10-26-2023, 10:22 PM
I have just started reading “Remote Viewing” by David Morehouse, and I found something very interesting. He begins the book by giving his definition of remote viewing, which includes several steps:
“RV is the learned ability to use two inherent kinesthetic human activities to detect and decode eight-dimensional waveform data.”
“This waveform data is decoded by the conscious mind into coherent four-dimensional thought form.”
“This coherent four-dimensional thought form is objectified into two-dimensional media via sketches (visual data) and by writing the descriptors for sound, smell, taste etc. (verbal data.) So long as this data is held in the mind, it is considered conceptual illusion. In other words, it is not usable or real until it is objectified, meaning written down. In the mind, it can continue to morph, flex, grow, and shrink. This is what conceptual illusion does. Just try to think back to something traumatic in your life. The more you dwell on it, the more it shifts and redefines itself with each passing moment. It cannot and does not remain stagnant or fixed, hence the term conceptual illusion. It is a waveform expression of some event in past time, and it is not real; it is only an illusion. Therefore, you, the Viewer, are required to use your inherent tools of language and visual reconstruction (sketching) to objectify on paper what it is that you perceive.”
So the last one is a real kicker. Shannon has more than once mentioned that fear can regenerate, and I believe this explains the mechanism. It also provides the way forward. So next time I listen to my loop, I will try “objectifying on paper.”
“RV is the learned ability to use two inherent kinesthetic human activities to detect and decode eight-dimensional waveform data.”
“This waveform data is decoded by the conscious mind into coherent four-dimensional thought form.”
“This coherent four-dimensional thought form is objectified into two-dimensional media via sketches (visual data) and by writing the descriptors for sound, smell, taste etc. (verbal data.) So long as this data is held in the mind, it is considered conceptual illusion. In other words, it is not usable or real until it is objectified, meaning written down. In the mind, it can continue to morph, flex, grow, and shrink. This is what conceptual illusion does. Just try to think back to something traumatic in your life. The more you dwell on it, the more it shifts and redefines itself with each passing moment. It cannot and does not remain stagnant or fixed, hence the term conceptual illusion. It is a waveform expression of some event in past time, and it is not real; it is only an illusion. Therefore, you, the Viewer, are required to use your inherent tools of language and visual reconstruction (sketching) to objectify on paper what it is that you perceive.”
So the last one is a real kicker. Shannon has more than once mentioned that fear can regenerate, and I believe this explains the mechanism. It also provides the way forward. So next time I listen to my loop, I will try “objectifying on paper.”
The banquet you enjoy depends on what you bring to the table.