What Intuitive Readings Are — and What They Are Not

Many people are unsure what intuitive readings actually are and often equate them with psychic readings or future predictions. In this article, I explain how I understand intuitive work — shaped by an innate intuitive sensitivity, developed over years of meditation, and informed by professional experience in psychiatric settings. My approach is direct and based on intuitive perception, without the use of tools or external systems. Rather than predicting outcomes, it focuses on perceiving present-moment dynamics, emotional patterns, and underlying processes to support clear, grounded insight.

The Intuitive Reading Room

4/20/20261 min read

When people first come across intuitive readings, they often associate them with something abstract, mystical, or unpredictable. Terms like “psychic reading” are frequently used interchangeably, but they don’t fully reflect how I understand or practice this work.

My approach is shaped by several influences. Alongside my professional training and therapeutic work within psychiatric settings, I’ve had an innate intuitive sensitivity from an early age. Over the past ten years, this sensitivity has been refined through consistent meditation practice and dedicated intuitive training.

As a result, my work is not based on personal experience alone, but on the integration of trained perception, professional context, and long-term inner development.

An intuitive reading is not about predicting the future or delivering fixed answers. It focuses on perceiving what is already present, but not always consciously accessible — such as emotional dynamics, internal conflicts, or underlying patterns influencing a situation.

This is where my work differs from what is often described as a “psychic reading.” Rather than focusing on future-telling or external information, I work with reflection, awareness, and present-moment clarity. The intention is not to provide certainty, but to support a deeper understanding of one’s own process.

At the same time, my work is not purely clinical. My background in psychiatry informs how I recognize patterns and hold space, while intuitive perception adds a layer that has been consciously developed over years of practice.

Intuitive readings, as I understand them, exist between these perspectives. They are neither a replacement for therapy nor detached from reality, but offer a complementary way of making sense of complex inner and relational experiences.

Ultimately, this work is defined by how these elements come together: sensitivity, training, and experience — working in alignment rather than in isolation.

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