Navigating the Future: Remote Viewing and the Age of Information - Nyiam Vendreys - Part 2
This podcast episode delves into the intricate interplay between consciousness and remote viewing, wherein we explore the profound implications of psychic abilities as tools for decoding information from the vast tapestry of existence. We assert that the methodology employed in remote viewing serves as a protocol that not only facilitates an understanding of our reality but also enhances our capacity to perceive beyond conventional limitations. The conversation touches upon societal reluctance to accept these abilities, often overshadowed by skepticism and a preference for technological explanations over human intuition. We examine how the art of visualization plays a crucial role in accessing deeper insights, emphasizing the necessity of honing this skill to elevate the accuracy and richness of one's remote viewing experience. Ultimately, we advocate for a renewed focus on consciousness, positing that as we navigate the complexities of today's information age, understanding our intrinsic capabilities may illuminate a path toward a greater collective awareness. A profound exploration of psychic abilities unfolds, revealing the intricate methodologies employed in their harnessing. Speaker A articulates the significance of employing a structured protocol to navigate the complexities of human consciousness, particularly through the lens of remote viewing. This discourse delves into the societal apprehensions that often impede the acceptance of such abilities, as Speaker B elucidates the pervasive skepticism surrounding psychic phenomena. The conversation highlights the dichotomy between technological advancements and the inherent capabilities of the human mind, suggesting that while society readily embraces innovations in technology, it often recoils from the potential of human intuitiveness. This reluctance, they argue, stems from a deep-seated fear of the unknown and a hesitance to acknowledge the profound implications of accepting such abilities as real. As the discussion progresses, both speakers advocate for a reevaluation of the potential of human consciousness, positing that the skills inherent in psychic phenomena may have been employed by ancient cultures to navigate their realities. The episode ultimately serves as a clarion call for openness and acceptance towards the exploration of consciousness, urging listeners to reconsider the boundaries of human capability and understanding.
Takeaways:
- The podcast discusses the importance of employing a structured methodology in developing psychic abilities, emphasizing a systematic approach to remote viewing.
- Listeners are encouraged to engage with the concept of remote viewing as a means to access subconscious insights, highlighting the significance of visualization techniques in this process.
- The speakers express concern about societal skepticism surrounding psychic phenomena, suggesting that many individuals prefer to dismiss these ideas rather than explore their validity.
- The conversation touches upon the intersection of technology and consciousness, indicating that advancements in AI may eventually lead to a deeper understanding of human cognitive abilities.
- A recurring theme in the episode is the necessity for individuals to develop their own intuitive skills, as relying solely on technology could hinder personal growth and self-awareness.
- The hosts reflect on the evolving nature of consciousness and the potential for humanity to embrace a transformative shift, driven by increased access to information and a deeper exploration of the self.
Companies mentioned in this episode:
- Siri
- Alexa
- Bing
- Elon Musk
- Dick Allgire
- Future Forecasting Group
00:00 - Untitled
00:01 - Exploring Psychic Abilities and Society's Perception
03:01 - The Visualization Process in Remote Viewing
16:04 - Exploring Cryptocurrency in Remote Viewing
22:54 - Exploring Consciousness and Remote Viewing
27:57 - Exploring Consciousness and AI
36:36 - The Intersection of Consciousness and Remote Viewing
41:11 - The Interrogation of Election Insights
52:34 - The Nature of Consciousness and Reality
01:04:04 - The Future of Consciousness and Humanity
Those skills, the psychic abilities are that you're using a protocol and a methodology.
Speaker AYou're basically using a tool set to go decode the metrics in the matrix.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BI think society for the most part is, you know, there's some fear behind those ideas.
Speaker ATrying all manufactured.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BFor them to accept that is, it's too hard for, for a lot of society to accept that that could be possible.
Speaker BThey, they, they're, they've much, it's so much easier to say, oh well, why haven't they won the lottery yet?
Speaker BOr why haven't, you know, I mean, it's so much easier to brush it away with these stupid kind of, you know, comments than it is to actually sit there and look at the information and, and study it over time and say, okay, maybe I thought it was a coincidence, but now that I've seen it for 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 years from all these different people, maybe I should take it a little more seriously.
Speaker BNow it's just easier to put it off onto something else.
Speaker BWhether it's technology.
Speaker BYou know, it's okay for technology to, to do amazing things.
Speaker BYou know, we're, we're fine with that.
