Charlene Boyd, Animal Communicator
                                            Charlene Boyd, Animal Communicator

 
 
 
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TALKING TO ANIMALS  Monthly Newsletter
By loving and understanding animals, perhaps we humans shall come to understand each other. 
Dr. Louis J. Camuti

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August 2007

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Published monthly for subscribers to the Talking-To-Animals Newsletter
By Charlene Boyd
http://www.talk-to-animals.com

To view past issues of Talking-To-Animals, please visit our newsletter archive.

YOU ARE ENCOURAGED TO FORWARD THIS NEWSLETTER TO FRIENDS

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In this edition.

1. Welcome!
2. Pet tip of the month

3. A story from my files - I think Baby has come back to me!
4. Exciting news benefiting both humans and dogs with melanoma
5.
The cat that can predict death
6. From the Bookshelf
7. The Tail End


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1. WELCOME DEAR READERS,
 
To the August edition of Talk To Animals newsletter. I hope all of you are really enjoying your summer
and spending lots of time outside in the fresh air. The weather, generally speaking, has been much more
temperate, especially in California. So far we have not had the extreme temperatures we suffered through
last summer. Our biggest concern are the extremely dry conditions and the real and present threat of brush
fires.This has been the driest winter on rercord for our state. Coyotes and even mountain lions are coming
down from the mountains and up from the canyons seeking out water and food and have been seen around
homes and golf courses in increasing frequency.
 
For me, it is a reminder to have food, water, crates and medicine in an emergency kit. Whether
you live in Texas, Maine or Oregon, it never hurts to be prepared. I know I can relax and enjoy summer a
little better knowing that I have a backup plan for our pets. It is also a good idea to exchange cell phone
numbers with trusted neighbors in case you are not in your area and your pets need help.
 
So how are you enjoying your summer? To me, summer is the perfect excuse to be a little lazy.
After all, chores and "must do" things really can wait, but summer doesn't wait for us!  Isn't it funny
that we never remember the loads of wash done or the trees trimmed, but we do remember the
picnics, outdoor concerts, and leisurely walks with the dog!
 
Our lives are really built around memories and experiences.The more wonderful memories we have,
the richer and more fulfilling our lives are.
 Time goes by way too quickly for most of us, but memories
of good times are stored away in our hearts and minds forever. May August be a month chock full
of memories of family, friends, laughter and love that will last a lifetime for you.


With blessings,
 
Charlene



 

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2.  
PET TIP OF THE MONTH - AGING GRACEFULLY
 
All dogs, just like people, age in different ways.  We know that little dogs age more gracefully than
large or giant breeds, but no matter what the breed, there are some aging signs that all dogs experience.
Some of the signs include: whitening of hair, especially around muzzle, skin problems, excess barking or
crying, easily irritated or aggressive, decline in body condition or musculature, disoriented, senile or confused,
change in sleep patterns, less interaction with family, aimless wandering, walking in circles, frantic or cries
when alone, trouble jumping into the car.
 
Fortunately, there are new medications that will help with many of these problems. Talk to your vet about help
for your old friend. Why not make his last year's the best for both of you?  You both deserve it.

Charlene

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3.  A STORY FROM MY FILES:
DON'T MAKE THE SAME MISTAKE THIS PET OWNER DID!
Dear Readers,

Heat stroke in animals is no laughing matter! Two days ago, my husband and I were driving down a
street in our neighborhood when we came upon a woman kneeling over a dog lying on the grass.
Thinking that perhaps the dog had been hit or was injured, we stopped to see if they needed help.

Walking up to them, I quickly sized up the situation. The dog was heavily panting, gasping for air.
The dog's tongue was enlarged, rersembling a paddle in shape. They did not live far away, but she
quickly accepted our offer for a ride home. Reviewing the situation, I realized several things happened
that should NEVER happen: the dog was being walked in the heat of the day. Secondly, the dog had
short legs and was predominantly black in color. Because it was a short legged dog, the poor dog was
walking double time to keep up with its owner.

