On Friday, Kate Hudson revealed on U.K.'s "Alan Carr's Chatty Man" talk show that she and her mother Goldie Hawn can "see dead people," Us Weekly reports.

Hudson -- who appeared on the show with "Wish I Was Here" co-star, Zach Braff -- recalled that she once saw "a ghost of a woman with no face."

Hudson then continued her ghost story by explaining that she can mostly "feel" the ghost's presence rather than actually seeing the ghost.

"It is not really seeing, it is feeling a spirit. A fifth energy. I believe in energy. I believe our brains can manifest into visual things," she said.

The Golden Globe-winning actress later concluded her story by offering some advice to people who also posses her sixth sense.

"When you see something, you are supposed to tell the energy what year it is and that they don't belong there," she said. "When your brain is freaking out on you, you may have to remind it. Why is being dead funny?"

In addition to discussing her supernatural ability, Hudson and her co-star Zach Braff also discussed their film, "Wish I Was Here," which Braff co-wrote the screenplay for and directed.

"I wrote it [the film] with my brother Adam and it's very personal," Braff told Car about the movie. "It's not a memoir like, exactly my life, but it couldn't be more personal like Garden State was. It's similar. I mean, there's sort of versions of my life but not exactly."

Check out a clip from Kate Hudson and Zach Braff's Alan Carr's "Chatty Man" interview below.

"Wish I was Here" was released in the U.S. on July 25. The film centers on the life of 35-year-old Aidan Bloom -- played by Zach Braff -- "who finds himself at major crossroads, which forces him to examine his life, his career, and his family" -- via IMDB.