Speaker BBut when it's human beings doing it, it's like, no, no, we gotta, you know, we can't accept that.
Speaker BI don't know what it is.
Speaker BIt's, I don't know, maybe it's the responsibility or the, you know, the implications of what that means.
Speaker BSome people, I guess, I mean, I've experienced this in my personal life.
Speaker BSome people find out what I do and they're scared.
Speaker BYou know, they're scared I'm going to see something about them or I'm going to know something about them that they don't want me to know.
Speaker BSo it's like, it's, yeah, there's a lot of different threads that, that come from this and for whatever reason, it's just, it's a hard pill for, for humanity to swallow.
Speaker BBut I, I'm with you.
Speaker BAnd the fact that this is a, this is a tool that I think we were using stuff like this in the past.
Speaker BYou know, how else would have cultures in the past have made it as far as they made it?
Speaker BThey must have had foresight, they must have known things that they didn't learn in the conventional sense.
Speaker BYou know, they had insights, they had intuition.
Speaker BAnd for the most part, our modern day society, we still have it, but it's, you know, it's, it's, it's barely functioning to the level that it, that it would have been in the past and, and when it does happen, we cover it up and say it's something else.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BWe, we make a mess.
Speaker AGet the behind me and you know.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, all that crazy.
Speaker AI'd like to go into something that you, we were talking about earlier when you were talking about the importance of the visualization and that mental blackboard, right, where that's a space where you, you try to get the visuals, the images into.
Speaker AIs that what that is?
Speaker BYeah, that's, that's a, a specific spot that we look.
Speaker BWe close our eyes and we look in that spot always for getting in visual information from the subconscious.
Speaker BSo it's kind of like a mental screen or.
Speaker BYeah, you know, that's the, the visual stage for information to, to show itself.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo when you were describing that, you also said that you think that that's an area that needs to be.
Speaker AHave more focus and people get more, will get more out of their sessions and just out of the, the process and the protocol of remote viewing if that visualization was accessed or focused on more.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BOne of, one of the first things that I teach when I'm teaching remote viewing, the first thing we do in a session in HRVG is called a visual ideogram.
Speaker BSo know, you're probably familiar with the spontaneous ideogram, which is like the, you know, the scribble.
Speaker BWe do a visual ideogram first and this is where we close our eyes.
Speaker BSo first thing in the session is we close our eyes and we look for one and a half seconds.
Speaker BSo it's done just that fast and we immediately draw what we see.
Speaker BAnd, you know, I've seen some amazing things.
Speaker BPeople have drawn.
Speaker BSome of my students have drawn some amazing things.
Speaker BYou can see the whole target in that 1 1/2 second.
Speaker BIt could happen.
Speaker BIt's not going to happen every time, but that's the type of power we're dealing with when we're, when we're talking about the visual field.
Speaker BLike you could literally just see the target in the first second of your session.
Speaker BLike all these things that we do in remote viewing and all the different methods and things that people are doing, it's like, yeah, they help and they have their purposes.
Speaker BBut if we could get down to the real, you know, the nitty gritty of it, it's like, yeah, we could close our eyes and see what's there.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BThe information is there.
Speaker BWe just gotta learn how to decode it in the right outlets, right and that's the example I, you know, I've given the talk on it.
Speaker BIt's like using dial up, right?
Speaker BIt's like, we're not gonna use dial up Internet for this conversation.
Speaker BIt's just, it's just can't happen, right.
Speaker BSimilarly, in remote viewing, if you want high resolution, if you want the experiential type data, which is obviously what is desirable, if we want to give a good report, you know, a coherent report, or if you want to orient yourself at the target, that's the, that's, there's, there's remote viewing and getting some things right, and then there's actually knowing what was happening.
Speaker BYou know, the remote viewer who actually knows, like, okay, I was here and this was happening.
Speaker BThose are two different things.
Speaker ASo, yeah, Dick's bilocation moments.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BSo it's like if you could see what was there for a moment, your chances of orienting yourself are much higher.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BYou know, you say, okay, I had this perspective and I was looking in this direction and this was here and that was there.
Speaker BInstead of, there's a structure, there's a sound, there's a, you know, there's water, there's a voice.
Speaker BSo it's different levels of organization and resolution of information that, that can happen depending on how you approach, you know, the remote viewing process.
Speaker BAnd it takes, for the most part, it takes a lot more work and failure to develop the visual aspect of remote viewing.
