Remote Viewing with Intuitive Healing
Remote Viewing with Intuitive Healing

E-class 20: Colors and Remote Viewing

Hello Explorers,

Today we’re exploring a very interesting topic — Colors and Remote Viewing.


Colors influence how we experience and interpret the world, and they play a very important role in Remote Viewing.
They can trigger sensory impressions, evoke emotions, and provide both literal and symbolic information about a target.
In RV, noticing and recording color impressions can significantly increase accuracy and add richness to your session data.

This lesson will help you:

– Understand how colors function in RV.

– Work with both literal and symbolic color impressions.

– Use a structured method (in my case, 47 color cards) to strengthen your perception and interpretation skills.

1. Why Colors Matter in Remote Viewing

Literal accuracy
Colors can point directly to elements in the target: blue sky, red car, green foliage.

Symbolic clues
Your subconscious may choose a color to represent a mood, energy, or abstract quality of the target. For example:

Blue → calmness, distance, coolness.

Red → urgency, passion, danger.

Green → nature, healing, renewal.

Environmental hints
Colors can suggest time of day, weather, materials, or cultural elements. For instance, “gold” might hint at sunlight, wealth, or ceremonial objects.

2. Literal vs. Symbolic Color Perceptions

Color Literal Possibilities Symbolic / Associative Meanings
Blue Water, sky, uniforms Calmness, sadness, coolness
Green Vegetation, camouflage Growth, healing, balance
Red Fire, bricks, blood Danger, urgency, passion
Yellow Sand, flowers, metals Optimism, caution, energy
White Snow, paper, light Purity, emptiness, spirituality
Black Shadows, asphalt, night Mystery, protection, secrecy
Gray Smoke, metal, concrete Neutrality, dullness, transition
Orange Fruits, rocks, fabrics Creativity, vitality, warning
Purple Flowers, cloth Spirituality, luxury, mystery
Brown Soil, wood, leather Stability, nature, grounding

3. Working with Colors in a Remote Viewing Session

The most important principle: describe, don’t label.
Instead of saying “blood,” you would write “dark red, thick.” Instead of “tree,” write “green, rough texture, vertical.”

Practical Steps

Notice and record colors immediately when they arise — even fleeting impressions.

Add qualifiers such as:

Bright / dull

Warm / cool tone

Transparent / opaque

Metallic / matte

Avoid guessing the object connected to the color until after the session.

4. Using a Structured Color Reference in Training

In my classes, I use a set of 47 color cards I developed for training purposes.
Each card shows a precise color swatch and has an associated meaning based on both literal and symbolic associations.

Here’s how we use them as a practice tool:

Pre-Session Warm-Up

Students pick a random card face down.

They focus on the color (without looking at the meaning) and write down any sensations, emotions, or textures that come to mind.

Only afterwards do they compare their impressions to the written meaning.

During the RV Session

When a color is perceived, students select the matching card from the deck and place it beside their notes (meaning hidden).

This reinforces the impression without analysis.

Post-Session Review

After feedback, they check whether the colors matched literally (present in the target) or symbolically (related to target mood/energy).

This process trains both raw sensory perception and symbolic interpretation, without forcing early analysis.

5. Real-Life Examples of Color Data in RV

Case 1 – Literal Match
Sarah perceived “deep blue, cold, heavy.” Target: frozen lake in winter.

Case 2 – Symbolic Match
Mark perceived “bright yellow, warmth, excitement.” Target: joyful summer festival (yellow was not dominant visually but matched the emotional tone).

Case 3 – Mixed Hit
William noted “dark gray, metallic.” Target: submarine (gray metal hull = literal; “oppressive” feeling from gray matched environment).

6. Practice Tips

Record every color impression, even if it feels random.

Pair colors with texture, temperature, and emotional tone.

Review past sessions to see if certain colors recur with specific types of targets.

Use a color journal to track your patterns over time.

Conclusion

Colors in Remote Viewing are not just decorative details — they are a core part of how your subconscious communicates information about a target.
By paying attention to both literal and symbolic aspects, and by training your awareness with structured tools like color cards, you can improve accuracy, richness, and confidence in your viewing sessions.

Many people have asked me where to get the Chromotherapy Healing Cards that support Remote Viewing and boost intuition — you can find them here https://dririnawebster.com/energy-healing-cards/