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HUD Remote Viewing Manual: Analogies, Exercises, and Techniques for Enhanced Perception

  • Writer: Gabriel Boboc
    Gabriel Boboc
  • 2 days ago
  • 24 min read


This HUD Remote Viewing (RV) Manual is designed to help practitioners enhance their remote viewing skills, using analogies, exercises, and techniques for recalibration and mental focus. It draws from aviation, psychological techniques, and practical methods to help remote viewers lock onto targets, maintain focus, and eliminate distractions.


1. Boresight Reticle (Jet's Aim) → Viewer’s Conscious Focus

  • In a jet, this represents where the aircraft is pointed. It’s the starting reference for alignment.

  • In remote viewing, this is the conscious mind's focus—staying relaxed, present, and open without forcing impressions. If the conscious mind wanders or overanalyzes, the "aim" drifts off target.

2. Missile Seeker Reticle (Where the Missile is Looking) → Viewer’s Subconscious/Intuition

  • The missile’s seeker actively tracks the target, but it has its own movement, separate from the jet.

  • In remote viewing, this is like the subconscious mind picking up on the target—it may "see" things before the conscious mind recognizes them. The challenge is keeping this signal steady and preventing interference from imagination or biases.

3. Target Designator (Predicted Impact) → Viewer’s Data Integration

  • This is the fire-control system's calculation of where the missile should go, considering movement and corrections.

  • In remote viewing, this represents how well the viewer integrates impressions into coherent data. It’s the moment when the subconscious insights (missile seeker) align with conscious interpretation (boresight), forming a clear perception of the target.

When Everything Aligns

  • In the jet, when all three shapes overlap, the pilot gets a valid missile lock, meaning a high-probability hit.

  • In remote viewing, when the conscious mind, subconscious impressions, and proper interpretation align, the session produces accurate, verifiable data.

Challenges (Losing the Lock)

  • In dogfights, pilots lose missile locks due to countermeasures, sudden movements, or breaking alignment.

  • In remote viewing, "losing the lock" happens when mental noise, assumptions, or emotional biases interfere, causing the viewer to drift off-target.

Key to Success

  • Fighter pilots use practice, discipline, and advanced systems to maintain alignment.

  • Remote viewers use training, mindfulness, and structured techniques (like CRV) to keep focus and extract clean data.

    So, whether launching a missile or viewing a target remotely, alignment is everything.


    Remote viewing might function like a targeting system in the brain, where the


    subconscious acts like a missile seeker, the conscious mind is the aircraft's HUD, and the final interpretation is the targeting computer calculating the best "hit."


    If any of these drift, the session loses accuracy, just like a missile missing its mark.

    This might also explain why training and structure matter so much in remote viewing—just like a fighter pilot needs to understand their instruments and how to make adjustments mid-flight, a remote viewer has to stay centered, avoid distractions, and recalibrate when needed.


1. How a Pilot Knows They’re Off Target

A pilot doesn’t just see the misalignment; they feel it through their instruments and instinct. Here’s how:

  • Visual Cues → The three shapes on the HUD are not concentric. The missile seeker is not following the target.

  • Auditory Cues → The missile lock tone may break or change in pitch, indicating loss of tracking.

  • Tactile Cues → The aircraft may be pulling Gs in a turn, making the pilot physically feel they are losing the lock.

A trained pilot doesn’t wait until a shot is missed—they sense drift early and correct in real-time.


2. How a Remote Viewer Can Detect Misalignment

A remote viewer doesn’t have a HUD, but the brain, body, and intuition act as a targeting system. Here’s how misalignment shows up:

  • Visual/Auditory Noise → The viewer starts getting data that feels "forced," too structured, or too much like imagination rather than a raw impression.

  • Mental Tone Shift → The session feels off, like a lock-on tone breaking. There might be hesitation or internal conflict about the data.

  • Body Cues → The viewer may feel tension, over-focus, or even an emotional reaction (frustration, boredom, or ego-driven excitement).

Like the pilot, a good remote viewer must learn to sense the drift before completely losing the target.


