Remote Viewing with Intuitive Healing
Remote Viewing with Intuitive Healing

Eclass 16: How to Ask Better Questions…

Hello Explorers,

One of the most powerful things you can do to sharpen your accuracy, expand your perceptions, and get clearer results in your Remote Viewing sessions is this:

Learn to ask better questions.

Remote Viewing isn’t just about receiving data — it’s about how you engage with the unknown.
The way you frame your questions will either open doors or shut them.

Let’s dive into why the quality of your question matters, and how to ask in a way that invites your intuition to respond with clarity.

🌀 Why Questions Matter in Remote Viewing
Your mind is like a search engine — it will try to answer whatever question you ask it.

So if you ask:

“Is this a house?” your mind may start guessing, imagining, or comparing to houses.

“What do I want this to be?” — you’ll get wishful thinking.

“What should I see?” — you invite pressure and logic.

But when you ask:

“What is here?”

“What are the textures, shapes, and sensations?”

“What does this remind me of — without labeling it?”

“What is the emotional atmosphere here?”

— You invite open, intuitive perception.

Your inner senses can breathe.

💡 Good Questions Are:
Neutral – They don’t assume anything.

Open-ended – They allow space for many types of answers.

Focused on perception – Not identity or naming.

These types of questions help you stay connected to your signal line, rather than slipping into imagination or analysis.

🔍 Examples: Shifting Into Better Questions
Let’s say you start perceiving a tall vertical structure.

Here’s how you might shift your questions:

Instead of asking… Ask instead…
“Is this a building?” “What is the shape and height of this structure?”
“Is this a person?” “What movement, energy, or emotion is present?”
“What is this thing?” “How does this feel? What is its texture, temperature, sound?”
You’re not jumping to conclusions — you’re staying with raw perception.

🧠 Asking Your Intuitive Mind
Once you’ve written down or drawn your initial perceptions, you can pause and ask your intuitive mind gentle follow-up questions, like:

“What else is here?”

“Am I inside or outside this space?”

“Is this object natural or man-made?”

“Is there movement?”

“What’s the emotional tone here?”

“If this could speak, what would it say?”

And then — listen.
The answer may not be in words. It may be a shift in body feeling, an image, a sensation, or even a silence that feels like something.

📚 Practice: The “Question Ladder”
In your next session, try this:

Start with your first raw perceptions. Write or sketch them.

Then ask a follow-up question — one that’s neutral and open.
Example:

“What shape is this?”

“How does this feel?”

“What am I touching here?”

Let the answer come before you ask the next question.

Build a little ladder of questions — going deeper with each step.

After the session, review which questions brought in the clearest data.

This is how you train your mind to listen instead of guess.

🚫 Questions to Avoid
Here are some question styles that usually interfere with your signal:

❌ “What is this?” (too vague — invites the analytical mind)

❌ “Is it a car, a house, a person?” (too specific — invites guessing)

❌ “Should I know this?” (adds pressure and ego)

❌ “What do I want this to be?” (fantasy or desire gets in the way)

You don’t need to know what it is.
You only need to know what it feels like — and describe that.

🌟 Final Thought
In Remote Viewing, your job is not to solve a puzzle.
Your job is to describe an experience, one layer at a time — without forcing it.

Better questions lead to deeper presence and more accurate results.

Stay neutral. Stay curious. And let your questions be doorways — not walls.

With clarity and curiosity,
Dr Irina Webster