The Truth Behind the Tarot

Outdated or Useful?

Many people have reservations when it comes to Tarot cards, they imagine a wizened old lady wearing a headscarf in a small room waving her hands over a crystal ball imagining tall dark strangers coming into your life. The truth is that many readers today use the Tarot as a modern way to gain deeper insight into your life.

I have taught many how to read and interpret Tarot cards and my first piece of advice is not to see them as having strict meaning. They are to be used as a tool and a guide much like other forms of divination. There is no set meaning to each card, nor what they mean for the person having a reading.

People are individuals and as such their reading has to be individual as well. The beautiful images on many cards help tell the reader a story and give guidance to their client. They can help people who have questions or who may simply want general guidance in their lives. They cannot strictly tell the future but they can guide you to make the right choices to gain what you want from life.

History of Tarot

The history of the cards is often in dispute, some say the Egyptians invented them, others say they were used many years ago as playing cards in Europe. Either way, the way they are used today can be very beneficial alongside a reading. The client can also see their cards and even bring their own interpretation later on when looking back on them.

They were used as playing cards because the church saw interpretation of non religious images to be a sin. So they were disguised as something merely for fun but many started to use them for guidance and divination. As the church became more relaxed those readers started to share their gift.

Different Decks

As there are so many kinds of decks you may wonder why a reader uses a certain one. I can say for myself that from being a young teenager I was drawn to a particular deck and my mother kindly bought it for me. I used this deck for many years, studying the images and wondering what meanings they could have for me and others.

As I developed spiritually I realised that the deck I had was giving me limited information and so sought other decks. For love readings I like to use the Tarot of the Witches or the New Palladini deck. Both have very strong visual imagery which my clients often ask about, they also comment that they feel connected with some cards over others as well which is a great comfort to them when they find out the meaning.

This will vary from reader to reader, some will prefer plainer decks using the words and numbers the card may represent as a guide more than the visual. It all depends on what works best for your reader. If you are ever interested in getting some cards do research or ask to see what the deck looks like and make sure that you are happy with what it looks like.

How Tarot can Help You

If you have not had a reading that involved Tarot in the past then you may want to try it. Many of the people I have read for the first time are often stunned and surprised. A lot tend to ask me how I reach my conclusions via the cards and whilst it is hard to explain fully I know that my guidance can help others a lot.

We have many readers here who are highly skilled in Tarot and have had this skill tested. They are able to use it alongside readings to give you amazing insight and guidance along with their guides and the angels giving them advice as well. Give it a go, you may be very surprised!

What is Mediumship?

A medium is someone who can connect to the thought vibrations of those who have passed over to the spirit world and are sending us messages here on the Earth plain. Mediumship is a very precious gift and one that many of our readers possess and can help you with.

Mediums provide us with evidence of survival. They teach us to understand and prove that there is a higher phase of life after someone has passed over from this life. They show us that our loved ones are never really fully gone and are peaceful and settled and can tell us how they are feeling.

What can a medium do for me?

Many people go to mediums only wanting to hear from a specific person, I have experienced this myself but have been given messages from other people in the persons past. This can seem a disappointment at first but usually these other people in spirit are passing on messages for the loved one my client is asking about.

A medium can also rescue those that may not realise what has happened to them. In cases where a passing was sudden and unexpected the person in spirit may not realise where they are. The medium can guide them to the spirit world and usually reconnects them with other loved ones that are waiting for them.

Does a mediumship reading help?

A lot of people who I have given mediumship to express a sense of gratitude and sometimes relief that their loved one is safe in spirit and in some cases reconnects them with those who passed before them.

For many people who have lost people recently or suddenly it can also help with the grieving process. To be able to know that their loved one isn’t scared or lost, that they remember them and are watching over them is a wonderful thing and can really empower those who seek this kind of reading.

How do I know they’re speaking to the right person?

As part of your mediumship reading your medium will be able to give you evidence of the person they have connected with. This may be by way of what they have to say, a certain phrase, the way they look, sound, an item they may be holding. It is usually something personal and specific to them.

Sometimes the connection can be weak or strained and exact information cannot be reached from the start. In these cases your medium will try and gain information from your loved one and see if they can make the connection stronger in order to get a message to you.

What should I do after my reading?

Although a reading can really help you in knowing that your loved one is well and on the spirit plain you may wonder how to keep that connection going. When our readers do a mediumship reading for you they will be able to let you know how to see the signs your loved one may be trying to give you.

For some people these signs may have been already being given, it was simply a case that they hadn’t noticed. I remember reading for one lady whose husband had passed after 40 years of marriage. She was happy to hear he was well and reunited with a child they had lost in infancy as well, however she was worried that he couldn’t speak to her. I explained that he was passing messages to her in the form of a blackbird, her face lit up as she explained a small blackbird has started to visit the garden around the same time each day around a month after he passed.

So if you have been wondering how to spot the signs then give one of our mediums a call, they will be delighted to pass on messages and give you evidence of survival.

Royal baby arrival at the Full Moon!

The little Prince of Cambridge is here!! 

After much waiting and speculation Kate Middleton has finally had her baby. The Duchess of Cambridge gave birth to little a little baby boy on 22/07/13 at 16.24.  It was believed that all went well and she and baby are resting nicely.

