Pets are our companions, friends, and there for us all of the time. For many of us they aren’t just “like family”, they ARE family! In today’s episode we have a conversation with animal communicator, Julie Evans. After a car accident left her unable to continue to do her work as an accountant, she learned she had an incredible gift in being able to communicate with animals, particularly dogs, and her gift to the world is helping humans understand their pet’s thoughts, fears, feelings, and helping them heal from past trauma. We all know that dogs have heightened senses, and Julie shows us that matrix of energy between dogs as well as how to help calm your pet, including the use of “cosmic Xanax” to help them calm! May Julie’s words help your pet on a deeper level and inspire you to communicate with them as members of your family!
Julie generously shares her gifts with our listeners with a free animal communication session with her: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1IcqmZIQa82mZHz4yk6dg4iIRjBvPKNaE/view
About the Guest:
Julie Evans is an Animal Communicator currently living in Wisconsin, USA. After hitting her head quite severely in an accident, Julie discovered that she could now clearly hear and speak with all types of animals! Julie has since worked on people’s pets, hearing them talk to her and tell them their pains, panics and quite often their opinions too in clear English (the way she interprets it). Clients are grateful for the peace of mind and the connection they get to communicate with their animals through her accurate readings. Julie is currently writing a coffee table book called “Chico’s Corner” that include hilarious dialogues with Chico, her “late” dog, such as: Julie “Chico, you’re my reason for living.” Chico: “You, need to find a better reason for living.”. In Julie’s previous career as an Accountant and Assistant Professor, she notoriously and with high regard from her students allowed dogs in her classroom. Julie loves talking to her animal friends and learning about cool ways to connect with them. She looks forward to meeting more pets and hearing hilarious stories from them about the way they view the world and the humans around them! Currently, Julie is focusing on Counseling pet owners who have lost a pet and transition that pet’s spirit to its New home. Also, Trauma clearings for rescued pets are frequently required. Many behaviors can be traced back to a trauma. To connect with Julie contact her here:
Hi friend, I'm Tanya Gill Welcome to lighten up and unstuck your What the fuck. Together, we explore the ways through life's stickiness moments, and how to live with more peace, joy, love and gratitude. We're going to talk honestly about what isn't easy so you can discover the light within you that will carry you forward. My friend, this podcast is about you in real life, your body, mind and soul, and the opportunity to not only live your best, but shine, doing it.
Tanya Gill:My friends, I am so excited to share this episode with you because I have a very special friend of mine as a guest today, Julie Evans. Now Julie is an animal communicator. And I will let Julie share her story. But she has not always been an animal communicator. And she has many different modalities that she brings in when she communicates with animal. And she is magical. Julie, thank you for being here. I am so excited to talk to you. So the story is you and I met about a year ago. And we were in a course. And in that course, we came to know of one another and to know each other. And since then I have had the pleasure of not only recommending your services, but also purchasing your services for others and also experiencing your magnificent gift and service in my own life as an animal communicator, so let's start with Julie. What the hell is an animal communicator?
Julie Evans:No, right. So, the animals I hear them in English, German and Spanish. I'm discovering that they send me the messages and the images, how I'm able to receive them. So it's not necessarily their first language. I'm an empath I've always been an empath, so I feel what the animal feels. And then the animal night talk, like one of the things is when they howl and they're trying to reach their person, their pack mate, I tell them there the person's hearing is broken. And then they're like, oh, and then they stop howling so loud. When they they don't realize how our capacities as human are different and not as intense and not as sensitive as the animals capacities. smell, hearing sight, all of that. So I don't know what an animal communicator is, but I know what I do. And as Tonya said, There were numerous events in my life and and capacities and skills that I developed over time that led me to be have these capacities with animals.
Tanya Gill:No, I know your story and it's a huge What the fuck it is. It's a huge What the fuck? Please to share with our listeners how on earth you started to hear animals.
Julie Evans:Okay, so I was a child, I had the intuitiveness and the empath weakness with the animals. Okay, and I would rather be with an animal than with people. So I would verbally like many of us do, we ask a question out loud, and then we kind of get a sense of what the animal wants you to do they want food do they want to go out? Do they want you know, and many of us have this but I wasn't hearing them in English. And in my head and I wasn't able to communicate with animals that weren't right in front of me. I didn't have the telepathic aspect of it. So about four years ago, I was hit by a truck.
Tanya Gill:Okay, let's let's just stop there for a second because I know that our listeners are like, What the fuck? This woman got hit by a truck. Okay, so let's just let that sink in for a second four years ago, my friend Julie was hit by a truck. Oh my God. Where are you hurt?
Julie Evans:Oh, yeah, I felt like my head was part of the pavement. Like one of those pieces of artwork were that are in stone or ceramic and that around the wall, or half the heads coming out of the wall, like that piece of artwork. That's what my head felt like. It felt like half of my head was part of the pavement now. Yeah. So I was a pedestrian. I wasn't in a car. I was a pedestrian hit by a Chevy Silverado here in America. So it wasn't I didn't just fall down, which is hard enough, if you fall down, and you hit your head, that's hard enough. So I was like, how many miles per hour forced into the pavements?
