Hello Explorers,
In today’s class, we’re focusing on a beautiful and essential part of remote viewing — something that can strengthen your signal line, increase your clarity, and help you trust your intuitive mind even more:
Drawing what you perceive.
You do not have to be an artist.
You don’t need to draw perfectly.
In fact — the less you try to make it “look right,” the better!
This is not about art.
This is about translating nonverbal intuition into physical expression.
Let’s explore why this matters and how to practice it.
🧠 Why Drawing Helps
Remote viewing often begins with nonverbal perception — shapes, colors, feelings, and sensory impressions that don’t come with names.
The act of drawing:
Bypasses the analytical mind
Keeps you connected to the signal line
Helps you stay in the intuitive state
And allows new information to come in as you draw
When you try to describe something with words too early, your mind often jumps in to “figure it out.”
But when you draw, your intuition stays in charge.
✨ What Should You Draw?
Start with the raw data — not what you think it is.
Examples:
A curved shape
A triangle inside a square
A tall vertical line next to a round object
Wavy lines that feel like water
Dots, clusters, or spirals
Arrows showing direction or movement
Let your pen or pencil follow what you feel or sense — without judgment.
You’re not trying to label the thing, you’re trying to express the structure or feeling of it.
🌀 The Drawing Process (Step-by-Step)
Start with a blank page.
Place the target number or cue at the top if you have one.
Close your eyes and tune in.
What’s the first impression that comes? A shape? A movement? A color?
Let your hand move.
Sketch what comes — a line, curve, cluster, texture. Don’t correct it. Don’t analyze it.
Add notes if needed.
You can jot down sensory words near the shapes: “cold,” “metallic,” “soft,” “buzzing,” “pulling,” etc.
Keep going in layers.
After your first sketch, pause. Breathe. Ask: “What else is here?” Then draw the next layer.
End when the impressions fade.
Don’t push past the natural stopping point.
🧘♀️ Tips to Stay in the Flow
Don’t erase anything. Even “mistakes” might be part of the data.
Let your hand move freely — you’re channeling perception, not creating a masterpiece.
Don’t label too early (avoid saying, “This must be a house,” etc.).
If something feels emotional or energetic, draw that too — maybe as color, shape, or movement.
Use symbols or lines for energy, motion, lightness, heaviness, tension, openness.
✍️ Weekly Practice Exercise
Try this in your next session:
Set a timer for 10 minutes.
Tune in to a blind target (ask someone to prepare one or use an online practice site).
Commit to drawing only for the first half — no words. Just draw what you perceive.
After 5 minutes, allow yourself to add short notes — but stay in the intuitive state.
At the end, review your drawing and then open the feedback.
Ask:
What matched?
What surprised me?
What part of my drawing felt most “alive” or intuitive?
This reflection builds awareness and confidence in your own style of perceiving.
💬 Final Thought
Your hand is an extension of your inner sight.
The more you draw what you sense, the more your intuition learns to speak through you.
Each line, squiggle, or symbol is a doorway to something unseen.
Remember: You’re not trying to draw the target — you’re drawing your connection to it.
Let it flow. Let it be messy. Let it be magic.
Watch this video: ‘How my friend Kristina drew what she perceived during a Remote Viewing session.
With trust in your perception,
Dr Irina Webster
