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I've always assumed that we draw ensouled pets to ourselves. Not every animal who has lived in our house has been ensouled. On a related note, the level of sentience seems to vary between individual animals within a species. i'm interested in hearing about what percentage of animals are ensouled, and which "pet" species are most likely to be ensouled and willing to help with our efforts.
I have a strong feeling that guinea pigs, domesticated rabbits, and "lab" rats often have beautiful souls, which is why they are used for medical testing (a/k/a sacrifices). I also have a wonderful, klutzy, goofy ragdoll cat named Daisy who is a real warrior. There are stories about the origin of the ragdoll breed in the San Diego area in the 1960s. A conspiracist friend used to live next door to the lady who first developed the breed, and the story is that one of the originator's persian cats got loose and got into a military base across the road, and came back pregnant with kittens that were unlike normal persians in personality and genetics. Don't know if it is true, but as someone with repty parentage, I like the idea that my fellow orgone soldier has some oddball genetics in her too.
On a somewhat related note, I had the abusive mother of my best friend decloak at me last weekend, because she walked into my body care shop for the first time, and the orgone! It burns! *LOL* I wonder why it doesn't affect me, even though my father was a repty SSer. Probably because I only use Committee-programmed items, and they know how to protect their allies from the effects of our genetics.
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I am not aware of any guinea pigs with souls, but pet rats are usually ensouled, as well as pet rabbits and maybe 1/2 of wild rabbits. Wild rats are almost never ensouled. Mice, hamsters, and gerbils almost never.
We have liberated the souls of many lab animals, military dolphin slaves, K-9's, slaughterhouse-bound and factory farmed animals.
About 1/2 of domesticated cats and dogs are ensouled. All turtles except the huge Galapagos tortoises. All pigs and bears with rare exceptions.
Our orgone devices do not attack harmless beings, regardless of genetics.
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LOL, so now I am officially "harmless".
Our backyard turtles are hibernating in the attic right now. They spend the summer in our tomato garden, processing the fallen tomatoes for next year's crop.
Last edited by kate (2015-01-03 13:26:08)
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Hi all! I have a great cat that is a rescue, about 9 yrs old. Had him about a year now. I'm not psychic but I'm pretty sure that he is ensouled. He really seems to connect with me and seems to "get" me. I just got a new job and will be starting within two weeks. I will be gone 12-13 hrs a day 5days a week, due to a long commute to and from work. This is a long time away from him. I was thinking of getting a kitten. Temple Grandin, autistic animal expert (and hopefully not one of "them"...they made a movie about her so she may be dubious, idk), says that cats left alone for long periods need companionship for good emotional health. I agree, and want the best for my little old guy. I know all about not making him feel replaced, protocol for hierarchy when bringing a new animal into a household, etc. I am more concerned about picking the right kitten. I'm trying to remember to chill, and remember that I have to just do my best to feel which kitten is going to be right, and that I'll know when the right kitten comes along. Anyone have any thoughts about this? I've always been good at choosing pets that are a good fit. But I could always use input from those who are energy sensitive, etc. Thanks.
Last edited by Pepper (2015-01-10 06:51:27)
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I wish you the best of luck in finding the right kitten companion. You might also consider getting a fish tank or a cage of finches, because my cats have always loved to spend many hours watching these animals in enclosures. (Parakeets/budgies are highly intelligent, and need a lot of human interaction. Finches are not the sharpest tools in the drawer, but are entertaining for cats to watch.)
My husband recently found employment (2 years after being laid off), so now there are 2 days per week when neither of us is home for about 10 hours per day. We usually find Daisy cheerfully talking to the Pearl the parakeet in her cage. Now the bird can make perfect cat noises, and the cat has begun making a squeaky sound!
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Hey, I never thought about a bird to keep him company I think he'd mess with the water or the fish too much if i got fish. (He likes to bat around in containers of water.) I never liked the whole "caged bird" thing tho. Don't know if I could do that... unless...when I'm home I could let the bird out into my room. I'll research how easy it'd be to train a bird to eventually go in and out of its cage. Maybe I'll research parakeets. Would want it to be smart enough, but not need too much interaction... don't wanna be neglectful. These seem like great alternatives. Thanks!
Last edited by Pepper (2015-01-10 11:41:00)
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Our backyard turtles are hibernating in the attic right now. They spend the summer in our tomato garden, processing the fallen tomatoes for next year's crop.
Turtles are great, but very vulnerable to conditions. I hope u know what ur doing. Normally they hibernate underground where the earth moderates the temperatures. I wonder if the attic might get too cold at times.
A great site for tortoise info:
http://www.tortoiseforum.org/
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Hi all! I have a great cat that is a rescue, about 9 yrs old. Had him about a year now. I'm not psychic but I'm pretty sure that he is ensouled. He really seems to connect with me and seems to "get" me. I just got a new job and will be starting within two weeks. I will be gone 12-13 hrs a day 5days a week, due to a long commute to and from work. This is a long time away from him. I was thinking of getting a kitten. Temple Grandin, autistic animal expert (and hopefully not one of "them"...they made a movie about her so she may be dubious, idk), says that cats left alone for long periods need companionship for good emotional health. I agree, and want the best for my little old guy. I know all about not making him feel replaced, protocol for hierarchy when bringing a new animal into a household, etc. I am more concerned about picking the right kitten. I'm trying to remember to chill, and remember that I have to just do my best to feel which kitten is going to be right, and that I'll know when the right kitten comes along. Anyone have any thoughts about this? I've always been good at choosing pets that are a good fit. But I could always use input from those who are energy sensitive, etc. Thanks.
Grandin seems OK.
You can send me a pic of prospective cats if u want.
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The fact that Temple Grandin checks out is pretty huge to me. I've read quite a few of her books. I learned a lot about myself, the autism spectrum, and animals as well. She makes some amazing connections between autism and animals, and uses her "disability" to do things "normal" people can't. I am so relieved that she's not just playing a role. Thank you.
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This is our turtles' tenth year in our attic. So far, so good. Our attic is a steady 50 degrees all winter thanks to a separate thermostat, and the turtles sleep in a padded box. When they start getting lethargic in the fall, we bring them in, and watch over them carefully until they reach full torpor.
On a somewhat related note, one of our feral cats actually walked into the house today. It's THAT cold outside! Usually they go crazy when we try to keep them indoors (they have access to a heated shed with bedding and food/water in cold weather) but Owlcat decided to come indoors for awhile today. I had the door open because I was bringing in our monthly non-perishable grocery haul. She eventually left when Freddy the dog went out for his evening patrol.
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Sounds like you have a nice system for the turtles (as long as the power doesn't go out in a cold snap).
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You can send me a pic of prospective cats if u want.
Thanks! I appreciate that. It makes me feel a lot less anxious about the idea.
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