What is remote viewing?
Remote Viewing is is the trained ability to obtain
accurate psychically derived data on persons, places, things and
events anywhere in time and space, using only a pen, paper and one's
mind. It is an innate ability that all humans possess, but like
language, it must be learned. When utilizing this methodology, you
are not in an altered state. You are fully conscious, alert and in a
state of "high attention."
The DIA's remote viewing unit became known in defense
circles in 1989, when an operations and training officer from the
unit, a prominent general, and several others took the technology
into the private sector and established
PSI TECH, Inc. Technical Remote Viewing.
They employed some of the best remote viewers from the DIA's
operational unit. Initially, PSI TECH kept a low
profile, accepting government and corporate contracts from the
defense establishment, and training prominent people from government
agencies and scientists.
In 1995, the CIA's AIR report, and a Nightline program
further increased public knowledge of the remote viewing program.
The report was a damage control attempt by the CIA. It
covered only the final two years of the program, which was called
"StarGate" when 'crystal ball gazers' and tarot card
readers were brought into the unit.
Since then, a virtual "psi soup" has been created, where the term
"remote viewing" has been applied to almost every form of psychic
phenomenon. Many psychics now refer to themselves as "remote
viewers," to legitimize their services and companies, because the
term sounds more scientific and acceptable to the mainstream. Worse
yet, some charlatans have emerged on to the scene, claiming to have
been part of the military unit, or from clandestine units that no
one (those who should be privy to such knowledge) has heard of or
been able to confirm.
Details about the publicity surrounding the release of the AIR
report, and the differences between the research side of
remote viewing, as it differs from the operational unit, are
available in this press release.
There is much confusion over what 'remote viewing' is and isn't. The
fact that many of the more prominent "RV researchers" still are not
aware of the important of CRV and that virtually
anyone can be trained to retrieve data more accurately than the
world's best natural psychics, is truly unfortunate.
What is being lost on much of the public, in all of the confusion, is
the breakthrough discovery that was created by Ingo Swann at
Stanford Research Institute. This was the real
*breakthrough* from the years of research, and the work done in the
military unit.
Ingo Swann, a brilliant natural psychic, focused his attention
inward and looked at his own process, developing a model of how his
own mind accessed information from the collective unconscious, and
created a method by which anyone could learn to accurately obtain
information on any person, place, thing and event in the past,
present or future.
Some of the prominent "remote viewers" such as Joe
McMoneagle, are in fact natural psychics.
At this web site, when we refer to "remote viewing," the term will be
used to describe the teachable methods developed by Ingo Swann and
those who teach the techniques, Coordinate Remote Viewing (now
called Controlled Remote Viewing) and
Technical
Remote ViewingŪ
.
The ability to remote view is not limited to a few natural psychics.
It is an innate ability that all humans possess. However, like
language, it is something that must be learned, to be effective.
As human beings, data and information is constantly flowing through
our perceptual apparatus. We are all constantly accessing
information, but unlike natural psychics, most of us can not control
the flow of data or lock on to it consistently. Our "psi muscles"
are underdeveloped.
When properly trained, CRV and TRV
structure allows any of us to lock on to the signal line, slowing
down the process so that we can retrieve accurate data, more
accurately and more consistently than the best natural psychics. The
structure is also self correcting, and brilliantly separates the
viewer's analysis and imagination from the actual data.
The CRV manual was never intended to be a "training
manual" per se, nor a replacement for proper training by a qualified
instructor.
It's purpose, in the military and at PSI TECH,
was simply to serve as a guide and a reference for CRV/TRV
terminology and it served to show inquisitive lawmakers what the
millions of dollars were being spent on.
Proper training in CRV and TRV is very
rigorous. Exact attention to structure (in the correct order) is
absolutely necessary. Every percept that enters your mind must be
dealt with. All AOLs must be properly declared, and
attention to structure must be maintained. Anyone seeking to 'try'
it by just reading this manual is going to be disappointed. This is
a learned skill that requires proper training and practice.
In the fourteen years since the writing of this manual, there have
been many advances and discoveries learned through years of
training. One major discovery, was the realization that geographical
coordinates are not necessary for targeting purposes.
Random numbers can be assigned to a target cue or search term.