Tanya Gill:What happened as a result of the accident?
Julie Evans:Well, I'm okay. So, I had been an accountant. My mother had been an accountant. And candidates called chartered accountant in the United States is called Certified Public Accountant, CPA. So that's what I had done. And I had taught it also at the universities. So my whole life had been spreadsheets, databases, reading, it was all reading, and I'm a bit of an introvert. So I love reading. I could not read, I would get a tremendous headache, it would take me three hours to read one paragraph, I keep reading the paragraph over and over again, trying to get is trying to get back to what had sued me, my refuges that I had had were gone.
Tanya Gill:Instant.
Julie Evans:Right, right. And these massive headaches would come on. So there was there's a head trauma there. There are neural pathways that are broken, kind of kind of like either an earthquake has happened. For those in California, when the earthquakes happen. Now you can't get from point A to B anymore. You can still get there. But you're going to take you four to five hours longer because you've taken other roads. So that's what my brain was doing. Yeah, very tired. So I was like, okay, it took a somewhere within a year for that to be drilled down to. Because it was like, there were other things, there was a tooth that was damaged, and that the nerves were just on fire. They were like, are you having sinus issues? Are you having you know, they go through the whole list? Is it just the stress and finally gets down to? Nope, it's in the brain and it affected your vision. Okay, as Yeah, that's why I spend most of my day with my eyes closed. And I was listening to audiobooks. Because like I said, I've been an intellectual, so I still wanted to learn. So I was learning energy work. I was listening to all these audiobooks about energy work, and even one of them was called talk to the animals. So I started, I started playing with it, you know, with friends, animals that were, you know, they live an hour away or whatever, let's see, you know, and, and then they started, I started hearing them clearly. And we just started playing, and my own dog started to talk to me, what I'm doing now, when I'm looking down on people, If this ends up in a visual form is what comes my brain is I doodle or color. So that's what I'm doing while I'm talking to you to keep because my brain is kind of like an AFib heart, where it goes boop, boop, boop. So I try to have these little tools that I've learned to keep it
Tanya Gill:like keep it on track to stay grounded. Yeah, just like a grounded to stay grounded. So So you started Okay, so So you started learning these these modalities? And, and as you were learning these modalities, you started to realize that you were able to communicate with dogs specifically. Now, one of those dogs was your own dog and I know that that his name is Chico. Tell me a little bit about Chico share share with our audience. How What's the special about Chico?
Julie Evans:Well, Chico had been I got him after the accident. I had another dog that was with me in the accident. And he was older and then he passed. So 11 months within the year after I got Chico now. Chico had been at the shelter a long time. Chico was reportedly 15 years old. That's one 515 They were like are you sure you want to see him? You know he had more
Tanya Gill:So, yeah, most people when they're looking for a pet are keeping in mind, you know, companionship, commitment relationship, but also the age of that dog. And what comes with the age of that dog. So he was 15. And you still wanted to see them.
Julie Evans:Yes. And even though they got out his file, and it was at the Humane Society, which we have in Wisconsin, and in the United States, so there's number of branches, and they have a good system in place. So they have a file on each dog and, you know, his, they told me to have his nails trimmed, it was medical, like his nail trimming was medical, like, okay, is he like a diabetic? Like a human needs to be careful with their feet when they're dying, right? No. But now I learned that was like, oh, because he's got to have you might have to be tranquilized to have his nails trimmed, right. But I didn't know what it meant. So I was like, oh, yeah, we'll just, you know, keep him Yes, I want to see him. And I saw him, he kind of ignored me. He just was like, outside smelling stuff. He had been at the shelters such a long time. That they were like, you know, $25 You know, it's one of those dogs like, well, we'll pay you to take him kind of thing, you know, and so yep, we left. And I left with them. I thought he was trying to commit suicide. He had like three of his really long legs out the window. When we're going down the interstate. It was just like, I don't think he'd ever been in a car. It turned out that he had been marginalized. He was quick to nip. And so he was put outside so he lived his life. A major part of his life outside he had bronchial damage when I took them to the vet and the X ray is chest it bronchial damage from getting pneumonia. So deep being outside and those of you listening in Canada, you know how it gets to part of the year. So sometimes the people would forget to give them water, they come home from work and forget to feed the dog outside. So he was not only alone, he was not well cared for. So I call them like a junkyard dog. And some are a crawl underneath like a rusty trailer or feed see it? And I'd have to crawl underneath it and get them back and like no, you could come in the house with me we have air conditioning, you don't need to you don't need a trailer, you don't need a because he had lived that way for such a long time. And he just wouldn't die. So it's my belief that the people finally took him to the shelter
Julie Evans:and he's still lived with me for two more years. So I practice these modalities on his body. He had arthritis he had you know, he had cataracts. And I you know, once I found that his heart chakra had closed and that he had been marginalized. Then I picked them up and I put them on the couch next to me so I could reach out and touch him if I wanted, like, you know, and also put certain crystals on his bed which he left on his bed, Ruby and so itis lavender, quartz, blue Lapis, he slept with right underneath his chest and sleep with his head between the situs and Ruby and quartz. And then the lapis under his chest. So it was like, pulling part of it was he was used to being outside. So he was like, there's nothing like a good rock, you know? So and but the other part was like it was healing as body. Yeah. So he would talk to me and he was rough around the edges. So he would use the effort a lot. He be like graph, tell him fuck off. Her, but he also would make sure nobody was unacknowledged. So everybody that was on the sidewalk or everybody that we met, he would acknowledge he'd bark and go up and acknowledge them. No one is unacknowledged on my watch, which still makes me like, you know, because he had had this experience of being marginalized. And he asked, yeah, he actually didn't realize that a human could see him as he was.
