are here to teach us about emotions, about good behaviour. It behooves us to try to do what we can to understand them."

email: AnimalsTalk

Call Toll Free 1-888-509-9999

How Will I Know If My Pet Is Talking?

Still Your Mind and Listen

Our pets are always trying to tell us what's on their minds. If you can just still your mind from the endless worry and chatter that your pet hears in your head, you can begin to let the still small knowing words of your pet be heard.

How ill you know if it's your pet talking?  Typically your pet will send a smell to your senses along with a word or picture of what their request is.   For example, my puppy Maxi wakes me up with a smell, as if she has soiled the carpet.  She knows it will get me up to let her out.  Usually the smell is no longer noticed after a step or two out of my bed.  Then I hurry down the stairs before the smell becomes a reality.

Our pets try to tell us their needs in this way all the time.,   Another time I was visiting a neighbour, when with the blink of an eye, I saw my big Great Pyreness Hanna with her mouth WIDE open and empty.  In my head I asked her to explain.  Her mouth just got bigger.  I went home and the water dish was empty.  When I filled it she took a big long drink and said "I thought you'd never get it!"  I tried to explain to her that people need words to understand.   She in turn told that words are what hold people back from communicating well with their animals.  Words are redundant to animals.  They think and do at the same time.  We think, then think, and maybe do.  It's frustrating for animals who are connected closely to their people.

So, to have a better communication link with your pets, remember to clear the chatter clutter from your mind.  And if you smell something, check it our before you go blaming your pets!

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