Learn Remote Viewing

A practical guide to perceiving distant locations through consciousness alone.

Four Core Principles

1. Write Everything Down

Record every impression that crosses your mind: words, images, sensations, smells, emotions. Even if it seems absurd or irrelevant. Your analytical mind will want to filter, but the key is to capture everything first and analyze later.

2. Trust Your First Impression

Your initial intuition is often the most accurate. Do not second-guess, censor, or judge it. Write it down immediately. The mind's first response tends to be the purest signal before the analytical mind interferes.

3. Suspend Your Ego

Your ego will attempt to "solve" the target through logic and guessing. Gently set this aside. Approach the session like a child drawing: free, uninhibited, without expectations of being "right" or "wrong".

4. Release All Expectations

Paradoxically, the best results emerge when you expect nothing. Cultivate curiosity without ambition. The goal is exploration, not achievement. This relaxed state allows information to flow naturally.

What You Need

Location

Any quiet space where you can focus without interruptions.

Duration

Sessions typically last 10-30 minutes.

Materials

Paper and pen, or a digital note-taking device.

Mental State

Relaxed, focused, and genuinely curious.

The Process

1

Receive Your Target

You'll be given a reference point for the target—this could be a number, a sealed envelope, or simply a photo turned face down. This reference contains no information about the actual target.

2

Quiet Your Mind

Close your eyes or softly focus on your paper. Take a few deep breaths to center yourself. Allow your thoughts to settle.

3

Receive Impressions

Allow whatever comes to come. Don't force or search for anything. Be receptive to subtle sensations, images, or thoughts that arise naturally.

4

Record Everything

Write or sketch all your impressions without judgment or analysis. Some prefer to note as they go, others wait until the session ends—find what works for you. What matters is capturing everything.

5

Stay Receptive

Maintain this receptive state for 10-30 minutes. If your mind wanders, gently return your focus to the target.

6

Compare & Learn

After the session, compare your notes with the revealed target. Look for patterns, connections, and surprising correspondences. Note what worked.

What to Expect

Remote viewing produces subtle impressions rather than vivid images. Think of it as catching glimpses through a foggy window—you'll perceive fragments, textures, colors, and sensations that only make sense once you see the actual target.

During a typical session, you might receive vague shapes, emotional impressions, or seemingly random details that later prove surprisingly accurate. Results vary greatly from session to session, and even experienced viewers have inconsistent performances. This variability is normal and part of the learning process.

Don't expect photographic clarity or perfect accuracy—these are myths. Remote viewing is not about instant mastery or absolute certainty. It's a skill that develops gradually through patient practice, self-observation, and learning from each session's feedback.

Remember

Each session is a unique experiment. There is no "good" or "bad" viewing—only data to learn from. Approach this practice with patience, curiosity, and an open mind.

Start Practicing