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Speaking at Speakeasy Conversation Club

  • Luca Dray
  • Aug 15, 2019
  • 3 min read

Updated: May 18, 2024

No matter how much I love talking, and especially if it's about Animal Communication, I still get nervous!


It's strange as I can stand in front of a class of students and teach them, but when it comes to public speaking it's different isn't it, as I'm talking about a subject for people to learn about it, so I am still teaching in a sense, but it feels like it's more about me and the subject I'm talking about. Yet is it different..?


Talking for 15 minutes about Animal Communication..... how do I narrow it down..? How do I make it interesting...? How do I put the other animals at the forefront..?


I had photos of the non human animals I was talking about, to enable the audience to get a greater sense of how I work with them, and who they are as individuals

15 minutes goes REALLY quickly!


Explaining to people that I communicate with all animals on a multi sensory level is quite unique.


I used to get a mixed response; from people being fascinated, asking lots of questions, and sharing that they often felt like they communicated with the other animals in their life, to strange looks, or feeling that people were simply humouring me, whereas they actually thought I was delusional, a bit batty, or just outright lying. So I had to gauge how and when I spoke about it.


Now I am fully comfortable in my gift, and it's ok if people don't understand it. I let the experiences I've had with animals speak for themselves.


I explained that I don't know how it works, but that I know it does, and that I go into a ‘zone’ where I switch off my human mind and fully allow the communication to come through in all its forms, including any remedies that come through and are offered energetically, or are offered during or after the session and are selected by the animals. This stuns me every time!


Communication is not something I can force on demand, I can’t ‘perform’, that’s my human mind getting in the way, and actually blocks anything coming through and turns it into ‘guess work’ and reading the animal.


Communication comes to me, I don’t go to communication, so I can’t always do it, as I’m not supposed to, and I fully accept that.


The communications are often from a distance, though I also do impromptu in person, and have communicated with dogs, cats, horses, snakes, hamsters, donkeys, birds, pigs, sheep, human to name a few, in various parts of the world, while I have been sitting in my home in the UK!


The communications involve feeling, seeing, hearing, smelling and tasting. So for example I can feel in my own a body a sensation that they have ie: a sore toe, and when I acknowledge it, it disappears from my body.


Since writing this blog I have fully realised I can work on a body from a distance as well.


In the photo above I am showing how my hands 'picked up' an area of sensitivity as an image flashed into my head of past ‘trauma’. I spoke of how the animals posture changes, how their body tightens, relaxes, moves, how their eyes stare, or become really busy, or simply close, how they yawn soooo much! How a cat shouted MRSA at me from several miles away, and even though the vet had said cats don't get MRSA and actually who talks to animals, the biopsy came back diagnosing MRSA!


It's not only when they are sick or emotionally traumatised that they communicate. sometimes they just want to say 'hello' or ask us 'why we complicate things soooo much!!'


I could actually talk for hours about the experiences with animal communications and how and what they communicate, as they need to be heard by us.


Humans can get very stuck in an idea that because the other animals don't speak

'human language' it means they don't speak at all. A bizarre thought that the sounds they are making are just that. Sounds with no meaning, yet when you listen to a human speak in another language, how does that 'sound'

Here is beautiful Tequilo, a cat who taught me a great deal.

He lived in a fairly rural area in France. His vet was not doing a good job with his care, and he needed to find a vet who believed in natural medicine alongside conventional approaches. Through communicating via me while he was in France and I sat by my open fire in Brighton UK, he was able to lead his two humans to a conventional and holistic vet, who lived a few minutes from their home, and who previous to this they hadn't known existed.


The other animals have very loud voices. WE just have learn to listen

 
 
 

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