Clairvoyance — "clear seeing" — is the ability to receive information through inner vision. Most people who have it don't recognise it as such. They explain it away as imagination, vivid dreams or coincidence. These are the actual indicators worth paying attention to.
Dreams that feel different from ordinary ones — more intense, more real, with information that later proves accurate. These often precede significant events by days or weeks.
Random, uninvited visual flashes — a face, a scene, a symbol — that appear while awake. Often dismissed as imagination but arrive without deliberate effort.
Seeing something move in your peripheral vision when nothing is there. More common in clairvoyants, particularly in transition states (waking, falling asleep).
When someone describes something verbally, you see it immediately and clearly. Highly visual thinkers — writers, artists, visualisers — often have latent clairvoyant ability.
Even faintly — a colour, a shimmer, a quality of light around a person. Many clairvoyants dismissed this for years before understanding what it was.
When you understand something, it comes as an image rather than a verbal explanation. Visual metaphors dominate your thinking. You understand maps faster than directions.
Arriving somewhere new with a sense of visual recognition — you've seen it in a dream, a flash, or a vision you didn't understand at the time.
Closing your eyes and seeing imagery without trying to visualise — shapes, colours, scenes that shift like a screen. This is an open third eye, not imagination.
Alexandra Morozova · Clairvoyant · 12 years