Tanya Gill:So this is interesting, right? So what you learned in communication with him was that it was important for him but no one was ever left on acknowledged because he had spent his time in isolation, kind of like the junkyard dog like you said. Now, his acknowledgement deepened, because it's He became a part of your healing as well, and your ability to communicate further with other animals and people. How did that happen?
Julie Evans:Yeah, I mean, right? It happened organically because COVID happened. So the things I was studying and the audiobooks, and the energy work on humans was no longer feasible, because no one was going to come to my home and get hop on my little massage table. And let me you know, do their energy work, because especially when COVID just began, it was like, stay on your own pod and all that. So I had been doing animal communication for friends and family, because they, they knew it. And they would call them even if they lost their cell phone in their apartment or their house. They say I just I haven't been able to find it for four hours. So I'd ask their cat where it was, and their cat would tell me, it's under, you know, it's under the bed bed. Okay, yeah. Um,
Tanya Gill:and then they would go to the bed, and they would find it. Now, to some people, Julie, this sounds wacky. Oh, yeah, I'm just gonna be really straight up. i This sounds wacky. You know, when we think about Sorry, I'm like it does it sounds so wacky, and yet I know it to be the truth. And I know what the guests that you have. So with this animal communication, what kinds of changes? Were you able to start seeing or experiencing or understanding for your friends and their dogs?
Julie Evans:Okay, so one of the things I studied for humans was trauma clearing. So I'm able to do that with the animals now. So they're not so triggered, they have an amygdala, just like we do. Are the mammals, I should say, If I don't, um, and the animals actually receive it more easily than the humans because the animals aren't asking why. Or who was that? Who stabbed me in the back, you know, I know, they don't care. They're like, okay, just had ran into a former client, right. And they put down one dog called irony, for name is irony. So she was an, the other dog video is left behind as an only dog. So they're like Leo's going into this was two weeks ago. And I found out about it last night. So the first thing I do is I do what's called an exit stage left. And it's normally done, like, you know, with humans, it's, it's a process that's run with the body and the spirit. It's Get the fuck back in your body and make it work, or choose to get out of your body. So a lot of times that life end or you know, there's so however, I use it with animals that have been put down, or that have been, you know, roadkill that have been hit or traumatic deaths, because they don't always leave their body fully, especially if something happens like that. Right? Yeah. So we do an exit stage left, make sure they've separated from their body. And then she was like, Lee, I said, where are you? She says, in the house, in her in her original house. And then she's like, Leo, the other dog, Leo. Leo, I'm here, I'm here. I don't have a body anymore. And Leo's like, all that explains it. And he was, he was going from room to room looking for her. Because often when we put down an animal, we put them in the car, we take them to the vet, and the animals that are left at the house are like, I don't know, our car rides bad. What just happened here? Right, right. And they're looking for their pack mate. They're looking further if it's a cat, a colony, you know. And so the animal that the spirit that's left the body is kind of left to go and try to reconnect with their path mates and be like, I'm still here. This is, you know, I just don't have a body anymore. Right. So then Leo's like, ah, like, I, as I was texting the the humans, the adults, you know, I was like I have, I'm smiling as I'm texting you. So there's a quiet happiness now, between Leo and ayeni. Whereas for two weeks, he's been looking for irony, which in my human heart just wants to start crying. Because he was the protector, he was the lead. He made sure it was always saved. It was his role to take care of this particular other dog. So that's one
Tanya Gill:and so okay. And this is this is really incredible, Julie, because as you share this, I know in my own experience, the impact that you've had so first of all, I want to share The story of my god daughter, my goddaughter and her husband have a dog who they were really struggling with, he was destroying everything. He was so distraught or dysregulated in his crate that he would destroy anything and even reach through the crate to get other things to destroy outside of the crate. And so you worked with them to do a trauma clearing, and what did you remember what you learned in that?
Julie Evans:I don't. But they're all recorded, and they're sent to the the owner. That's why they're recorded.
