The idea of “clairvoyance” carries a mystical aura. But if we look into the origin of it, we find that the term itself comes from French and simply means clear vision. I t is often interpreted as a rare, otherworldly gift granted to a select few. This framing can leave many people feeling excluded or frustrated, as if they lack a special trait that others mysteriously possess. A more grounded and empowering explanation exists. Neuroscience offers a model known as predictive processing —the idea that the brain constantly generates predictions about the world and updates them based on incoming sensory information. This is not a supernatural talent. It is a basic feature of human cognition, something everyone uses every moment of the day. What some traditions have called “clairvoyant” ability could potentially be understood as a refined version of this natural process. People who have practiced mindfulness, meditation, or other attention-training disciplines tend to become more aware of...
Human beings have always read the sky as narrative. Long before spectroscopy and orbital mechanics, people looked upward and saw mirrors — mythic, psychological, collective. The zodiac was never merely a calendar; it was a map of consciousness. When an interstellar visitor like 3I/ATLAS breaches the solar boundary and threads its way through this celestial map, it invites a form of reading older than science. We are invited into the synthesis of symbol, sky, and the psyche within the persistent, subterranean motifs in myth, the link between the masculine principle and chaos‑confrontation. We are not just talking about male as in “men,” but male as in the symbolic polarity associated with thrust, initiative, differentiation — the principle that meets disorder head‑on and tries to carve form out of it. Cultures encoded that into serpent battles because serpents represented two things simultaneously: primordial vitality (ancient chaos powers) and destabilizing entropy. They were the perfe...