Elaine Garley of Animal Bridges received this email testimonial from Cat Bear of Richfield, MN on August 12, 2015. Monty, the dog stops limping after an animal communication.
“I met Elaine at an event several months ago. We engaged her to speak to our dog Bo (who had just passed away) and our 3 other pets Monty (dog), Earl (cat), and Leo (cat). The [animal] communication she had with all 4 of them was very valuable, but the most remarkable information we received was about Monty.
Monty is a puppy mill survivor, miniature poodle, little bitty guy 🙂 Ever since he had been with us, he limped on his front right paw and consistently licked that area. Whenever we went to the vet with him, we would mention this. Every time, the vet would check his paw and couldn’t find anything wrong. Elaine asked Monty about this limp. Here is an excerpt of that communication:
Elaine: Thanks for sharing this with us. What is wrong with your paw? The vet never seems to think it’s a problem but I see that it is.
Monty: Oh that. It hurts me when I walk sometimes. It feels like I have something between my pads that got stuck in it. Maybe it is a splinter of something. When I walk it hurts. Then I lick it and get in trouble. I don’t know what I did to it. It just hurts.
Elaine: Where does it hurt? Show me. Is it between the big pad and little pads?
Monty: I’m not sure. It just hurts when I walk. I feel something in it.
Elaine: Do you lick the entire foot or just the spot the hurts?
Monty: The entire foot. I keep going and go beyond the point that hurts.
Elaine: Does it hurt when Cat touches it?
Monty: Nope. Just when I walk or play.
With this information, my husband looked very closely at Monty’s paw and saw a small discolored spot in between the pads (see photo). I took him back to the vet and showed them. It turned out to be a large corn that they were able to remove. The vet said it was unusually large for such a small dog.
Since then, Monty has stopped limping and is much more comfortable! Thank you so much Elaine for spotting something that his vet didn’t or couldn’t see!”
Cat Bear — Richfield, Minnesota
Yes, the dog stops limping with the help of an animal communication.