Speaker BSo a lot of people try it and they say, I don't see anything.
Speaker BAnd they give up, you know what I mean?
Speaker BWhereas it takes time.
Speaker BYou got to keep failing, you got to keep trying, and you will get those moments where you, where you see it.
Speaker BAnd that's the, what do they call that?
Speaker BThe black swan.
Speaker BYou know, that's the.
Speaker BOkay, if you saw it that time, well, that means you can see it again.
Speaker BAnd that's the kind of mentality that you have to work towards.
Speaker BAnd I didn't, I wasn't just seeing the target when I first started doing it.
Speaker BYou know, I had to fail a whole bunch of times and fall down and get back up and do it over and over again.
Speaker BBut now I can pretty confidently sit down and say, okay, there's a guy there, let me see him.
Speaker BAnd I can see him and I can draw him.
Speaker BSo it's.
Speaker BYeah, it's a work in progress that, you know, people are, you know, they gotta, they gotta stick with it.
Speaker BIt's something you gotta stick with.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo, you know, I'm a geezer.
Speaker AGeek.
Speaker AI've been in tech for over 40 years, actually 50 if I go back to my punch card days.
Speaker ABack in the 70s I used to be a Univex 1701 key punch machine technician.
Speaker AAnd so I've built software and had all that tech stuff for a long time.
Speaker AThat was my main corporate career.
Speaker ASo I'm really enjoying what I'm seeing with this whole misnamed AI, they really expert systems, this whole field that's going on and, and all of the.
Speaker AIt's basically in my opinion it's Siri, Alexa, Google, Bing on steroids.
Speaker AIt's the next iteration of that and it's all misnamed.
Speaker AIt's not artificial, it's not intelligent.
Speaker AThe hype, the hyperbole, the musfuss sex and sizzle that's being tossed around.
Speaker AIt isjustala.com Back in the turn of the millennium and I suffered through that as well.
Speaker ABut I'm looking at this and I'm going, you know there's some really the, what's happened is these expert systems, the language protocol for the prompting has an.
Speaker AAnd the access to data through what they call LLMs but it's not really what it is but it's all language based search and it's got enough computing capability to where it is able to aggregate the pattern recognition of the words that you've put into your prompt.
Speaker AAnd that's what it does.
Speaker ABut it's gotten pretty damn good at it.
Speaker AThe image generations, the video generations, voice, I mean I'm using, I've got a half a dozen of them that I use on a regular basis and they're just getting better and better.
Speaker ASo my question to you is on the whole idea of focusing more on the visualization and the visual component of what you're doing with remote viewing.
Speaker ADo you see any way that these expert systems could be used as a part of that process?
Speaker BWell, I know there's a lot of people that are using, trying to use the AI image generation to like they'll put their session data into the, into the AI and then let it generate images to match up with their, with the session data and stuff like that.
Speaker AAnd I mean is that working or is it at that level yet?
Speaker BI mean to a degree, I mean it does give an image that in some cases is better than anything the person could draw.
Speaker BSo I guess in that sense it can be useful.
Speaker BFor me I'm just, I'm very much into developing the human part of it and I don't think anything will ever match up to you drawing what you saw as a human being, like what you experience in that moment.
Speaker BIf you take that and put it into an AI.
Speaker BYes, it may produce a nice image, a nice pretty image, but I don't think it'll ever match up to what could be.
Speaker BIf you learn how to draw what you saw in that moment.
Speaker BI think that's.
Speaker BAnd the drawing and the seeing are like two sides of the same coin.
Speaker BThat's the problem, I guess, that I have with that idea.
Speaker BIt's like I'm just gonna put the.
Speaker BI'm gonna put the words in and let it do the drawings and.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BI mean, that can work, I guess, but seeing it and then drawing it is a part of the same process.
Speaker BIt's the same thing.
Speaker BSo if you want to be able to see it, you're going to have to get good at drawing it.
Speaker BThat's the.
Speaker BThat's kind of like the crux there.
Speaker BAnd I think that's just.
Speaker BI mean, why wouldn't you want to develop that?
Speaker BI mean, to me, it's right.
Speaker BI don't want the AI to do that part for me.
Speaker BI want to experience that part.
Speaker BThat's what makes.
Speaker AYeah, it kind of feels.
Speaker AIt feels to me like being old school analog, you know, I. I want to be able to sit there and have that.
Speaker AYeah, it's like tactile versus, you know, visceral experience.