Tanya Gill:Right? And I guess the thing about that is, too is that you don't stay attached to that stuff. But the owners, it makes a huge difference. So some of the things that I know happened for them was they realized part of it was their own anxiety impacting their pet. Right. Another thing that that you did was you were able to communicate across the country across actually the continent, with their dog to help him understand that what he was doing was not the best choice. And that and to give him context to it. Now, and the reason I say that is because we have now Walter and Maggie. And we were quite concerned about some of Maggie's trauma. So where you helped noodle, my god daughter's dog, and some of that chewing and that incessant obsessive stuff that was happening in the crate, which by the way, now he's still to gently nibbles on the corner of a blanket. But that's it, like the destruction ended. And it's incredible, because it was a huge struggle for them. And, and so now, you know, we had a session with you and had to do some trauma clearing for Maggie, do you want to share some of what that what, what you learned about Maggie? And that?
Julie Evans:I don't remember. Because it's almost like channel like, we have this conversation. I recorded on Zoom. So we have it, but I don't remember a lot of details of it. Because it's gone. A lot of it's, it's gone. We cut the cords, we cleared the trauma and with the animals, it's great. It's gone. They're not like, oh, let's analyze this. Let's write a book about this. They're just like, Oh, I feel better now. Thank you. Bye now. There is Oh, and I'm like, Oh, okay. I don't remember. Oh, she was alone. She was alone a lot.
Tanya Gill:Mm hmm.
Julie Evans:But I don't I don't remember the details about her trauma. Oh,
Tanya Gill:so. So it's interesting, because I love that because I of course, remember because she's our Maggie. And I was so concerned. And some of the big concerns that I had were around her feeling settled and comfortable and belonging, and not caring, so much of the trauma from and she did, she said, the circumstances of her previous life with her previous humans was a situation where she did spend a lot of time alone. And, and she is a dog that needs a pack. And so having the pack of our family and having the leadership of Wally has been actually very, very powerful. It's been interesting, but we've had some challenges with her around chewing destroying things. And particularly, she has taught Walter, the art of chewing electrical cords. Now we've been super fortunate that it has has been kind of exclusive to things that are not plugged in. But of course we continue like that's something that's a real fear for us. And so you you previously did some work on that and and discovered that Wally is the one who now is actually so into the electrical cords and maybe not Maggie.
Julie Evans:And she's like, Well, we did it when I check in with her. And look what happened here. She's like, Well, we did it. Well, like I did, like a sibling.
Tanya Gill:And you know what, what is so funny is the other day I sent you a text message with evidence of what had happened while Peter and I were gone to the gym. We always think because we leave at five o'clock in the morning that they'll just continue to sleep, but they clearly do not. And God and so then these little creatures, we came home and they had done some destruction and some pictures and there was slobber all over things and plant was broken and all of these things. And I checked in with you and said Oh, it's a busy morning and you said immediately like Maggie was like Wally did it and sure enough evidence that it was wildly all over his face. Maggie like no evidence no little evidence of maybe getting into things that all right, it as a pet owner, you know, you definitely are not someone who's going to all of a sudden make everyone's pet a super spectacularly obedient animal. What you do do though is help them understand some of the stuff that they're doing isn't maybe right. So for example, one of the things that you communicated to Wally was that he needs to stop touching our crap.
Julie Evans:No, I'm remembering. Yes. He's like, Oh, I just thought it was crap. I didn't know it was important. I'm like, yeah, it's important to them. It's important. It's like important bones. Like, he's like, ah, they got a lot of crap. It's like yeah, it's but it's their bones
Tanya Gill:so we continue so we continue on the path of help of trying to help Wally and Maggie understand what crap is ours and what crap is there? And, you know, like, really, truly some of this is. Some of it is, it's frustrating, right? Like as a, as a as a, as a pet owner or as the human of these pets. It can be so frustrating for some people. And we've already seen an improvement, although, the other day when we found somebody was chewing on a pillow. i Yeah, I was like, Oh, come on. You guys. Come on you guys. Right? But it's improving. It really truly is improving. What do you say to pet owners who are like, Okay, can you just fix my dog?
Julie Evans:I'll say, um, let's see what shifts. So, you know, I explained, I'm the bridge between the human world and the dog world, the animal world. And once they realize what's for the benefit of the pack, if it's a dog, they generally choose to change of their own behavior. I'm not a trainer. I'm not a vet. This is just all conversation with the dog. And then the dog makes the choice.
Tanya Gill:Julie, would you be open to checking in with Maggie and Wally right now just so that our readers can or readers our listeners can understand how this work.