3. How to Realign When Off-Target

Pilots have correction maneuvers to bring the missile seeker back onto the target. Remote viewers can do the same:

Pilot’s Realignment Method

Remote Viewer’s Correction

Adjust flight path to center HUD shapes

Pause, reset, and go back to a neutral state

Switch targeting mode (e.g., radar to IR)

Shift perception—try a different sensory approach (visual, tactile, emotional)

Reacquire target using wide scan

Use "broad strokes" instead of fixating on details (sketch, describe general aspects)

Trust training & avoid panic

Trust raw impressions & don’t force data

If a fighter pilot forces a shot while off-target, they waste a missile. If a remote viewer forces an impression, they introduce mental noise. Both need patience and discipline to wait for proper alignment.


Using This for Remote Viewing Training

We could create an internal “lock-on” system for RV:

  1. Pre-Session Calibration → Take note of your mental and physical state before starting.

  2. Live Adjustment → Develop sensitivity to when the session "feels off" and reset without force.

  3. Feedback Review → Like a pilot watches gun cam footage, a remote viewer should analyze where they drifted to improve future sessions.

Final Thought: Is There a Deeper Mechanism at Play?

This suggests that remote viewing is a real-time feedback process just like missile targeting. The brain might function like a dynamic alignment system, constantly adjusting perceptions until the subconscious and conscious minds fully “lock on” to the target.


Remote Viewing "Lock-On" Training Routine


1. Pre-Session Calibration (Aligning the Jet Before Battle)

Before a fighter pilot enters combat, they check all systems. In RV, you need to check your internal state before engaging with a target.

Checklist Before You Start

  • Mental State Check → Am I relaxed? Too analytical? Emotionally distracted?

  • Physical State Check → Am I tired, restless, or too energized?

  • Expectation Reset → Let go of what you think the target might be.

  • Quick Centering Exercise → Breathe deeply for 10 seconds and let thoughts settle.

The goal is to start in a neutral, steady state—like a jet taking off smoothly, not with turbulence.


2. The "Lock-On" Phase (Getting a Good Target Fix)

Once a fighter pilot enters combat, they use multiple systems (radar, IR tracking, etc.) to find the target and get a solid missile lock.

For remote viewing, this means making initial contact with the target in a way that feels stable and clear.

Technique: Wide Scan to Lock-On

  1. Start with Broad Strokes → Get general impressions first (shapes, colors, textures, emotions).

  2. Look for the "Lock-On Feeling" → The data should feel fluid, natural, and not forced—a clean "ping" rather than a struggle.

  3. Sense Alignment → Do conscious thoughts match the raw impressions? If they feel disconnected, you may be drifting.

  4. Micro-Adjust → If the target feels faint or unclear, shift your focus slightly (change perspective, use a different sense).

Indicator of Good Lock-On:✔️ Data flows easily, with a neutral, detached feeling.❌ If you start "chasing" details or mentally constructing a scene, you're losing lock—time to reset.


3. Mid-Session Correction (Reacquiring the Target)

Even in combat, missile locks can be lost due to enemy maneuvers or countermeasures. A fighter pilot doesn’t give up—they correct and try again.

In remote viewing, this happens when the signal gets weak, mental noise creeps in, or the target feels distant.

Correction Methods (Reacquiring the Target)

Problem

Correction

Data feels forced or logical

Pause for 5 seconds, reset, and re-approach passively

Images become too structured

Shift to a different sense (textures, emotions, sounds)

Emotions or expectations arise

Write down the distraction and push it aside

No impressions come through

Relax, breathe, and let the target "pull" you instead of chasing it

Think of it like a pilot switching targeting modes to reacquire a moving target.


4. Lock Confirmation (Making Sure You're Really On Target)

A pilot doesn’t just fire a missile immediately—they confirm the lock before committing to the shot.

For remote viewing, this means checking for false locks (where imagination or assumptions have taken over).

Self-Test: Is This a Real Lock or Mental Noise?

  • Does the data feel “received” or “created” by me? (Received = good lock, Created = bad lock)

  • Is the session still fluid, or am I filling in gaps?

  • Does it match previous correct RV sessions in terms of “feeling” alignment?

If something feels off, don’t force it—go back to correction techniques and realign.


5. Post-Session Debrief (Analyzing the Lock Performance)

After a missile is fired, fighter pilots review their targeting performance using gun cam footage and radar logs.

For RV, analyzing where you maintained or lost alignment is crucial for improvement.

Debriefing Routine

  1. Mark When You Felt "Locked-On" vs. When You Felt Lost

    • Look at timestamps where impressions felt strongest.

  2. Check Accuracy Against Feedback

    • Where did you get close? Where did you drift?

  3. Identify What Broke the Lock

    • Was it overthinking? Emotional reaction? Losing focus?

