The Key To Mastering Remote Viewing

Hey guys. I found this amaz­ing list of sci­en­tific remote view­ing terms that will help any­one — begin­ner, inter­me­di­ate or advanced. I think famil­iar­iz­ing our­selves basic ter­mi­nol­ogy in any aspect of the topic can help any­one advance their remote view­ing knowledge.

Learn Sci­en­tific Remote View­ing Vocabulary

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Advanced SRV — Of the three cur­rent forms of SRV (Basic, Enhanced, and Advanced) that are used to describe phys­i­cal tar­gets, this is the most sophis­ti­cated. It involves the use of com­plex pre-printed tem­plates, highly-structured spa­cial and tem­po­ral mov­ing exer­cises, and sig­nif­i­cant detail in sketch­ing, prob­ing, and analy­sis. The intent of the Advanced SRV pro­ce­dures is to assist the viewer in assem­bling a more coher­ent pic­ture of the tar­get by “glu­ing” var­i­ous par­tial per­cep­tions together. This is often used to pro­duce a map of the tar­get and its sur­round­ing environment.

Basic SRV — This is a ver­sion of SRV that is used by all begin­ning view­ers. It incor­po­rates all of the essen­tial com­po­nents of Enhanced SRV, but it does not uti­lize some of the more advanced sketch­ing and move­ment procedures.

Bilo­ca­tion — At some point dur­ing the SRV ses­sion, the viewer’s atten­tion is so strongly directed toward the tar­get that the viewer’s aware­ness is split between his or her phys­i­cal loca­tion and the tar­get site.

Con­cepts — these are intan­gi­ble attrib­utes of some­thing that is per­ceived using SRV. For exam­ple, the ideas of “good” or “impor­tant” are concepts.

Cue — one or more words used at var­i­ous points dur­ing an SRV ses­sion in order to direct a remote viewer’s per­cep­tion to focus on a tar­get, or per­haps to per­ceive spe­cial­ized infor­ma­tion for a tar­get. The first cues used in a remote-viewing ses­sion are the tar­get coor­di­nate num­bers. Sub­se­quent cues are entered into the Phase 4 matrix.

Data types — When remote-viewing ses­sions are con­ducted under cer­tain con­di­tions, the data obtained from those ses­sions are clas­si­fied as being of a cer­tain “type.” There are six types of remote-viewing data.

Type 1: Solo, viewer front loaded (rarely done, data are usu­ally of poor qual­ity)
Type 2: Solo, viewer blind, tar­get selected from a pre-determined list of tar­gets by a com­puter or some other task­ing device (com­monly done)
Type 3: Solo, viewer blind, tar­get assigned by a human tasker (com­monly done)
Type 4: Mon­i­tored ses­sion with mon­i­tor front-loaded and viewer blind (very com­mon dur­ing train­ing)
Type 5: Mon­i­tored ses­sion, mon­i­tor and viewer blind (com­monly done)
Type 6: Mon­i­tor and viewer front-loaded (rarely done, data are usu­ally of poor quality)

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One Response to The Key To Mastering Remote Viewing
  1. Sam
    July 17, 2009 | 7:13 pm

    I just wanted to thank you for this lat­est post, which is really a big help in my research. I’m just now down­load­ing the audio course on remote view­ing and am very excited. I’ve been work­ing with expand­ing my con­scious­ness to include the uni­ver­sal mind’s perspective–that of there being one mind of which we’re all a part–but up until now have had lit­tle to no method­ol­ogy to help me artic­u­late what I’m com­ing up with. Now I can trans­late a lot of the eso­teric wis­dom of Bud­dhism which often times is hard to artic­u­late in today’s soci­ety by way of this remote view­ing pro­to­call. I’m pos­i­tive that this will shake things up quite a bit, and make this type of uni­ver­sal knowl­edge much more avail­able for our world. Thanks again, and be well.

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