Remote Viewing Instructional Services, Inc.

ADMINISTRATIVE NOTES


OPS Notes II - operations

  1. FIRST THOUGHTS:
    1. When you perform an operational CRV session, the same rules apply as if you were doing a standard training session. The RVIS, Inc. program is aimed at teaching students the basic skills necessary to become operational viewers. The training was set up the way it is on purpose. It mirrors the way human mentality unfolds to the signal line. This is why I drum into your heads to always "go" to the site, not the feedback photo.


    2. You will start with the encrypted coordinate, proceed through Stages I, II, and III, and begin Stage IV by focusing on the basic elements of the target, working into the more complex and abstract elements gradually. The most relevant data starts to emerge once you have a further AI while in Stage IV. In operational settings viewers are sometimes tempted to drop out of proper structure and go too much into stream-of-consciousness responses (kind of like launching into an extended S 4-1/2 that goes on for a page or pages). This is a major MISTAKE and in most cases leads to low-quality data and AOL-drive. STICK WITH THE CRV STRUCTURE - it will keep you on the straight and narrow - at least as much as is consistently possible with remote viewing.


  2. As Ingo Swann has insisted in conversations I've had with him, every target involves a site. This means that, even if the target is an event or a person or group, there is ALWAYS a geographical location associated where the person or event is/was located at the time that is targeted (in most cases that will be present time). You will primarily get the site gestalts and descriptors first. The more abstract information - having to do with persons or events - usually distills into consciousness after a reasonably full description of the site.


  3. Following from the previous point, don't be too hasty in jumping into the meat of the data. Focusing on basics of the site initially allows the aperture to open satisfactorily before going for the intangibles and complex tangibles.


  4. Remember - once you get into Stage IV, most AOL is actually AOL-signal: though it remains AOL, it contains high levels of truth, and the truth-content in AOL-signals tends to increase the farther into the session you go. Treat it cautiously (because sometimes the viewer will mistake and actual AOL as AOL-signal), but don't discount it altogether. Learn to 'feel' how relevant AOL-signal is to the target. And always remember to 'mine' the raw (basic) data from your AOL-S?s.


  5. Stage 4 ½ will be particularly valuable in operational viewing - but be very careful not to abuse it. Good quality S 4 ½'s don't usually turn up until after you've had a good solid AI in Stage IV.


  6. Operational summaries must be COMPLETE. This doesn't mean that you include every color, texture, smell, etc. A summary like the following is not particularly valuable: "There is something green at the site. There is something blue. Something else is rough. I smell bread baking." While all this might be true, in most cases it will be of little to no use for the analyst. We will post examples of operational-type summaries in the Ops portion of the RVIS website.


  7. We will also post a sample operational remote viewing session on the RVIS website for you to examine. This is a typescript (so you can read it) made of the original hand-written transcript from the session I worked that turned out to be the attack on the USS Stark. I opted to post this session, since it is unlikely you will ever get a targeting that is similar (hence, it fills the same role as my 'Eiffel Tower' example - an example that will never be in the target pool so that it can freely used as an example without generating expectations that any given session you get in the future might be the Eiffel Tower) As with all other RVIS-Ops related materials, please restrict this to your own use and do not pass it further.