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| Could you describe a remote viewing session or two? |
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The first Technical Remote Viewing (TRV) session was under the direction of Major Ed Dames and Ms. Joni Dourif. In this basic exercise, I found myself bilocating to a place in the midst of nowhere, by a corrugated cold (stone) structure or at least, I identified it as such. What I remember of this experience was the rough and uneven surface of a gigantic structure, cold to the touch and somewhat unusual in that it sat in the middle of a vast expanse of land. I declared it to be natural and not man made. The short session ended there. In the folder, two four-digit numbers on the tab was this picture:
TRV sessions begin with the monitor (Major Ed Dames) calling out two four-digit numbers that are used to identify the target and for record purposes. Inside of an opaque gray envelope that sat on the table, unbeknownst to me, was a manila folder containg information about the "target" (in this case a picture) with the numbers written on the tab. When Ed called out the numbers, I wrote them down and let my pen make an involuntary squiggle on the paper. It is felt that all of the information about the target came in a "burst transmission" from the "matrix," the TRV term for the collective unconscious described by Carl Jung where information is stored. The mind downloads this information and by using a series of well defined steps, decoding of this burst transmission is carried out. The "bilocation" I mentioned is the feeling of being in the room with the monitor with pen and paper and yet also being at the remote site, in this case Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming. President Theodore Roosevelt established Devils Tower as the first National Monument on September 24, 1906. It is a natural rock formation that you will remember well from Close Encounters of the Third Kind. I my case, it was indeed a close encounter as I could literally (in the state of bilocation) touch the cold surface of the stone. I felt as if I was indeed close to this structure but surrounded by forest and woodlands. I will be describing other cases further on in the FAQs.
N.B. When the proclamation establishing Devils Tower was published, the apostrophe was not in the document. To my knowledge, there has never been an official correction to the name of Devils Tower.
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