Hello Explorers,
This week we’re tuning in to something dynamic — something that challenges us to go beyond static impressions and follow the flow of energy and events.
Welcome to:
🧭 Tracking Movement: Remote Viewing in Motion
Many targets aren’t still images — they involve motion, change, and flow. Whether it’s a person walking, a vehicle traveling, or energy shifting across time and space, movement adds a layer of complexity and richness to your viewing.
Let’s explore how to recognize and follow that movement intuitively.
🔄 1. Why Viewing Motion Matters
Most of reality isn’t still — it’s always in motion.
By learning to track motion intuitively, you:
Expand your sensory awareness
Improve your ability to describe time-based events
Strengthen your confidence in flowing data
Deepen your connection to your signal line
Viewing motion helps you get beyond “snapshots” and into the living, breathing essence of a target.
🧠 2. How Movement Shows Up in Sessions
Movement in Remote Viewing often appears as:
A change in temperature, emotion, or sound
Shifts in direction, energy, light, or form
Kinetic sensations in the body (tingling, rising, falling, swinging)
Visual metaphors (e.g., a wave crashing, a wind blowing, a spinning wheel)
You might not see a “person running,” but feel:
Forward pull
Rapid movement to the left
High energy + tension
A sense of motion across terrain
👉 The key is to trust and follow it — even if you don’t understand it yet.
🎯 3. Practicing Tracking Movement
To practice, use targets that involve action:
A race
A vehicle in motion
A meteor falling
An animal migrating
A rescue mission
A performance or ritual
A river flowing or a storm rolling in
Start by asking:
“Is there movement here?”
“Where is the energy going?”
“What is the pace, direction, or feeling of this motion?”
Then describe it:
Fast, slow, rising, spiraling, jolting, flowing, crashing…
✍️ 4. Let Your Descriptions Flow
Use verbs and dynamic descriptors in your notes and sketches.
Instead of:
🟥 “There is a red shape.”
Try:
🌀 “Something red is moving rapidly downward in a zigzag motion.”
Encourage yourself to sketch motion lines or sequence-like progressions. Arrows, waves, and directional symbols can be very helpful.
You can even try a three-part breakdown:
Beginning of the motion
Middle / transition
End / resolution
This helps you “ride the wave” of the movement.
🧘 5. Letting Go of Control
Tracking movement requires a little surrender.
You may not know what is moving, or why — but you’ll feel:
Pull
Speed
Rhythm
Change
Don’t analyze — just let the flow carry you. Like dancing, the movement will show you where to go.
🧪 6. Sample Practice Prompts
Try blind targets with questions like:
“Describe the dominant movement at the target.”
“Track the direction and flow of energy.”
“What changes over time in this scene?”
“What does your body sense about the motion here?”
Movement often shows up stronger when you ask for it.
⚠️ 7. Common Challenges & Tips
Overthinking – If you try to “name” what’s moving too soon, you may block the flow.
Mislabeling – Motion impressions can be metaphorical (e.g., “a whirlpool” might mean emotional turbulence, not water).
Forcing direction – If the energy feels like it’s going right, don’t change it to match logic. Go where the data leads.
💡 Tip: Sometimes your body gives subtle cues — leanings, tension, or internal rhythm. Listen to those!
🌟 Final Thought
Learning to track motion through Remote Viewing gives you access to time-based awareness, a deeper feel for real-world dynamics, and a stronger intuitive flow.
When the target moves — you move with it.
Let go of stillness.
Embrace the flow.
Ride the river of perception.
Your inner senses already know how.
With rhythm and trust,
Dr Irina Webster
