Proving Psychic Skeptics wrong with Remote Viewing

  • “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

psychic 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.

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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!

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