  4. Simulate How You Could Have Corrected It

    • Visualize yourself detecting the drift earlier and applying a correction method.


6. Advanced Training: "Simulated Dogfights"

A pilot improves by practicing against different targets in training. Remote viewers can do the same by working with different types of targets:

  • Static vs. Moving Targets → Try viewing both still objects (buildings) and dynamic ones (people, vehicles).

  • Blind Targets vs. Known Targets → Mix blind sessions (unknown targets) and controlled sessions (targets you get feedback on quickly) to train the “lock-on” reflex.

  • Short vs. Extended Sessions → Force quick lock-ons in 3-5 minutes, then practice maintaining them for 30+ minutes.

This kind of practice sharpens both quick targeting ability and long-term stability.


Final Thoughts: The Brain as a Targeting System

This routine suggests that remote viewing works like a dynamic targeting system in the brain, constantly adjusting focus to stay aligned with non-local information.

If we could develop real-time biofeedback (like monitoring brainwave shifts when the "lock-on" feeling happens), we might be able to create an RV HUD (Heads-Up Display) training system—like how a pilot sees alignment on the HUD before firing a missile.


When a session feels locked-in but is actually locked onto mental noise instead of the target. Switching senses is like a pilot switching from radar lock to infrared tracking when one mode fails. The trick is to create automatic escape routes from a stuck perception.


Techniques for Quickly Switching Senses in Remote Viewing


1. The "Eject Button" – Instant Pattern Interrupt

When a fighter pilot realizes they’re in a bad situation (wrong lock, missile failure), they sometimes have to eject and re-engage from a different angle. In RV, when you're overly attached to a sense, you can "eject" by:

  • Clapping or Snapping Fingers – A sudden break stops fixation.

  • Looking at Something Else for 2 Seconds – A blank wall, your hand, anything neutral.

  • Blinking 3 Times and Re-centering – Creates a short neurological reset.

  • Physically Moving Your Body – Slightly shifting posture can shake up perception.

Use these when you feel stuck in a sensory loop.


2. The "Sensor Override" – Forcing a Shift to Another Perception

A pilot can override targeting systems by manually switching modes. You can do the same with senses:

How to Override Using a Specific Sensory Focus

Currently Stuck In

Override By Asking Yourself

Visuals (Seeing)

“What does it feel like?” (Texture, temperature, weight)

Textures (Feeling)

“What color is it?” (Force a visual shift)

Sounds (Hearing)

“What shape does this sound have?” (Convert to a visual form)

Emotions (Feeling the atmosphere)

“If this was an object, what would it look like?”

Each question forces a mode switch in the brain.


Example:If you’re stuck seeing water, but unsure if it's a lake, ocean, or river → Ask, "What sound does it make?" If the response is quiet and enclosed, it might be a pool; if roaring and open, an ocean.


3. The "Flyby" – Checking for a False Lock

Fighter pilots do a "flyby" to visually confirm a target before committing to engagement. In RV, you can do a quick sensory flyby to check if you’re truly locked onto the target or if it’s just mental noise.

Flyby Test:

  1. Pause for 5 seconds.

  2. Shift perception to an opposite sense.

    • If you were seeing: Try touching.

    • If you were feeling: Try hearing.

  3. If the new sense confirms the impression → You're likely on target.

  4. If it breaks the impression → You were likely stuck in a false lock.


Example:You keep seeing "a metallic structure." Ask: "What does it feel like?" If it suddenly collapses into a vague feeling, you might be imagining it.


4. The "Kill Switch" – When All Else Fails

If a pilot locks onto the wrong target, they sometimes have to cut the lock completely and restart. In RV, if all senses fail, do a hard reset by:

  • Writing “RESET” on paper → Then immediately trying again.

  • Saying out loud: "What I just got might be noise. I’m letting it go."

  • Taking a deep breath, exhaling slowly, and starting fresh.

It’s better to reset than waste time stuck in a bad lock.


Final Thought: The Brain as a Multi-Sensor Targeting System

The brain is naturally multi-sensory, but sometimes it gets stuck in a single mode. Training these switching techniques makes it easier to move between senses instantly, leading to clearer and more accurate remote viewing.


1. "Eye Movement Reset" (Like a Fighter Pilot Scanning)

Just like how pilots scan their surroundings to stay aware, you can engage your eyes in a quick pattern to shake up your perception:

  • Look up (toward the ceiling or sky).