It is said that the Full Moon is a time of nurture, new life and energy given by the Goddess moon and this has certainly been the case for Kate and William being given their new life in the form of their baby who is now third in line for the throne.

Special Star Sign for the Prince

Being born on this day the baby is a Cancerian which is really special considering the Water Trine planet alignment we have experienced recently. This means a wonderful future for baby as the planets really were in their favour when he was born! Star signs and astrology is something that can tell you a lot about what lies ahead for you in your life, chat to one of our accurate Astrologers to find out more.

Cancerians are emotionally intelligent, they are creative and thoughtful and also a helper of others. This means that the little Prince may well grow to be like Princess Diana and do as much as possible to help those in poorer situations than ourselves.

Birth, new starts and new beginnings

Just as this is a new beginning for the Duchess and the Prince why not make a new start for yourself? If you’re not sure what’s around the corner then remember there is always someone who can guide you and help you to focus and realise what life goals are right for you.

Take out the old and bring in the new and you’ll see a lot more positivity come into your life. Celebrations can happen not just for the royals but for you as well, aim high, reach strongly and you can gain what you desire in your life with ease.

How to make the most of the Full Moon!

What can the Full Moon mean for you?

On the 22nd July this year there is a full moon, it was originally thought that the moon heightened lunacy and wild behaviour in animals and in people! Today we realise it’s not really linked to this but it can mean an emotional shift is coming up ahead! It’s time to prepare, take a step back and think about what you want from life.

It can mean spiritual changes in your life are on the way. The height of this time is 3 days before and after the Full Moon so there is a whole week where matters of the heart, career, money, friendships and home life can all take a change in direction.

What is a Full Moon literally and spiritually?

Literally speaking it is when the whole face of the moon is illuminated, this means we can see the moon in ‘full’ from the earth. Take some time to look at her and take in the lunar energy she has to share with the universe. Many find looking at the moon to be very soothing and therapeutic.

The Moon at its full is linked with fertility, mothers and goddesses, a time where psychic ability can peak and intuition is at its strongest. If you have been sitting on ideas or wondering what pathway to take then this will be a great time to contact a psychic or medium as their energies linked into this moon phase has the power to give them more information than usual. With this information you will be able to gain more clarity and insight into your life and the people around you!

What can I do during this time?

As well as considering an accurate psychic reading you may want to try and focus your energies. The Full Moon brings a lot of emotional energy down to the Earth, it can increase positivity and good luck or it can create chaos. It’s all a case of knowing what to do at this special time.

A lot of people also take this time to ground themselves, know what they are thankful for and who to appreciate in their lives. Make sure that any negative people are kept at bay during this time as they could bring you down. Conversely make sure to draw those you love and who respect you even nearer at this wonderful time.

Emotions are heightened, so if you are angry this will be amplified, the same if you are sad or resentful, here are some tips to help you during this event:

  • Try not to get angry or argue with others
  • Think positive thoughts, even if frustrated, they can grow and support you
  • Think of people in need and send your healing thoughts to them
  • Try to meditate and relax as much as you can
  • Visualise your goals becoming reality
  • Seek advice from trusted psychics to get on the right pathway

The Full Moon only comes once a month and it’s an ideal time to reflect on what you need and want from life and how to get it. You deserve happiness and it’s often out there waiting for you, it’s just a case of knowing how to obtain it during this special time.

How a psychic love reading can get you back on track

A psychic love reading is a bit different to just a general reading that looks at all areas of life. It can focus on one of the most important things to you, matters of the heart and the desires of those around you. I know that having unanswered questions when it comes to love can be a very hard time and can create confusion, especially when you don’t know what your partner or loved one is thinking or what they want for the future.

Many people would suggest just speaking to them but it isn’t always as easy as that. I know from my work as a psychic that communication can be the one of the first things that fails when a relationship is under strain. A reading with a psychic to focus on these areas can really help you. I know from reading on love many times that people will consider pathways that have never occurred to them before!

Make sure to listen to all the signs

When you are having your reading make sure to listen carefully to your psychic, he or she will tell you many things and bring you a lot of insight but there can always be double meanings to what they are telling you. Make sure also not to take things too seriously or get too wound up, just because they may tell you something is a possibility doesn’t mean it will always happen. You have the power to use the information they give you to shape your future to a place you want to be.

Sometimes the information in a psychic love reading given may confuse you but giving it time to sink in and settle the answers will come to you. Also make sure to pay attention to your partner or the person you desire, their actions and comments tied in with what your psychic told you in your love reading can piece everything together.

Don’t make rushed decisions

Once armed with all this information from your personal psychic love reading make sure that you sit on it for a while. Running in and blurting out all your feelings to someone may push them away or alienate them. Take stock and give yourself some time to absorb what your psychic has told you. By processing the information for a while you will have a better chance of making soul connections a lot deeper.

Remember that love needs to grow and blossom, just like the flowers in the spring and summer months, it takes time, nurturing and the right kind of light and energy to bloom. Creating bonds and making them work is exactly the same and you need to give it time and lots of thought and focus but try not to drain yourself.

Think of your own needs

Always remember that you need to focus on yourself as well, you need to know what it is you want from a partner or spouse, if you’re not getting that then it is time to change. The information given to you in your love reading will be able to help you gain all you want from a relationship, something which you may have overlooked if you didn’t have the insight from your personal psychic reading.

