Remote Viewing - Top 10 List
Below are some beautifully insightful personal lists from
Fire’s Personal Archives, categorized under Misc. Personal Articles and maintained very well, I dare add by PJ.
PJ (Palyne Gaenir) owns an impressive archive Firedocs Remote Viewing Collection (’95-’02) where you can find numerous Remote viewing resources. PJ a brilliant writer, was a past student of Controlled Remote Viewing, CRV, under many of the ex military viewers, and is now a freestyle viewer and advocate. Controlled Remote Viewing is a term first coined by Ingo Swann. Previously based mainly at TKR, her blog informs us that she has now ‘retired’ from the still very active TKR Remote Viewing Project (’03-’08).
PJ, on remote viewing:
There are big things, and little things.
The big thing is viewing. Just do it. Do it a lot.
Everything else is a little thing.
- It isn’t easy.
- English sucks.
- The structure without talent is just an exercise.
- The talent without structure is just a game.
- Emphasis on validating facts sure can dent your ego.
- Not validating facts will warp your ego (-and rationality).
- It is highly individualized, despite consistent structure.
- It can be pleasant, but it’s not exactly fun.
- There is no god but PRACTICE.
- It isn’t fast—or easy. Yes, that’s the last word too.
- DESCRIBE the target in detail and prove yourself to be psychic. Try to IDENTIFY it and prove yourself a fool.
- It’s much easier to do it than to fight it. But there is nothing harder than to let go of the fight.
- The only thing “certain to be” flowers is hippopotamus whiskers. Assume anything at your own risk, no matter how obvious it seems “it must be.”
- Everybody feels like an idiot for awhile. Sometimes for a long while.
- One thing sure is that your subconscious already knows the answer… and that your conscious will hide it if you let it.
- Half of good training ends up being therapy.
- From all appearances, the subconscious speaks Etruscan in 4-D, translates it through geometry, encrypts it in some long-dead fish language, and then feeds you that information in code. Of course, it’s always perfectly obvious in retrospect.
- Most of being right is being willing to be wrong.
- It’s much better to write down something that is wrong than to realize you didn’t write down what turned out to be right.
- Being intelligent is no guarantee. Being psychic is no guarantee. In the end they’ll certainly help. But in the beginning, following structure and practicing is the only guarantee you can learn it, let alone be good at it.
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