Health & Wealth for Humans and Their Animals

Testimonials

Mr. Kiki’s mom says:

Leta is a miracle worker whose animal communication skills not only enhanced and elongated my beloved companion, Mr. Kiki’s life; they also changed mine forever. Thank you Leta for your fabulous work.  

Linda

Wow!

Wow……Wow!  Leta, you have an amazing gift!  I’ve just read your notes for the second time.  Wow! . . . No real surprises – just clarification and understanding.   . . . Thank you thank you.  I’m so grateful for your gift! 

— Laura

Scherzo

Leta has helped turn my horse around completely.
My six-year-old Belgian Warmblood, Scherzo [see Scherzo at left – Ed.] had been through major health issues. A huge, 150-lb. fatty tumor was removed from his abdomen on July 8, 2000. He nearly died, but came back. This tumor explained all of the early training issues we had with him. Or so I thought. Another surgery followed on March 22, 2001 to repair a post-operative hernia, and after his healing I put him back in training. The trainer was going very slowly with him due to his past history, but after about two weeks Scherzo had a major panic attack and exploded. That is when a friend told me to contact Leta. Everything changed after that. She found out that Scherzo is a really unique horse, and she asked me to do some auric healing on him and explained how it was done. I proceeded, and after the first session my trainer asked what in the world I had done. He exclaimed that Scherzo was awesome when he worked him. I continued these sessions at least three times a week for several weeks, and now I do them once every week or two. Scherzo loves it! Leta checked in with him again on November 7, and he was very happy and said he is doing great. The trainer says he just gets better and better. Although Scherzo also talks to me, I have never gotten the real details of some of his issues. I now know who can.

— Collene Sweeney, Georgetown, Texas

One Client’s Experience

Animal communication can be a very valuable tool when working with a skilled communicator. I have often worked with Leta on difficult cases with patients and my own animals. She is very well trained and accurately reports the information she receives without interpreting it. Her information has been confirmed in many cases by looking back into the animal’s history. As a homeopath, I have relied on her in many cases to get details which have lead to good prescriptions. In addition to her skills, Leta has wonderful compassion for people and animals.

Thank you, Leta, for saving “Ruby”. The difference in her attitude has been nothing short of miraculous. She went from lying down in her stall almost continuously to being back on her feet, alert and hungry and very protective of her new foal. It was the communication that turned her around. Discovering that the root of her illness was in her last foal’s being taken away within one week of birth (and dying) really surprised me. I had no knowledge of that when I bought her. The fact that she conveyed that to you and you were able to reassure her that this foal would not be taken away until she was ready has lifted Ruby out of her life-threatening depression.

— Debbie, Client  (Read the entire Ruby story below.)

It’s Not Just for Grown-ups!

Dear Leta,
I wanted to write and thank you for the time you spent over the last three days teaching my three children your animal communication class. They enjoyed every minute. You have raised their awareness of all our animals. Our pets will certainly benefit, but mostly my children will from the increased sensitivity they have learned from you to the world around them. You are a blessing to all of us.

— Mother of young students

Dog Harmony

Testimonial submitted via e-mail, January 19, 2001

About my experience with your animal communications, I would be happy to tell that story:

My new dog, Chica, a miniature beagle, was viciously attacked by our other dog, Rosanna. I was there, so I was able to pull Rosanna off of her, but while I was dragging Rosanna off to tie her up, Chica disappeared.

It was one of those horrible 100+ July days in Texas and Chica had been treated for heartworms just 5 days earlier, so I was desparate to get her back. After nearly 6 hours of searching in the wooded areas and calling for her all over our acreage, I gave Leta a call and asked for help. I asked Leta to warn Chica about the coyotes and hawks and to ask her to come home. Leta said that Chica was ready to come home but was confused and didn’t know how to do that, so Leta asked me to imagine that there was a golden cord connecting Chica’s heart to my own.

Although Leta had never been to my place before, and had never met Chica, she was able to describe where Chica was so well that I walked out of the house and directly to where Chica was — not more than a hundred yards away! And when I found Chica, she was walking towards me, as well. I rushed her to the kitchen sink to cool her off and clean up her wounds. We were so grateful for Leta’s intervention! Thanks, Leta. [It was] suggested that I give Holly Bach flower remedy to Rosanna, and I “talked” to her about how she was just as important to me as Chica. They are great friends and love to play together now.

— Trish

 

About Leta’s Classes

I think the “thanks” all go to YOU, as you led us through, what at first seemed a dubious task. You trusted all of us to succeed, and so we did! It was a wonderful day, and I hope to be included in other workshops you might give.  . . . P.E.

 OMG…..today was amazing!   Thank you for opening up your beautiful home to us and allowing us to play with your amazing “kids.”  You have such a gift and I’m so grateful to have participated in this today.  And, the group was great also.  I liked each and every person there and am amazed at how you guided us to this magic!   . . . L.P.

RUBY’S STORY

A couple of years ago I was asked by Dr. Madalyn Ward, a holistic equine veterinarian, to communicate with Ruby, a twelve-year-old thoroughbred mare belonging to her client, Debbie. This was in early April of 1999. Ruby had been delivered of a healthy foal on April 1. I say “delivered of” because the birth was grueling for Ruby—she came close to dying. Fortunately the filly was large and thriving with an indomitable spirit and will to live.