Sundial psychics are all very well versed in matters of the heart and being able to guide you on what is the right pathway for you. Many specialise in love and relationships so make sure that you pick a reader that is right for you.

Bark to the future! Clairvoyant grandmother uses psychic poodles to predict health, money and relationship problems

There has long been a debate as to whether Pets are Psychic, or they have natural heightened senses. So many pet owners acknowledge a “knowing” when they are going through a difficult time, such as illness, unhappiness or worry. Our pets will do so much to uplift us, and depending on their personalities amuse or comfort us with their unconditional love. This is more than cupboard love and can extend to amazing levels. My cats always sense when we are going on holiday, and they actually sulk with us just before departure and a few hours after our return! They are always there to greet us on our return no matter of the time of day or night.
In my work as a Medium, I have had so many experiences that would agree that Pets are extremely psychic. Many times when I am called to a house to deal with spiritual activity, or energy problems the dogs or cats can pick up on rooms or areas in the house that I pick up activity in. So many times when I speak to bereaved families they tell me of the dog whining or barking inconsolably at the time of their owners passing to spirit. Many loyal pets go off their food and seem to be pining for their owners. One of the home circles I teach spiritual development to has three large dogs there. I thought this is going to be interesting as they were all running around, jumping up and barking. However, as soon as I started my opening meditation all three dogs settled down in the middle and joined in the meditation with us! Interesting enough one of the dogs a laborador cross was extremely psychic and barked profusely when a male spirit came through even looking at exactly where they were. This helping my students confirm what they were picking up, the dog was always correct, my students were nearly always! Frequently in demonstrations of Clairvoyance Pets will come through and the delight of their owners to know that they are fine and with loved ones is immense. My cat adores the energy in my spiritual room and loves to lie where my crystals are and it’s her favourite place to sleep.
For many years it was dotty older ladies like myself who were indulged in the belief that pets are psychic, so what I find really exciting is that now there are some respected academics and scientists that have undertaken research on this subject. Dr Rupert Sheldrake, Cambridge Biochemist, Biologist and much published author, has done so much work on this subject. His book entitled “Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home And Other Unexplained Powers of Animals: An Investigation.” Sheldrake has conducted experiments on something many pet owners have observed. Having proven this scientifically, he goes on to offer a scientific explanation. He would argue that living things have morphogenic fields – invisible vibrations that surround and give shape to life forms and effects their behaviour. This interconnection of life energy and thought crosses barrier of species. This would mean that animals would pick up on our thought or intention and react to that accordingly. For more on this see:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2084017/A-Cambridge-scientist-believes-seen-beginning-animals-telepathic-powers.html

On a slightly more tounge in cheek note, I was really amused to read about quirky Medium: Linda Lancashire who not only believes her two poodles are psychic, but they specifically help her with her readings. They will indicate if her client has come for a love reading, or if it is a work or finance issue! So the poodles pick up on the issue and then Linda conducts the reading and gives guidance. This is interesting as by the way Linda writes she trusts the poodles for giving her direction and then she uses her psychic skills then to tune in and give guidance. Many Psychics use tools to tune in but this is very different, she gets her poodles to give her direction. This article is fun and lively and the poodles do look very intelligent and the energy in the photos of them speak volumes and the relationship between them and Linda. Have a read and keep an open mind, it’s very different to the Rupert Sheldrake article above but it’s fun and along the same theme.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2266306/Grandmother-59-runs-clairvoyant-business-using-psychic-POODLES-claims-predicted-futures-politicians-paralympians.html

What do you think? I would love to hear of any psychic experiences with your pets or other animals? Please leave your comments as I would love to hear your input.

Russell Grant to star as the Wizard of Oz in West End

Strictly Come Dancing star Russell Grant is to replace Michael Crawford in Andrew Lloyd Webber’s West End musical The Wizard of Oz.

Grant will play the part of the wizard from 14 February for a 12-week run.

Buy levitra cheap online

>

The actor and astrologer will be coached by former Strictly judge Arlene Phillips before he takes to the stage.

“I am thrilled to be back where I’m at my happiest – in showbiz. I want to thank the great British public for supporting me in Strictly,” Grant said.

“Without them, I wouldn’t be back in the West End again.”

Runner-up

Grant, 60, began his career as an actor but became better known as an astrologer in the 1980s and 1990s, appearing on BBC Breakfast, ITV’s TV-AM and This Morning.

As well as playing the title role in the show at the London Palladium, Grant also takes the part of Professor Marvel, which was also played by West End veteran Crawford.

Danielle Hope, who won the part of Dorothy after appearing in the BBC One show Over the Rainbow, leaves the show on 5 February.

Over the Rainbow runner-up, Sophie Evans, will take over the role full-time from 7 February, having already played Dorothy every Tuesday for the last few months.

Full story http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-16683259

 

Is your pet psychic?

One of my former neighbours in my home town of Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire, was a widow whose son was a sailor in the merchant navy.

He did not like to tell his mother when he would be coming home on leave because he was afraid she would wor

ry if he was delayed on the way. But his mother always knew anyway — thanks to the family cat.

This pet was very attached to this young man and, an hour or two before he arrived, it sat on the front door mat and began miaowing loudly as if equipped with some sixth sense which told it that he was on the way.

The cat was never wrong and this early-warning system gave our neighbour time to get her son’s room ready and prepare him a meal in the certainty that he would turn up soon afterwards.