  • Look down (toward the ground).

  • Look left and then right quickly.

Doing this rapid, non-sequential eye movement helps your brain disengage from an over-structured thought pattern, forcing it to reset and open to new data.


2. "The 5-4-3-2-1 Grounding Technique" (Sensing Reality)

This is a mindfulness technique that helps pull you back into direct sensory engagement with the world around you. It works because it engages multiple senses to bring your attention back to the physical moment, breaking the illusion or fixation of a target.Here’s how it works:

  • 5 things you can see

  • 4 things you can feel (e.g., texture, temperature, pressure)

  • 3 things you can hear

  • 2 things you can smell

  • 1 thing you can taste

This technique can be a reset button when you feel stuck or too immersed in one sense. By focusing on physical, sensory data, you reset your mental "lock" on the target and open up new possibilities.


3. "Body Reset" (Body Scan)

This technique helps you re-align by engaging your bodily awareness. It's like adjusting the physical settings on a device before a recalibration.

  1. Close your eyes and take a deep breath.

  2. Scan your body from head to toe slowly, noticing any tension, tightness, or discomfort.

  3. Release any tension as you exhale and focus on the sensation of relaxation spreading through your body.

  4. Shift your awareness to your breathing and how it feels in the present moment.

By consciously moving your awareness through your body, you interrupt the cognitive loop and bring your focus back to a more grounded, neutral place.


4. "Write and Let Go" (Externalizing the Thoughts)

Sometimes, your mind holds onto things too tightly. To break the mental loop:

  1. Quickly write down any thoughts or impressions you’re having about the target (without censoring yourself).

  2. Set the paper aside and mentally say, “I’ve captured that thought; now it’s time to move on.”

  3. Start fresh with a new approach, engaging a different sense or resetting your focus.

Writing down the thought allows you to acknowledge it and then release it, much like how a pilot clears out data after a failed lock.


5. "The 30-Second Stillness Exercise" (Resetting by Silence)

Sometimes, all you need is a break to let your brain “reboot.”

  • Close your eyes and sit completely still.

  • Do nothing but breathe deeply for 30 seconds.

  • Allow thoughts to pass through without attaching to them.

This is similar to how a fighter pilot might momentarily disengage to avoid "overload" when they need to think clearly. Giving yourself a moment of complete stillness helps your brain relax and reorient to new data.


6. "The Switch Between Active and Passive Perception"

At times, remote viewers can get too active in their thinking, trying to force information into a particular form. If you find yourself stuck in this mode, it’s time for a switch.

  • Active perception: You forcefully try to figure out what the target is.

  • Passive perception: You let the information come to you without interference.

When you notice you're overthinking, switch to passive mode. This is akin to a fighter pilot switching from an active radar lock to using passive infrared sensors—allowing the environment to give you the information rather than forcing a specific perception.


7. "The Breath Reset" (Engaging the Diaphragm)

Breathing deeply can help reset your nervous system. It’s a quick and simple way to refocus. Here’s a technique:

  1. Take a deep, diaphragmatic breath, filling your lungs from the bottom up.

  2. Hold it for 3 seconds, focusing on the air filling your lungs and chest.

  3. Exhale slowly and completely, releasing all tension.

  4. Repeat 3 times.

This slows down your mind and brings you back to the present moment. It’s like recalibrating the jet’s instruments for a clearer lock.


Final Thoughts: The Power of Intentional Breaks

The underlying idea of all these techniques is intention—you intentionally break your focus when it’s misaligned to reset your brain and open yourself to fresh data. These techniques are designed to bypass mental overthinking and bring you back into a state of presence and neutrality.


It’s an incredibly useful skill to be able to perform the session while monitoring yourself to ensure you’re staying on target. This is similar to how a fighter pilot might be actively engaged in a dogfight, but also needs to constantly check their radar and monitor their instruments. Developing this ability as a remote viewer involves balancing focus and self-awareness, so you can stay attuned to the task without getting stuck or lost in the details.

Here's a breakdown of how you can develop this dual-tasking ability:


1. Develop Self-Awareness as a Separate "Observer"

This is similar to a flight control system where the pilot is flying the plane but also has a secondary “observer” monitoring key data. The key here is to train your brain to split attention between two main functions: the active viewing and the self-monitoring.