Ruby is a brilliant, gleaming chestnut, but her baby was a grulla—the special grey of burros who have the sign of the cross on their shoulderblades. She too had this sign. Debbie’s eldest daughter dubbed her “Saving Grace” because of the miracle of her survival. Grace learned to nurse with her mother lying down. Ruby was so traumatized and exhausted by the birth that she could not stay on her feet for the first several days after the delivery.

Ruby had come to Debbie several months prior to the birth. Debbie didn’t know much about where she had been, but did know that Ruby had had a brilliant show jumping career when she was a few years younger. Debbie in fact now owns a video of Ruby at the height of her glory, taking the jumps with great exuberance and skill, and it is easy to see in that film the great spirit Ruby’s daughter inherited.

As the birth became more imminent, Ruby began going downhill physically and emotionally. Her feet swelled and became painful and she spent an increasing amount of time lying down. She was depressed and lethargic. Dr. Ward began treating her homeopathically, but not much progress could be made because of Ruby’s emotional state. Ruby was also on superfood supplements to provide complete nutritional support. Debbie’s small private breeding farm provides the best of the best in every way for all her horses, so Ruby was receiving the best treatment possible.

Ruby’s labor was difficult and unproductive. After several hours, Dr. Ward was called and upon palpating Ruby, discovered that little Gracie was presenting in a position that is impossible to deliver. Her nose was down and pointed in the right direction to enter the world, but her front legs were back along her body instead of tucked up under her chin where they should have been. Normally a veterinarian can correct such a situation by simply reaching into the birth canal and pulling the legs into position. Dr. Ward is a petite woman however, and Ruby was quite a large mare, so she was unable reach the foal’s legs. Meanwhile, Ruby was down and in great distress.

To add to the challenges of Ruby’s labor, a tumultuous early spring storm was underway with lightning and thunder and gale force winds. There was nothing to do but get Ruby to a clinic, and somehow Dr. Ward and Debbie miraculously got Ruby loaded into a trailer and over to the largest equine hospital in Texas, an hour away. It took six men to save Grace and Ruby.

About a week later Ruby was no better. That’s when Dr. Ward decided she needed all the clues she could get in order to help this mare, so, with Debbie’s permission, she asked me to come talk to Ruby. As soon as I walked up to her stall Ruby came over to me and seemed eager to communicate, although her depression was apparent in every fiber of her being and demeanor. She was also really angry. I was surprised, but stayed still and open to see what would come. Ruby couldn’t really tell me why she was so mad at first, but it was obvious her hostility was directed toward the world in general and everyone in it. It was interesting to me that she wanted to talk in spite of this. Unable to get much information from her at first, I started telling her how much Debbie loved her and how glad she was to have Ruby, how she planned to keep her at the farm forever, and how upset everyone was over Ruby’s obvious suffering and poor condition. I let her know how much we all wanted to help her and asked her if there was anything she could tell us that might help.

Ruby finally started letting go of her hostile façade and, as she softened, I could feel a great despair within her. She then began showing me pictures along with vague ideas and impressions about something that had happened to her in her past. It was a short but shocking story.

Her previous foal, a couple of years before, had been taken from her way too early. She had never seen it again. The picture I saw was of a very young foal just a few weeks of age. Ruby had been plunged into a lengthy period of grief and despair as well as great physical imbalance and distress. That was all she showed me. Her sadness was so great and her heart so heavy over this that I started crying as I tried to relate the story to Debbie. All I could do was reassure Ruby over and over again that such an incident would never ever happen with Debbie. I also told
her that Grace was in perfect health and there was no reason for worry, and that Debbie was going to raise and show her, so there would be plenty of time for a normal, timely weaning.

Now that Dr. Ward knew there was such a huge grief inside Ruby’s heart, she was able to treat her for it with the homeopathic remedy Ignatia, named for St. Ignatius, which is wonderful for shock and heartache. After that, and after Ruby’s new understanding of what her future would hold, the other constitutional remedies Dr. Ward was using could take effect. Ruby began getting better by the day and seemed much, much happier.

Unbeknownst to me, Debbie called the sales agent through whom she had purchased Ruby. She asked him to check out Ruby’s history and to find out what had happened at her previous owners’. He called her back and this is what he reported. Ruby’s last foal had developed a conditioned known as “joint ill” at four weeks of age. Treatment was delayed to the point where the baby was finally taken from her mother, put in a stationwagon, and taken away to a veterinary clinic where she died shortly upon arrival. Ruby was turned out to pasture and left on her own to deal with her engorged udder and her confusion and grief. She was ill for months and was never her brilliant self again.

Until now. Ruby is still strengthening, especially in her hindquarters and rear legs which were most affected by this trauma, but she is being supported and groomed for her next foal, which will most likely arrive in the spring of 2002. According to Ruby, she can’t wait! She is visibly proud and excited when Debbie takes her out on easy bareback jaunts, and she can be seen prancing and trotting now in her pasture, where she is queen of the small broodmare herd. All the mares are very special, but Debbie caters to Ruby with special treatment, and we have had regular communications with her to keep her updated about everything that is happening with Grace and just to see how she is faring.

Oh! Saving Grace, now a large 2-year-old, is in a nearby pasture with other youngsters and is being carefully trained and groomed for her impending show career. She is large and sturdy and has no fear—a great asset in a jumper, and is pushy about getting her share of attention. She has a scar on her nose already from jumping a fence to get to her mama during her weaning. And although her color is darkening as she gets older, you can still see the cross on her back—there to remind us that miracles really do happen.