Speaker BI was there, so to speak.
Speaker BSo I'll draw it.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BThe thing.
Speaker BIt wasn't there.
Speaker BI don't want to play a game of broken telephone with the.
Speaker BWith the AI, But.
Speaker AYeah, because sometimes you're looking at a visual and you're.
Speaker AYou have to search for the words to even describe what you're seeing.
Speaker AAnd if the AI is going to require you to put some words in there and you can't pick them up from what you're seeing, it's like, well, you go, go away.
Speaker AGive me a pencil, and I'm going to draw this thing out.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ABecause I don't know what it is, but it looks kind of like this, right?
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BI mean, I have nothing against it, and I think it'll be a great tool for many people.
Speaker BBut my focus is on augmenting human consciousness and the human abilities.
Speaker BYeah, that's where.
Speaker BThat's where my main interest is.
Speaker BI'm not really super interested in the AI thing.
Speaker BI mean, it's there, but I haven't gotten super deep into it or anything like that.
Speaker BYeah, I think it's kind of overblown for the most part.
Speaker AYeah, I've been pounding on this for the last few years.
Speaker AI have my own technology stack of a model that I built for the future which is based on tokenization and expert systems replacing all of the stuff that is broken and you know, we're using now and we're actually seeing this happening with Elon and the doggy boys.
Speaker AI mean they're going in there and just saying, well we have built a system that goes in and looks for things, pattern recognition and where it finds stuff that doesn't end or doesn't end well, that throws a flag up and we go look at it again.
Speaker AThat's all this stuff is, and that's all the AI tools actually are, is they're just pattern recognition over guarded with guardrails over a prompt, over a specified data set.
Speaker AAnd it's always static.
Speaker AYou can't have sentience the people that go on about well AI is going to come take my job and it's like, well it's going to replace the function that you may be doing that's probably unneeded and can be gotten rid of.
Speaker ABut the people who use AI are the ones that are going to get rid of your job.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker ABecause it's going to be an efficiency boom.
Speaker ABecause the interrogation of existing systems will reveal the inefficiencies and that is where the real hope I think of that technology is going to be going forward.
Speaker ABut we're in the middle of AI wars.
Speaker AI'm calling them the, it's the bot battle.
Speaker AI mean they're all out there trying to out compete one another and they don't realize, I think they do and something they're trying to figure out how to navigate it but in the end there can't be one AI.
Speaker AThere's not going to be one AI that everybody's going to use.
Speaker AIt's going to be an open source assistant that will gather agents that you define that you want and configure for the way you want shit done.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd it, so it's going to be a commodity in, in my opinion and I think that that's where it's, it's going to be very useful.
Speaker ABut you guys, you know, you've done in your crypto viewing, you know, having to go poke along the blockchain and, and the crypto world of the tokenization, I don't know dick, he drops his regular vids on the blockchain's coming, everything's going to be tokenized and I completely Agree with that.
Speaker AJust from a technology perspective, trying to gauge my grasp of the reality of the environment that we're in.
Speaker AWe're going to be all tokenized ever.
Speaker AYour, your identity is going to be your currency and you will be your own bank because the, the architecture and the infrastructure will enable that to actually.
Speaker AFor the individual to have that sovereignty and provenance of their assets.
Speaker ABut when you guys go look at AI and you go look at, at cryptos, that's a, that's like the wild, wild west out there.
Speaker BYeah, it's, it's definitely a different kind of subject matter for remote viewing.
Speaker BLike how do you remote view across cryptocurrency?
Speaker BRight, that's, that's not really something that people were doing.
Speaker AHow do you do a bit and a bite out there in some kind of energetic form that's always moving.
Speaker BYeah, we kind of had to develop some new ways to approach that kind of information because there isn't, I wouldn't say there isn't, but, you know, the sensory kind of data that you would typically use to describe a location or a person or an event isn't going to be necessarily the type of information that you.
Speaker BSomeone who wants to know what's going to happen with the cryptocurrency.
Speaker BI mean, Tom.
Speaker AWell, is that why you haven't hit the crypto lotto?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo it's like we had to find out different ways to approach how you.
Speaker BYou know what?
Speaker BWell, this cryptocurrency, it's not going to have a smell and a taste and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker BBut there's people associated with the cryptocurrency, so we can look at those people or there's people who are going to be in possession of that cryptocurrency.
Speaker BSo we can tap into those people and see how are they feeling or what's their life like.
