Current:Home > InvestI signed up for an aura reading and wound up in tears. Here's what happened. -Infinite Edge Capital
I signed up for an aura reading and wound up in tears. Here's what happened.
View
Date:2025-04-17 04:56:20
The tears filling my eyes are a surprise. I did not expect to cry while having my aura read for the first time, nor did I expect to feel... seen?
I’m not a complete stranger to spiritual assessments. In 2022, I connected virtually with Tyler Henry, a medium whose talents have spurred two television series. But during that reading, I could fact-check his premonitions. (He seemed to know a lot about my family, but not every instinct felt spot-on.) But how could I fact-check an interpretation of my aura, the most important of all color analyses?
Elizabeth April – pitched to me as a “spiritual wellness influencer, clairvoyant, intuitive psychic and bestselling author” – says she possesses “extra sensory abilities.” At 2, she says, her parents noticed her “seeing things. Probably energies and auras and spirits and ghosts.” I’m a Catholic. I believe in an afterlife, which I think includes ghosts. Auras, I’m less familiar with.
It's someone’s energy field, April says. Each color has an association, “typically different emotions or scenario situations." She also gathers intel from the size of someone’s aura.
Everyone's obsessedwith Olympians' sex lives. Why?
An editor encouraged me to “Just have fun with it,” before my reading. Cut to me crying. Here's what happened:
'What does the future hold?'
The first colors April sees in evaluating my aura are pink, orange and yellow, a color scheme that I think my nieces, 7 and 4, will approve of.
Pink represents my divine feminine energy and my levels of compassion and empathy, April says. Similarly orange touches on those qualities and points to my “observing, feeling” side. The yellow is my confidence.
“You're definitely someone who just knows what they want and goes after it,” April assesses. And then things begin to feel more specific.
Forest green indicates “this deep question in you of like, ‘What does the future hold? Where am I going?' ” April says. Bingo!
At the time of our reading, it’s 10 days before my birthday, an occasion that usually generates excitement. I’m not in a relationship so I’m not celebrating on Valentine’s Day or an anniversary. There’s no Aunt’s Day yet. So I get one day out of the year, and I typically savor it.
But this year, I’m in a panic. I’ll be 37, longing for a husband and kids, without even a prospect of a good date.
April asks about my relationship status.
“Single and looking, single and hopeful,” I tell her.
“Interesting,” April responds.
“Why? What do you what do you see?” I ask.
Do I have a 'past life'?
I have purple energy toward the back of my body signifying I have “past life stuff” to deal with, April says. It’s been blocking my romantic relationships. Well, at least there’s a diagnosis.
The pattern needing to be cleared is “not fully being seen within relationships,” April says. “You have a tendency to actually hide parts of yourself from men.”
More:Kamala Harris, Taylor Swift, Jennifer Aniston and when we reduce women to 'childless cat ladies'
I’m worried that being a strong, ambitious woman will intimidate men, April says. She's right. I am.
“But as we know, it is usually men who are not confident and authentic and strong, who are intimidated by a woman like that, who is not the type of man that you want to be dating anyway,” she says.
In the past year, I’ve “done a lot of inner work,” April says, and now I’m comfortable “unapologetically being yourself.” That's also true. That’s the yellow, the confidence, she says.
By talking about this pattern, it’s being cleared, April says. She predicts my soulmate will enter my life in one to two years. Now we’re talking!
“That's your person for the rest of your life,” she says. It fills me with ease, a balm for the wound that hurts most. He’ll be an “old soul,” who is a good communicator and empathetic. “Therefore, he's not intimidated by you stepping up and taking charge either. So there's going to be a really good balance there, rather than (someone) who's narcissistic and really doesn't see who you are.”
For me, being seen is both the scariest prospect and the thing I yearn for most. Every time I struggle to make small talk while others converse fluidly or try to connect with my girlfriends unsuccessfully, I feel "weird," as a sixth grade classmate once put it − an insult that stung.
And if I were to show that weird self to a romantic interest, surely they wouldn’t stick around. Just like no one has in the years that I’ve been dating. So that’s why the tears fall from my eyes. Without even saying much, April has been able to recognize the parts of me that I’m proudest of and given me full permission to be my unique self.
“Ooh, I get chills,” April says. I have them too. “You have so much to say. You are such a force to be reckoned with, and I feel like you've been playing it small, both in romantic relationships and in career, and this is your time. This is your time to be seen.”
Through sniffles, I tell April about feeling at a loss because I don’t have a husband or kids.
“What you've always wanted is coming to you,” she says. “So don't worry about that. Everything's in due time.”
When I meet my soulmate, we’ll fit like puzzle pieces April says.
Do I have a Starburst-colored aura? Will I meet my “puzzle piece” husband by 2026? Will April's predictions for my life come true, or is it easy to know what a single woman in her late 30s crying about being lonely wants to hear? For me, the answer to those questions is not what I am thinking about after the reading. I'm left pondering how much brighter my future can be if I am brave enough to show the world who I am.
veryGood! (1377)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- A Minnesota city will rewrite an anti-crime law seen as harming mentally ill residents
- Rudy Giuliani pleads not guilty as Trump allies are arraigned in Arizona 2020 election case
- Corn, millet and ... rooftop solar? Farm family’s newest crop shows China’s solar ascendancy
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Archaeologists search English crash site of World War II bomber for remains of lost American pilot
- Landmark Paris trial of Syrian officials accused of torturing, killing a father and his son starts
- A man charged with helping the Hong Kong intelligence service in the UK has been found dead
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Who's left in the 'Survivor' finale? Meet the remaining cast in Season 46
Ranking
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Surprise attack by grizzly leads to closure of a Grand Teton National Park mountain
- Victims of UK’s infected blood scandal to start receiving final compensation payments this year
- From London to Los Angeles, many Iranians overseas cheer, and fear, after president’s death
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- The Latest | UN food aid collapses in Rafah as Israeli leaders decry war crime accusations
- Trial of Sen. Bob Menendez takes a weeklong break after jurors get stuck in elevator
- Maker of popular weedkiller amplifies fight against cancer-related lawsuits
Recommendation
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
Trial of Sen. Bob Menendez takes a weeklong break after jurors get stuck in elevator
As New York’s Offshore Wind Work Begins, an Environmental Justice Community Is Waiting to See the Benefits
UN maritime tribunal says countries are legally required to reduce greenhouse gas pollution
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Effort to ID thousands of bones found in Indiana pushes late businessman’s presumed victims to 13
Reparations proposals for Black Californians advance to state Assembly
Flight attendant or drug smuggler? Feds charge another air crew member in illicit schemes