How to Train Self-Awareness:

  • Establish a "watcher" mindset:Before starting a session, tell yourself you’ll engage in two tasks: active observation and self-monitoring.

    • Active observation is focused on the target.

    • Self-monitoring is about checking for alignment with the target and being aware of your emotional and mental state.

  • Visualize yourself as both the viewer and the observer:Imagine you are two beings at once:

    1. One is diving deep into the target with focused attention (the active viewer).

    2. The other is standing slightly apart, watching your process and noticing if you’re drifting off course.

  • Switch between primary and secondary focus as needed:

    • If you notice you’re too caught up in a specific sense, consciously shift your focus back to the overall “target.”

    • If the watcher part detects a misalignment (like you're stuck or too attached to a particular sense), allow the active viewer to relax for a moment and give room for the watcher to reorient.


2. Internal Feedback Loops – Checking and Re-calibrating

This is like autopilot with manual override in a plane. You can develop a feedback loop where, as you work on the target, you automatically check in with yourself for signs of deviation.

How to Build Feedback Loops:

  • Have a mental checklist as a passive background thought:"Am I still with the target? Are these impressions coming from the target, or from my own expectations?"This is a subtle thought, but it helps keep you grounded and aware without pulling you out of the session completely.

  • Use mental "check-in points":Every 10 minutes or so (depending on session length), ask yourself questions like:

    • "What am I really perceiving?"

    • "How does this feel right now—does it match with my previous data?"

    • "Am I focusing on something that might be irrelevant?"

  • Incorporate a feedback cue into your session rhythm:At each shift in perception or major sensory change, take a second to ask: "Is this aligned?" Then move forward with the information, but you’ve created a small check-in that reinforces your awareness of being on or off track.


3. Use Body Cues and Feelings as Signposts

Pilots often use their body sensations to detect early signs of problems—a slight change in G-force can warn them that the plane is going into a dive or stall. In RV, your body sensations and gut feelings can act as early warning signs that you’re losing the lock.

How to Use Body Feedback in RV:

  • Physical tension: If you feel your body tightening, your jaw clenching, or you start holding your breath, stop for a second and mentally check where your attention is. Your body’s stress signals can indicate mental overload or focus drift.

  • Emotional cues: Pay attention to any emotional reaction you have while in session. If you’re getting frustrated, confused, or starting to feel like you’ve “lost it,” that’s often your inner observer signaling that you're too focused on a path that doesn’t align with the target.

  • Breath awareness: If you’re losing your connection, you might start breathing shallowly or irregularly. Use this as a cue to re-center your focus and adjust your mental engagement.


4. Train the "Pause and Reset" Technique

A pilot can pull out of an engagement to reassess their approach. Similarly, remote viewers can learn to pause and reset if they feel they’re losing track. This is like taking a quick recalibration check before diving back in.

How to Apply the Pause and Reset:

  • If you start feeling too attached to one perception or “lock,” take a brief pause (around 10-20 seconds).

    • Step 1: Mentally step back and “look” at your viewing process. Ask yourself, “Is this the target or my expectation?”

    • Step 2: Reset your focus by asking a neutral question like, “What does this target feel like?” and shift to a new perception.

    • Step 3: Re-engage with the target, but from a neutral perspective without overthinking the process.

  • This "pause and reset" works like a soft reboot, giving your subconscious a chance to recalibrate the target.


5. Develop “Dual-Perception” Exercises

To truly enhance dual-tasking, practice RV exercises where you alternate focus between active viewing and self-monitoring.

Dual-Perception Practice Exercise:

  1. Set a timer for 5 minutes and begin a session on a random target.

  2. Set two distinct tasks:

    • In one 2-minute window, actively view the target without concern for self-monitoring.

    • In the next 2 minutes, shift your focus to self-monitoring and observe how the impressions are coming in. Are you locked in? Are you getting attached to irrelevant details?

  3. After the cycle, repeat and switch tasks again.

With this practice, you’ll get more comfortable with alternating between active engagement with the target and neutral self-monitoring, making it easier to balance the two during actual RV sessions.


6. Use Analogies and External Objects for Calibration

A fighter pilot has external instruments for constant calibration. You can use external objects or analogies as “reference points” during your RV practice to stay calibrated.For example:

  • Keep a watch or timer nearby to remind yourself to check in at intervals.

  • Use objects like a coin or crystal to represent your "target" and hold it in your hand for moments of recalibration when needed.

These tools help create mental hooks that reinforce your self-monitoring without needing to consciously check in all the time.