Speaker BTrying to.
Speaker BExperimenting with charts.
Speaker BHow can you forecast charts?
Speaker BUsing your intuition, which is something.
Speaker BI developed a way to try and predict the movements of, of, of a financial chart, you know, and had some.
Speaker BAnd I've had really good success with that.
Speaker BBeing able.
Speaker AIs it like the, the, the associative rv, is it along those lines?
Speaker BNo, this is, this could work hand in hand with arv.
Speaker BSo I think ARV technical analysis and this method, methodology that I created can kind of be used to like triangulate on, you know, on what exactly something's going to do.
Speaker BAnd it involves every single day, like let's say for a month, every single day of that month, precognitively you know, doing this in advance, trying to predict if a asset is going to move up or down and then trying to kind of dowse for which days in that month are gonna be the peak and the trough.
Speaker BSo when is it gonna be the highest and when is it gonna be the lowest in that month?
Speaker BAnd for, you know, I had some of the numbers crunched.
Speaker BIt was like over 80% accuracy.
Speaker BI was able to predict when the peak or the low would be every month for Bitcoin in advance.
Speaker BSo if someone was trading just purely off of buy low, sell high, they could have made it.
Speaker BYou know, they would make money not knowing anything about the price, the specific price, but just going off of up and down.
Speaker BThey could have made a lot of money.
Speaker BSo there's different ways that, you know, we're, we're approaching this and, and trying to make sense of it because obviously it's not easy to call the exact price of what financial asset's gonna be.
Speaker BSo, yeah, it's been fun.
Speaker BI mean, a lot of our subscribers need that, that chart that I do.
Speaker BThey, it's in high demand.
Speaker BThey, they like to see it every month.
Speaker BIf I ever forget, I get complaints.
Speaker BSo I make sure I did every month.
Speaker AYeah, well, if you're getting in, you're getting in the 80% range, I mean, that's better than 90% or more of what's, you know, who's out there making calls on things.
Speaker BI think with that and things like arv.
Speaker BSo let's say the sense is that, okay, it's going to peak on the 17th of the month, let's say, then you could take some arv.
Speaker BYou can make an ARV tasking to say, okay, on the 17th, is it going to be over this price or under this price to try and see if you can confirm or, or see whether.
Speaker BAnd then you could have your technical analyst, you know, what are they saying is going to happen around the 17th?
Speaker BAnd kind of using those different data points, you can get a good grip on what's going to happen.
Speaker BAnd I've done that a bunch of times.
Speaker BLike, you know, I'll do my chart.
Speaker BAnd then we have Marty, who's a technical analyst for Future Forecasting Group.
Speaker BSo I, I would have done my chart before the month starts.
Speaker BAnd then I'll watch his analysis and he'll be saying, oh, around this day, you know, we might break out here, or we might, you know, it might fall down here.
Speaker BAnd I'll look at my chart and be like, okay, well, I think we're going to break out because I, I have it peaking around this time.
Speaker BSo it's like you can kind of using the different, you know, routes of information, you can kind of get a better idea of what's going to happen in the future with, with some of these financial things.
Speaker BSo it's like a, it's, it's, it's new territory, you know, trying new things.
Speaker BBut we've had some good successes and you know, we have a lot of subscribers that have done good using some of that information.
Speaker AAnd that's the key and from my perspective is it's all information and it's an information field.
Speaker ASo whatever information is out there, however, whatever tools you're using to target and interrogate that information are the things that you want to use to hopefully, you know, navigate as smoothly and successfully through whatever you're doing, whatever that part of the stream is, is possible.
Speaker AAnd going back to this whole thing of, of consciousness, when you had, let me ask you this.
Speaker AHas your state of your consciousness, your awareness of your consciousness, what I call the third person, which is there's somebody who's watching me, who's watching me as I'm watching me be.
Speaker AThere's like a different level of observation, if you will.
Speaker AHas that changed as you've had these experiences, like doing a session and then all of a sudden seeing it, seeing the exact image on the headlines, has that changed the way that you feel about consciousness?
Speaker BYeah, I think quite a while ago, I think I, for the most part, I'm more in that space.
Speaker BA lot of the time I'm.
Speaker BI'm a little more detached from my direct reactions.
Speaker BYou know, I've, I observe myself more than.
Speaker BI'm caught up in what's happening.
Speaker BYou know, I'm able to see myself from a bit of a distance and, and that's just from.