This is just one of many examples of animals displaying the apparently psychic tendencies more normally associated with some of their human counterparts.

Many cats seem to know, for example, when they are going to the vet’s — hiding away in the hope that their owners might get bored of looking for them and give up on the idea.

More dramatically, some animals seem to sense when their owners have had accidents or have died in distant places — as documented on my database of more than 5,000 case histories involving psychic phenomena in animals.

This includes 177 cases of dogs apparently responding to the death or suffering of their absent masters or mistresses, mostly by howling, whining or whimpering, and 62 accounts of cats showing similar signs of distress.

Conversely, in 32 instances people knew when their pet had died or was in dire need, even when they were many miles away at the time.

As we will see, these paranormal powers are of potentially huge value to human beings in the prediction of natural disasters, such as earthquakes and tsunamis.

And yet, as someone who has spent his entire adult life working as a biologist, holding senior academic posts both here and in the U.S., I am constantly surprised and frustrated by the refusal of my colleagues in the scientific world to take them seriously.

In 50 per cent of dog-owning households and 30 per cent of those with cats, the animals were said to anticipate the arrival of a family member

Without acknowledging such phenomena, it’s difficult to see how we can fully understand the behaviour of not just cats and dogs, but wild animals such as wolves.

The latter were studied by naturalist William Long who, in 1919, wrote a book that described the behaviour of a pack he had followed in Canada. He found separated members of wolf packs remained in contact with each other and responded to each other’s activities while many miles apart.

On one occasion, a limping female became separated from the pack Long was tracking and lay recovering in a den while the rest of the wolves moved on. Days passed, then suddenly the female reappeared among the pack.

The wolves’ responsiveness appeared to involve far more than simply following habitual paths, tracking scent trails, or hearing howling or other sounds, and Long wondered whether the same abilities might be found in pets.

He described some simple experiments with a friend’s dog which showed a knack for predicting its master’s return home. The dog would go to stand at the door soon after its owner had started his journey from work.

No one followed Long’s lead in researching this because, among scientists, the subject of telepathy has always been taboo. But in the Nineties I began asking friends and neighbours if they had ever noticed that their animals could anticipate when someone was coming home. I soon received dozens of reports, and by 2011 my database included more than 1,000 accounts of dogs and more than 600 of cats behaving in this way.

In telephone surveys in Britain and the U.S., I found that in about 50  per cent of dog-owning households and about 30  per cent of those with cats, the animals were said to anticipate the arrival of a member of the family. And it was not just dogs and cats that were involved. More than 20 other species showed similar behaviour, especially parrots and horses, but also a ferret, several bottle-fed lambs raised as pets, and pet geese.

Many cats seem to know, for example, when they are going to the vet’s – hiding away in the hope that their owners might get bored of looking for them

Many of those I spoke to made it clear that the animals’ responses were not simply reactions to the sounds of familiar cars or footsteps in the street. They happened too long in advance of the person’s arrival, and often even when they came home by bus or train. It wasn’t just routine. Some people were plumbers, lawyers and taxi drivers who worked irregular hours, but still their pets were ready to welcome them when they got home.

Intrigued by this, I carried out experiments. The most extensive were with a terrier called Jaytee, who lived near Manchester with his owner Pam Smart. Initial observations showed that he was at the window on 85  per cent of the occasions when Pam returned home.

I wanted to be sure that this was not down to Jaytee learning Pam’s routine, or picking up on other clues, so in a series of more formal tests, we arranged for Pam to be at least five miles away from home during each test.

I then set up a camera to film Jaytee’s behaviour and each day selected a random time for Pam to return home, asking her to travel by taxi so as to avoid any cues which might have come from the engine noise of a familiar car. She did not know in advance when she would go home, but was informed when to do so by a pager.

On average, Jaytee was at the window only 4  per cent of the time during the main period of Pam’s absence, and 55  per cent of the time when she was on the way back.

I did similar experiments with other dogs, including a Rhodesian Ridgeback from Manchester called Kane.

He looked out of the window, with his paws on a front table, when his owner came home — but whereas Jaytee’s vigil began shortly before his owner set off, Kane took up his post only when his mistress was already homeward bound. Both these and the many other cases I have investigated suggest that these animals have some kind of telepathic bond with their owners.

Alongside telepathy, animals also seem to have a sense of impending doom. Since classical times, people have reported unusual animal behaviour before earthquakes, and I have collected much modern evidence.

In all these cases there were descriptions of wild and domesticated animals acting in fearful, anxious or unusual ways. Some possible explanations are that they pick up vibrations in the earth’s surface, or detect subterranean gases.

The ability of animals to anticipate disasters have been ignored by Western scientists… but things are very different elsewhere

Or perhaps, as I am suggesting, animals rely on something which defies current scientific understanding. In the case of the Asian tsunami on December 26, 2004, they appeared to be aware that something was happening half an hour beforehand.

According to villagers in Bang Koey, Thailand, a herd of buffalo were grazing by the beach when they suddenly lifted their heads and looked out to sea, ears standing upright. They turned and stampeded up the hill, followed by bewildered villagers, whose lives were thereby saved.

Some animals anticipate other kinds of natural disaster such as avalanches, and even man-made catastrophes. During World War II, many families relied on their pets’ behaviour to warn them of air raids before official warnings were given.