Julie Evans:So Maggie, what's going on? She said I don't know what's going on. While he what's going on? I'm chewing on something. Wally, is it? Your crap? Or the humans crap? Oh, shit. It's the fucking humans crap. While I need you to put it down, please. Okay, fine. Where's my other words thing? Or is it my thing? Or is it a thing? Maybe we're gonna how's my thing? I got to find my thing. Now. Here's my thing. Thank you, Wally. Thank you for putting it down. It's so frustrating. So frustrating. I keep forgetting that it's their crap. Not my crap. Because it's like normally everything that I can touch is my crap. Oh, yeah, that's true when you're outside. You know? If you were Coyote, that would be true. Yeah, but because you live in a house with the humans. Yeah, it's not true. Yeah. It's hard. Can you tell the people that it's really hard? Because I'm not a human, but they expect me to live kind of like I'm a human and now I can't find my orange thing. Ah, okay. Well, he will. Okay. Do you need some Botox? She needs some Xanax use of cosmic Xanax. Yes, please. How many? 62 Fucking 1000. Okay, there you go. Because my exam is when I'm feeling like my chest is really tight. Okay, all right. I'm gonna go nap now. i Sorry about their stuff. I'll do better. I'll do better. I'll get it. I'll get it. I'll get it. You know, they say I'm young, which is true. So I got time, but I don't know how much time I got because they get pretty upset with me. And uh, you have all the time you require with your with your people there. They're not going anywhere. Okay. You're not going anywhere either. Okay. All right. Let's go now with your chest honey. That's anxiety. Yeah, I guess so. worried because like, you know, even though we're packed but like they kicked me out of the pack of they don't like what I do, like I gotta fit in with the pack. I know they say anybody are we ask Abby to come help me. Okay, well Abby, will you spend some time with him and give him your calm? Sure. Okay. All right, guys. Okay, I'm gonna go back to the human now. It's recorded, right, whatever that means. Yes, it is. Okay. All right there. He wants to talk more. Who's Abby? Oh, Abby is a blind and deaf. Albino cocker spaniel.
Tanya Gill:Okay, so, Abby is a blind and deaf cocker spaniel who lives were
Julie Evans:lives in Wisconsin. So I've met her in person. And she's a healer. So when a dog is having issues anywhere in the world, because I've had a dog in the United Kingdom, California, you know, I'll ask Abby, can you go spend some time with them? So she energetically telepathically because their telepathic abilities are beyond Wally's because she doesn't hear she doesn't see she doesn't have those senses. So she got her telepathic intuitive, these other senses that we'd have, we might not even have words for our heightened. So she'll go spend time with the dog that's upset with the dog that just had surgery. And she'll her energy will come and snuggle in with them and hang out with them. Because like Wally got like, is like somebody hit me in my chest, because he got really concerned about being kicked out of the pack. Because he knows he keeps doing this. And he's really struggling not to do it. And like you said, you know, if he were in the wild, like a canine, everything is there's there's nothing they're not supposed to really touch. Right? So game. Yes. And if you want to understand it, you understand. But here someone's next to you, your your don't chew on it, because it's a pillow. It's their crap. So he is trying so hard. And and he's getting getting worried. So he's getting anxious that will be kicked out. Not that anybody said anything. But like, they know they have to get along in the pack. And, or they can be kicked out of the pack. There's there's rules and packs. Right. So
Tanya Gill:between you and me, we both know that Wally and Maggie are going nowhere. We love them so much. Right?
Julie Evans:I told him that. Because I know that no, I wouldn't have told him that if I didn't know that if he was on the verge of being reformed. Then we do we put like a shield around or you know, it'd be something different energetically, but for this, and sometimes they just need to be heard. Just like the human, they just need to be heard and they need someone to say I know it's hard. I get it. And you're not going anywhere. And that and I feel with you I feel your sadness. I feel your anxiety. You want this cosmic Xanax, which is an energy out there because we've had Xanax for what three years. Okay, so I
Tanya Gill:know what cosmic Xanax is. But our listeners don't know what cosmic Xanax is. What is cosmic Xanax? Well, it
Julie Evans:has the energy of Xanax without the byproducts, so you don't have to take the pills because Xanax has been and Trazodone. Botox, they've been out there for years. So there's an energy exist of them.
Tanya Gill:And so they are able to request explain how the cosmic Xanax works for listeners.
Julie Evans:Oh, well, it does it. It works. Like while he asked for it he asked for I don't know why they like to ask for 62,000 which, when it first occurred, actually, an animal was the first one that asked for cosmic Xanax. I didn't know this energy existed until an animal brought it up. And I'm like, oh, okay, I just go with it. My logical mind is working in the back. The accountant mind is like, Okay, this doesn't make sense. What the hell, you know, but then I'm like, You shut up. Shut up. We're just going with this, you know? And so yeah, cosmic Xanax is the energy of that when the entered when that when the Xanax takes effect in the in the body and you're like, oh, okay, you're not able to worry as much. Okay. The Trazodone if they're like, Haha, so, okay, tranquilizers, the Botox, like pause if they have issues with pause issues with sinuses, they like the cosmic Botox to be shot in there. So the animals is the energy of that item without having to take the pharmaceutical and you can't overdose on it because it doesn't have Have the byproduct it just has the energy, the beneficial energy of it.
Tanya Gill:So now the question becomes, can only you administer it? or can people administer it for their animal randomly?
Julie Evans:Anybody can. You can be like, Hey, do you want cosmic sand because it exists out there. It's in the it's in the fifth dimension. Well, it's in third dimension too, but it's in the fifth dimension. And so you can just say, you know, if you've got, you know, cat, Chevy, that's one of my cat Chevy, would you like some cosmic Botox? In a lot of times, the owner knows when the animal says yes, because you know, they know the look on the face. You're like, okay, there you go. It's a if you believe it. If you you know, if you believe it, it works. How many would you like, okay, even if you don't hear the animal, you have that pause so the animal speaks because they are speaking to you all the time when they're staring right at you like that. Look right into the camera. They're not saying I love you. They're communicating something and you aren't hearing it. So they look like do like this even harder.
