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  • September 6, 2006

    and Bumblebees do fly

    Filed: Cool Psi Stuff — Joe @ 6:11 am

    {This is in response to one of the comments on the Remote Viewing Visuals thread.}

    A team of people assembled for viewing inclusive of Project manager, tasker, viewer, monitor, analyst(s), reporter(s), and client(s) - would be an exceptional rarity, even in the intelligence or scientific world. Of course that would be the ideal.

    I’m taking the time to respond to this, because I know why you’ve asked the question. It’s an appropriate and important one, although most out there should have figured it out for themselves already. By the way, your DSL won’t last very long once the pathogens have take over, because the weak link is in the first main-line generator mechanic at a critical power switching station along the American-Canadian border.

    Guess what - once I get my blind tasking, I work alone as well, 95 to 99% of the time. I might do a few weeks of lab work every now and then, but when it’s stacked up against everything else I do, it appears a weak glow worm against the room full of candles, so I don’t want to hear any bitching from the gallery about going it alone.

    I said what I said originally because I was asked specifically about the viewing and what one might “visualize,” so my intention was to respond to that - not critique the multitude of reasons why someone’s remote viewing might lack in some qualitative or quantitative way, of which this just happens to be a major one.

    You are absolutely right - there is no one you can hand it to that might figure it all out for you. And if there was - guess what - they would have had to spend years with you and have more than a passing understanding for psychology and physics, and then have spent hundreds of hours in a closed room with you for days on end aside from the remote viewing in order to give you the kind of help you are expecting from a professional support team. Or, in a preferable case, be two or three additional people, spending more than a few years with you doing the same thing. I guess I am lucky in this accord, since when I do work in a lab, the psychologist has known me for just over 25 years and the physicist has known me for closer to 30. So, they do know when I make a certain kind of scribble and call it a dog can, it’s more than likely noodles casserole with tuna fish and peas.

    But, when I’m on my own, which is usually 95-99% of the time, I have to figure that out for myself, and that usually means when I’m being televised in front of millions of people, demonstrating for magazine or newspaper writers (always free), working for law enforcement or looking for missing people which is 60% of my pro-bono work, or just winging it for my meager income. Of course there is no pressure there (please laugh along with me here, as this is supposed to be humorous.)

    Seriously, this unfortunately is the dog-assed difficult part of remote viewing which is the part that is totally un-teachable, but which everyone says they can teach and is a piece of cake. Heck, you should be able to just pick this up in a couple of days, a week at most - from almost any course out there, or at least that what most say. It’s all over the Internet. Here are some facts (straight from the laboratory - I don’t make this up):

    1. Most remote viewers cannot analyze their own remote viewing. Not because they can’t, because they spent no time learning how, and never plan to.

    2. “Almost without exception,” no remote viewer has been able to demonstrate an ability to state when they are right or wrong under controls within the lab. There are two exceptions to this statement who have been able to demonstrate this ability within our lab, but only under great difficulty.

    3. Since every human mind is different, there are probably few commonalities between the meanings of images shared among remote viewers when viewing the same target beyond the very rudimentary state. In other words, the more complex the reporting the less likely viewers reporting images will agree.

    4. If you really want to understand what you remote view, you have to learn to understand how your own mind works. That takes years of hard work. Notice I said years - not months, or weeks, or days.

    5. Once you come to consciously understand what a subconscious mental image actually means or represents in reality, your conscious mind will steal it and use it for just about anything, rendering it useless. This means the language of your subconscious that you struggle so desperately to learn is a “dynamic” language that constantly changes. It is a language that is vibrant, vigorous and active. It doesn’t wait for you to catch up. So, to be an effective and expert remote viewer, you must pursue it constantly and relentlessly, as hard today as the day you started.

    I’m repeating myself here - since my books have always said it. It’s about using feedback to try and understand one’s own mind and how it works. How and why the personal mind uses the symbols it uses. Why does it speak to itself the way it does? Why does it go around the block the way it does to deliver itself the messages? Why does it refuse to address certain issues? Why does it have no problem with certain things and so much difficulty with others? When one digs out the reasons for these problems and issues, and then solves them; when one figures out how their own mind works, and understands how their mind operates and why, they will be closer to mastering RV.

    Mastering RV isn’t about seeing some distant place and being right. It’s about cleaning out one’s own head, opening to what one needs to hear or see and providing a clear place for visual and input images or input to reside long enough to understand. It’s a form of personal self discipline. It’s a martial art of the mind. It starts and ends inside one’s head, it’s really not about RV at all.

    If one can’t discipline what’s inside themselves, then how can they control, manipulate, and understand what they are trying to perceive about something half an Earth away, or from the back side of the Moon?

    I would add one last comment. I’ve never encouraged zillions of people to become remote viewers. What I have always said is that everyone who has ever walked into our lab and been tested has shown the capacity for being psychic; albeit most were not very good. All human beings are psychic - it is part of our nature to be so. It’s the very reason I do not teach RV. Why should I teach what everyone already knows? I would be taking money under false pretenses.

    I have also stated that approximately one in two hundred have shown a propensity for being world class viewers under protocol. This we know from formal testing. The only way of knowing if you’re one of the one in two hundred is to try and remote view. If one tries and does extremely well in a natural way, then one has gotten a hit off of home plate and has started a journey that now requires learning mental self-discipline. I’ve strongly recommended against paying money to anyone for training, since all remote viewing is, is a formal protocol that can be learned in fifteen minutes from a book. Since every human being appears to be psychic anyway, all one needs is the protocol in order to be a remote viewer.

    Learning mental self-discipline is like losing weight, it is usually a long and lonely journey. It’s fun to do with a group, but it usually comes down to what one does themselves that matters, not what the group does for the person. The group is good for moral support, but little else. One will learn to discipline their self and come to understand how their own mind ticks, or they will fail. No one can take a stick and beat that into them. There simply is no “wax on, wax off” method for doing this.

    I’ve also said more than frequently, if remote viewing isn’t fun, then one shouldn’t be doing it. Mastering oneself should be both a challenge as well as healthy and fun. The added benefit, even if one becomes a reasonably average remote viewer, are the side benefits of mental discipline one will have learned, such as; being able to control pain, controlling the flow of blood to different parts of your body, controlling your body weight, controlling anger, angst, and emotions, improving the strength of the mind, bringing calm to one’s inner and outer world, and best of all, being able to provide a better example to others.

    Like watching Bumblebees fly, there’s more to RV than just describing the other side of the moon.