The animal reactions occurred when enemy planes were still hundreds of miles away, long before the animals could have heard them coming, and some dogs in London anticipated the explosion of German V-2 rockets, even though these missiles were supersonic and could not have been heard in advance.

With very few exceptions, the ability of animals to anticipate disasters has been ignored by Western scientists, but things are very different elsewhere.

Since the Seventies, in earthquake-prone areas of China, the authorities have encouraged people to report unusual animal behaviour. In several cases they have issued warnings that enabled cities to be evacuated hours before earthquakes struck, saving tens of thousands of lives.

By paying attention to unusual animal behaviour, earthquake and tsunami warning systems might be feasible in parts of the world that are at risk from these disasters. Millions of people could be asked to take part in this project.

They could be told what kinds of behaviour animals might show if a disaster were imminent. If people noticed such behaviour, they would telephone a hotline. A computer system would analyse the places of origin of the messages. If there was an unusually large number, it would signal an alarm, and display on a map the places from which the calls were coming.

Exploring the potential for animal-based warning systems would cost relatively little. If it turns out that they are indeed reacting to subtle, physical changes, then seismologists should be able to use instruments to detect these and to make better predictions themselves.

If, on the other hand, it turns out that what we call ‘presentiment’ plays a part, we should embrace it, regardless of whether or not we understand it. Ignoring it, or trying to explain it away, will leave us less protected against the unexpected ravages of nature.

One of my former neighbours in my home town of Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire, was a widow whose son was a sailor in the merchant navy.
He did not like to tell his mother when he would be coming home on leave because he was afraid she would worry if he was delayed on the way. But his mother always knew anyway — thanks to the family cat.
This pet was very attached to this young man and, an hour or two before he arrived, it sat on the front door mat and began miaowing loudly as if equipped with some sixth sense which told it that he was on the way.
The cat was never wrong and this early-warning system gave our neighbour time to get her son’s room ready and prepare him a meal in the certainty that he would turn up soon afterwards.
This is just one of many examples of animals displaying the apparently psychic tendencies more normally associated with some of their human counterparts.
Many cats seem to know, for example, when they are going to the vet’s — hiding away in the hope that their owners might get bored of looking for them and give up on the idea.
More dramatically, some animals seem to sense when their owners have had accidents or have died in distant places — as documented on my database of more than 5,000 case histories involving psychic phenomena in animals.
This includes 177 cases of dogs apparently responding to the death or suffering of their absent masters or mistresses, mostly by howling, whining or whimpering, and 62 accounts of cats showing similar signs of distress.
Conversely, in 32 instances people knew when their pet had died or was in dire need, even when they were many miles away at the time.
As we will see, these paranormal powers are of potentially huge value to human beings in the prediction of natural disasters, such as earthquakes and tsunamis.
And yet, as someone who has spent his entire adult life working as a biologist, holding senior academic posts both here and in the U.S., I am constantly surprised and frustrated by the refusal of my colleagues in the scientific world to take them seriously.
In 50 per cent of dog-owning households and 30 per cent of those with cats, the animals were said to anticipate the arrival of a family member
Without acknowledging such phenomena, it’s difficult to see how we can fully understand the behaviour of not just cats and dogs, but wild animals such as wolves.
The latter were studied by naturalist William Long who, in 1919, wrote a book that described the behaviour of a pack he had followed in Canada. He found separated members of wolf packs remained in contact with each other and responded to each other’s activities while many miles apart.
On one occasion, a limping female became separated from the pack Long was tracking and lay recovering in a den while the rest of the wolves moved on. Days passed, then suddenly the female reappeared among the pack.
The wolves’ responsiveness appeared to involve far more than simply following habitual paths, tracking scent trails, or hearing howling or other sounds, and Long wondered whether the same abilities might be found in pets.
He described some simple experiments with a friend’s dog which showed a knack for predicting its master’s return home. The dog would go to stand at the door soon after its owner had started his journey from work.
No one followed Long’s lead in researching this because, among scientists, the subject of telepathy has always been taboo. But in the Nineties I began asking friends and neighbours if they had ever noticed that their animals could anticipate when someone was coming home. I soon received dozens of reports, and by 2011 my database included more than 1,000 accounts of dogs and more than 600 of cats behaving in this way.
In telephone surveys in Britain and the U.S., I found that in about 50  per cent of dog-owning households and about 30  per cent of those with cats, the animals were said to anticipate the arrival of a member of the family. And it was not just dogs and cats that were involved. More than 20 other species showed similar behaviour, especially parrots and horses, but also a ferret, several bottle-fed lambs raised as pets, and pet geese.
Many cats seem to know, for example, when they are going to the vet’s – hiding away in the hope that their owners might get bored of looking for them
Many of those I spoke to made it clear that the animals’ responses were not simply reactions to the sounds of familiar cars or footsteps in the street. They happened too long in advance of the person’s arrival, and often even when they came home by bus or train. It wasn’t just routine. Some people were plumbers, lawyers and taxi drivers who worked irregular hours, but still their pets were ready to welcome them when they got home.
Intrigued by this, I carried out experiments. The most extensive were with a terrier called Jaytee, who lived near Manchester with his owner Pam Smart. Initial observations showed that he was at the window on 85  per cent of the occasions when Pam returned home.
I wanted to be sure that this was not down to Jaytee learning Pam’s routine, or picking up on other clues, so in a series of more formal tests, we arranged for Pam to be at least five miles away from home during each test.
I then set up a camera to film Jaytee’s behaviour and each day selected a random time for Pam to return home, asking her to travel by taxi so as to avoid any cues which might have come from the engine noise of a familiar car. She did not know in advance when she would go home, but was informed when to do so by a pager.
On average, Jaytee was at the window only 4  per cent of the time during the main period of Pam’s absence, and 55  per cent of the time when she was on the way back.
I did similar experiments with other dogs, including a Rhodesian Ridgeback from Manchester called Kane.
He looked out of the window, with his paws on a front table, when his owner came home — but whereas Jaytee’s vigil began shortly before his owner set off, Kane took up his post only when his mistress was already homeward bound. Both these and the many other cases I have investigated suggest that these animals have some kind of telepathic bond with their owners.
Alongside telepathy, animals also seem to have a sense of impending doom. Since classical times, people have reported unusual animal behaviour before earthquakes, and I have collected much modern evidence.
In all these cases there were descriptions of wild and domesticated animals acting in fearful, anxious or unusual ways. Some possible explanations are that they pick up vibrations in the earth’s surface, or detect subterranean gases.
The ability of animals to anticipate disasters have been ignored by Western scientists… but things are very different elsewhere
Or perhaps, as I am suggesting, animals rely on something which defies current scientific understanding. In the case of the Asian tsunami on December 26, 2004, they appeared to be aware that something was happening half an hour beforehand.
According to villagers in Bang Koey, Thailand, a herd of buffalo were grazing by the beach when they suddenly lifted their heads and looked out to sea, ears standing upright. They turned and stampeded up the hill, followed by bewildered villagers, whose lives were thereby saved.
Some animals anticipate other kinds of natural disaster such as avalanches, and even man-made catastrophes. During World War II, many families relied on their pets’ behaviour to warn them of air raids before official warnings were given.
The animal reactions occurred when enemy planes were still hundreds of miles away, long before the animals could have heard them coming, and some dogs in London anticipated the explosion of German V-2 rockets, even though these missiles were supersonic and could not have been heard in advance.
With very few exceptions, the ability of animals to anticipate disasters has been ignored by Western scientists, but things are very different elsewhere.
Since the Seventies, in earthquake-prone areas of China, the authorities have encouraged people to report unusual animal behaviour. In several cases they have issued warnings that enabled cities to be evacuated hours before earthquakes struck, saving tens of thousands of lives.
By paying attention to unusual animal behaviour, earthquake and tsunami warning systems might be feasible in parts of the world that are at risk from these disasters. Millions of people could be asked to take part in this project.
They could be told what kinds of behaviour animals might show if a disaster were imminent. If people noticed such behaviour, they would telephone a hotline. A computer system would analyse the places of origin of the messages. If there was an unusually large number, it would signal an alarm, and display on a map the places from which the calls were coming.
Exploring the potential for animal-based warning systems would cost relatively little. If it turns out that they are indeed reacting to subtle, physical changes, then seismologists should be able to use instruments to detect these and to make better predictions themselves.
If, on the other hand, it turns out that what we call ‘presentiment’ plays a part, we should embrace it, regardless of whether or not we understand it. Ignoring it, or trying to explain it away, will leave us less protected against the unexpected ravages of nature.

