Seeing Beyond Your Senses?

images Remote ViewingToday I’d like to take a deeper look at Remote Viewing, and how to use our Remote Viewing Entrainment program and other tools at your disposal to increase your ability to see objects that are out of range of your standard five senses.  You may remember our last newsletter, when we looked at your ability to focus on objects in order to discern the important difference between observation and memory.  It may sound like a simple task, but along with our imaginations, many of us lose our ability to actually observe things as they really are as we get older.  We see symbols of objects rather than the objects themselves.

Remember first that the trance state is important to remote viewing.  Your mind has to train itself to be able to switch on its peripheral field of vision and project your thoughts to other locations.  Many people spend years trying to tune their minds to the exact frequency required for this, but our entrainment therapy is specially designed to make this journey quicker and within easy reach for everyone.

You can Access our Precision Entrainment Therapy Here!

If the idea of “seeing objects as they really are” sounds far out, let’s try an exercise.  Psychologists have demonstrated that participants in studies will often confuse what an object actually looks like if shown another object that serves the same purpose or is “symbolically” a representation of that object even if it is a different color, thinking it’s the same one.  This experiment requires a little subterfuge on your part, but it perfectly illustrates the disconnect from “symbol thinking” and actual observation.  Take two objects that serve the same purpose and look similar, but not exactly the same.  Replace the object in the room with the similar one that will symbolically represent the same thing to those passing through.  It could be a different fork next to someone’s plate, a different colored flower in a kitchen’s vase, or a differently designed napkin at the table.  Nine times out of ten the witness, when they return to see the replaced object, will think it’s the same one.  This symbolic thinking is exactly what you want to train your mind to rebel against, as symbols, while useful, are often a road block to the remote viewer from getting a perfectly accurate image.

Our environment is complicated, so we often replace objects with ideas in our mind.  When we see a television set, we see a simple object: a television.  This is symbolic thinking.  What we need to do is understand all the components of that television.  It is not a simple object, but an incredibly advanced series of components working together toward the whole.  Does it have a glass or LCD screen?  Are the edges on it rounded or sharp?  What do the buttons look like?  Where do cables coming from it lead to?  This sort of thinking can also lead to improved deductive reasoning.  Rather than taking for granted that the television is there, you may see a series of cables running from the screen to nothing and conclude, “Aha!  Something has been removed from this room.”

This sort of deductive reasoning is not difficult, it’s just a different way of thinking.  And it will ensure that images you draw or describe while remote viewing are more accurate.  This will keep you from using vague symbolic representations to describe events, and ensure you get a crystal clear image of what will be in a given location.  As a result your remote viewing experience will be vastly improved too.  Practice observing everything in your environment.  Why are objects where they are?  Is there a reason this door is open?  Is the time on that clock accurate?  Take nothing for granted.  It is far easier than you may think.  Of course after a while observation will become second nature to you, just as driving or walking has become.  And when this observation is more accurate, so will be your remote viewing experience.

So to recap, deductive thinking allows for more accurate visions while remote viewing.  Those asking you questions will want to know details.  Those who say, “I see a window,” will be more accurate if they can give details like, “A Northwesterly facing window of gothic design is streaming light from the inside out onto the street.  There is a crack in the upper right hand corner.”  And remember the importance of sounds.

Thank you for taking the time to read this week’s lesson on remote viewing.  Next time I’d like to look into remote viewing with others.  The process is more than simply answering questions posed to you as you project your thoughts outward.  There are specific protocols that yield better results than others and improve accuracy without breaking the concentration of the remote viewer.

Access our Precision Entrainment Therapy Here!

Have a safe and enlightened journey!

Access Free Samples Here!
Discover the One Secret to Peace, Health, Love, Happiness and Success that most people will never know! Download your Free Samples and Manual Now! Lets Make it Happen!
Name:
Email:
 
Powered by Optin Form Adder

You Already Have the Power, but Power is nothing without Control? Go Here Now!