The owner had no water or small dish or cup with her for the dog. When a dog gets over heated, the tongue
becomes thick and paddle-shaped exposing the very back of the tongue that you do not normally see. I
could not help but wonder why she was walking at 2 p.m. in temperatures over 90 degrees.

Young and older animals are more sensitive to heat as are long haired dogs. In an earlier newsletter I reminded
readers that if you are not comfortable outside, neither is your pet! Mormings and evenings are the best times
to go walking, and please don't forget the water for both of you.

If your pet does show signs of heat distress, IMMEDIATELY water the dog with a hose or get a cloth with cold
water, wring it out and place in the dog's groin area to keep vital organs cool. Remember to cool the dog's
head as well to prevent brain damage. Ice water is not recommended as it be too much of a shock to the dog's
already compromised cooling system.

With a little bit of forethought, hopefully you will never need to institute these measures.

Have a safe and wonderful summer - Charlene

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4.  EXCITING NEWS BENEFITING BOTH HUMANS AND DOGS WITH MELANOMA

As I have stated in a previous newsletter, cancer is the number one killer of dogs in all its many types. The
prognosis for cancer in dogs was better than 5 or 10 years ago, but still not what we, as owners would like it to be.
I would like to be the first to share with you some very exciting news that will benefit both humans and dogs. There
is now a canine melanoma vaccine developed through collaboration with veterinary and human oncologists at Sloan
Kettering Cancer Institute and the drug's manufacturer, Merial. This is really exciting news for animals and people
as well because the same technology that created the canine melanoma vaccine is being researched for human
melanoma
and the results thus far are promising.
 
For further information contact:
Animal Cancer Foundation, (347)693-6882, acfoundation.org or Merial U.S.,maker of therapeutic melanoma vaccine.
(888) 637-4251, us.merial.com
 
May many animals as well as humans benefit from this groundbreaking vaccine.

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5.  THE CAT THAT CAN PREDICT DEATH

The footsteps down the corridor of the Steere House Nursing and Rehabilitation Center are light but purposeful as
Oscar makes his way towards the end of the hallway and stops outside room 310.

The door is pulled firmly shut and, untroubled, he sits down outside it, and waits some 25 minutes until a nurse's
aide appears, her arms full of dirty linen.

"Ah, Oscar," she smiles, and with a nod, almost as if she were expecting him, allows him to pass into the room
where a frail elderly lady, her body ravaged by cancer, is sleeping fitfully. Oscar sniffs ostentatiously around, resists
the blandishments of the relatives gathered round the bedside, struts out and continues on his round. For the lady in
room 310, the time has not yet come.




Oscar was raised in the nursing home

The patient in the next room into which Oscar pokes his gray-and-white head is not so lucky. This time, Oscar
weighs the situation carefully, then leaps on to the bed and curls up beside the woman lying in it.

A few moments later he is spotted, snuggled up there, by a passing nurse who immediately raises the alarm,
not kick-starting a security alert to rid the ward of an unwanted intruder but a frenetic flurry of activity as medical
records are fetched, a priest is called, and relatives are alerted to the likelihood of the patient's imminent demise.

Because Oscar, as everyone in this nursing home is agreed, has special powers - more even than the doctors
and palliative care specialists who come to tend to the terminally ill here.

For Oscar is able to discern that the moment is near that the spirit of the person in the bed will leave the body
for the last time.  It is an unusual skill, certainly. All the more so because Oscar is just a cat.

The fluffy, two-year-old, gray and white brindled pet was adopted by the dementia unit at the home in Rhode
Island
and named by its residents after a famous American hot dog brand.


Oscar curls up next to patients who have just a few hours to live

Yet his skills of divination are beyond question - and have even been the subject of an article in as august a
publication as the New England Journal Of Medicine. To date he has predicted the passing of 25 patients, and
done so with such accuracy that he has completely won the trust of even the initially incredulous medical staff.

"This cat really seems to know when patients are about to pass," says Dr David Dosa, a geriatrician at Rhode
Island
hospital who also attends patients at Steere House.

"We started to see something was happening about 18 months ago and at first I think we were all very skeptical.
But it's not an unusual occurrence for patients to die here, so we've had plenty of opportunities to witness and
observe the phenomenon."

