What Are The Best Applications For Remote Viewing?

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By SimeonHein

It's Called "Situational Awareness"

Remote Viewing has a lot of benefits and applications when the viewer wants to get information from a distant location or event, even those in the past or future. A skilled viewer can sometimes pick up details from such events with sometimes astonishingly high levels of accuracy.

When these techniques were originally developed for the military and intelligence communities, viewers were put to the test to describe remote locations such as military installations, new technologies, the whereabouts of particular people, and the likelihood of future events happening. In one particular case, viewer Joe McMoneagle accurately described a new Soviet submarine, with a novel feature of having it's missile tubes ahead of the conning tower, before it had even left dry dock.

Since the days of the military remote viewing program other viewers, like Beverly Jaegers, have gone on to work with police departments in solving crimes and locating missing persons while others have worked with corporations in the development of new products. Some people have developed techniques for predicting future behavior of commodity or stock markets, a technique known as ARV (Associate Remote Viewing) which seems to have at least a 55 percent accuracy rate. Some have even made quite a bit of money with the technique.

From time to time, I get calls from people wanting me to help them find missing pets. This can be an emotionally draining exercise as the owners always want to hear good news from you almost instantly, even if you have none to deliver.

Other applications that viewers sometimes RV for is to look at so-called "esoteric" targets such as UFOs and other planets, or even historical events. Two particular historical targets that are memorable for me include the extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago (I saw a huge meteor with tons of grey dust afterwords) and the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. In both cases, the imagery during the session was very vivid and I can still recall it. This is known as being "bi-located" as the target location seemed as strong or stronger in my awareness than my physical location in the room where I was viewing.

But my favorite "application" of RV is simply to get to know your own mind better and become aware of the subtle types of energy that are around us all the time, and that we seldom pay attention to: something in the RV world known as "ambience." Practicing this type of mental detective work leads to an a better sense of "situational awareness:" simple being more aware of your surroundings and impending events.

After over ten years of studying, practicing, and teaching RV I've learned to appreciate the subtle types of information that one becomes aware of just by paying attention to the subtle cues that pass through our subsconscious minds--but that we often ignore. RV teaches you to pay attention to the cues, not just to let them go by unexamined.

So when you are in a new or different environment, working on a project, or discovering a new setting or location, you have access to a broader range of sensory information that you usually would. You see more, hear more, and most of all become a better listener. This is what some refer to as "situation awareness." And the results of that type of enhanced attentiveness mean you usually do a better job at anything your doing.

Also, you'll find your creativity is enhanced when writing or development new material for just about anything your working on. This is something Daniel Pink in A Whole New Mind and Malcolm Gladwell in Blink have referred to repeatedly (see book module below). A remote viewer has learned to pay closer attention to the subtle signals from their subconscious mind and right brain and so are more open to novel ways of looking at things. Ideas pop out of a viewer's mind with ease and that have a better sense of paying attention to what's important.

This isn't to say that RV is an instant answer to everything. It isn't. But for those dedicated practitioners, it opens up a new world perception and a treasure trove of new thoughts, ideas, and feelings. And in a world that can sometimes seem short on creativity, that's a big plus.

Read more: Can Anyone Learn To Do Remote Viewing?

Comments

markbennis profile image

markbennis Level 6 Commenter 3 months ago

Great article and one I find really interesting too because I am very open to the concepts of consciousness and how it all is connected on a dimensional level, so again great read and interesting from a learning point and a conformation angle too, voted up!

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      Remote Viewing Related Books

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