Mar 22

I bet you asked yourself this question more than once! So how do I win with Remote Viewing?

Let’s take the NFL® pre­sea­son. This is the per­fect example to prac­tice remote view­ing to predict the out­come of National Foot­ball League games. Here are the top ten tips and hints for max­i­miz­ing your effectiveness:

1) First and fore­most, Stay In Struc­ture. With­out proper train­ing and rig­or­ous atten­tion to TRV (tech­ni­cal remote view­ing) struc­ture, all of your attempts to uti­lize the fol­low­ing tips to win big will be fruit­less. To be suc­cess­ful, each of the remote view­ers you will be work­ing with need to at least be fully pro­fi­cient in basic and inter­me­di­ate TRV tech­niques, and prefer­ably have expe­ri­ence with the advanced stages of TRV.

2) Leave your ini­tial tar­get cue open ended. Do not make the mis­take of start­ing out by restrict­ing your search or mak­ing assump­tions about which spe­cific aspect of the game will be best to tar­get. Allow your uncon­scious and The Matrix free reign to deliver up rel­e­vant data. Often view­ers will pro­duce infor­ma­tion rec­og­niz­able to or avail­able to the even­tual ana­lyst — things that would not nor­mally occur to you. You will also find that in many cases view­ers on your team will work “together” and divide the work­load uncon­sciously — each per­ceiv­ing a dif­fer­ent piece of the puz­zle in a very effi­cient manner.

3) Remem­ber to work rapidly, at a snappy pace. The impor­tance of this can not be overem­pha­sized. After page 1, spend no more than one minute per page and your imag­i­na­tion will have less chance to inter­fere. Your first sketches in this Remote Viewing session must be lim­ited to 20 sec­onds or less in dura­tion. Declare all AOLs and A.I.‘s imme­di­ately when­ever they occur. All incom­ing data, every thought must be declared or objec­ti­fied on paper dur­ing your ses­sion or the flow of data will quickly come to a halt. The only time you may slow down in TRV is dur­ing advanced stages.

4) Start with stan­dard move­ments. As with each of your TRV ses­sions, do not attempt to employ move­ments specif­i­cally tar­get­ing ele­ments in the remain­ing tips on this list with­out first com­plet­ing at least two stan­dard move­ments. Before you can col­lect accu­rate refined high level data, you need to build a sta­ble foun­da­tion to estab­lish and main­tain accu­rate sig­nal line con­tact. There is no sub­sti­tute for time on target.

For the tasker, ana­lyst or team leader — here are items to tar­get and things to watch for dur­ing analysis:

5) Team Mas­cot / Logo — this can often be recognizable/identifiable to the ses­sion ana­lyst as early as the first Stage 3 sketch. An exam­ple is a “light­ning bolt” that was sketched by a real estate exec­u­tive as one of the ele­ments appear­ing in her ses­sion which sig­ni­fied that the San Diego Charg­ers would win ver­sus the Den­ver Broncos.

6) Sketch­ing the win­ning team’s head coach. This may occur spon­ta­neously dur­ing the ses­sion, or you may assign your view­ers the task of exe­cut­ing a face sketch in Stage 6. An exam­ple of this is a viewer who sketched Eagles head coach Andy Reid, pro­duc­ing a vir­tual dupli­cate of the P.R. photo on the Eagles’ web site at the time, down to the “Eagle” logo in the same loca­tion over his chest. Addi­tional key ele­ments which ver­i­fied his iden­tity and fur­ther ruled out the oppos­ing coach included his mus­tache and his weight. (The oppos­ing coach was thin and had no facial hair.)

7) Team Col­ors — no need for explanation.

Emo­tional Impact. Exam­ine these closely in the view­ers’ data, or you may specif­i­cally tar­get the emo­tions of each teams’ fans or play­ers (Hint: move for­ward in time to the end of the game.)

Well known land­marks in the win­ning team’s home city. As with the pre­vi­ous sug­ges­tions, these may appear spon­ta­neously, or you may directly tar­get them in a move­ment or follow-up ses­sion. If well known, in many cases these will be imme­di­ately obvi­ous to the ses­sion ana­lyst, or take very lit­tle time to research. Pos­si­bil­i­ties include: the Space Nee­dle in Seat­tle, the Lib­erty Bell in Philadel­phia, Reunion Tower in Dal­las, etc. View­ers may also sketch the win­ning team’s home sta­dium. A team’s sta­dium, par­tic­u­lary when it is older, has a great his­tor­i­cal sig­nif­i­cance, and is an impor­tant sym­bol of the team. Look for unique shapes, struc­tures, col­ors, or fea­tures (does it have an open or slid­ing roof, or is it cov­ered? How is it shaped?) If not specif­i­cally tar­geted, pay par­tic­u­larly close atten­tion if the vis­it­ing team’s home sta­dium appears in a session.

10) Anom­alous Data. And finally, do not over­look or under­es­ti­mate anom­alous data (which you can fur­ther inves­ti­gate in Stage 5) which may appear mean­ing­less or out of place ini­tially, but could reveal infor­ma­tion that relates to the win­ning team, a star player, team his­tory, or a cur­rent event sur­round­ing the the team.

Once again, I really do hope that you do use Remote Viewing for more noble causes. But I guess when you have the next office sweep­stakes is on — feel free to use this advice taken from TRV News — and let me know if you do win the next footy, bas­ket­ball, or base­ball tip­ping sweep­stakes at the office.

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