Dogs that know when their owners are coming home

December 23rd, 2008 - 5:05 pm KY Time

Howllo Fellow Hound and telepathic dog lovers: This is going to be kind of a long post with some scientific data included. It is very interesting. If you do read the entire post you might be very intrigued.

I use the word intrigued because that is exactly what I was when I went to a yearly conference with my sister in 1997 called the Psychology of Health, Immunity and Disease. My sister is a Doctor in Atlanta and is very much into education. I was not signed up for the conference which was very pricey. I was going to find plenty to do while she was educating herself all day.

However, when she was signing up she asked me. Hey, if you want to attend I will pay for it. You can pick your own lectures/workshops to go to. I was pretty excited about it because like I said, it was very expensive at about 1,000 dollars and I love lectures. Even if I have never heard of a topic I like to try and figure it out. I won’t go into all of the details of this conference, just one that has stuck with me to this day.

OMG, we had so much fun. Later that evening over dinner we picked our lectures and workshops. The keynote speaker was Christiane Northrup, M.D., and the entire group was invited to that. Her lecture was life changing for me. OK, let me try to move on. As I was perusing the speakers Rupert Sheldrake jumped off the page. The lecture was titled:

MORPHIC RESONANCE AND MORPHIC FIELDS –
DOGS THAT KNOW WHEN THEIR OWNERS ARE COMING HOME

Check! I was first in line for this lecture and sat on the front row. My sister went with me. The talk was fascinating and Rupert was captivating. I loved every second of it. I bought his book: DOGS THAT KNOW WHEN THEIR OWNERS ARE COMING HOME

I also had him sign it. I followed him to the elevator and had kind of a groupie moment. I though he was fascinating, smart and he had a british accent. He was such a nice and kind man and just brilliant.

This is the summary on his website of Morphic fields. It does not really get into the details of the book but you will enjoy reading I think! It is kind of dry, but the book is much better. This just kind of gives you some background on the subject.

MORPHIC RESONANCE AND MORPHIC FIELDS
An Introduction

by Rupert Sheldrake

In the hypothesis of formative causation, discussed in detail in my books A NEW SCIENCE OF LIFE and THE PRESENCE OF THE PAST, I propose that memory is inherent in nature. Most of the so-called laws of nature are more like habits.

My interest in evolutionary habits arose when I was engaged in research in developmental biology, and was reinforced by reading Charles Darwin, for whom the habits of organisms were of central importance. As Francis Huxley has pointed out, Darwin’s most famous book could more appropriately have been entitled The Origin of Habits.

Morphic fields in biology
Over the course of fifteen years of research on plant development, I came to the conclusion that for understanding the development of plants, their morphogenesis, genes and gene products are not enough. Morphogenesis also depends on organizing fields. The same arguments apply to the development of animals. Since the 1920s many developmental biologists have proposed that biological organization depends on fields, variously called biological fields, or developmental fields, or positional fields, or morphogenetic fields.

All cells come from other cells, and all cells inherit fields of organization. Genes are part of this organization. They play an essential role. But they do not explain the organization itself. Why not?

Thanks to molecular biology, we know what genes do. They enable organisms to make particular proteins. Other genes are involved in the control of protein synthesis. Identifiable genes are switched on and particular proteins made at the beginning of new developmental processes. Some of these developmental switch genes, like the Hox genes in fruit flies, worms, fish and mammals, are very similar. In evolutionary terms, they are highly conserved. But switching on genes such as these cannot in itself determine form, otherwise fruit flies would not look different from us.

Many organisms live as free cells, including many yeasts, bacteria and amoebas. Some form complex mineral skeletons, as in diatoms and radiolarians, spectacularly pictured in the nineteenth century by Ernst Haeckel. Just making the right proteins at the right times cannot explain the complex skeletons of such structures without many other forces coming into play, including the organizing activity of cell membranes and microtubules.

Most developmental biologists accept the need for a holistic or integrative conception of living organization. Otherwise biology will go on floundering, even drowning, in oceans of data, as yet more genomes are sequenced, genes are cloned and proteins are characterized.

