Hello Explorers,
Today we step into one of the most fascinating and challenging applications of Remote Viewing:
🔍 Psychic Detective Work
Using intuitive perception to assist in locating missing people, solving mysteries, or helping with unresolved cases.
Video: Can Remote Viewing Help Crack Cold Cases? Psychic Detective Insights
This work goes beyond curiosity — it involves ethics, emotional depth, and clarity of perception. It can be incredibly rewarding, but also requires care, neutrality, and strong self-awareness.
Let’s explore how to approach this kind of viewing safely and effectively.
🧠 1. What Is Psychic Detective Work?
Psychic detective work involves using Remote Viewing or intuitive methods to gain insight into:
Missing persons cases
Unsolved crimes
Cold cases
Disappeared objects, vehicles, or animals
Mysterious deaths or events
You’re not trying to “solve” the case logically — you’re contributing intuitive data that could support official efforts or provide deeper understanding for those involved.
⚖️ 2. Ethics First: What You MUST Consider
This type of work touches lives — so ethics are vital.
Before beginning, ask yourself:
Do I have permission to view this target?
Am I emotionally stable and clear-headed?
Is my intention to help, not to judge or control?
Can I stay detached from the outcome?
Will I avoid making direct claims or accusations?
Never accuse or name a suspect based on a session. Your role is to provide sensory, energetic, or emotional impressions — not conclusions.
🧘♀️ 3. Preparing Yourself Mentally
Psychic detective targets can carry heavy emotional energy. People may be grieving, anxious, or desperate for answers.
To prepare:
Ground yourself before viewing
Set a strong intention to be a neutral observer
Surround your space with calm, protective energy
Release any need to “get it right” — just receive
You’re tuning into energy, not drama. Stay centered.
🧭 4. What to Focus on During the Session
When Remote Viewing for a psychic detective case, your focus might include:
Location clues:
Environment (rural/urban, indoor/outdoor)
Landmarks (near water, road, structure, hill, field)
Sounds (traffic, birds, silence, voices)
Emotional atmosphere:
Feelings at the scene (panic, confusion, peace)
The tone of the surrounding energy
Shifts in emotion during timeline changes
Objects or people involved:
Descriptions of surroundings
A person’s state of being (alive, unconscious, passed)
Clothing, vehicles, rooms, tools, symbols
Timeline elements:
What happened before, during, after the key moment?
Is there movement from one location to another?
Did the energy feel rushed or calm?
✍️ 5. How to Document Clearly
This is important. Always:
Draw and label your sketches
Use descriptive, not analytical language
(e.g., “a tall figure wearing dark fabric” not “a man in a hoodie”)
Avoid guessing — just describe what comes
Include directional impressions (e.g., “feels south of water,” “under trees”)
Use phrases like:
👉 “I perceive…”
👉 “I sense a feeling of…”
👉 “There may be…”
This keeps your data neutral and clean.
🧪 6. Practice Cases to Build Confidence
Start with historical or solved cases:
Famous disappearances
Solved murders
Recovered missing persons or pets
Compare your session to known outcomes. This builds trust in your signal line and helps you spot your own patterns.
You can also team up with other viewers for practice and compare notes afterward.
⚠️ 7. Things to Be Mindful Of
Avoid emotional attachment: This clouds data.
Don’t seek praise or validation: This pulls you out of the intuitive state.
Avoid becoming the “rescuer”: Maintain neutrality.
Never give out information unless authorized or trained to do so.
And most importantly — respect the families and people involved.
🌟 Final Thought
Psychic detective work is a sacred responsibility. When done with care, humility, and clear intention, it can bring peace, guidance, and healing.
You are not here to solve — you’re here to listen, perceive, and offer what the intuition brings forward.
Be respectful. Be gentle.
And always be grounded in compassion.
With clarity and care,
Dr Irina Webster