Source Daily Mail
Path:

Why we ALL have psychic powers

Why we ALL have psychic powers: How thought premonitions and telepathy are more common than we think

Like many mothers who feared for their family’s safety during World War II, Mona Miller was evacuated from London to the peaceful seaside

town of Babbacombe in Devon.

It seemed like a wise precaution but, shortly after her arrival there with her young children, Mrs Miller became increasingly uneasy.

‘I had a feeling that I must leave Devon and return home,’ she told me.

‘At first I dismissed the idea; why leave when I was so happy and contented despite the war going on around me?

‘But the feeling increased. The walls of my room seemed to speak to me: “Go home to London.” I resisted the call for about four months then, one day, like a flash of light, I knew we must leave.

‘On a Saturday in late 1942, we travelled back to London and a few days later I received a letter from a friend in Devon.

‘“Thank God you took the children on Saturday,” she wrote. “Early Sunday morning, Jerry dropped three bombs and one fell on the house where you were living, demolishing it, and killing all the neighbours on either side.”’

Mrs Miller was far from the only person to experience such forebodings during the war.

Three years later, in the spring of 1945, U.S. serviceman Charles Bernuth took part in the invasion of Germany and, shortly after crossing the Rhine, found himself driving along the autobahn one night with two officers.

He described how a ‘still, small voice’ within him told him there was something wrong with the road ahead.

‘I stopped, amid the groans and jeers of the other two. I started walking along the road.

‘About 50 yards from where I had left the jeep, I found out what was wrong.

‘We were about to go over a bridge — only the bridge wasn’t there. It had been blown up and there was a sheer drop of about 75ft.’

Both Mrs Miller and Charles Bernuth had experienced presentiments — feelings that something was going to happen without knowing what it would be.

These differ from premonitions, where the person involved has an insight into what lies ahead, as when 16-year-old Carole Davies visited a London amusement arcade during the Seventies.

‘While standing looking out into the night, I had a sense of danger,’ she recalled.

