Natural Remote Viewing
A practical guide to the mental martial art of self-discovery
2nd Edition
Revised and Expanded
Jon Noble
Foreword by Pam Coronado
Copyright 2018 by Jon Noble
Foreword Copyright 2017 by Pam Coronado
Edgar Cayce Readings 1971, 1993-2007
by the Edgar Cayce Foundation
All rights reserved
Photographs and graphics from the public domain (Pixabay, publicdomainvectors.org, Wikipedia) or Jon Noble
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Intentional Press
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Kindle Edition
Second edition
Table of Contents
Praise for Natural Remote Viewing 1st Edition
This highly informative and easy to understand guide is a perfect first step for anyone who is interested in learning the art of remote viewing but doesn't know where to begin. I assign this as mandatory reading for my own classes.
Debra Lynne Katz
Director of The International School of Clairvoyance, and author
You Are Psychic: The Art of Clairvoyant Reading & Healing
Extraordinary Psychic: Proven Techniques to Master Your Natural Abilities
Freeing the Genie Within
With this remarkable little book, Jon gives anyone with the desire to try remote viewing the foundation and the tools needed to begin their own exploration of the wonders of the human mind. As the wise have always said....Know thyself.
Mary Crosby,
RVPGNYC member
Terrific, short intro to RV, the au natural way....I think using this guide virtually anyone can learn how to transcend space and time and view the unimaginable.
Berl Kaufman,
RVPGNYC member,
Amazon review
If someone asked me how to get started in RV, I would recommend this book to them.
Brandon Jepson,
Amazon review
...a fantastic introduction book for the newbie/student of remote viewing. Packed with tips and great advice for the novice giving them much needed advice to try this mental martial art for themselves.
Darryl Smith,
Amazon review
Foreword
I cant actually recall when I first met Jon Noble because weve both been traveling the same remote viewing circle for years. When I became President of the International Remote Viewing Association in 2013, Jon was, and still is, running IRVAs free target practice forum, Focal Point. I bring this up, first to acknowledge his dedication and hard work and second, to remind readers that he is an experienced teacher. During a conference a few years ago, we held a raffle in which many speakers and authors graciously donated their books. This is when I first learned of Jons book Natural Remote Viewing: A Practical Guide to the Mental Martial Art of Self-Discovery. I was thrilled to see this handy, practical guide because it filled a significant gap. Now here I am writing the foreword for his second edition.
During my term at IRVA, I became keenly aware of the need for more accessible and affordable how to guides for remote viewing. While there is an abundance of information out there about remote viewing and the fascinating history, there is little written about the actual process, especially the less formal, natural form of RV. I was a natural intuitive long before I became trained in the more structured CRV method which is why I appreciate Jons approach and easy to navigate guide. For those who want to learn at home, this book is the perfect solution.
Pam Coronado
Preface to the Second Edition
As a self-professed non-psychic, with nothing to relate in terms of personal psi experiences, the remote viewing training I took in 2010 with Russell Targ and Stephan Schwartz had a profound effect on me. Here was something that was not really spoken about, suddenly being presented as if it were a normal, everyday affair; their message was matter of fact and simple: remote viewing is possible - we used it to find things - here is a simple procedure - now go and practise.
What I experienced that week convinced me that I did indeed have some small psychic ability, and that the remote viewing approach held an opportunity for fellow psychically challenged individuals to gain some direct experience, as I had, of the phenomena of psi.
Why doesnt everyone know about this? I started a practice group to spread the word and, over the years of running it, I found myself repeating remote viewings fundamentals - its definition, protocols, and methods - to new members. Why dont I write this down?, I wondered. By doing so, I could literally spread the word.
These were the seeds of the first edition of this book. I wanted to produce a concise and straightforward introduction, which could be understood by those unfamiliar with what remote viewing was or how to perform it; something easily digestible, which would spur them on to try it for themselves and, hopefully, gain first-hand experience of being psychic.
Although I felt this goal was generally met, in review, there was more to say: some concepts could have been better explained and developed. And things do not stay the same. Ive read more books, attended more meetings, completed more courses and hopefully learnt from my own remote viewing successes and failures.
We each experience reality in our own way; we each have our own filters and experiences that we use to measure and relate new information against. This makes the explanation of anything to those who have not experienced it for themselves difficult at the best of times, and especially true for something as ineffable as distinguishing psychic information from mind chatter, imagination, memory and conjecture: the artefacts of our keen analytical, albeit often random, thought processes.
So, here is a second edition with more emphasis on the importance of intention in the remote viewing process, and the feeling/knowing experience of the remote viewer.
Much of the book has been revised; new information and new tools are provided, including a method to describe the surrounding locale of the remote viewing target based on a process outlined by Pam Coronado, a vocabulary of adjectives, a simplified model of consciousness to help explain the concepts on which the remote viewing method is based, and an expanded history of remote viewing in the United States. All of this has passed through my own filters and should be viewed as one set of thoughts on a human ability that is far from being understood.
One topic has been removed: local sidereal time. At the time of the first editions publication, the viewers local sidereal time was thought to be a factor in the accuracy of remote viewing; I added it as a point of interest, but stated that it should not impede the viewers practice. Subsequent analysis, based on a much larger data set, by the author of the original paper, has now dispelled its impact on remote viewing. As such, the viewer does not need to concern him/herself with it.
Introduction
Institutional science has no explanation for what is referred to as psi phenomena and so, against its own principle of investigation to acquire knowledge, takes the position that such phenomena are not worthy of study. As such phenomena dont fit our current models of physics they cannot exist, therefore they dont exist.
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