Speaker BYeah, all the experiences I had.
Speaker BIt's kind of hard for me to, you know, I know that there's a whole nother dimension to, to what's happening here.
Speaker BI know that my experience is just kind of the surface phenomenon of something that's much greater.
Speaker BSo it's just a part of my personality trait now.
Speaker BAnd maybe that's what makes me good at remote viewing as well.
Speaker BI'm just, I'm not so much stuck in, in, in my head in that sense of like, you know, my thoughts.
Speaker BI'm able to observe my thoughts.
Speaker BI'm able to observe my emotions from a, from a distance instead of just fully being caught in them and being consumed by Them.
Speaker BSo, yeah, it's.
Speaker BI just live my life in a bit of a different way than most people in that I do have a.
Speaker BOf knowing that, you know, that I've kind of proven on the small scale doing things like remote viewing, that I know that there's.
Speaker BI know what's coming, even if I don't know it.
Speaker BIf I can't put it into words, there's a part of me that does know what's coming.
Speaker BAnd if I follow the thread, if I do what I'm supposed to do, I'm going to end up in the right place at the right time.
Speaker BAnd that's kind of hard for a lot of people to do because we always want to know, you know, we always want to have the plan and then know this and then be guaranteed that.
Speaker BBut I've kind of.
Speaker AOr force and guide the events to our particular will.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI've kind of.
Speaker BI have more of a submission to what is knowing that it's going to result in something that's beneficial, even if at the moment I can't explain it.
Speaker BYou know, I'm okay with not knowing.
Speaker BYeah, I'm okay with not knowing.
Speaker AWell, at the same time, while you're knowing.
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker BI. I know, but it's okay if I don't know right now.
Speaker AYou know, I know that there's something.
Speaker ABut I. Yeah, but.
Speaker AAnd that sense, that's a sense of awareness.
Speaker AIt's not, it's not necessarily the way.
Speaker AIn my opinion, the way we use the term psychic or psychic abilities or skills, it's.
Speaker AIt's a.
Speaker AIt's something El.
Speaker AI think that word is kind of been overused and abused and there's some other definition for it.
Speaker ABut for me, I discovered in my path, I was always looking for something that resonated with me that gave me a.
Speaker AA definition, an explanation of some sort that explained my experience because I was having an experience that the.
Speaker AAs I was saying earlier, the narrative I was given about the reality I was inhabiting just wasn't working.
Speaker AIt's like, no, this is not right because I'm experiencing this.
Speaker ASo I went through.
Speaker AIt took about 20 years.
Speaker AAnd I actually had a Christian music ministry in the late 70s, early 80s, and it's with the Pentecostal Church.
Speaker AAnd so I had a band and we'd go sing and minister at youth homes or youth authorities and rest homes and prisons.
Speaker ABeat him over the head with that Bible.
Speaker AMy God, if you don't do this, you're.
Speaker AYou're shit's not going to be happy on the other side.
Speaker AAnd I, so I went through all of that and I realized that all of the stuff I was, every time I looked into it, the more questions I had, the more questions I had, the less answers I got.
Speaker AIt was kept ending up on faith.
Speaker AGotta do faith.
Speaker AIt's like I can't just suspend belief and, or suspend reality to.
Speaker AExcept this belief is.
Speaker AI was trying to find something that gave me some kind of definition.
Speaker AAll the theological things weren't working.
Speaker ALook, I started delving into the philosophical and then the Eastern side and I became a Shiatsu practitioner in the 80s.
Speaker AI learned traditional Chinese medicine, kinesiology and herbology and so forth.
Speaker AAnd Shiatsu is Japanese for acupressure.
Speaker ASo same meridian, Chinese meridians and points, but no needles because needles and me have never ever and will never ever get along.
Speaker AJust don't come at me with one of those.
Speaker AI'm, I'm out.
Speaker ASo I started learning Tai chi in the 90s and then I became a Tai Chi instructor.
Speaker AAnd during that time I started studying the dao and, and the I Ching.
Speaker AAnd that's primarily what I follow now.
Speaker AThat is my philosophy for navigating reality because there's no hierarchy, there just is and a flow with either you go or the flow will make you go kind of model.
Speaker AAnd to me that, that really opened up the, the idea of exploring consciousness to the point of trying to understand what is this thing called consciousness that we all share, that nobody can define.