‘Then I saw what looked like a picture in front of me showing people on the floor with tiles and metal girders on them. I realised that this was to happen here. I began to shout at people to get out. No one listened.’

Together with her friends, Carole hurried out and went to a nearby cafe.

As they sat inside, they heard sirens in the street outside. A weakness in the arcade building’s structure had brought its roof and walls crashing down on those within.

‘We all ran down the road to see what had happened,’ Carole remembered.

‘It was just as I had seen. A man I had shouted at was being pulled from under the debris.’

Like Mona Miller and Charles Bernuth before her, Carole was convinced she owed her life to her mysterious sixth sense, a notion which you might expect a scientist of my background to dismiss out of hand.

I am a biologist who has studied, researched and taught at both Cambridge and Harvard, and held senior academic posts on both sides of the Atlantic.

Yet I’ve long believed that presentiments, premonitions and other psychic phenomena such as telepathy should be taken more seriously by my scientific colleagues.

My fascination with this subject began during the Sixties when I was a graduate student in the biochemistry department at Cambridge University.

This was not long after the South African writer Laurens van der Post had published his accounts of life with the Bushmen of the Kalahari desert.

Like most traditional societies, theirs was one in which telepathy was not only taken for granted, but put to practical use, as van der Post saw when his hosts hunted down and killed an eland antelope many miles from camp.

As they were driving back in a Land Rover laden with meat, he asked one of the Bushmen how those back at camp would react when they learned of this success.

‘They already know — we Bushmen have a wire here,’ he replied, tapping his chest. ‘It brings us news.’

He was comparing their method of communication with the white man’s telegram or ‘wire’.

Sure enough, when they approached the camp, the people were singing the ‘Eland Song’ and preparing to give the hunters the greatest of welcomes.

Many other travellers in Africa have reported that people seemed to know when loved ones were coming home.

The same would occur in rural Norway, where the inhabitants developed a special word — vardoger — for the anticipation of arrivals.

Similarly, accounts I read of the ‘second sight’ of some inhabitants of the Scottish Highlands included visions of arrivals before the person in question appeared.

But none of this convinced me, converted as I was to the dogma of ‘materialism’ which has dominated scientific thought since the late 19th century, and still does so today.

According to materialists, science will eventually explain everything in terms of physics and chemistry.

And anything that cannot be thus explained can be dismissed as illusory.

Educated in this tradition, I adopted the standard dismissive attitude when the subject of telepathy came up in the laboratory tearoom one day.

I was gently taken to task by Sir Rudolph Peters, one of the doyens of British biochemistry. He was a kindly man with twinkly eyes and more curiosity than most people half his age.

He told me of an ophthalmologist friend who had a severely disabled and mentally retarded young boy as a patient.

Although he was almost blind, he seemed able to read the letters on the optician’s chart very well, but only when his mother was looking at them.

The only explanation appeared to be some form of telepathic communication between the two, and in 1968 Sir Rudolph conducted an experiment in which the boy correctly guessed many of the written numbers or words shown to his mother, even though they were sitting on either side of a screen which prevented him from picking up any visual or auditory cues.

Sir Rudolph concluded that this telepathy had developed to an unusual degree because of the boy’s extreme needs and his mother’s desire to help him.

But, as I discovered, even laboratory experiments involving strangers had produced results which, if less marked, were still compelling.

For example, the years between 1880 and 1939 saw something of a boom in early psychical research, with the publication of more than 186 studies involving trials in which subjects guessed which randomly selected cards a ‘sender’ was looking at.

When the four million individual results were combined in a statistical procedure called meta-analysis, the overall results were hugely significant because they were considerably more accurate than would have been expected from random chance.

Later experiments during the Seventies involved subjects sleeping in a soundproofed laboratory while a ‘sender’ in another room, and in some cases another building, opened a sealed package containing a randomly selected picture and concentrated on it, trying to influence the subject’s dream.

Sometimes the thought transference was very clear: one subject described having dreamed about buying tickets for a prize fight while the sender was looking at a picture of a boxing match.

Occasionally, it was more symbolic, as when the subject dreamed of a dead rat in a cigar box while the sender was looking at a picture of a dead gangster in a coffin. But in 450 such trials the overall results were very significantly above the chance level.

My research has included more than 4,000 cases of psychic phenomena. Many, like Mona Miller’s near-miss in the Blitz, involve mothers.

Hundreds told me that during the months they were breastfeeding, they’d know when their baby needed them, even from miles away, because they began secreting breast milk.

With the help of a midwife, I studied nine nursing mothers in North London during a two-month period, and found that their unexpected ‘let-downs’ of milk when they were separated from their babies very often coincided with their infants experiencing distress.

The odds against this occurring by chance as often as it did were a billion to one, and this telepathic connection makes good evolutionary sense.

Mothers who could tell at a distance when their babies were unhappy would tend to have babies that survived better than those of insensitive mothers.

Such connections often seem to continue even when the children have grown up, with many stories on my database concerning mothers who had an urge to get in touch with their children when they could not have known by any conventional means that they were in trouble.

Many would do so by telephone, the method of communication most commonly mentioned in reports of telepathic experiences in general.

Many people told me they had thought of someone for no apparent reason, and then that person rang in a way that seemed uncanny. Or they knew who was calling when the phone rang, even before they picked up the receiver.

I designed an experiment to test this, a simplified version of which you can try through my website.

