Is there anything apart from meditation and doing remote viewing session that you can do to improve your remote viewing skills?
training to be a remote viewer
Practice... :D :D :D
A few of the named RVers use Theta waves while in session.
I would also suggest getting proficient at Lucid Dreaming.
You do need to ensure you have a good diet and sleep pattern.
And, you could try supplements for better brain activity.
Exercise and get fit & healthy.
Read. For knowledge, for pleasure. For being able to better describe targets (there's a video out there, and I think I read in one of the many books, about having good medical terminology - anatomy & physiology - makes for better RI and medical RV.)
Practice. Not just doing an RV session with a designated target, but try using your RV/clairvoyance faculty for day to day things - where's the parking spot? Will X be on time to the meeting? What's the traffic like going in Y direction, or should I go via Z?
Get a group of people together and do regular (weekly) practice sessions. (so that you continually have validity and create a group of believers, which will reinforce the hits, and thus your confidence, and thus your ability).
just a few ideas....
Thanks. 🙂🙂😀😃😄😁😉
Also, I now realize, if you are pursuing the Farsight certification, you want to get used to understanding the template and also memorizing the advanced vocabulary if possible. Once you can look at the template and you automatically know how to fill it out: you are ready for SRV
Meditation has nothing to do with remote viewing. You can become a great remote viewer with it without meditating. Sometimes when people meditate, they use visualization which really doesn’t still the mind. In remote viewing your not trying to meditate, your looking for dialogue betweeeb the conscious and subconscious
I would subtly challenge that. Meditation is not necessary for remote viewing... but people who struggle to remote view often struggle to meditate. In fact people who struggle with managing their emotions often struggle to meditate.
Brainwaves, like nutrients or exercise, are healthy in variety. Brainwaves of meditation are different from sleep and conscious thought. We have mental duress if we're not exercising different brainwaves, just like we get serious cramps if we don't exercise different muscles, or we'll have serious digestive problems if we don't take a variety of nutrients
Re : Meditation
Meditation may not be «necessary» for any number of activities, BUT, Meditation, when done properly/correctly, DOES have an effect upon one's Mental-Processing Speed; IF you DON'T Meditate, your Mental-Process-Speed simply doesn't increase, and, you WILL «miss» out on being able to achieve a Full-Perception of things in comparison to what you may have otherwise Perceived.
The simplest «Field-Testing» Example that I can provide for this that you can try for yourself is to Meditate for at least a minute (or at least at the minimum of 30 seconds; a few minutes is even better) BEFORE you start on a Chess-Game; IF you had Meditated FIRST, then, within the initial 30 or so seconds of the match or maybe once the patterns start to become complicated, you should be able to «see» (perceive) more moves and options that are available, such as maybe recognising up to 30 or more so possible moves, compared to a non-meditation-prepared state which would have only been able to recognise and process maybe up to a maximum of 10 moves within that same time-frame.
Field-Test it for yourselves to see what I mean... http://www.noctie.ai/
Meditation has numerous benefits. Just simply explaining to new or novice viewers it isn’t going to make them better. Practice, practice, and practice will. You don’t still the mind when your remote viewing. A matter of fact, I can do a session on a train, plain, at a park, etc. meditation and remote viewing are very different practices. Pretty sure ingo swann stated in interviews that he didn’t meditate. You’re trying to have a dialogue with the subconscious. Early on it’s very basic. As the subconscious matures, the dialogue becomes more evolved. Many people have immature subconscious and it takes time and effort to understand what the subconscious is giving you. That being said the subconscious likes things. So, after a good session give the subconscious a reward (peice of chocolate, ice cream, etc) and you’ll notice the subconscious will become much more engaged like a dog wanting to work for a reward. I don’t think meditation will give you that. It really can be one that simple. Most people fail at remote viewing because they are trying to hard and not making it fun or engaging the subconscious in a creative way.
"So, after a good session give the subconscious a reward (peice of chocolate, ice cream, etc) and you’ll notice the subconscious will become much more engaged like a dog wanting to work for a reward."
Were you being literal with your examples of rewards? Or just as a metaphor?
What other 'rewards' does the subconscious enjoy?
thanks. It was very helpful.
I was being literal. Everyone is different. You’re giving yourself a treat. Chocolate works for me. Maybe it’s a type that’s more expensive that you usually don’t buy. Get it? You’re praising your subconscious. It could be glass of wine, could be a bath in essential oils, could be a walk, it really doesn’t matter. It’s a reward for your subconscious. You will develop your signal much better and quicker.
Ok, cool. Very much thanks for the suggestion!!!!
Q: how do you know it's a sub-conscious reward, and not a conscious reward? (oh, a thought just struck - perhaps it is a conscious reward for shutting up and letting the sub-C do its thing??? Does this even matter? (oh, apparently the answer is 'yes' ;p Because, it wouldn't improve the data contact the S-C has...))
I think I saw similar advice from Lyn Buchanan on his website, but I could be wrong.
I think a similar thing. But it's actually the conscious mind. And it's a bit like a conversation with a yappy dog or a paranoid driver at a traffic stop.
"Whoa whoa. What do you need to calm the f down? You want to go for a walk? Here. You want some chill music? Why don't you just stare into space for a sec."
And during session I think "stop caring!!" Stop caring if it's accurate or flops, or if it's about reptilians or the gay waiter at last night's party. Just don't care.
I think it has a lot to do with just calming the f down.
I definitely need to meditate just so i can shut the brain a bit due to the fussiness of work and day to day life.
I'm not yet in a constant state of being of a different and higher vibration so breathing exercices helps a lot for me not to mention the benefits that comes with a deep state of mind afterwards.
On Daz Smith website there is a program called Tachistoscope provided By Lyn Buchanan and John Maillard.
From the website
"A tachistoscope is a device that displays an image for a specific amount of time. It can be used to increase recognition speed, to show something too fast to be consciously recognized, or to test which elements of an image are memorable."
Have somebody use it, is it any good to help you get better in the field of remote viewing?
https://www.remoteviewed.com/tachistoscope-program-provided-by-lyn-buchanan/