- “It’s all lies and smoke and mirrors”
- “Don’t be an idiot, psychics don’t exist!”
- “Don’t learn remote viewing, the stuff is total garbage”
You have probably heard all these excuses and more when you tell people that you learn remote viewing because they are skeptical about psychic and paranormal phenomena. Are you tired of hearing all this and are wanting to know how to change a skeptic?
I know how you feel and it totally sucks when you’re totally for something and people vehemently criticize you for your abilities. It’s because those critics out there just haven’t experienced it for themselves and are stuck in their matrix.
Would you like to know how to prove that remote viewing works and prove all those skeptics in your life wrong? Here’s an example I recently came across where a a woman proved to her skeptical husband that remote viewing works.
How to Change a Remote Viewing Skeptic
When I first started studying Technical Remote Viewing last December, I realized very quickly that this was a legitimate and mind-boggling technology. But my husband, a cynical and suspicious 20-year veteran of the local police department, just laughed. When I started submitting Targets Of The Week, and showed him some of the sessions done by the more experienced viewers, his reply was that they were “shills” and not “students.”
Exasperated, I finally asked what it would take to convince him that this was “real.” He replied, three sessions where I “nailed” it. But, he added, “it’s all smoke and mirrors. You’re just getting lucky sometimes. Pure coincidence.”
The first session that raised his eyebrows was a Target Of The Week session where the cue was the cause of the shuttle disaster. This turned out to be a very good session for me. I drew what looked like heat tiles on one sketch, the nose cone of the shuttle on another, and had a lot of data that couldn’t be “explained away.” He admitted I appeared to have nailed it, but that I was guessing because it was in the news.
I kept practicing. Every time he saw me logging into TRV University, he would shake his head and mutter, “NOT TRV again!! It’s ALL SMOKE AND MIRRORS.” I was afraid he’d try to tell me to stop, but he never did. I believe the reason he didn’t was that, although he thought TRV was absolutely a scam or useless at best, he would defend to the death my rather sporadic telepathic ability. I think that deep down in his mind, there was just enough open-mindedness to keep him from issuing an edict.
The second session that got his attention came about a month later on another Target Of The Week. This time the target cue was related to the key to human life extension. My session, although not stellar, showed sketches of scientific or medical researchers and I had concluded in my analysis that they were trying to find ways to cure disease.
Nothing had been in the headlines or news on this subject. There had been no prior Targets Of The Week on anything remotely related to this subject. How could this be coincidence or a lucky guess? He was very, very quiet.
Click here to learn more >>
Have you ever encountered cynicism about remote viewing and remote influencing by your loved ones? Have you ever proved to them that your skills actually did work? I’d love to hear about your story!


Post a Comment