Peeps:Sabina-Rob's email about remote viewing 21 May 2009
Before we do it, I will answer a few Qs about RV, though I fear you'll be less excited about it after reading the answers!
Basically remote _viewing_ is a misnomer. It's more like a series of perceptions, and the trick is simply to get the conscious mind out of the way. "I have the sense of blue, the sense of up-ness, the sense of activity."
Just by reading those three things, your mind is going, "hmmm blue, it could be a _____, oh and up! maybe it's _______ and activity could be _______ you know this reminds me of the _____ and I bet he would be thinking of the ______ after we talked about ______ and oh man some ______ would be good right about now...."
That's the same challenge that one has while remote viewing; the conscious mind jumps in with its conclusions, suggestions, fluff, etc. In the parlance, that can be called AOL, for Analytical Overlay.
It's possible to remote view the past, who rang your doorbell, the maybe the color of your room. BUT, the remote viewer must have ZERO knowledge of the target. Must not know if it's in the past, present, future, a person, place, thing, idea, challenge... NOTHING.
So you can't start out with "who rang my doorbell an hour ago?" because my brain immediately knows what time the person arrived, upon whose door they rang, etc. I'm gonna guess it was the pizza delivery person, and therefore guess it was a male. That's not remote viewing, even in the slightest. It's just random, slightly educated guessing.
Targeting the future is easier than targeting the past. That's because *far* fewer people have targeted the desired location in the future, but many people already experienced the past, told stories about it, and have therefore created all variety of thoroughly intermeshed thought forms about it.
It's still possible to target the past, just a bit trickier.
In our class, we were repeatedly targeting "the time and place this photograph was taken." Our instructor (my friend Kevin), took all the photographs, so the situation was not optimal. He has advanced knowledge of what photos he took, but of those hundreds, he'll use about 20 during the class, and not know which ones he's chosen.
Optimally, the people in the room are all blind to the target. Have utterly no idea anything about it; otherwise, they sway the targeting process.
I know of a random photo site that's probably pretty good for our purposes, but it's not perfect. We'll see how it goes. Basically I'm going to ask you to generate two numbers which we'll use to identify the target photo.
How about this: I am now setting the intention to target the photo that comes up when you roll a die to choose the two numbers when we start emailin' in 20-ish hours from now. 2009 May 21st morning in Japan and 2009 May 20th evening in the US.
Cool?
Email me at that time, and I'll tell you how many times to roll the die for each number.
- Rob!