Tanya Gill:Like hello, exactly. I
Julie Evans:gotta go pee pee pee BB P P P P BP. Before I hit my head, I thought I had a dog called Mugsy. And I thought he was just telling me you love me. You know, it's busy. Who's that? It tends to my boys love you, honey. warthogs. They're like, our people are so stupid. We keep telling them and they're just keep doing the opposite. It's like, I'm like, they can't hear you. It's broken. And they're like, Oh, okay. So,
Tanya Gill:okay, so, so Julie, we also so let's go with this. Okay, so we know Wally is really struggling with stuff. What stuff is, is everyone's what stuff is his what stuff was ours. And granted, humans have a lot of crap. With Maggie, we were really concerned about her feeling a sense of attachment and realizing that she is safe. And love and home.
Julie Evans:She said, I'm home as long as Wiley is home. So her safety is Wally. Okay. Which she gets concerned too about Wally screwing up. Okay, they get concerned about about Peter leaving. And I said he might leave to go to work, but he'll always come back home. So they they read our minds. So even when we're acting like, you know, fake it till you make it your thing, right. So we go through transitions we go, you know? Yeah. So they sense that we can't hide it from them.
Tanya Gill:And that's something Oh, interesting, because Peter is going through a transition right now. Right? And, and so because he is going through that transition, it's interesting that she would pick up on that.
Julie Evans:And then they the way they interpret it, just like humans, you know, your neighbor can interpret something that's going on in your home. By the signs, they see you're coming and going or whatever they hear. Right, but it might not be Korea, you know? So like, maybe he was thinking, you know, that he might leave the home? And it's like, No, he'll always that would be for a job and he would always come back. So I don't know what he's looking at for work, you know, because some of us will work. You know, some people would go to Quebec for the week, and then they take a train back for the weekends. I mean, we had that in California between you know, people go to San Francisco and work there for the week, but then they'd come back to the country areas for the weekend. I don't know what's being looked at but she senses that. That she sensed that so I told her that oh, he's always coming back home.
Tanya Gill:Well, what's interesting about that is that Peter works from home. So while his work his work from home is more or less at home and and and so from working from home is not him potentially leaving however energetically he's you know, he's feeling some division and difficulty. So it's the sense of that. Yeah. Incredible awareness. So is it possible Julie van to communicate with her again that that you know, I mean, we we try so hard to to express to her how much we love her and how she is home and she is safe and that she's with us? She's a Our little girl now you know, is there a way to to I mean, we express it, but is there a way for you to communicate that to her and check in with her?
Julie Evans:I said, this is your space now. And she said, I know. But what if it goes away? That I get it? What Chico went through? That's what I'm going to get. Yes, honey. Okay, good. Because Chico came and he was like, for lack of a better explanation, like a foster child that had been through like, you know, maybe 15 homes. So when he got to my home, he would hide in closets. And he would show me his his butt. And he was like, yeah, it's great. But it could go away at any moment. And so Chico's now a spirit out there. And he's a major spirits. So they have the, the animal world has a whole network in the spirit world, okay. Some of them are still in their bodies. And some of them aren't. So she knows the energetically what Chico went through. So so I can just reference, like Chico, and she'd be like, oh, like what, Chico went, okay. So she knows that energy of coming in. And having been in an unstable situation, and now having it be stable. So they can draw on on his experiences and get that energy of being stable. Now, Chico had a goal, six months, eight months, before finally was like, That's my lady. And I'm her and I'm her guy. And that's nothing to change it. You know, no matter what happens, you know? Yeah. I mean, because it didn't happen right away. But with that, just like the cosmic Xanax and energy exist out there that the animals can draw on humans can too. But the animals do it like that, because they don't have an analytical mind.
Tanya Gill:I was just gonna say, because they're fucking analytical mind because this thing here gets I'm tapping my forehead for people die. In the third I get shut, closed. Right? We like we, we completely blind ourselves. And like you said, we get, we talked about this, we get so stuck in the basic senses that we've learned instead of recognizing that there is so much more out there in that energy.
Julie Evans:Yeah, and Maggie just grabbed that she grabbed that energy of being secure after you weren't secure. And all she had to say was oh, like Chico? And I'm like, yes. Okay, she got it. So now, it's like, they're not going anywhere. Like you didn't go anywhere. Exactly. They're going to take me to the hotel, like you did, exactly. Like I, you know, he had, you know, he had whatever he, he required, he went, he went everywhere with me, including hotels, including, and because he would bite, I could leave them in the car, nobody was gonna steal them, or the car. So I could leave the windows down
Julie Evans:I'd be like, peacefully protect our staff. And he would, he'd sleep most time, but I knew that, you know, I could leave the windows all the way down. Nobody was gonna get a hand reached in there to grab, you know, my $5 in the change door, it wasn't going to happen. But he went, he was my guy. And even when I was in the nursing home for two months, I had security cameras. So I still could talk to him. He could hear my voice. But we really got the telepathic thing going then, because I paid dog walkers to come in and walk them twice a day. So he was alone for 23 hours. So a day.