The first signals come as early as two days beforehand, when Oscar leaves his usual favorite solitary spots
under a doctor's desk or sunbathing in the windows of an empty office and begins doing his rounds, padding
round the corridors of the unit, visiting patients but never lingering.

"When somebody's not ready to die, he leaves," says Dr Dosa. "He doesn't settle in their room until the day
they pass. Sometimes it can be as much as four hours beforehand, but he's universally there, curled up on their
bed, two hours before they take their last breath."

Oscar was just a kitten, a small, stray bundle of fur, when he arrived at the home in July 2005, and since then
he has not failed to spot a single passing. On occasions, his skills have been sorely tested, for example when
a visiting medical expert, Dr Joan Teno, noticed that a patient seemed to be running out of time.

"I think it was around the 13th patient," she says. "Their breathing had changed, and their extremities were
cooling. We'd already noticed Oscar seemed to have form in predicting when someone was about to pass so
I asked if he'd been in. Mary the nurse said, 'No' and I said, 'Oh, let's put him in there and let him keep his streak going.'

"So we did. Oscar went in, sniffed around - and promptly left the room. The next morning I asked how things had
gone overnight and was told the patient had died at 2.30am - about ten hours after I'd predicted. And Oscar had gone
back into the room, and stayed there, two hours beforehand. So he's obviously a better prognosticator than I am."

As far as those who work there are aware, there is only one death at which Oscar has not been present - and
that wasn't because he didn't notice it, but because relatives of the patient asked for him to be removed from the room.


Oscar has correctly predicted 25 passings

Standing outside, Oscar began such a noisy commotion of frenzied caterwauling, miaowing and scratching at the
door that he had to be removed from the unit. Clearly, he wanted to be in the room and was not happy about being
told he had to stay away.

His insistence was all the more peculiar because although Oscar purrs contentedly as he nestles close to those
who have just hours to live, he normally prefers to stay aloof from human company.

As Dosa puts it, "Oscar is not usually particularly friendly. He actually doesn't like spending time with either
patients or staff. Sure, you can usually bribe him with some food if you want to, but that's about it."

So what draws him so strongly towards those who are nearing the very end of their lives?

"That's actually the most puzzling part of it," observes Daniel Mills, a specialist in veterinary behavioral medicine at
Lincoln
University
. He believes the idea that a cat, or indeed another animal, might be able to intuitively sense the
proximity of death is not nearly as fanciful as it seems.

"Animals are particularly sensitive to a whole range of cues of which we are not always aware and can pick up on
minute chemical changes," he explains. "For example, you can train a dog to predict an epilepsy fit in a patient
before they even sense it themselves, or even detect cancer, so it seems reasonable to suppose you might be
able to train a cat to detect that a person was terminally ill, particularly as they have such a good sense of smell.

"The challenge is that it's hard to see what the cat might get out of it. After all, the person they've gone to sit with
dies - so why should it engage in that sort of behavior?"

He postulates that one 'admittedly far-fetched' reason might be that metabolism changes shortly before a person
dies
, "and often the body makes a last-ditch surge. So perhaps they get a little warmer, and the cat seeks them
out because of that. It would be very interesting, macabre though it sounds, to see video footage of this happening,
to get a better insight."

Others have also speculated that the cat might be responding to physical signals - subtle changes in smells and
hormones - not fully understood by humans but detectable to the whiskery feline nose.

Laurie Cabot, the 'official witch' of Salem, Massachusetts, where the infamous 17th century witchcraft trials were held,
has another theory. In her view, Oscar is acting as a 'familiar' - the term witches of old used to refer to the cats who
were their constant companions - which means that he is in psychic communication with the patients he visits.

"He knows they are going to die because he is picking up on their brainwaves," says Cabot, a descendant of a
family that arrived in America on the Mayflower with the Pilgrims. "Science has found that the brainwaves of cats
never go into Beta mode, they are always in Alpha. And it is in the Alpha range that all psychic things happen.

"This little cat Oscar knows all the patients in the unit and he is trying to help them, just like the cats that I've
always kept will curl up on my chest and try to heal me if I feel upset or am ill. In this case, though, Oscar is
not trying to heal, he is clearly trying to help these people walk over into the other world."

