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Remote viewing is considered a way of gaining information not available through normal physical senses. The viewer is asked to describe a location, which he has never visited, or asked to describe an event long passed, or even describe an object hidden in a room or in a box. Intelligence circles were so enamored by it that it was used during the cold war years to gather military information.
Though remote viewing is thought to be related to parapsychological phenomenon, such as clairvoyance and telepathy, they are quite different. Remote viewing is more structured than the parapsychological disciplines. The viewers follow a specific format that is designed to enhance their performance. These formats allow them to deal better with stray thoughts, imaginings, and analysis. Such mental noises degrade the psychic signals.
The remote viewer is not aware of the identity or the nature of the target. This is kept away from him deliberately, until after the session. Remote viewing is not done for fortune telling or psychic readings. It is more of a research for helping criminal investigations, government intelligence work, and commercial applications.
Learning Remote Viewing
Many people are interested in remote viewing and it takes a lot of training, and time to become a skilled operator of remote viewing. You can start your learning by trying to ‘see’ what is in an opaque envelope. A friend can assist you by selecting a few clear pictures, pasting each on a white paper and sealing them in separate envelopes, and marking them sequentially. The photos or pictures must not be very complex and confusing, and at the same time be different from each other.
Sit in a peaceful and quite area comfortably and select an envelope. Try to perceive the impressions you get from the photo inside the sealed envelope. Remote viewing signals are often vague and fuzzy. You need to separate the clear mental noises, such as memories, thoughts, and worries, etc, that normally occupy your mind. It will require quite a few sessions before you will be able to separate the everyday noises from the remote signals.
It is important that you make sketches of the impressions as you go along. They may not make much sense to you, but it may turn out to be descriptions of the ‘whole.’ Note down all the perceptions you feel, such as colors, smells, sounds, textures, or tastes, as well as the perceptions of lines and shapes. With time and experience, your perceptions will become stronger, and will make a better sense, even though you may never get the full picture.
The experiment with the first envelope would take not more than 5 to 10 minutes. Once you have recorded all your impressions and perceptions, put the paper aside, and no more jotting.
You can now open the envelope to see the photo and compare with your noting. Do not try to fit the data to your impressions. Make an honest assessment, and do not make excuses. You are not expected to succeed the first time, and there is no 100 percent success rate. You need to try to take intuitive risks and trust your impressions, whatever they are. This is all part of gaining experience.
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