Tanya Gill:Wow.
Julie Evans:So that energy exists to so when we deal with separation anxiety. We really learned from Chico how to do this. How can an animal feel secure and be alone for 23 hours a day. But he but we met we figured it out. And then one thing is is the security cameras and then I can talk to him. And he can telepathically communicate with me see where I am. And I tell people call me to communicate telepathically with your animal even if you don't think you have it. Stare at your dashboard in your car for five seconds. And just think of your dog you're sending this is where I am and most dogs have been in our vehicles. This is where I am. They'll pick it up. Even if we're not picking up them they'll pick it up.
Tanya Gill:Okay, so that kind of comes back to our dogs seem to know when we're coming home. Right. So that's something we can all relate to Julie, our dogs seem to know when we're coming home. How do they know when we're coming home?
Julie Evans:They read your mind
Tanya Gill:folks, they read your mind.
Julie Evans:They see the pictures what you're seeing with your eyes. They're seeing
Tanya Gill:and so then they know that you're coming home and they're ready and they're excited and they're not only need to go pee, but they also want to love you.
Julie Evans:Because you've returned to the pack. Yeah, it's party time for like, what? 3030 seconds, 60 seconds and then they go lay back down. Yeah, they give you a proper hello because the pack is back together. And and what I tell my clients is you are out hunting or scavenging because that they understand. And that has a picture of a dog coming back with scavenge goods. They don't understand. Like, I love you, I'll be back later. Bla bla bla bla bla, no, no, they understand a picture. Give them a picture. I'm hunting, okay. And I go to an office to hunt or I go to a factory to hunt or I go to a classroom to hunt. It's complicated, you know,
Tanya Gill:right. Or even a vacation, vacation. Vacation to hunt so that they understand that concept of I'm coming back.
Julie Evans:Mm hmm. And then, you know, go ahead. And then you you know, you check in when you're on vacation or you're at work, you just you check in, you're like, hey, hey, Megan, hey, Wally. This is where I am. And you hold your gaze on something. Like I hold my gaze on the curtain or something and be like, Oh, okay. All right. Got it. Because they like humans forget what they've been told. Because if the routine boom, boom, boom, boom, their habits? Right? And, um, so the dog would I'm dog sitting now I said, Okay, she's taking her friend to the doctor in another city. And it's like, oh, yeah, I forgot. Because he was going room to room looking for his person. You know what I'm like, oh, remember? She's in the Prius. Oh, yeah. Without me. Yeah, remember Auntie Donna is? Is with her. Ah, Auntie dang it oh no shit
Julie Evans:like, what's the my lady's my job? You know, for this particular dog and and I'm like, well, Auntie Don is going to do the job for the next two darknesses and it's like, Dad, I don't know shit. You can't do that job.
Tanya Gill:Okay, I have to interrupt this job concept because you actually have a texting with our dogs to see what their jobs are. Will you please share with me what Wally's job is?
Julie Evans:Yeah. job is to spread the word. Um, Wally is the only dog I've met that that's his job to spread the word. I don't know what the word is. But he's spreading it.
Tanya Gill:Raleigh's job is to spread the word now. What's Maggie's job?
Julie Evans:Oh, she just said love everybody. Maggie, what's your job? Love everybody and watch wildly because he's a handful. And she's showing me a picture of Peter. So Peter is a big part of our job. Yeah, because the other times they are assigned to a human. The world the energy world, spirit world, animal world, whatever it is assigns them gives them assignments and they can have more than one in a lifetime.
Tanya Gill:So Peter is Maggie's assignment, to a certain degree is wildly my assignment is am I Wally's assignment?
Julie Evans:Well, I do have an assignment. Yes. Spread the word. So then I was able to ask, what does Wally run away? And, and Peter was like, Yes, sometimes. Yeah.
Tanya Gill:Oh, yeah. He loves to go and explore and spread the word. Make new friends and not come back.
Julie Evans:So you know, and in those cases, I tell clients, you think the animal for doing their job. So we know it's Wally's job to spread the word. So when he runs away and doesn't want to come back and you go and you walk to the neighbor's house or whatever, the next suburb and you get you get wildly. You're like, Molly, thank you for doing your job. I see you spread the word. Thank you so much. Let's go home now. And then they're like, okay, because you don't you try to punish them or yell at them like don't do that no more. It's like they're doing their job. Right. And sometimes I'm able to give them a different job that doesn't can't coexist with the one that's bothersome. But that hasn't been the case with Wally.
