Fears and Phobias and the Power of Mind
The power of mind features many different aspects, and it can be a challenge to keep them straight at times. Clairvoyance is often confused with precognition, but is more along the lines of remote viewing. Literally meaning “clear vision,” clairvoyance is the psychic ability to obtain information through sight that you have no basis for knowing. These could be visions of the future, but unlike precognition, they are not always a glimpse into what has yet to occur.
Exercise is very important to developing and strengthening your clairvoyance. For this exercise, begin by selecting a place that you are familiar with, but not somewhere you go regularly. You will not be working in this space, but rather viewing it from afar. A room in a friend’s house might work for this, just as long as there is an element of mystery to the space. A public location also works well. A library or other quiet environment you do not visit regularly works wonders, especially if you have a general grasp of its layout. The goal of this exercise is to use the power of mind to create a clairvoyant telescope. This will help you be able to look into a location of your choice once your psychic talents have become stronger.
Are you afraid of height? Spiders? Snakes? Are you afraid of the dark? Many people share these rather common fears and phobias. We get them for various reasons, though some spring up just because we do not understand something or because someone else we know has that fear or phobia. If you have a common phobia, you may know others with the same one, or at least people understand that your fear is not all that uncommon. What do you do, however, when your issues are rather uncommon?
What you do depends on the fears and phobias that you have. If you have common fears, people almost have a respect for that and they may leave you alone about it. They may offer advice about how to overcome your fear, but they may not give you too much grief about it. However, if your fears and phobias are uncommon, they may not give you as much space as you would like. If someone you know has a fear of lady bugs, how often would you tell them it is silly and even try to get them to touch one? What about someone with a fear of the color blue? Would you wear that color often around them?
Filed under: General, Miscellaneous, People

