When Other Beings Notice Your Presence During Astral Travel
- Nurit Weiss
- 3 days ago
- 3 min read

One of the most fascinating aspects of my astral experiences is the way other beings respond to my presence.
Most of the time, the beings I encounter seem completely unaware that I am there. They continue with whatever they are doing, almost as if I am invisible. Yet every so often, something different happens. A being will suddenly stop, turn, or react as though it has sensed a disturbance in its environment. The reaction often resembles surprise or curiosity, as if something unexpected has entered its space.
The closest comparison I can think of is how people describe seeing a ghost in the physical world. Imagine going about your day when suddenly you sense that someone is watching you, or you catch a glimpse of something that shouldn't be there. In these moments, I sometimes feel as though I am the ghost—an unseen visitor entering another reality.
Why do some beings notice while others do not?
One possibility is that certain beings are simply more sensitive to energetic shifts. Just as some people in the physical world seem naturally more intuitive or perceptive, perhaps some beings in nonphysical realms possess a heightened awareness that allows them to detect changes in the energetic environment around them.
Another possibility is that these beings exist in a state where awareness itself functions differently. If they inhabit the astral plane or a similar dimension, they may naturally be more attuned to subtle fluctuations in consciousness and energy. To them, my arrival might create a ripple that is impossible to ignore.
Over the years, I have also wondered whether some of these encounters are more than random interactions.
Could there be a deeper connection between us?
What if some of these beings are connected to my soul in ways I do not fully understand? Perhaps they are individuals I have known in other lifetimes, aspects of my own consciousness, or companions whose paths have crossed mine many times throughout existence.
When we explore ideas such as past lives, the nature of time becomes increasingly difficult to define. We tend to think of time as a straight line moving from past to present to future. Yet many spiritual traditions and personal experiences suggest that reality may not function that way at all.
What if time is not linear?
What if past, present, and future exist simultaneously, woven together within a greater framework of consciousness?
If that is the case, then when we access what appears to be a past life, we may not simply be observing a memory. We may actually be connecting with a living aspect of ourselves that exists within another layer of reality.
This possibility raises an even more intriguing question.
Just as I might encounter a version of myself from what I perceive as a past life, could another version of myself be encountering me?
Perhaps a future self, existing beyond my current perception of time, occasionally brushes against my reality. Perhaps when I sense an unusual energetic presence, I am not only observing another consciousness—I am also being observed.
The idea may sound extraordinary, yet it offers an interesting way to think about the interconnected nature of existence. If consciousness is not bound by the limitations we experience in physical life, then the boundaries between identities, lifetimes, and timelines may be far more fluid than we imagine.
In this view, astral travel becomes more than a journey through space. It becomes a journey through layers of consciousness, where multiple versions of reality overlap and interact.
The beings we encounter may not be strangers at all. They may be connected to us through unseen threads that stretch across lifetimes, dimensions, and timelines. Some may recognize those connections consciously, while others simply sense the energetic ripple of our presence.
Whatever the explanation may be, these experiences continue to leave me with a profound sense of wonder. They remind me that reality may be far richer and more interconnected than our physical senses reveal.
We are often taught to see ourselves as observers moving through a vast multidimensional universe.
Yet it may be that we are active participants in a living web of consciousness, continuously influencing and being influenced by countless forms of awareness across different layers of existence.