HOST: Welcome, good-natured viewers to another edition of Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants. Today we feature the first of a two-part series on 
Mary G etten, a telepathic animal communicator from the state of 
Washington, USA. 
Ms. Getten is the winner of the 2007 Nautilus 
Book Award for “Communicating with Orcas: The Whales’ Perspective.” As 
the title suggests, the book chronicles her inner conversations with 
Orcas and how these special beings view the world.  The Nautilus Book 
Award is for works that “contribute significantly to our society's 
well-being and that embrace spiritual and ecological values such as 
compassion, sustainability, simplicity, and global peace.”
Recently
 Ms. Getten kindly took time from her busy schedule to share with us 
some of the messages she has received while communicating on a 
heart-to-heart level with both wild and domestic animals.
Mary Getten (f): I am a professional 
telepathic animal communicator. 
I’ve spent the last 15 years talking
 to people’s animals around the world and I do most of my work on the 
phone. Telepathy is the universal language and so you don’t need to be 
with an animal; time and space really doesn’t matter. I’ve spent more 
than 25 years working with marine mammals and in my professional 
practice 
I spend most of my time talking to domestic animals. 
HOST: How did Ms. Getten become 
involved in communicating with animals?
Mary Getten (f): yeah, you know I loved animals as a 
child and I always wanted to work with animals. When I was in high 
school I used to read every National Geographic about Jane Goodall. 
But
 how I got involved with animal communication was when I was working at 
the Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito (USA). 
This was in the 
late 1980s. I met a teacher named Penelope Smith who is one of the 
founders of animal communication. And so I took a class from her because
 I thought if I could help at the Center talking to seals and sea lions 
where we didn’t know what was wrong with them, I would be a big asset. 
After
 I was in the Bay Area,I moved up to the San Juan Islands in 1990, which
 is an area of Washington State and British Columbia where there is a 
resident population of close to 90 orcas. 
And it was leading 
whale watch trips and seeing these guys that really got me to start 
working with my telepathic communication skills, because I wanted to 
know about those whales – who they were and what they thought about and 
all the questions that researchers can’t answer by just observing them. 
I
 realized that this is a way we can do research without all the grants 
and the degrees is talking to them directly.
For more details on Mary Getten, please visit 
www.MaryGetten.com“Communicating
 with Orcas: The Whales’ Perspective” is available at the same website