I just watched an amazing movie titled, “The Animal Communicator.” It is about our interbeing with nature and interspecies communication.
Interbeing is a word coined by Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh to help us realize the insight of our interconnectedness with nature, the earth, the sun, the planets, the Milky Way, and the whole cosmos. This film is an excellent example of how we used to interbe with nature and somehow thought that we were better than nature.
How this delusion came about is another story. Suffice it to say that the separation of mind and body, people and nature, humans and animals, and other destructive notions has caused our planet to become in desperate condition. We are living on the borrowed time of our grandchildren!
The movie features the work of Anna Breytenbach.
Anna is a professional animal communicator who has received advanced training through the Assisi International Animal Institute in California, USA and has been practicing for 12 years in South Africa, Europe and the USA with domestic and wild animals. Her conservation experience includes working with cheetahs, lions, wolves, baboons and elephants in educational and rehabilitation programes. Anna’s goal is to raise awareness and advance the relationships among humans and other species, on both the personal and spiritual levels. She’s also the subject of the documentary movie “The Animal Communicator” due for international release in 2013. In her communication and conservation work, Anna lives her personal mission of being a voice for the animals and the wilderness. [Read More…]
Please click on the picture of Anna to watch the movie. I was unable to embed it in this post. A new window or tab will open up for you to view “The Animal Communicator.”
The website for the movie states,
Anna Breytenbach has dedicated her life to what she calls interspecies communication. She sends detailed messages to animals through pictures and thoughts. She then receives messages of remarkable clarity back from the animals.
Anna can feel the scars hidden under a monkeys fur, she can understand the detailed story that is causing a birds trauma, she transforms a deadly snarling leopard into a relaxed content cat – the whole animal kingdom comes alive in a way never seen before – wild birds land on her shoulders, fish gather around her when she swims, and wild unfamiliar baboons lie on her body as if she is one of their own.
This is the first full length documentary film on the art of animal communication.
I know a man who would love to have this ability. His name is Larry and he is the person who introduced dogs into San Quentin prison. He works tirelessly for the Marin Humane Society and co-founded the Ganesha Foundation. The Ganesha Foundation supports a school in the remote mountains of Bali where children never before could get an education.
What if you could talk to animals and have them talk back to you? Please share this wonderful movie.
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