If you are familiar with our company, you know that we have published many books touching on remote viewing. Five are by remote viewer 001, Joseph McMonagle. One is by F. Holmes (Skip) Atwater, who monitored the Army’s remote viewing program from its inception until his retirement. Other books touch upon the subject as well.
But there is nothing like experiencing it to get a different view. Last week I participated in a residential seminar on remote viewing at the Monroe Institute, and have been writing up my experience in my own personal blog (www.frankdemarco.wordpress.com).
What you might find most interesting in my comments is that after I talk about the process in general (including the roles of monitor, viewer, and judges), I show you the notes and sketches that I made during my remote viewing (in part two), then show you the pool of possible targets so that you can decide whether you yourself would have been able to decide what my target had been (in part three), and then — in part four, which will appear tomorrow, Thursday — I show what the target actually was, and discuss the implications of the process.
If this discussion whets your appetite to learn more about remote viewing, I suggest you return to the Hampton Roads site and examine Joe’s books and Skip’s. I am not particularly scientifically inclined, but it is clear enough to me that the fact that remote viewing really works exposes the materialist view of life as the fantasy it always was. The sooner you wake up from that particular daydream, the better for you.