Interspecies Communication

Interspecies communication is form of “extended ” or “shared” awareness. We don’t always know how the information is transferred, but people who can lower their brain waves, seem to have better and more clear communication than people who are always in a “busy mind”.

Mary Ann pioneered the scientific field of Interspecies Communication, when as a wildlife biology undergraduate in 1975, she showed how our brain waves can alter the outcome of wildlife observation inventories, thus showing that the scientific method of being the “objective observer” can give limited and sometimes false data.

By becoming a “passive participant” and observing the system without influencing it, her data showed that more accurate results could be obtained on the numbers, types and movement of species within a certain area.

Direct observation of “looking at” instead of “looking with” seemed to cause “observation stress” to the animals.

Mary Ann continued research in interspecies communication and obtained her Masters degree in Interdisciplinary Consciousness investigating Human-Animal Interactions and Healing in 1990.

Developing the O.F.F.E.R Techniques in 1979, Mary Ann has trained scientists and other biologists as well as thousands of other professionals in non-verbal communication.

Her work in cognitive ethology and interspecies communication has been published in a variety of magazines and she has given a number of papers since 1981 on the topic.

Please contact Mary Ann for more information at 360. 573.1958