Animal Communicator answer from another thread

lol, just determined Lou.

see, my understanding (though interactions are complicated and my brain is currently struggling with the deep science at the moment) - so very basically is that a virus being latent it is preventing its replication and it is part of a survival strategy to remain in the host without being detected hence should have minimal effect on your system unless:

A. the affected cells can become cancerous,
B. the affected cells are the immune system cells.
C. the host becomes compromised in some other way causing the virus to leave its latent phase.


Have also just read interesting article on the possible symbiotic relationship of us and latent viruses:

www.physorg.com/pdf98540136.pdf

easier to read version:
http://notexactlyrocketscience.wordpress...gainst-another/

so if they might be good for us we should keep them, so why don't we know they are good for us?
 
'boing!' you go monty.

we had a horse that nicked a sausage roll once.......thinking of reason for that one.
 
I just found my cake gland ..

I was deficient in cream and jam doughnuts, but I self medicated and feel much better now thanks
grin.gif
 
Lol! I have decided that Lou's was obviously scared of water to start. Trouble is not sure if mine was a pork sausage roll .............

just had a though pigs like getting muddy so horsey didn't think he was getting muddy enough hence needed sausage roll,

We are getting good at this, anyone want to set up with me?

I wanted some comments to my possible symbiosis too though
 
you always find the kao,

and given the formation of the teeth I am not sure where he would fit in the current classification system where's SC gone!? we made need to do some DNA seq on that one.
 
i'm scared to comment cause when i was asking where i might find a gd AC, just to see what they would think about my horse always injuring herself, in a previous post i got seriously mocked by a certain user
frown.gif
 
It should perhaps be noted that said horse was found to be suffering from a low WBC count indicative of a virus and is under treatment by the vet, having 6 weeks off and regular vitamin B12 injections. -For further details please check one of horse_crazys posts.
 
QR My dad fed a horse turkey once
blush.gif


I have used an AC, it was £30 and was just another avenue to go down in my quest to find out what was wrong with my dog, no more than I would spend on medication, for example.
She didn't recommend any sort of medication, nor would I have expected or accepted any, I don't think that is part of their 'job'.
She reinforced a bit of what I thought was happening already and while didn't point to any particular ailment was quite accurate as to his symptoms/behaviour/previous home.
 
[ QUOTE ]
Was this found out before the AC's visit or after?

[/ QUOTE ]

im sure it was after?? then she asked vet to do bloods and tht confirmed the virus
 
Yes it would have been after as at the time I spoke to the lady as far as I am aware 'virus' had never been mentioned until I spoke of it. Thanks Ester for posting as I've not spoken to the lady since so always good to hear the outcome and feedback of what's found. Let's hope now it has been varified the horse can get on the mend.

Also with regards to what I said about epstein barr. I am well away it can sit dormant in many people once you have got it. But in my case it's been low grade active for 22 years not dormant.
 
[ QUOTE ]
QR My dad fed a horse turkey once
blush.gif


I have used an AC, it was £30 and was just another avenue to go down in my quest to find out what was wrong with my dog, no more than I would spend on medication, for example.
She didn't recommend any sort of medication, nor would I have expected or accepted any, I don't think that is part of their 'job'.
She reinforced a bit of what I thought was happening already and while didn't point to any particular ailment was quite accurate as to his symptoms/behaviour/previous home.

[/ QUOTE ]

The whole point is to make you aware of what opinions are available to you. If you had never heard of aromatics but they might have helped your dog if not mentioned you may never have found that out. When I know I can treat my horses myself I do when I need a vet I call them like only last week for my horse with a hurrendous infection that took hold in just a couple of hours. That is peoples choices.
 
Is that the point?
Now knowing what is wrong, there is bugger all she could have suggested to fix it, to be honest and I am glad I was not sent off on a wild goose chase (not suggesting you did that, not really aware of the original thread)
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
vegetarian deer

[/ QUOTE ]

Is that as opposed to the incredibly well known carnivorous forms of deer?!
grin.gif


[/ QUOTE ]

Some deer types are herbivores, accept for certain circumstances as I have already mentioned.

Minkymoo, I have no worries at all that you are lacking in bullshit. In fact I'm sure you have plenty in stock :-)

[/ QUOTE ]

Sorry I thought ALL deer were herbivores?
 
All deer are herbivores Sirena. The OP seems to think that if a deer eats, for example a bone, to resolve a calcium deficiency, then it cannot be classed as a herbivore. This merely serves to demonstrate the OPs ignorance as to how we classify animals into herbivore, omnivore, carnivore and suggests that they may possibly think vegetarian humans are herbivores (which clearly they are not, they are omnivores, in the same way that my cat, despite eating grass and catnip, is a carnivore, and an obligate one at that, and not an omnivore).

I notice they have chosen to ignore the fact that I have pointed this out though....
smile.gif
 
swth-
I am quite sceptical of animal communicators- I'm someone who needs proof to believe something
wink.gif
But can I just ask... you say that your horse had to have colic treatment, but was left untreated because your vet misdiagnosed... surely you would have "known" it had colic due to whatever it is that you do?
confused.gif
 
Interesting SC as QUOTE:
I notice they have chosen to ignore the fact that I have pointed this out though.... no one including yourself appears to have mentioned about the resulting blood test since it was posted by someone else (nothing to do with me) either.
I am well aware that a human veggie isn't a herbivore lol! as teeth are designed to tare meat if desired. But I would question is a cat is as you say 'carnivore' as a large part of their natural diet is small rodents which carry plant matter in their systems which cats eat on a daily basis when allowed or wanting to hunt so for many cats vegetaion is actually a daily part of their diet which when fed a raw food diet of raw meat they then have to have plant matter added else they have been found to come ill over a period of time. Will be interested to hear your views.
 
[ QUOTE ]
swth-
I am quite sceptical of animal communicators- I'm someone who needs proof to believe something
wink.gif
But can I just ask... you say that your horse had to have colic treatment, but was left untreated because your vet misdiagnosed... surely you would have "known" it had colic due to whatever it is that you do?
confused.gif


[/ QUOTE ]

This was 3 months into having my first horse and many years ago. It was about 4 months later I started the communicating with my horses partly through working towards learning due to what happened to my mare.
 
Cats cannot effectively digest plant material - the reason they are OBLIGATE carnivores is that they lack the metabolic pathways required to break down plant material. The plant material HAS to have been digested or partly digested for them to utilise the nutrients from the plant material. The reason they eat the internal organs of the rodents they catch is because they require the nutrients from the plant material which the rodents themselves have already broken down - hence they will eat the gut and stomach etc of their prey.

If you were to feed a cat entirely on steak and try and supplement its diet with raw plant material then it would suffer from malnutrition - it simply cannot digest the raw plant material. Do not confuse the cat eating digested or partly digested plant material from the internal organs of its prey with it being an omnivore - it is NOT. If it were an omnivore then it would be able to digest raw plant material and garner useful nutrients from it, much as we can. It does not have the require metabolic pathways to be an omnivore.

However if you feed a cat on commercial cat food, or on steak and a vit/mineral supplement, it will survive just fine. Being an obligate carnivore does not preclude needing nutrients from plant sources, it merely changes the manner in which you obtain them.
 
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