On average it happens a few times a month. I’ll have a dream about someone and something happening to them and then a few days or weeks later, I’ll discover the scenario in my dream happened in real life. It’s always been this way. One night when I was 19 I dreamt of my grandmother being reborn as a baby but with her elderly head. I woke to my university halls of residence landline ringing, went to it and heard my father tell me my gran had died in the night.
Then there was the time I dreamt of a tower with bodies falling from it in graphic detail. A few days later the World Trade Center tragedy happened. I dreamt of my father lying still in a contraption in a wall. That year he started radiotherapy for the cancer that killed him. And on the morning he died, in 2005, I had a strange feeling of everything ‘stopping’ and that I should not get the train to work. He died that morning.
Psychic ability
So, I’ve always felt a little bit psychic. But often I ignore my dreams or feelings, or I forget them. Like the time I had a dream that I should not go down a path. Next morning I went walking and saw this path I had dreamt of. Ignoring my gut instinct I walked down it, only to be flashed at by a man in the bushes. So what use is a tiny nugget of psychic ability if I don’t listen to it or interpret it correctly? And can someone like me be ‘trained’ to get better at it?
I contacted celebrity psychic Inbaal Honigman. Inbaal has been psychic all her life, doing tarot readings from age 20. She’s appeared on Big Brother as the reality TV show’s resident psychic to see who would be voted off. Now she runs courses helping psychics improve their skills. Our first session starts with a Zoom call. Inbaal is bubbly, friendly, personable and tells me that everyone has the ability to be psychic but they need to nurture it.
This story is from the June 24, 2024 edition of WOMAN - UK.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the June 24, 2024 edition of WOMAN - UK.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
How to avoid a cold when partying
Burning the candle at both ends might seem fun at this time of year, but it can spell disaster for your health and wellbeing...
ASK US ANYTHING
SUZIE HAYMAN AND SUSAN QUILLIAM CAN HELP
MOWED DOWN after a Christmas party
Anna-Louise Bates has finally allowed herself to enjoy the festive season again
A weekend in...VILNIUS
A dreamy couple of days in Lithuania's captivating city can be easy on the purse
The letter that SAVE YOUR
Why do a third of women miss their breast cancer screenings?
New love in 2025 WOULD BENICE
Growing up in Bradford, West Yorkshire, to Punjabi Indian parents, Anita Rani says her household ‘didn’t really do Christmas’ – but boy, is she making up for it now!
'2024 has been DREADFUL'
Prince William admits that this year has been the hardest' in his life. Is blood thicker than water in times of need
The dark side to your CHRISTMAS NIGHT OUT
Do you know what’s in your glass this party season?
IS THERE ANYTHING MORE NOSTALGIC THAN CHRISTMASES PAST?
Do you remember the anticipation before the big day, pondering endlessly about what should go on your Christmas list? I would lovingly write two or three things down, pop it into an envelope and leave it by the fireplace to be wafted up the chimney like something out of Mary Poppins.
The Christmas that CHANGED OUR LIVES
We speak to three women about their most wonderful time of year