07/29/2023
Good answer.
On "Domestication" from my Animal Communication Mastery Series:
Not every animal would enjoy the type of life their wild ancestors or cousins have. For example, people wonder if it's okay to keep cats indoors, depriving them of their natural surroundings. While a natural, outdoor environment helps cats to fully express their physical nature, some environments are very unsafe, with traffic, pollution, unfriendly people, aggressive dogs, or wild animal predators. You have to look at your individual cat and situation and weigh the benefits with the risks. Some cats who have known the outdoors would be miserable if kept indoors. Others who are used to a protected indoor life would be terrified and not survive well with outdoor access, and there are many variations in between. In most areas, giving dogs free access to outdoors without a fenced yard creates well-known problems that I don't need to elaborate here. The hazards are clear for other domesticated animals, like rabbits, birds, lizards, or rats, if allowed to roam free.
Most spirits who have chosen lives as domesticated animals are oriented to and have purposes related to human companionship. They adapt to indoor life and feel very fulfilled. To feel that animals are deprived without access to the wild outdoors is like saying every human would be happiest dwelling in the woods all the time and must get away from cities. Most humans who choose urban, domesticated lifestyles do so because of their experience, exposure, and adaptation, just like their domesticated animal companions.
I'm not for forcing animals and humans to be away from their natural habitats, but co-habitation of human and non-human animals has tremendous benefit for each others' ability to love life and evolve as emotional and spiritual beings. A balanced, beneficial relationship in any situation requires sensitivity, good communication, and understanding. Misguided people who would force their animal friends out into a wild environment, would find most domesticated animals exclaiming, "Hey, what are you doing, I came here to be with you?" It is also objectionable to deprive animals of their natural environment without their consent. For animals to make a choice, they need to understand the alternatives. Good judgment is required in handling the balance between domestication and a life in wild nature.
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