This breakthrough allowed this technology to be more effectively used
as a problem solving tool. This important discovery, along with many
others, is not covered in
the manual.
A person can now create a target where they essentially search
the Matrix as they would a library or internet database,
using carefully constructed cues and search terms.
-
The manual does not instruct one on the proper methods for cuing.
-
It does not instruct one on the proper creation of a targeting
package, and the pitfalls and problems that can result if the use of
target reference material (photographs) is not properly employed.
-
It does not instruct you on the duration a session should last, how
many one can do each day and leaves out many details regarding the
actual application of the skill. Additionally, many techniques were
refined and developed during many years of application in the
private sector, in the 17 years since the manual was written.
How can I properly learn these techniques?
In the military unit, training lasted approximately three months. When
PSI TECH
took these techniques public in 1989, they successfully developed a
course that effectively taught prominent people in the defense
establishment, scientists, and doctors these techniques in a shorter
period of time.
Their original professional development course, taught on-site, was
$4500, lasted nine days, and was very intensive.
Some thought that viewers learning in such a brief period of intense
training would not be able to adequately learn the skill. But the
course was very successful, and when PSI TECH
demonstrated that there was a market in the corporate and private
sector for remote viewing services, several of remote viewers from
the Ft. Meade unit, followed
PSI TECH's example, and opened their own training
schools.
Ingo Swann no longer teaches. There are several qualified
instructors who can effectively train you in Ingo Swann's
methodology. Jonina Dourif offers courses at PSI TECH.
Paul Smith's company,
RVIS, teaches
CRV, and Lyn Buchanan teaches at P>S>I.
Training is expensive, and in most cases requires one to travel, but
if you can afford it, it is well worth it.
If you can't afford to take a course in person, one can learn the
techniques at home, for significantly less than on-site instruction.
PSI TECH offers their new 2000 TRV video training
course, a 10 video set, for $449.95.
Their courses are very effective and I can personally recommend them,
as this is how I learned.
In 2002 PSI TECH unveiled the new Technical Remote
Viewing University
online training campus. This new training system offers 24 hour a day
technical support and live personalized tutoring options, access to
supplemental training targets, weekly "Target Of The Week" training.
The training courses are designed to be completed in as little as
six weeks.
When learning via these distance learning methods, the student can go
back and review lectures, and learn at his/her own pace, over a
period of months, guaranteeing proper learning and long term memory
retention, something which is less likely to occur when taking a
brief in-person course on site.
Be aware that learning remote viewing and applying the
techniques
is hard work. To become proficient, CRV or TRV training requires a commitment by one to practice the
techniques, as it is a learned skill.
Following the exposure of these methods after the release of PSI
TECH's original home training course, and the publication of
the
CRV manual on the internet,
many have sought to profit from the technology and have attempted to
copy and alter the structure, taking bits and pieces and making the
rest up as they go along, without the background, experience,
knowledge or qualifications to do so.
They do not have an
appreciation for Ingo Swann's method, understand the theory,
nor are they aware of the time and expense (millions of tax dollars)
that went into its creation. They play upon the ignorance of the
public and seek acceptance from the "RV community."
I know that there will be those who will try to learn CRV
on their own, by simply reading this manual. If you do not have
success, it won't necessarily be for lack of trying, but because you
do not have enough information and lack proper training. You will
also likely ingrain improper habits that will be tough to un-learn.
If you are serious about learning, take a course from a professional,
whether in person or via PSI TECH's video or online training
courses.
INTRODUCTION
A. General
The following definitions and descriptions are provided to acquaint
the reader with the remote viewing phenomenon and a typical remote
viewing session.
1. Definitions:
a. Remote Viewing (RV): The name of a method of
psychoenergetic perception. A term coined by SRI-International and
defined as "the acquisition and description, by mental means, of
information blocked from ordinary perception by distance, shielding
or time."
b. Coordinate Remote Viewing (CRV): The process
of remote viewing using geographic coordinates for cueing or
prompting.
c. Remote Viewer: Often referred to in the text simply as
"viewer",
the remote viewer is a person who employs his mental faculties to
perceive and obtain information to which he has no other access and
of which he has no previous knowledge concerning persons, places,
events, or objects separated from him by time, distance, or other
intervening obstacles.
d. Monitor: The individual who assists the viewer in
a remote viewing session. The monitor provides the coordinate,
observes the viewer to help insure he stays in proper structure
(discussed below), records relevant session information, provides
appropriate feedback when required, and provides objective analytic
support to the viewer as necessary. The monitor plays an especially
important role in training beginning viewers.
