![]() June/July 2001 Good Data - - - Wrong Target What Went Wrong? by Dick Allgire Here is a fairly interesting example of what we call undisciplined remote viewing. By undisciplined we mean getting good data, but for the wrong target. It is embarrassing - nothing to be real proud of - but none the less demonstrative of how slippery remote viewing can be. I try to work at least 5 targets per week, and since I am very busy I try to plan ahead and have a schedule of when to work certain targets. Maybe an operational target one day, then a validation target with instant feedback, and then on another day a homework target with no feedback available until it’s turned in. The week of the 4th of July holiday I had several targets lined up ready to work. On Thursday, July 5th I worked PPVI-WPQS. This target was cued by Sita and published on the HRVG Target page. No feedback was available until Saturday, July 7. I also knew that my next target, to be viewed a day or two later, would be OXWF-JLRA from the HRVG on line target section. So on Thursday I sat down and viewed. My data suggested a fairly simple natural setting with a manmade structure, which I drew as a bridge. I had quality visuals during S-1 Playfair¹ data collection. The gestalts of natural land and simple straight bridge-like structure carried over into S-2 Nimo² Playfair¹. In fact I actually wrote the word bridge, and “simple bridge” in session. ![]() ![]() ![]() Later that day I worked another target from the HRVG On Line Training section, cued by Jason. This target was OXWF-JLRA. When I clicked on the feedback photo, I recognized it immediately. Not from the session I had just done, but from the session I had worked two days earlier. Compare the data I produced working PPVI-WPQS to the feedback for OXWF-JLRA. ![]() How do you explain it? Has this ever happened to you? Submissions are welcome. ![]() ¹Playfair is the stage one data collection matrix used in HRVG methodology. It was named for Merriweather Playfair, a British cryptologist in World War II. ²NIMO is a probing icon. It stands for Neuro Interrogation Mask Overlay. Return to Home Page Copyright © 2001, H.R.V.G. All rights reserved. |