Aura Colours And What They May Reveal About The Soul
- The Angel Communicator

- Feb 27
- 3 min read
Updated: Mar 8

Every now and then someone mentions auras.
Maybe you’ve heard someone say they can see them. Maybe you’ve come across charts explaining what each colour supposedly means.
Red for strength. Blue for calm. Purple for intuition.
At first it can sound a little mystical, maybe even hard to take seriously.
But the idea behind auras didn’t appear out of nowhere.
Across many cultures people have long believed that human beings carry some kind of subtle energy. Not something visible to everyone, but something that can be sensed, felt, or interpreted through colour and symbolism.
Whether someone believes auras are literal energy fields or simply a way of describing emotional states, the idea raises an interesting question.
Why do certain colours feel connected to certain personalities?
The Idea That Emotions Carry Their Own Energy
Think about how people describe moods.
Someone who is angry might be described as “seeing red.” Calm situations are often described as blue or peaceful. Creative energy is frequently associated with purple.
Even people who don’t believe in auras still instinctively link colours with emotional states.
Because of this, aura colour systems may simply be another way of describing emotional and personality patterns through visual language.
Why People Believe Some Individuals Can See Auras
Some people claim they can actually see colours around others.
Science hasn’t proven that visible aura fields exist in the way spiritual traditions describe them. But researchers have explored something called synesthesia, where certain individuals experience sensory
crossover.
In some cases, people who believe they see auras may be interpreting subtle emotional signals through colour associations in their mind.
The Colours People Often Associate With Personality
Over time, common patterns have emerged in how people interpret aura colours.
Red is often linked to strong will, determination, and physical energy.
Blue tends to be associated with calm personalities and strong communication.
Yellow is often connected to optimism, curiosity, and intellectual energy.
Green is frequently linked with empathy, healing, and emotional awareness.
Purple is often described as intuitive or reflective.
These interpretations don’t necessarily mean someone permanently carries one colour.
Many people who believe in auras think the colours shift depending on mood, stress, or personal growth.
Why People Are Drawn To The Idea Of Auras
The real appeal of aura discussions may not be whether the colours are literally visible.
It’s the idea that human beings carry emotional signals that others can sense.
Most of us have experienced walking into a room and immediately picking up on someone’s mood.
You notice tension before anyone speaks.
You feel calm around certain people without knowing why.
Aura language may simply be a symbolic way of describing that awareness.
The More Interesting Possibility
Instead of asking whether auras are real in a literal sense, another question might be more interesting.
Why do humans feel that certain people carry a particular presence?
Some people feel grounding to be around. Others feel energetic or inspiring. Some people naturally calm
a room the moment they arrive.
Those impressions may not appear as coloured light.
But they are still forms of emotional energy people sense in one another.
The Quiet Meaning Behind The Idea
Whether someone believes in auras as spiritual energy fields or simply as symbolic language, the concept reflects something true about human nature.
We are constantly reading one another.
Not just words, but tone, posture, emotion, and intention.
Sometimes those signals are so subtle that describing them as colours becomes the easiest way to understand them.
And maybe that’s the real reason the idea of auras continues to fascinate people.
It reminds us that human beings communicate far more than we realise, often without saying a single word.



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