Conclusion:

The ability to do both tasks simultaneously—doing the session and monitoring yourself—requires the development of a mental “dual-control” system. It’s a process of training your brain to not just “perform” but to also observe itself in real-time, which can take practice, but with consistent effort, it becomes a powerful tool in your RV sessions.

This dual-tasking enhances your awareness and your adaptability during sessions. As you practice, you’ll become more fluid at toggling between the two roles, allowing you to stay on target while staying mindful of your state.


A retake:


Core Concepts:

  1. Locking onto a Target – The process of mentally focusing on a target and avoiding distractions.

  2. Recalibrating Your Focus – Techniques for realigning your perceptions when you lose your “lock.”

  3. Overcoming AOL (Analytical Overlay) – Strategies for letting go of assumptions and maintaining pure impressions.

  4. Dual-tasking in Remote Viewing – Techniques for maintaining awareness of both the session and your focus, akin to a fighter pilot managing multiple tasks.

  5. Psychic Shields and Counter-RV Techniques – Protecting yourself from external RV attempts and ensuring your target remains undetected.

1. Analogies for Locking onto a Target

Aviation and Missile Guidance System Analogy

Imagine you are a fighter pilot locked onto a target. Your targeting reticle and missile guidance system have to align to strike effectively. Just as the missile’s guidance system relies on the pilot’s ability to lock on and track the target, so does a remote viewer’s ability to focus on the target through their mental targeting system.

Three Shapes for Locking In:

  1. Concentration Circle: The central area where your focus must land. This is where you see your target clearly. If the reticle is off, the missile will miss.

  2. Engagement Window: The zone in which the missile can effectively lock onto the target. This window represents the clarity of the target’s location in your mind. Without it, the lock doesn’t hold.

  3. Reticle Alignment: The mental process of keeping your focus aligned on the target, much like a pilot’s visual alignment with a target. If your mind wanders or gets distracted, the lock is broken.

Remote Viewing Parallel:

  • As a remote viewer, you must focus on one target at a time, maintaining your mental reticle and ensuring you don’t wander off into unrelated mental distractions or assumptions. If your focus is misaligned (just like a pilot), you will miss the mark.


2. Dual-Tasking: Maintaining Focus on Session and Self-Awareness

In a dogfight, fighter pilots keep track of both the enemy’s position and their own. Similarly, a remote viewer must balance the focus on the target and the awareness of their own mental state to avoid losing the lock.

Mental Exercise: The Dual Lock

  • Step 1: Imagine you are simultaneously flying two planes. One represents your target (the object or location), and the other represents your self-awareness (your mental state).

  • Step 2: As you focus on the target, keep your mental "radar" on your internal state. If you feel yourself veering off-course (due to distractions or intrusive thoughts), realign your focus as you would correct a plane’s trajectory.

  • Step 3: Practice balancing both tasks, adjusting and recalibrating your focus as needed. Over time, this will become second nature.


3. Recalibrating Your Focus and Shaking Off AOL (Analytical Overlay)

AOL Concept:

AOL (Analytical Overlay) occurs when you interpret the impressions you receive from the target, instead of simply receiving them as raw, unfiltered data. It’s the mind trying to make sense of things prematurely.

AOL Analogy - Fighter Pilot Perspective:

Imagine a fighter pilot sees something (like a flashing light), but instead of focusing on it as a real target, they start analyzing it—“That’s a helicopter, I’m sure of it.” This immediately breaks their lock because their brain is imposing assumptions.

Recalibration Techniques:

  1. Three-Times Blinking:

    • Exercise: Blink three times to reset your focus. This disrupts the mental process and gives your mind a fresh start, erasing analytical assumptions.

    • Reason: It’s a mental “clear the cache” action that disrupts analytical thinking and puts you back in pure, non-judgmental perception mode.

  2. The Windmill Technique:

    • Exercise: Imagine the “target area” spinning like a windmill. The spinning motion helps break any stagnation in focus, allowing fresh data to flow through.

    • Reason: The motion prevents mental attachment to a single interpretation and fosters fluid perception.


4. Creating Shields and Protecting Your Target

In the context of psychic shielding, you can draw from military tactics of camouflage or countermeasures.

Psychic Shield Analogy - Creating a Fog Barrier:

Think of it like creating a fog around your target or yourself. This fog blurs the details for any incoming observer, similar to a fighter jet using electronic countermeasures to confuse a missile lock.

