2 minute read

How can your animals bring you money?

Words VIV ADCOCK

Strange concept, right? Aren’t animals supposed to cost you money? Everything in the universe desires to contribute to you, including your animals. What is required is for you to expand how you receive and be different. There is an unchallenged assumption that as animal owners, you have to continually earn money to pay for them.

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Years ago, I went overseas to care for my dying mother. At the time, I had a horse that I chose to put into full-time care at the best place I knew, which ‘cost’ $600 a month. She had made it very clear to me that this is where she wanted to be so I asked her, “Okay, you want to be here, can you bring the money in to cover your costs while I’m away?” Miraculously, during those eight months, money showed up in my life and my bank account that more than covered her agistment.

What if by asking your animals to contribute to your world financially they could? If you are willing to function from a very different place by receiving from your animals and asking them to contribute to your world financially, what else would be possible? If we don’t ask, we can’t receive. And by the way, how it shows up is totally non-linear and beyond rational explanation!

For me, one of the greatest gifts of having animals in my life is their contribution to expanding my capacity to receive. Being present with an animal changes you – you’re not thinking or computing anything for that interaction until the thinking kicks in again.

There is no such thing as a money problem, only a receiving problem, but not much in this reality empowers you to know how to receive. I have fostered many dogs over the past five years, choosing to feed them high-quality food. I ask each and every foster dog to contribute to my world financially. This isn’t a literal interaction – the dog doesn’t come with its own purse with money to give me for the food it eats. By asking for a contribution, the universe provides in the most miraculous, unfathomable ways.

I recently adopted a rescued greyhound and ironically, I came across her racing history. It turns out she won over $66,000 in prize money during her six years of racing. So I asked her, “Hey Bella, would you be willing to continue creating money for us?” Asking rhetorical questions that our logical mind cannot compute allows us to expand our ability to ask and receive.

What can you ask for?

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