I suggest that morphogenetic fields work by imposing patterns on otherwise random or indeterminate patterns of activity. For example they cause microtubules to crystallize in one part of the cell rather than another, even though the subunits from which they are made are present throughout the cell.

Morphogenetic fields are not fixed forever, but evolve. The fields of Afghan hounds and poodles have become different from those of their common ancestors, wolves. How are these fields inherited? I propose that that they are transmitted from past members of the species through a kind of non-local resonance, called morphic resonance.

The fields organizing the activity of the nervous system are likewise inherited through morphic resonance, conveying a collective, instinctive memory. Each individual both draws upon and contributes to the collective memory of the species. This means that new patterns of behaviour can spread more rapidly than would otherwise be possible. For example, if rats of a particular breed learn a new trick in Harvard, then rats of that breed should be able to learn the same trick faster all over the world, say in Edinburgh and Melbourne. There is already evidence from laboratory experiments (discussed in A NEW SCIENCE OF LIFE) that this actually happens.

The resonance of a brain with its own past states also helps to explain the memories of individual animals and humans. There is no need for all memories to be “stored” inside the brain.

Social groups are likewise organized by fields, as in schools of fish and flocks of birds. Human societies have memories that are transmitted through the culture of the group, and are most explicitly communicated through the ritual re-enactment of a founding story or myth, as in the Jewish Passover celebration, the Christian Holy Communion and the American thanksgiving dinner, through which the past become present through a kind of resonance with those who have performed the same rituals before.

The memory of nature
From the point of view of the hypothesis of morphic resonance, there is no need to suppose that all the laws of nature sprang into being fully formed at the moment of the Big Bang, like a kind of cosmic Napoleonic code, or that they exist in a metaphysical realm beyond time and space.

Before the general acceptance of the Big Bang theory in the 1960s, eternal laws seemed to make sense. The universe itself was thought to be eternal and evolution was confined to the biological realm. But we now live in a radically evolutionary universe.

If we want to stick to the idea of natural laws, we could say that as nature itself evolves, the laws of nature also evolve, just as human laws evolve over time. But then how would natural laws be remembered or enforced? The law metaphor is embarrassingly anthropomorphic. Habits are less human-centred. Many kinds of organisms have habits, but only humans have laws. The habits of nature depend on non-local similarity reinforcement. Through morphic resonance, the patterns of activity in self-organizing systems are influenced by similar patterns in the past, giving each species and each kind of self-organizing system a collective memory.

I believe that the natural selection of habits will play an essential part in any integrated theory of evolution, including not just biological evolution, but also physical, chemical, cosmic, social, mental and cultural evolution (as discussed in THE PRESENCE OF THE PAST ).

Habits are subject to natural selection; and the more often they are repeated, the more probable they become, other things being equal. Animals inherit the successful habits of their species as instincts. We inherit bodily, emotional, mental and cultural habits, including the habits of our languages.

Fields of the mind
Morphic fields underlie our mental activity and our perceptions, and lead to a new theory of vision, as discussed in THE SENSE OF BEING STARED AT. The existence of these fields is experimentally testable through the sense of being stared at itself. There is already much evidence that this sense really exists Papers on Staring

You can take part in a staring experiment yourself through this web site. Staring Experiments

The morphic fields of social groups connect together members of the group even when they are many miles apart, and provide channels of communication through which organisms can stay in touch at a distance. They help provide an explanation for telepathy. There is now good evidence that many species of animals are telepathic, and telepathy seems to be a normal means of animal communication, as discussed in my book DOGS THAT KNOW WHEN THEIR OWNERS ARE COMING HOME. Telepathy is normal not paranormal, natural not supernatural, and is also common between people, especially people who know each other well.

