how do you use doves to read someone
How I Use Doves for Readings
When I offer a reading, I don’t begin with cards or questions—I begin with presence. I invite the dove, not as a symbol, but as a living oracle. These gentle messengers carry the breath of the Spirit, and their movements become the language through which divine insight flows.
Each dove reading is a sacred unfolding. I observe where the dove chooses to land, how it moves, and what it avoids. If it circles above the crown, I sense a message about divine alignment or spiritual awakening. If it lingers near the hands, it may be revealing a calling to create, to release, or to bless. The dove becomes a mirror, reflecting what the soul already knows but has not yet spoken.Sometimes, the dove will pause in stillness, and that silence becomes the message. Other times, it will flutter with urgency, drawing attention to a part of the body or a hidden emotion. I interpret these signs prayerfully, listening not only with my eyes but with my spirit.
The reading is not about prediction—it’s about revelation. The dove helps uncover what is ready to be seen, healed, or embraced. It may point to ancestral wounds, divine assignments, or hidden gifts waiting to rise. And always, the dove leads with gentleness, never force.
At the close of the reading, the dove’s departure is the benediction. It leaves when the message has been delivered, when the heart has heard what it needed most.


do you use your horse for readings
How a Horse Offers a Reading
A horse does not speak in words, but in presence. In stillness. In breath. When I bring someone into a session with Illusion, I am not asking the horse to perform—I am inviting him to reveal. Horses are prey animals, exquisitely attuned to energy, emotion, and intention. They read the nervous system like scripture. They feel what we hide.
As the session begins, Illusion will often approach slowly, sensing the unspoken. He may rest his muzzle near a wound—physical or emotional—or stand at a distance, mirroring the client’s guardedness. His body becomes a compass. If he circles behind someone, I know we are being invited to explore what’s been left in the shadows. If he places his heart near theirs, it is often a sign of deep resonance, a call to trust again.
Sometimes, he will stomp or snort, releasing energy that the client has not yet named. Other times, he will lower his head and breathe deeply, inviting the person to do the same. His movements are not random—they are sacred choreography, just like the doves. He becomes a mirror, a midwife, a  messenger.And when the reading is complete, he will often walk away—not out of disinterest, but as a benediction. The message has been delivered. The soul has been seen.

What do you want your clients to know?
What I Want You to Know
When you come to me, you’re not coming to be fixed—you’re coming to be seen. Fully. Tenderly. Without judgment.
I want you to know that the doves, the horse, the silence—they’re not tools. They’re companions in your healing. They respond to your spirit, not your story. You don’t have to explain everything. You don’t have to be ready. You just have to show up.I want you to know that your body carries wisdom. That your grief is not too much. That your longing is holy. That the places you’ve hidden are not shameful—they’re sacred ground waiting to be honored.
I want you to know that I will listen—not just to your words, but to the pauses between them. To the way your shoulders hold memory. To the way the dove hovers near your heart. To the way Illusion breathes when you speak.
This is not performance. This is presence. This is not therapy. This is encounter.
You are not broken. You are becoming.