Creating a Psychic Fog:

  1. Visualize a Shield: Imagine a shimmering field or mist enveloping your target. This prevents it from being clearly visible to other remote viewers.

  2. Make it Collective: To ensure that the shield is part of objective reality, imagine it is public, known, and discoverable by all, akin to how a military defense system would be detectable by radar.

  3. Intentional Projection: It’s not just about imagining a barrier but anchoring it in the collective consciousness. Use imagery, words, and even concepts that are widely agreed upon as real.


5. Counter-Remote Viewing Techniques

If you suspect someone is using remote viewing to target you or your location, you can use these countermeasures to block their perception or create false impressions.

Contaminating the Tasker’s Mind:

The first step is to unconsciously influence the tasker or project manager by planting false assumptions in their mind. This contaminates their target and, in turn, disorients the remote viewer. You can achieve this by:

  1. Intentional Suggestion: Create a false narrative around the target. For instance, imagine a completely different scenario in the same location that misleads the viewer.

  2. Mind Contamination: Projecting your false assumptions, such as thinking the target is something mundane like a box or a tree, may skew the viewer’s impressions. The remote viewer may start perceiving these false details as truth.


6. Detecting RV Interference

As a remote viewer, you must be aware of psychic disturbances when someone else is attempting to view your location.

Signs of Remote Viewing Interference:

  1. Energetic Shifts: If you feel a sudden pressure, emotional disturbance, or a sense of being watched, someone may be attempting to target you remotely.

  2. Intrusive Imagery: If foreign imagery pops into your mind that doesn’t seem to belong, you may be sensing the remote viewer’s impressions.

  3. Physical Sensations: Some report sudden temperature shifts or vibrational disturbances when being targeted psychically.

Counter Detection:

  1. Pendulum & Dowsing: Use a pendulum to ask questions like “Am I being targeted by RV right now?” The pendulum’s movement will guide you to answers.

  2. Reverse Lock-On: Attempt to ping back the viewer by focusing on them and seeing where their attention is coming from. You may sense their location or intentions.

  3. Mirrors and Reflective Surfaces: Sometimes, reflective surfaces like mirrors or water show distortions when an external consciousness interacts with your space.


Conclusion: Enhancing Remote Viewing Skills

To become a proficient remote viewer, it's essential to not only develop the ability to lock onto targets but also learn how to recalibrate when you lose your lock, defend against external RV attempts, and maintain clarity by overcoming AOL. Through a combination of analogies, mental exercises, and psychic techniques, you can strengthen your skills and adapt your approach to both remote viewing and countermeasures.

By integrating these techniques into your training routine, you will become adept at mental dual-tasking, maintaining focus, and understanding the underlying energetic dynamics of RV.


Second retake:


Remote Viewing as a Heads-Up Display: A Cognitive Flight Plan for the Mind

Introduction

Remote Viewing (RV) can be thought of as a mission of precision, guided by the same HUD (Heads-Up Display) systems that military pilots use to navigate the skies. The brain uses its own quantum radar to sense vacuum oscillations, like a radar system detecting objects at a distance. It then locks onto specific targeting impressions before firing neural missiles (microcolumns) to analyze and process these features. Finally, it integrates the information into a complete pilot view, where the viewer experiences the target as an entire scene.

In this article, we will explore how to approach RV with the same precision and focus as a fighter pilot, using intent, neural microcolumns, and feedback loops to stay locked onto the target and correct errors along the way.


1. Preparing for the RV Mission: The Pre-Flight Checklist

Before engaging in Remote Viewing, it’s crucial to prepare the mental cockpit. This pre-flight checklist ensures you’re ready to begin your session with full cognitive capacity, much like how a pilot ensures their aircraft is ready for flight.

Pre-Flight Checklist:

  • Clear Your Mind: Just as a pilot must ensure the skies are clear, clear your mind of distractions. Perform a short breathing exercise to center your focus.

  • Set Intent: Like a pilot setting a flight path, clearly define your RV intent — what you want to know about the target.

  • Visualize the HUD: Picture the three shapes that guide you during your session: the radar (vacuum sensing), the missile targeting system (impression search), and the pilot view (integrated data).

  • Tuning Your Brain: Prepare your brain for the session, ensuring that the microcolumns are ready to be fired once the target is locked.

