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You'll drink about 75,000 litres (20,000 gallons) of water in your lifetime. |
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Remote Viewing Methods
Posted on Thursday, February 02, 2006 (CST) by Thoth
Controlled remote viewing (CRV)--together with its derivatives--is probably the most widely known and practiced of the varieties of remote viewing methodologies. CRV was originally known as "coordinate" remote viewing, because the primary mechanism for targeting viewers was the geographic coordinates of the target's location.
After the government program became public knowledge in 1995, the name was changed from "coordinate" to "controlled" to reflect the broader aspects of the methodology. CRV was developed beginning in the mid-to-late 70s. As SRI's research revealed the promising aspects of remote viewing, it seemed reasonable to explore ways to develop the skill that some people seemed innately to have in others who had not yet demonstrated the ability.
Working closely together, Hal Puthoff and Ingo Swann worked out a structured approach to remote viewing that promised to make the skill transferable and teachable.
This method
was used to train military personnel and government civilians to become
effective remote viewers, and became a major RV methodology employed
for the last 11 years of the government program.
CRV is based on the notion
that one does not train someone to be "psychic," but rather teaches a
person to "expand the parameters" of his or her perceptions, as Swann
puts it. Information obtained through CRV is carried to the viewer on a
theorized "signal line" which the viewer's subconscious detects. The
goal of CRV is to facilitate the transfer of information from the
viewer's subconscious, across the threshold of awareness, and into
waking consciousness, where it can be "decoded" into a form the viewer
can express intelligibly. Viewers are trained how to deal with--in
other words, control--the mental "noise" encountered in the course of
the remote viewing session.
To implement this process,
CRV is structured as a set of formal stages which correspond to the
progressively deeper levels of awareness the viewer goes through as he
or she gains ever greater contact with the RV signal line. A typical
description of these stages is as follows:
- Stage 1. Perception
of basic, overall nature of the site or target (usually referred to as
the "major gestalt"). Examples of these major gestalts might be "land,"
"structure," "water," "event," etc.
-
Stage 2. Basic sensory perceptions--tastes, sounds, colors, qualities of light, textures, temperatures, etc.
-
Stage 3. Perception
of the site's or target's dimensional qualities--i.e., height, breadth,
width, depth, angularity, curvature, density, etc. Sketching of viewer
perceptions is an important aspect of this stage.
- Stage 4. Perception of increasingly complex and abstract perceptions about the site or target.
-
Stage 5. "Interrogation" of the signal line. Allows details of the target to be more fully explored.
-
Stage 6. Allows
further sketching and three-dimensional modeling or sculpting of
aspects of the site or target, while acquiring further qualitative
information.
Various derivatives of the
original Swann/Puthoff methodology have re-ordered some of the stages,
made alterations to some of the content, and introduced changes in the
vocabulary originally adopted by SRI. However, the overall intent of
each of these derivatives remains the same as the original version of
CRV.
Two of the more
widely-known of these CRV derivatives are "technical remote viewing"
(TRV), taught by Mr. Ed Dames through his company Technical Remote
Viewing Institute; and a TRV-derivative/Transcendental Meditation
hybrid known as "scientific remote viewing" (SRV), which was developed
by Dr. Courtney Brown through his Farsight Institute.
Extended Remote Viewing
In Extended Remote Viewing,
or ERV for short, a viewer relaxes on a bed or other comfortable
support and tries to reach a 'hypnagogic' state - a condition at the
borderline between asleep and awake. The room is darkened and
soundproofed if possible.
As the viewer reaches the
edge of consciousness, a second person in the room, the monitor, begins
the session with a tasking, that is directions to the viewer to access
the desired target. Once the viewer can describe elements of the
correct target, the monitor quietly poses questions about the target.
These questions may request details, purpose, appearance, construction,
activities, or other target-related information. The monitor records or
writes down the answers the viewer provides. After the session the
viewer makes additional notes about what was perceived, along with
appropriate sketches or drawings.
The theory behind ERV is
that, given the likelihood that remote viewing impressions bubble up
from the subconscious, then deliberately approaching an unconscious
state should make it easier to detect these impressions with less
mental noise. (In reality, this noise does not seem any less in ERV
than it does in other remote viewing methods.)
The term ERV was originally
coined by Capt. F. Holmes "Skip" Atwater while he was operations and
training officer for the Army's remote viewing unit at Ft. Meade, MD.
ERV existed before its name did, and was used by some of the first
military viewers. Because an ERV session took longer than did a CRV
one, Skip decided to call it by "extended" RV, and the name stuck.
Article Source 1
Article Source 2
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Re: Remote Viewing Methods by terry on Thursday, February 02, 2006 (CST) (User Info | Send a Message) http://na | most of the online articles on remoye viewing
actually say very little, and there are many courses you can pay to take to develop these abilities, we all have read about how these people used their capabilities during the cold war, but why have they done nothing since ?
i have been watching and waiting to see if any other reports came up from these people and they have not, for instance- i have watched Tony Blair at night crying in his sleep with on occasion Cherie sitting up in despair.
watch this space i will tell you how in six easy steps how to astral travel, accomplish an
O B E and remote view, it is just a knack.
terry- remember seeing is believing and this is for free |
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