This involved asking subjects for the names and phone numbers of four friends or family members before placing them alone in a room with a landline telephone with no caller ID.

I then selected one of the four callers at random and asked them to phone the subject, who had to say who was on the line before answering.

By guessing at random, subjects would have been right about one time in four, or 25 per cent.

In fact, the average hit rate was 45 per cent, very significantly above the level of chance, and these results have been replicated independently at universities in Germany and Holland.

In attempting to explain such phenomena, we need to look far beyond the traditional scientific view that everything is essentially material or physical, including the human mind.

That materialist approach was summed up by Francis Crick, who in 1962 shared a Nobel Prize for the discovery of the structure of DNA.

‘You, your joys and your sorrows, your memories and your ambitions, your sense of personal identity and free will, are in fact no more than the behaviour of a vast assembly of nerve cells and their associated molecules,’ he wrote.

Crick spoke for the scientific mainstream, as did influential neuroscientist Susan Greenfield when she described seeing an exposed brain in an operating theatre.

‘This is all there was to (the patient) Sarah, or indeed to any of us,’ she reflected in a paper published in 2000.

‘We are but sludgy brains and somehow a character and mind are generated in this soupy mess.’

Yet this idea that our minds are fixed physically inside our heads, and that consciousness is nothing but a by-product of the activity of the brain, runs contrary to our everyday experience.

When we look around us, the images of the things we see are outside us, not in our heads. The feelings in my fingers are in my fingers, not in my head.

The human intuitions I have described fit better with the ‘field theory’ of minds.

We are used to the fact that fields exist both within and outside material objects such as magnets and mobile phones, and there is reason to believe that our minds have similar fields which have their roots within our brains, but also extend beyond them.

Extraordinary though this sounds, it’s supported by studies of another remarkable psychic phenomenon — the sense of being stared at.

Most people have felt someone looking at them from behind, turned around and met the person’s eyes.

And most people have experienced the converse: making someone turn around by staring at them.

In extensive surveys in Europe and North America, between 70 and 97 per cent of adults and children reported such experiences.

In a series of interviews with police officers, surveillance personnel and soldiers, I discovered most felt that some people seemed to know they were being observed, even though the watchers were well hidden.

‘A lot of times the crook will just get a feeling that things aren’t right,’ I was told by one narcotics officer.

‘We often have someone look right in our direction even though he can’t see us. A lot of times we’re inside a vehicle.’

Surprisingly, laboratory tests have shown that the sense of being stared at works even when people are looked at on screens, rather than directly.

Our emotional response can be measured by the activity of our sweat glands and this increases in many subjects being watched on CCTV, even though they are unaware of their response.

All this suggests that, whether through direct staring or CCTV, we are capable of ‘touching’ each other with our sight — further evidence that our minds are not confined to the inside of our brains.

With telepathic communication, it seems that these fields somehow interact at a distance, picking up feelings, needs or thoughts across space.

As for presentiments and premonitions, these imply links across time, as we tune into our future mental states.

That such links are real was suggested by a series of experiments in the U.S. and Holland over the past 20 years.

These measured responses to a series of noxious smells, mild electric shocks, emotive words and provocative photographs, interspersed with calming stimuli which had no physiological effect on subjects at all.

No one, not even the experimenters, knew what kind of stimuli the computer involved would produce next, but in a significant number of cases the subjects reacted to the unpleasant stimuli some three or four seconds in advance, somehow connecting with their future selves who would be experiencing the stimuli for real.

These findings are fascinating in themselves but, as I will explain in Monday’s Mail, psychic phenomena are not restricted to human beings.

There are amazing stories of telepathy and premonitions of disaster in many other species, including pet dogs.

As for exactly how such phenomena operate, it may be years before we understand them, but an important first step is for scientists to acknowledge that they exist, and that the minds of both animals and humans interact in as yet unexplained ways.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2083279/Psychic-powers-How-thought-premonitions-telepathy-common-think.html#ixzz1il6rKhfH

Russell Grant for Eurovision

ASTROLOGER Russell Grant has been asked to represent MALTA at Eurovision.

Organisers from the Mediterranean island got in touch with the flamboyant star after he impressed them with his turn on Strictly Come Dancing.

But Russell i

nstead wants to sing for the UK and has even had a song written especially for the competition.

A pal said: “He was thrilled but a bit perplexed to be asked to represent Malta as he has no link to the country.

“The only Maltesers he knows are in a box of chocolates. But he was really flattered.

“The premise would be Russell singing and then breaking off into a dance with Strictly partner Flavia.”

But a source close to Russell — who released a version of The Supremes hit No Matter What Sign You Are in 1983 — said he would turn the approach down because Russ has set his sights on representing the UK.

Hayley Sanderson, one of the singers on Strictly, has written Russell a song to perform and early talks have already been held with the Beeb.

Article from The Sun

Viagra is the most famous ‘love pill’ in the world, but it is not the only option for you. The majority of men who tried both brand and generic pills state that Cialis (the most famous and top-quality generic drug) works better. It is up to you to decide whether you choose brand pills or buy Cialis, but ED patients state that:
Now it is possible to avoid awkward publicity if you buy Cialis online in our reliable web pharmacy. To purchase Cialis online simply place your order, use your credit card to pay for your pills, cialis online pharmacy receive your drug per post in a decent package and start your way to perfect men’s health!