  • Grounding: The quantum vacuum is an endless resource of entanglement, so don’t worry about creating or maintaining entanglement — just trust that it’s available.


2. Locking Onto the Target: Integrating the Three Shapes

The key to a successful RV mission is staying locked onto the target, just like a missile targeting system stays focused on its target. The three shapes — radar, missile targeting, and pilot view — each represent different stages in the process.

Step-by-Step:

  • Radar (Sensing the Vacuum Oscillations): The first step is the radar — your brain's ability to detect quantum fluctuations in the vacuum. These faint oscillations are the first signals your brain picks up. This is the initial sensing of the target, akin to how radar detects distant objects.

    • Exercise: Tune into the subtle vibrations around you, mentally attuning your brain to detect the faintest quantum signals.

  • Missile Targeting System (Impression Search): Once the radar detects the signal, your brain’s missile targeting system locks onto specific impressions (e.g., shapes, colors, textures) of the target. It’s like your brain “scanning” the target, searching for features that it can latch onto.

    • Exercise: Once the radar detects a faint signal, ask yourself, "What is the first feature of the target I notice?" Focus on this and zoom in.

  • Pilot View (Integrated Data): As the data from the target accumulates, the brain integrates it into a coherent mental image, the pilot view. This is the full scene you perceive, with all features of the target integrated and connected.

    • Exercise: As you gather features, visualize the target from multiple angles, creating a 3D image of the target in your mind’s eye.


3. Shaking Off AOLs: Exercises to Stay Focused

AOLs (Analytical Overlay) are the analytical mind’s attempts to interpret or judge the incoming data prematurely. When this happens, it’s like a pilot misinterpreting radar data, causing confusion.

Shaking Off AOLs:

  • Recognizing AOLs: If you catch yourself analyzing or guessing the target, you’re likely in an AOL. The trick is to recognize it quickly and shift back into receiving mode.

  • Exercise 1 - "Reset the Radar": When you start overanalyzing, mentally say, “reset” and shift your focus to the initial faint signal. Trust your first impressions and stop the analytical thoughts.

  • Exercise 2 - "Zoom Out": If you're fixated on one feature or analysis, zoom out from the target, mentally pulling back like a radar screen. This broadens your perspective and helps release the fixation.


4. Common RV Challenges: What Happens When You Lose Lock or Can't Reorient?

Sometimes, you’ll lose the target lock or fail to focus clearly. This can be compared to a missile losing its lock or an aircraft drifting off course. Here are three cases and their solutions.

Case 1: Losing Lock (Focus Shift)

  • Problem: The signal is there, but you can’t focus on specific features of the target. It’s like trying to lock a missile on a moving target but missing.

  • Solution: Re-engage your intent and adjust your mental focus. Try switching to a different aspect of the target, like changing the direction of the missile lock.

Case 2: Inability to Reorient (Lost Sense of Direction)

  • Problem: You lose the sense of where the target is. The target feels disjointed, as if the jet is flying off-course.

  • Solution: Retrace your steps and refocus on your initial impressions. Take a moment to reset the mental trajectory and realign your attention to the target.

Case 3: The Target is Too Complex (Overwhelming Data)

  • Problem: The data is too rich or complex, like a jet receiving conflicting radar signals.

  • Solution: Simplify the data by focusing on a singular aspect (shape, color, position) and gradually build the image from there.


5. Correcting Errors: Feedback Loops and Dynamic Adjustments

In the same way a pilot adjusts their course mid-flight, remote viewers must recalibrate their focus during the session. If you sense an error, use the feedback loop to correct and refine.

  • Dynamic Adjustment: If the data is inconsistent or off, reestablish your intent and adjust your focus to realign the information. Reaffirm the target’s features and check for consistency.

  • Feedback Loop: Use earlier data to ensure alignment. If you're stuck, return to your initial impressions and trust that the target will reveal itself with time.


Conclusion

Remote Viewing is a dynamic mission, requiring precision and control much like piloting a fighter jet. Using the quantum radar to sense the vacuum, the missile targeting system to lock onto specific impressions, and the pilot view to integrate the data, remote viewers can efficiently and accurately lock onto a target. The microcolumns (neurons) act as missiles, firing when needed to process and integrate data, while intent drives the overall session like a pilot navigating through the air.

By following this RV flight plan, you'll be able to consistently stay on course, shake off AOLs, and correct errors when needed, all while honing your mental and neural systems for effective Remote Viewing.



 
 
 

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