In the modern world, the commonest kind of human telepathy occurs in connection with telephone calls. More than 80% of the population say they have thought of someone for no apparent reason, who then called; or that they have known who was calling before picking up the phone in a way that seems telepathic. Controlled experiments on telephone telepathy have given repeatable positive results that are highly significant statistically, as summarized in THE SENSE OF BEING STARED AT and described in detailed technical papers which you can read on this web site. Papers on Telepathy Telepathy also occurs in connection with emails, and anyone who is interested can now test how telepathic they are in the online telepathy test. Experiments Online

The morphic fields of mental activity are not confined to the insides of our heads. They extend far beyond our brain though intention and attention. We are already familiar with the idea of fields extending beyond the material objects in which they are rooted: for example magnetic fields extend beyond the surfaces of magnets; the earth’s gravitational field extends far beyond the surface of the earth, keeping the moon in its orbit; and the fields of a cell phone stretch out far beyond the phone itself. Likewise the fields of our minds extend far beyond our brains.

February 2005

END OF ARTICLE

Now I want to relate this to Chaps and Emma. I have done my own scientific studies on this topic with the help of my Dad. Sheldrake’s theory holds up every time.

When I go out to run errands I have my Dad come down and sit with the kids. I never have a specific time or day of doing this. I might go weeks and not test the theory.

Every single time I go out Chaps or Emma or both of them together will get up about 5 minutes prior to me returning, again, at no specific time. They will wait by the window and cry. My Dad will know for a fact I am about to drive up. The test results are 100 percent.

My Dad cannot get over it. My Mom is usually with me. I love how Rupert wrote that,
“There is now good evidence that many species of animals are telepathic, and telepathy seems to be a normal means of animal communication.”

Wow – how about that? I had to share. I hope you enjoyed your lecture in this basset hound town master series!

My Mom always asks the kids, “What are you thinking”. I tell her that they know what you are thinking, so just think LOVE!

Life changing I tell you, life changing.

More telepathy later……Cat, Chaps and Emma

Comments

  1. Candy
    December 23rd, 2008 | 6:08 pm

    Cat – I received this book as a Christmas present about 5 years ago; love it; and have shared it with many, many friends. I have also been told that my dogs seem to know when I’m on my way home; whether it is from work, shopping or a dr. appointment. I think our dogs are truly tuned into something that we people are just too busy to pay attention to. Or maybe it is the bond of shared love.

    Either way, it is always comforting to know that no matter what life throws at you, there are living creatures who are just happy to have you in their lives. Somedays, that is more than enough to keep one going. Sorry – feeling a little blue today. . . thinking about the holiday and those no longer with us.

    This is a great topic. Thanks.

    Candy

  2. Cat
    December 23rd, 2008 | 6:14 pm

    Wow Candy that is just pawsome that you know about this. It makes me think that we are connected as well. You found me and now we are friends. I am so sorry to hear that you are feeling blue, but it is certainly understandable. I am thrilled that this post might have helped you out a little bit.

    The bond of shared love is such a miracle. We love you Candy……

    Cat, Chaps and Emma

  3. ken
    December 23rd, 2008 | 7:40 pm

    Cat, Buster and Lemon Drop know when Robin is bringing her Hounds over for a play day. About ten to fifteen Min. before she arrives they state howling and running to the door and look out the windows. This happens every time. Love Ken

  4. Cat
    December 23rd, 2008 | 7:42 pm

    Fantastic point Ken. It is not just owners. My kids do the same thing when my dear friend Lisa and her son come over!

    Are they not amazing? Kiss your kids for us!

    Cat

  5. Mary & Scully
    December 23rd, 2008 | 7:56 pm

    That’s pretty fascinating! My hubby and I are always amazed at how Scully gets up and waits near the front door shortly before one of us gets home. My parents used to notice the same thing when they would basset sit Scully for us.

    Even if I am out for a walk with her on my own, she lets me know that her Daddy will be home soon by the way she starts looking around for him and getting all excited. It never fails.

  6. Cat
    December 23rd, 2008 | 8:01 pm

    Dogs have a perfect knowledge in my opinion. I always tell my Mom that they know everything. We are the lucky ones that have such wonderful spirits in our life. Your Scully is a divine intervention! Just like all of our hounds. I know Candy and Ken will attest to that! Love you guys!

    Cat

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