Speaker AIt's the hard problem in all sciences and yet it is the one ubiquitous thing that if it didn't exist, would reality exist?
Speaker AWe don't know any of those things because there is no.
Speaker AAnd going to my question about using AI or you know, some of these tool sets, you can't program emotions, you can't program intention, you can't program drive, motivation, ambition.
Speaker AThere is no formula for that.
Speaker AYou can put all the men, math models and machines you want at that problem.
Speaker AAnd I'm sorry, you're not going to get it.
Speaker ASo having this HAL 9000 terminator singularity is just can't happen with our current physics.
Speaker AAnd, and the way this, you know, gritology billiard ball model of defining the materium is being used, it just doesn't work.
Speaker AAll of that comes from consciousness.
Speaker AAnd so if you look at just what are the characteristics, the nature, the habits of this thing called consciousness that we all seem to share in a common stream of consciousness, occasionally you get to poke out of it, in and out of it, which is what I think remote viewing and non local consciousness is an example of.
Speaker AIt's slipping out of the stream to the other parts of the stream, out of the common stream.
Speaker ABut that stream that we're in all still has its own flow and its own mo and it's on go and it.
Speaker AAnd you can still look at the data and the information within that stream and you can prognosticate it.
Speaker ALooks like it's going that way, right?
Speaker ALooks like it's going to end up over there.
Speaker ABut the real fine tuning of being able to read the infinite field in the event stream is the non local consciousness.
Speaker AIt is that methodology, the protocol, the practice of accessing this part of the innate part of consciousness that we all have.
Speaker ADoes any of that make sense or.
Speaker BYeah, no.
Speaker BYeah, I agree with you.
Speaker BWe get, we're so absorbed in a certain kind of intelligence, you know, what we call intelligence or logic, you know, all these different things that in our society are the cornerstone.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BIt's like if you want to be successful, you got to do these things.
Speaker BYou got to be, you know, you got to be book smart, you got to get your degree, you got to do this, you got to do that.
Speaker BNone of those things really involve the things we're talking about right now.
Speaker BYou know, they don't really involve so much introspection or the subjective things that come about in your awareness that, that can lead you in a certain direction.
Speaker BThose things are, for the most part, they're not given as much importance, they're just after the fact.
Speaker BAnd if something happens and it lines up, it's like a coincidence or you know, or whatever, or it's lucky or it's.
Speaker BOr it's wow, that's cool.
Speaker BAnd okay, back to, back to reality.
Speaker BNow that's kind of how it's.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker AWell, that was an anomaly.
Speaker AI'm not sure where to put that, but okay, it happened.
Speaker ANow where's that bag of Cheetos?
Speaker BY. Yeah, it's a, it's a, it's an interesting anomaly.
Speaker BYeah, that's.
Speaker BThat's what it's usually called.
Speaker BUm, so it's like in, in a way, I do think that all this, all the direct, the direction where things are going with the technology and creating AI and and all these different tools, I do think in a way it's gonna make us loop back to ourselves and consciousness.
Speaker BBecause who created that?
Speaker BLike you're saying it's like, it's like, yeah, okay, that stuff is cool, but who created that?
Speaker BI Mean our awareness, our, our consciousness created that.
Speaker BYou know, what's that about?
Speaker BWhat's that thing about?
Speaker BHow did that, you know, how did.
Speaker BWhere does all that come.
Speaker ALet's go poke around in there and see what's going on.
Speaker BYeah, it's like, you think it's interesting that AI can generate this or that.
Speaker BWait till you see what, what you can generate if you put a prompt in there.
Speaker BBecause, I mean, that's essentially what remote viewing is, right?
Speaker BWe're putting a prompt in to awareness, and it doesn't know what it is, or it's not supposed to know what it is, and you can get the information out of it.
Speaker BSo it's like.
Speaker AAnd you guys have the craziest prompts, right?
Speaker AIt's a code, all right?
Speaker ASo I'm going to throw this code at you.
Speaker AHave fun, see what you get.
Speaker BSomething that's very interesting to me is that now that the AI things are more easily accessible and things like that.
Speaker BI always see people online and, you know, I have nothing against it.
Speaker BIt's just so interesting to me.
Speaker BThey, they tried to make the AI remote view.
Speaker BLike they'll give the AI a target ID and see if it can describe this or that thing.
Speaker BAnd I just think that, I mean, that's interesting, but isn't it more interesting if you could do it?
Speaker BYou know?
