
The warning is brutal — and eerily specific.
A London psychic who claims to have foreseen Covid-19, Donald Trump’s unlikely rise to power, and even a string of celebrity breakups now says that 2026 will be a year of collapse and reckoning. According to him, the coming months will bring chaos, scandal, and a shocking fall from grace for the former president — a sequence of events that could reshape not just headlines, but history itself.
Nicolas Aujula does not look like a man who courts the apocalypse. At 39, the soft-spoken Londoner lives quietly, his manner more therapist than prophet. Yet behind the calm exterior, he says, lies a mind that refuses to rest — a screen that flashes with images of things that have not yet happened. “They just arrive,” he told one interviewer. “I don’t summon them. They come uninvited.”
He describes the visions as fragments — bursts of color and sensation that crash into consciousness like waves against glass. In one recurring image, he sees buildings collapsing into dust, their silhouettes swallowed by fire and water. In another, a storm — vast, violent, biblical in its scale — tearing across coastlines from the Pacific to southern Europe. And then there is the most haunting vision of all: a lone figure stumbling on the steps of a plane, cameras clicking, voices shouting, and a heavy, suffocating silence that follows.
That figure, he insists, is Donald Trump. Not the triumphant showman of rallies past, but a man caught in a moment of frailty — undone not by politics, but by fate. “It will be humiliating,” Aujula says simply. “A fall that changes everything.”
His prophecies for 2026 extend far beyond Washington. He speaks of earthquakes shaking Turkey, Greece, and parts of the Pacific Rim — “the earth reminding us who’s really in control.” He warns of a mysterious illness that strikes suddenly and without warning, “like an aneurysm from nowhere,” sweeping through populations already fatigued by years of crisis. And in the world of celebrity and royalty, his words are equally unsettling. He predicts new scandal circling Harry and Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex — “something that exposes the cracks in the image they’ve built.”
Aujula’s predictions have long divided believers and skeptics. Supporters point to the eerie accuracy of his past forecasts: the onset of the pandemic, mass protests in 2020, and the turbulent energy surrounding Trump’s political career. Critics dismiss him as a clever storyteller who weaves probability into prophecy. Yet even the doubters admit there’s something unnervingly precise about his tone — not hysterical, not sensational, just matter-of-fact.
When asked how it feels to carry such visions, Aujula grows quiet. “It’s not a gift,” he says. “It’s a weight. Seeing what might come isn’t power. It’s responsibility — and fear.”
Still, his forecasts for 2026 have begun to spread across social media, where fascination with prophecy collides with the anxiety of modern life. Threads dissect his every word, news anchors smirk through segments on his predictions, and yet — privately — many wonder. Could the man who saw the world unravel once before be right again?
Whether dismissed as fantasy or feared as foresight, Nicolas Aujula’s visions of 2026 strike a nerve. Because beneath the headlines about earthquakes and illness, beneath the spectacle of scandal and politics, lies a single, haunting question — one that hums in the back of the mind long after his words fade:
What if the future really does whisper before it shouts?