Remote Viewing with Intuitive Healing
Remote Viewing with Intuitive Healing

Eclass 28: How to Use Remote Viewing for Decision-Making.

Hello Explorers,

Today we’re diving into a powerful, practical way to use your intuitive abilities — not just to perceive, but to navigate life with clarity and confidence.

💡 How to Use Remote Viewing for Decision-Making
Whether you’re choosing between two paths, exploring a future possibility, or just trying to get unstuck, Remote Viewing can help you bypass fear and confusion — and connect to your deeper knowing.

Let’s explore how.

🧠 1. Why Use Remote Viewing for Decisions?
Your rational mind often runs in circles when faced with choices.

“What if I make the wrong one?”

“Should I follow logic or intuition?”

“What will happen if…?”

Remote Viewing allows you to:

Step outside emotional bias

Receive neutral, clear impressions

Explore potential timelines

Sense the energy of a choice

Feel how your body responds to each path

You’re not predicting the future — you’re perceiving possible outcomes from a calm, intuitive state.

📌 2. Framing the Right Question
The quality of your session depends on your question. Avoid asking “Should I?” or “Will I?” — these are analytical.

Instead, ask:

“Describe the outcome of Path A.”

“What is the energy surrounding this opportunity?”

“What do I need to know about accepting this offer?”

“Describe the impact of this choice 3 months from now.”

“How will I feel if I take this route?”

These are descriptive and observational, not predictive.

You can assign coordinates like:

Target 1043-A: Staying in this job

Target 1043-B: Accepting the new role

Then do a session on each one separately.

🧘 3. Preparing Yourself for a Clean Session

Before doing a session, get into a clear state:

Ground yourself

Let go of emotional attachment

Be open to what is, not what you hope

Remind yourself: “I’m receiving, not choosing.”

This helps you access neutral, accurate data — without projecting your desires or fears into the session.

✍️ 4. Running the Session
When viewing a potential decision path, focus on:

Visuals: What do you see or sense? (environment, tone, symbols)

Emotions: How do you feel in that version of reality?

Sensations: Lightness? heaviness? flow? tension?

Energy: Is the scene vibrant or dull? Calm or chaotic?

Symbolic clues: Bridges, doors, colors, animals, etc.

Write and sketch freely. Don’t try to “figure it out.” Just observe what emerges.

Then repeat the process with the alternate choice.

🔁 5. Comparing Two (or More) Paths
Now that you’ve viewed both options, reflect on:

Which path felt more aligned with peace, clarity, or opportunity?

Did either path feel blocked, heavy, or disconnected?

What sensations, symbols, or metaphors stood out?

What emotional tone lingered after each viewing?

This comparison can reveal not only which direction feels best — but why.

Your intuition speaks in subtle signals. Learn to listen to the difference in energy.

🧪 6. Practice Prompts

Here are some example decision-based prompts for your members to try:

“Describe the emotional result of moving to a new city.”

“What is the energetic impact of ending this relationship?”

“Show me the most aligned timeline for my creative project.”

“What is the long-term feeling of launching this product?”

“Which investment path brings growth and clarity?”

These can be real-life decisions or practice targets.

⚠️ 7. Tips & Cautions

Detach from outcome: Don’t force it. Let the data come naturally.

Be kind to yourself: RV offers guidance, not rules.

Don’t over-view: One or two sessions per choice is enough.

Trust small clues: Even subtle impressions can speak volumes.

Record everything: You’ll often see the meaning in hindsight.

🌟 Final Thought
Remote Viewing for decision-making isn’t about “getting it right.”
It’s about connecting to clarity — the part of you that already knows.

Your intuitive mind holds wisdom your analytical brain can’t access.
You don’t have to chase answers — just receive them.

Let your deeper self show you the way.

With presence and perception,
Dr Irina Webster