The warning is stark, unsettling, and impossible to ignore. Nicolas Aujula, a London-based psychic who has previously claimed to have foreseen global events ranging from the Covid-19 pandemic to Donald Trump’s rise, and even some high-profile celebrity breakups, now delivers a chilling forecast for 2026. According to him, the upcoming year is set to be a maelstrom of chaos, scandal, and public humiliation, particularly for the former president. His visions are vivid and unrelenting: violent earthquakes tearing through regions, a “mysterious illness” that strikes suddenly and without warning, and a deeply humiliating accident involving Trump on the steps of an airplane. The psychic’s latest predictions read like the script of a dark political thriller, yet Aujula insists they are not fictional—they are images forced upon his mind with no pretense or dramatic flair, merely flashes that demand to be shared.
At just 39 years old, Nicolas Aujula says he never sought out these visions. They arrive unbidden, crashing into his consciousness like waves breaking over rocks. One moment, he sees buildings collapsing under their own weight, seas raging with an almost apocalyptic fury; the next, a lone figure struggles and stumbles on the steps of a plane, surrounded not by applause or adoring crowds but by the cold, unblinking glare of photographers, camera lenses capturing every misstep. In these glimpses, Aujula clearly identifies Donald Trump, a man he says is suddenly exposed not as the confident public persona millions recognize, but as someone vulnerable, human, and painfully fallible. The imagery is so vivid that the psychic struggles to convey the sense of dread that accompanies it—an event so public, so humiliating, that it could reshape perceptions of a former leader overnight.
Aujula’s visions extend far beyond a single political figure. He predicts catastrophic earthquakes striking southern Europe, Turkey, and various Pacific regions, leaving devastation in their wake. A “dangerous storm event,” almost biblical in scale, looms in his foresight, its violence and unpredictability threatening cities and communities in a way that challenges human preparedness. Alongside natural disasters, a sudden, mysterious illness emerges in his visions, one that strikes without warning, invisible until it manifests, akin to an aneurysm appearing out of nowhere. These glimpses are not confined to politics or nature; Aujula also sees turbulence in the royal world. He hints at a scandal involving Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, suggesting that the carefully curated public image they have built may crack under unseen pressures, revealing vulnerability, discord, or personal missteps that the public has yet to anticipate.
Whether one believes in psychic visions or dismisses them as coincidence, Aujula’s warnings carry a persistent, disquieting weight. They raise an unavoidable question: if he has been correct before, predicting events that later unfolded in ways few expected, what if these visions for 2026 also come to pass? The psychic’s pronouncements blend the personal, the political, and the natural, painting a year where the boundaries between public perception and private catastrophe blur. His warnings are not delivered with flourish or dramatics—they are clinical, almost journalistic in their precision—but they leave readers with a lingering sense of unease, a reminder that the future may hold shocks that no one, not even the most powerful or prepared, can fully anticipate.
In the end, Aujula’s prophecy is less about fear-mongering than it is about reflection. It challenges us to consider how fragile structures—political, societal, and natural—truly are. From the halls of power to royal palaces, from tectonic plates to human health, 2026, according to his visions, is poised to test resilience, humility, and perhaps even the very nature of public trust. Whether or not these events come to pass, the psychic’s account forces us to confront uncertainty in a world increasingly defined by unpredictability. And in that confrontation, Aujula’s message lingers: the future is never guaranteed, and those in positions of influence may find themselves at the mercy of forces far larger—and far stranger—than they ever imagined.