It sounds impossible. Then you see your own sketch.
"I think I know this person." — the reaction people keep having.
There's a strange, quietly viral thing happening online right now, and I can't stop thinking about it.
People are asking a psychic artist to draw the face of their soulmate — someone they haven't met yet — and posting their reactions. Some are laughing. Some are crying. A surprising number are saying the same unsettling thing: "I think I know this person."
I went in as a skeptic. I came out… not quite a believer, but definitely not laughing anymore. Let me explain how it works, because it's simpler than you'd think.
Here's what got me. It's not really about whether the drawing is "accurate" in some courtroom sense. It's what it does to you.
The women I talked to described the same thing: after they saw their sketch, they started paying attention again. They looked up in coffee shops. They said yes to the party they'd normally skip. One told me, "It's like the drawing gave me permission to believe someone was actually out there." A few weeks later, she met a man with — her words — "the same stupid crooked smile."
Your other half is, in a sense, already out there — just as curious to find you as you are to find them.
Whether you read that literally or not, it does something to the chest, doesn't it?
"I met my soulmate two weeks after my sketch arrived. I still can't believe it."— a result echoed across Tina's 43,285+ drawings
So here's my honest take. If some quiet part of you has been wondering — who's out there for me? — this is a low-risk, oddly beautiful way to ask the question out loud. No promises. Just a face, a feeling, and maybe the nudge you needed to start looking up.
The video on the next page explains the whole thing. Watch it the way I did — skeptical, but open.
Get your own soulmate sketch →Is this the face you've been dreaming of? See for yourself— Elena
Show me my soulmate's face →Takes 60 seconds to start