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Edward A. Dames, Major, U.S. Army (Ret.)
Past, Present and Future

Continued

Crystalline Pebbles - Medical Remote Viewing

A recent project involved a medical condition suffered by one of his students, a woman from Sedona, Arizona. Dames says it was a bizarre syndrome that had stumped the Mayo Clinic. “She had these crystalline pebbles,” he says. “Pebble sized grains coming out of her eyes. Glass, like compact pieces of glass, and she would hear this cracking in her sinuses and her head. It was very annoying and she had gone through PET scans and CAT scans and MRIs, and they could not diagnose what was wrong with her. I used remote viewing to determine the cause of that malady in that person.”

He did six sessions. The target cue for the first was: [PERSON’S NAME] / CRANIUM CONDITION / SOURCE.

Dames says the first session yielded information that told him there was something foreign in the woman’s head. “I had to determine that it was not part of her own tissue,” he says. “A tumor for instance, that it wasn’t her own cells metastasizing. After I determined there was an organism, a living organism in her head, I had to then distinguish what kind of organism that was. Animal, bacterial, viral, fungal, something like that.”

So he cued a second session: THIS PARTICULAR LIFEFORM (FROM FIRST SESSION) / ORIGIN.

“I ran that and looked at the natural environment,” says Dames, “ where this would normally be found, and that didn’t help because it was normally found in animals. So I did more work to identify the phylum and genre of this thing and I found out it was a fungus.”

He says doctors overlooked this. “A test,” says Dames, “can identify that your body is being attacked by a fungus. But this test was not performed because the effects were so bizarre nobody suspected it was a fungus. So in fact these crystalline things coming out of her head were the dead cells, conglomerations of dead cells from the fungus as the cells were dying. And the fungus cells are made of keratin, the same thing our finger nails and lobster skins are made of. That’s what was coming out of her eyes, and breaking up in her sinuses. The cracking sounds that she heard.”

Having made his diagnosis, Dames set out to find the cure. He worked two sessions to find what he feels should be the proper treatment. “The treatment and the cure was colloidal silver as a nasal spray. And that’s what she’s doing now.”

I asked Dames if any physician verified all this, or if the condition was improving. "Not yet," he said. “We’ll wait and see.”

Targeting Leah Freeman’s Killer

In a past appearance on the Art Bell radio show Dames vowed to pursue the killer of Leah Freeman until he was found and brought to justice. Freeman was a young girl, abducted and murdered in Oregon. The project was dubbed, “Operation Golden Eye.”

“What I do,” explains Dames, “in the case of Operation Golden Eye, I go after the child’s killer. Killers usually stay in one place. They have a job or they’re living on the road or something like that, but eventually they stay around one place long enough that we can identify that place. And that’s what we’re going after in Operation Golden Eye. In this case Leah Freeman’s murder. We have identified a work facility, the place where he works, in Oregon. But we don’t go after the killer’s residence because residences are homogeneous, especially if someone’s in a big city. So we don’t mess with that.”

In the Leah Freeman case Dames has data from eighty different remote viewing sessions, produced by seven different viewers. Some might wonder how an analyst would sift through all that data, since it is widely held that not every viewer is one hundred percent correct all the time. Some analysts rely on “consensus analysis,” giving more weight to data corroborated independently by multiple viewers. Dames feels that is not an issue.

“They’re all good. They don’t get out of the class
without being good.”

“When I train the viewers myself they’re standardized,” he says confidently. “They’re all good. They don’t get out of the class without being good. They don’t get a certificate. So the viewers that I use are all standard operators and they don’t miss their target. They’re taught not to, so I know that the data is good. Sometimes, in a worst case, there is not a lot of data and I can’t use the session. But they’re always on target because they’re trained to be on target.”

If there are discrepancies, Dames blames the targeting, not the viewers data. “If viewers who are trained in TRV by me are all over the place,” explains Dames, “then I know that my cue is wrong.”

He offers this as an example of a cue that could produce seemingly different or incorrect data: LEAH FREEMAN/ KILLER’S WORKPLACE.

Dames explains how that cue might cause problems. “Let’s say the killer is out of work and doesn’t have a job. Okay? Then some viewers might be describing the most recent workplace and others might describe a campground. Then I know something is wrong with the cue. Let’s say the person doesn’t work at all, they’re independently wealthy and we find them in a house. Then I know there’s something wrong.”

“But in this case the worker had three different jobs,” says Dames. “He was moonlighting and doing some other stuff too. And it’s more complicated. This particular person was a construction worker and was working on different locations in different towns. So that was a mess. I had to refine the cue and then run “killer’s employer.” That’s what gave me the name of the employer. We were able to look where the headquarters was, and looked at the symbol for the company, then put that together analytically.”

At publication, no arrest has been made in the case.

Now that he is no longer affiliated with Psi Tech, Ed Dames has returned to teaching, and he’s doing it in an intimate environment; just two students at a time. “In order to really teach it well,” says Dames, “I can’t teach more than two people. I could give a workshop for people who are familiar and give them tips and pointers. But to really teach, it’s just like flight school you know. You can’t have more than two people in the cockpit.”

He says the sheer amount of information the students are exposed to can send them into “information overload.” To combat this he has the students rotate on the “hot seat,” 20 minutes on, 20 minutes off. One student watches while the other works. “This gives them time to absorb and integrate what they’re learning.”

Dames agrees with other experts in the field that remote viewing is a somewhat perishable skill. “It reminds me very much, very analogous to language,” says Dames. “I speak Chinese and it’s a complex language, like any other language, and I have noticed over the years that if I don’t practice my Chinese it is perishable and it does go away. I have found that remote viewing is very similar in that way, that you do get rusty and you start to miss things. You’re not as alert, not as facile and agile.”

Dames continues to be a popular guest on Art Bell’s Coast To Coast AM radio show. He was one of Art’s first guests when Art returned to the show last month. The topics were vintage Dames or “Dr. Doom”: the killer plant pathogen spreading from Africa, remote viewing Satan, UFO’s, and the Loch Ness monster, which he says is the ghost of a dinosaur. The audience loves every minute of it. “They want to be entertained,” says Dames.

Ed Dames is currently the principal instructor at The TRV Institute. For information about his personalized training, from TRV 101 - Fundamentals of Technical Remote Viewing, to TRV 300 - Advanced Skills/Project Management, and Instructor Certification, visit his website at www.trvinstitute.com.   




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