Cabot might find further support for her theory in the fact that Oscar does not leave the patient after they have died,
preferring to stay with the body until the undertaker arrives. Then those who have cared for the patient escort the
corpse out in a procession to honor the patient. Oscar, because he lives in the locked dementia unit, is not allowed
off the premises, but he always walks with the funereal procession to the door, and watches as it leaves.

Dr Teno shares Cabot's idea that Oscar is a compassionate cat, but she prefers a slightly more prosaic explanation
for the way he behaves.

"He's not a bad omen," she says, "He comforts the dying patients - and what's striking is that, in a center that offers
a real gold-standard in end-of-life treatment, Oscar seems to be mimicking the behavior of those who work there. He
makes the room feel like more of a homely setting, and has become part of the soothing ritual."

Certainly some relatives of those who have had the 'Oscar experience', feel his contribution was positive. "Oscar's
presence gave a sense of completion and contentment," says Jack McCullough of East Providence, whose mother
and aunt both died at Steere.

"What could be more peaceful than a purring cat? And what sound more beautiful to fill one's ears when leaving life?
He brought a special serenity to the room."

Not everyone might agree; but although Oscar is the only one of the home's six cats to behave in this way, he might
not be unique.

Since his story began to hit the American papers, his nursing home has received dozens of e-mails and letters from
people all over the world who say they know a cat that appears to have similar powers.

And as long as Oscar continues to predict, rather than to curse, there can surely be no harm in it.

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6.  FROM THE BOOKSHELF
 
With all the concern over pet food here of late and people realizing that what you feed to your pet makes all
the difference in the world as to how well they age and how healthy they remain throughout their lives, this
book piqued my interest. Since I know that cancer is the number one killer of dogs and diet as a preventative
can play  a major role, I wanted to share this book with you. Help Your Dog Fight Cancer by Laurie Kaplan is
a very well written book. Obviously this is not a general health guide, but the author does such a great job
in describing the total care program needed to help her dog through a long fight with cancer, that every type
of health care problem is discussed. She discusses diagnostic tools, various cancer treatments (conventional
and alternative), how to interpret lab tests, how to communicate with the vets and make informed medical
decisions. She does an excellent job describing how she formulated and prepared an "anticancer" diet for
her dog (who, by the way, outlived his diagnosis by years).


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7.  THE TAIL END

I came across this statement in a book I recently finished.It is from John Assaraf and I think he states
our relationship with the world, our animals and each other very eloquently. He states," we are all connected.
We just don't see it. There isn't an "out there" and an "in here." Everything in the universe is connected.
It is just one energy field and we are all a part of it." I would like to add that from doing the work I do and
tapping into the hearts and minds of many different species, I could not agree more. Those of us who
share our lives with animals are truly blessed because most of us already know this truth and our lives
are changed and are never quite the same again.
 
Have a wonderful, carefree August and I look forward to talking to you again in September!
 
Blessings,
 
Charlene


PS  I always enjoy receiving your input on things so send in any questions no matter how strange
or silly you feel they might be.  My email is charlene@talk-to-animals.com.
 
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Mission Statement:

"I feel that my primary role as an animal communicator is to speak the truth for the animals.
By speaking their truth I am able to share with their owners their unique perspectives and spiritual
philosophies. The special bond that companion animals share with their owners is one that is built
on love and trust. Through this special relationship both owners and their animals have an opportunity
to experience love, trust and mutual understanding. It is the key to all relationships we develop with
our pets. As we become more sensitive to our pets, we learn that we are all One, created by the
same Divine spirit. Our ultimate goal is to live in harmony and joy with the animals we love and cherish."

Charlene

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Copyright  2004 - 2007, Charlene Boyd, Animal Communicator.  You are welcome to forward this entire
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To find out more about animal communication and to visit our newsletter archive, please go to our
website at www.talk-to-animals.com. To contact Charlene regarding a lost animal, animal behavior
problems or the death of your pet, email her at charlene@talk-to-animals or call 877-907-1741.

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