2. Descriptions:
a. Remote Viewing Session: In a remote viewing session an
individual or "viewer" attempts to acquire and describe by mental
means alone information about a designated site. The viewer is not
told what the site is that must be described but is provided a cue
or prompt which designates the site.
b. Session Dynamics: In conducting a coordinate remote viewing
session, a remote viewer and a monitor begin by seating themselves
at the opposite ends of a table in a special remote viewing room
equipped with paper and pens, a tape recorder, and a TV camera which
allows either recording for documentation, or monitoring by
individuals outside the room.
The room is homogeneously-colored,
acoustic-tiled, and featureless, with light controlled by a dimmer,
so that environmental distractions can be minimized. The session
begins when the monitor provides cueing or prompting information
(geographic coordinates in this case) to the remote viewer. The
remote viewer is given no additional identifying information, and at
this point has no conscious knowledge of the actual site.
For
training purposes, the monitor is allowed to know enough about the
site to enable him to determine when accurate versus inaccurate
information is being provided. The session then proceeds with the
monitor repeating the prompting information at appropriate intervals
and providing necessary feedback. The remote viewer generates verbal
responses and sketches, until a coherent response to the overall
task requirement emerges.
c. Post Session Dynamics: After the session is over, the remote
viewer and monitor obtain specific information about the site in
picture/descriptive form. The remote viewer and monitor then discuss
the session results.
B. Background
In early 1980, an SRI - International (SRI-I) subcontractor
developed a training procedure known as Coordinate Remote
Viewing to satisfy R&D demands on SRI-I to enhance the
reliability (scientific replicability) of remote viewing (RV).
The subcontractor's approach to improving the reliability of
RV was to focus on the control of those factor that in his
view tend to introduce "noise" into the RV product
(imaginative, environmental, and interviewer overlays). The basic
components of this training procedure consist of:
(1) Repeated site-address (geographic coordinate) presentation,
with quick-reaction response by the remote viewing; coupled with a
restrictive format for reporting perceived information (to minimize
imaginative overlays).
(2) The use of a specially-designed, acoustic-tiled, relatively
featureless, homogeneously-colored "viewing chamber" (to minimize
environmental overlays).
(3) The adoption of a strictly-prescribed, limited interviewer
patter (to minimize interviewer overlays).
The training procedure requires that the trainee learn a progressive,
multi-stage acquisition process postulated to correspond to
increased contact with the site. At present there are six
"stages" of training. In general, these stages progress as
follows:
(1) "Stage I" sites (islands, mountains, deserts, etc.).
(2) "Stage II" sites (sites of quality sensory value--sites
which are uniquely describable through touch, taste, sound, color,
or odor--such as glaciers, volcanoes, industrial plants, etc.).
(3) "Stage III" sites (sites possessing significant dimensional
characteristics such as buildings, bridges, airfields, etc.).
(4) "Stage IV" sites for which the trainee begins to form
qualitative mental percepts (technical area, military feeling,
research, etc.).
(5) "Stage V" sites for which the trainee learns to
"interrogate" qualitative mental percepts in an attempt to product
analytical target descriptions (aircraft tracking radar, biomedical
research facility, tank production plant, etc.).
(6) "Stage VI" sites which involve the trainee in direct,
three-dimensional assessment and modeling of the site and/or the
relationship of site elements to one another (airplanes inside one
of three camouflaged hangars or a military compound with a command
building, barracks, motor pool, and underground weapons storage
area).
The following document has been prepared to serve as a comprehensive
explanation of the theory and mechanics of CRV as
developed by SRI-I. It is intended for individuals who have no
in-depth understanding of the technology and as a guide for future
training programs.
Particular attention should be paid to the
glossary at the end of
the document
and to the terms as defined in the text, as they are the only
acceptable definitions to be used when addressing the methodology
presented.
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