Question:

Does trying to do Remote Viewing give you a headache?

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I know this is a silly question...but I think I would get a headache if I had to think that hard. Does this happen to anyone?

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7 ANSWERS


  1. No certain targets do. I was recently tasked to 'remote view' the demolition of WTC on 9/11. It gave me a headache.

    For what it is worth we did find out thermite was used. The bombs were planted in advance. A top ranking member of the Executive branch was involved. And much more.This was from my session alone and this was done blind, without a monitor and  with the usual protocols in place. I will not comment in this venue what the other remote viewers got.

    The answer is only certain targets. Thank you for letting me expound on this but for the most part certain targets. Government targets, alien targets I have beat them both. Very nebulous targets like clouds or things that will happen in the future with a huge number of variables.

    Some targets can make you nauseous. Some can scare the h**l out of you.

    It is the target not the practice. Usually I have a nice glow and a relaxed look on my face because I have to hold theta so long. It is very much like a forced meditation with a focal point.

    No, remote viewing is as pleasant as the meditation it takes to get there. It is our reaction to the target that gives the pain. There are some 'theoretically blocked targets' which might give you a problem but let's not go there for the time being. I don't want a bunch of kids hurting themselves over something I've said. To be even frightened and loose a nights sleep pondering the 'what ifs' isn't worth it to a young mind.


  2. no

    i'm a telekinetic

  3. No,but all these people saying they can do it does.

  4. I can't say as I've ever had a headache caused by remote viewing (and that's after several thousand documented remote viewing sessions).  If anything, I found the RV process relatively relaxing.  One of the requirements for successful remote viewing is to "set aside" personal inclemencies -- that is, emotional or situational distractions that might interfere with the viewing.  (For example, having a cold, needing to remember to pay the bills/go to an appointment/pick up the kid after school, had a fight with one's spouse, etc., etc. -- having a headache before starting a session would also count as an inclemency to be set aside, LOL!).  You set them aside by acknowledging them, writing them down so you won't forget to do them/take care of them after the session, and then putting that aside so you can let go during the session.  It works so well I use it in other, more conventional aspects of life!  But RV'ing in itself has never given me a headache.

    ADDITIONAL EDIT:   What Mycroft is talking about is something called "Aesthetic Impact" -- certain elements or aspects of a target can sometimes cause a subjective or emotional reaction in the viewer.  AIs are not target data -- they are the viewer's own personal response to these certain kinds of target data.  Like personal inclemencies, AIs should also be acknowledged and set aside, or they will warp and distort the rest of the session (which I think may be what happened in the 9/11 session Mycroft reported; the scenario that was sketched out can't possibly have happened, and Mycroft's results might have been influenced by the huge emotional reaction sparked by his early RV perceptions of the 9/11 disaster).

  5. I have no Idea. I've never tried to use remote viewing.

  6. Remote viewing really isnt that hard.  I think its simple and fun.  I never get a headache it just comes naturally to you.  You dont have to think hard about it.  Actually the harder you think about it the more youll get wrong.  God bless.

  7. I think if some one has that natural ability, it is probably easy for them.  Those of us who can not do it would of course get a head ache because we would be trying to hard.

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