Tanya Gill:Oh, yes, my sweet Wally, he is a handful, let me tell you, but just so much fucking joy. That is the thing like, I did it. I did a podcast episode about pandemic pets. I don't know if you've listened to it, Julie. But, you know, this is kind of the follow up to that, because our pets are a really huge part of our lives. And, you know, I know people who have really felt that their their pets have saved their lives, or reciprocally that they saved their pets lives. But in reality, their pet saved their life. We have incredible relationships with our pets, we talk to them, we marvel with them, we see the world through their eyes. And we love them, because when they're part of a packet, they do become a family member. And because they're a family member, we want them to live their best life possible. And that means not having those frustrations as much as understanding them better and having a great relationship with them. And so what what I love so so much about you, Julie, is that as an animal communicator, you open a door for your clients to have insight into their animals, and be able to make that reciprocal relationship richer. If people want to get a hold of you or learn more about you, I will make sure that I have all of the contact information in the shownotes. But I want them to know about your YouTube channel. Tell us about that.
Julie Evans:Oh, yes, it's animal messages with Julie. Plain and simple is weekly. So I use Zoom to record it. So I'll have guests. And it's my weekend review. So as what I've learned who what animals told me what are we can review and sometimes people will come on because it's a way to get free services. You can come on and ask about your animal. And I'll send you the the Zoom link to come on on. It's Thursdays, it would be 6pm in Alberta 7pm. Central Time 8pm New York time and yeah, 5pm, California time, Vancouver time, on Thursdays. And I try to keep it to like five minutes because I want it gets put up on YouTube later, like two days later goes on YouTube. But let's sometimes we've even gone to an hour because we had a guest on that was clearing cats emotions, and the cats absorb emotions from the humans. So it was clearing, clearing, clearing clearing, so we had a number of people come on and and get pro bono services that way. So that one was an hour long. But I don't know how many there out there because I just do it every week. I don't know what's gonna happen. Sometimes there's a plan, but especially with animals, plans don't go as
Tanya Gill:planned. So go as planned.
Julie Evans:They're like, they're in the moment. So whatever that is, um, and, yeah,
Tanya Gill:that's amazing. I will make sure that your contact information is in the in our show notes because I know that there are going to be lots of people who listen who are like, I need to talk to this lady. Because as wacky as this sounds it's intriguing. I'm curious, and I hope that people who know me understands that, like, in a million years did I think that I would be like my friend Julie's gonna be communicating with my animals you know, like, not a fucking chance. There's the truth to a not a fucking chance. And yet, the magic that comes from the work that you do for your clients and for their animals, it can't be dismissed. I keep coming back to and I just want to I we're going a little long here but I just I keep coming back to what's his name? Edgar.
Julie Evans:Edgar. Yes.
Tanya Gill:Edgar had a pretty rough life and he was in a foster home. And his foster parent was very, very concerned for him because he didn't know if he would ever be able to be recalled because of his trauma. And so, his temporary foster human at that time, had to work with him. What happened to Edgar?
Julie Evans:Edgar. Edgar is part was he a mastiff? He's part is Mastiff, so he's strong and bigger. Okay. And he had been hit with a brick on his head, he had a scar on his head. So I asked, you know what, what happened? I asked the animals what question he said, Oh, Brooke fell on my head. Did it fall? Or was it in a human's hand? It wasn't a human's hand. So he was one of those dogs that was like, would show you his butt, he wouldn't come out from under the desk. He would chew on cords. At one point, he was chewing on the, like the router cord when his foster mom was doing a presentation on Zoom, or one of the platforms and he's right, right. So he, yeah, we we cleared, we talked about it, we cleared the trauma, because once I get the what happened in the images, now I can cut the cord to bricks, I can cut the cord to various things. So it doesn't have that reactive. response, a smell like it smell of a certain cologne can do it if they were abused by someone wearing a certain cologne. You know, just the sight of something up here if they had been beaten, like whatever it is, can can trigger them. So we just we clear that and they don't have a judgement about it. They're not like how does this work? We just we run the processes, which I studied for that first year when I had my eyes closed. And I was listening to all these audiobooks into audio courses. Yeah, and he is now adopted and within a couple in New Hampshire, and helping out a very shy 13 year old boy was very shy himself. But yeah, so that that's how that's how it can work. And then being a master we like to choose so we had appropriate things to to what it came up in the reading. I am happy I am lovable, I am secure. So his foster mom actually wrote that on an index card and put it in his kennel. Just the energy of it. I mean, I've not the editor could read it. It came up in the recording. And um, when I do these things, the human doesn't have to be present. You turn on the Zoom, it's me the animal stays usually stays in the room with me. And I, I recorded and then I email it to the person so you walk away for an hour and then you come back. It's like so easy peasy for the humans. Really. It's there's not you don't have to get the car and take it to a trainer. You know, 16 weeks in a row twice a week. Nope is. Yeah,
Tanya Gill:my friends, you need to get in touch with my beautiful friend Julie. Oh my god. Doing this has been incredible. I am so grateful that we've been able to share this I love how you communicate with them and have such a deep appreciation for this tragically beautiful gift. Right? had had you not had the what the best of getting hit by a truck. Right? This gift may not have presented itself. And this is a gift to not just the animal world but also to the humans that have the privilege of being a part of their world and having them in their world. So from the bottom of my heart Julie, thank you so much for being with us. Thank you so much.
Julie Evans:Thank you Tanya.