Speaker BI mean, isn't it more interesting what happens when people do it?
Speaker BIt's like, I don't know what it is that we're so preconditioned to put everything outside of us, you know what I mean?
Speaker BTo put it over there.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BIt's okay when it happens over there, but when it happens here, it's like, we can't accept that.
Speaker BI feel like the technology community would be completely accepting if AI could remote view.
Speaker BIf they discovered that, yeah, AI could describe a blind target with accuracy, they would be so happy about that.
Speaker BBut you try and tell them a person can do it and it's like they're going to grind your teeth.
Speaker BThey're going to deny it.
Speaker BThey're going to be skeptical.
Speaker BIt's just, I don't.
Speaker BIt's just such a bizarre kind of mentality that, that we have.
Speaker BI just, you know, I don't know if I'll ever.
Speaker AI was a. I did a call in with a guy a couple of years ago, and fairly intelligent guy, real sharp, which is one of the.
Speaker AHe had a live call in and I said, I think I got some stuff I'll throw at him.
Speaker AHe was Basically, he would go after theological folks, Christian apologists and stuff.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd he'd basically beat him down with just his knowledge and his words.
Speaker AAnd I said, well, the guy's got some.
Speaker AHe's pretty smart.
Speaker ASo I got on and he says, so, what do you want to talk about?
Speaker AI said, well, you know, I think the whole consciousness thing is really where, you know, this reality is kind of heading and where actually the reality of reality actually is.
Speaker AAnd he says, so you talk about, like, psychic stuff.
Speaker AAnd I said, well, yeah, for example, remote viewing, for example.
Speaker AAnd he says, remote viewing.
Speaker AOkay, you're one of these guys.
Speaker AAnd I.
Speaker AAnd I said, look, if I gave.
Speaker AIf I showed you empirical, demonstrable, documented evidence that it works because it does exist and there's a shitload of it out there, would you have a different opinion of it?
Speaker AIs.
Speaker AOkay, well, who's.
Speaker AWho would be a remote viewer?
Speaker AAnd I said, well, I don't know.
Speaker ADick Allgire would be one guy that I'd put up to somebody.
Speaker AAll right, I've written something on a piece of paper.
Speaker AGet a hold of Dick and tell him to just.
Speaker AWhat's on the piece of paper?
Speaker AAnd I went, it doesn't work like that.
Speaker AOh, okay, well, it doesn't work.
Speaker AThat mean it doesn't work.
Speaker AAnd he kicked me out of the show.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd I'm.
Speaker AI've seen more of that kind of thing, you know, just across the world of Woo in period.
Speaker AI mean, Cliff High gets knocked around all the time because of his predictive linguistics, and there's a whole bunch of.
Speaker AHe's never called the thing.
Speaker AIt's like, okay, you apparently haven't looked at the data, but that one that Dick did, I guess I think it was on.
Speaker ACorrect me if I'm wrong, was Cliff's target where Dick ended up with Trump and Rogan.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker AExplain that, Lucy.
Speaker BI mean, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AAnd that was fully documented.
Speaker AAnd sure as it happened, you know, the whole time stream and slip and divergence and whatever people ascribe to the concept of time, you forget that there was a target, there was a drawing, and then it eventually happened.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ADo you need more proof than that?
Speaker AWhat.
Speaker AWhat is it that people need in order to realize the reality of this?
Speaker BYeah, in my experience, it's like, I don't know if I can ever prove it to somebody.
Speaker BIt's like no matter what I do, you know, I could draw exactly what's in the envelope 100% accurately.
Speaker BThere's always still going to be someone saying something you Know what I mean?
Speaker BThat's what I realized.
Speaker BAnd it's like the, the best thing is for them to try it themselves or do it themselves.
Speaker BAnd even then they might still deny it, you know, they might still say, oh, it was a lucky guess, or, or whatever.
Speaker BI just try and document everything that I do.
Speaker BSo I like, I timestamp a lot of my work on the blockchain.
Speaker BSo it's like, even if, you know, we come out and I say, oh, you know, I drew this assassination attempt and someone says, oh, well, you didn't publish it before, or, you know, whatever it is, I, I have the timestamps, you know what I mean?
Speaker BI can go on the blockchain and say, look, here it is.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BI published it here way before on this date.
Speaker BSo, you know, I'm trying to be as thorough as I can in terms of being transparent and honest with my work.
Speaker BBecause, you know, obviously, why should someone believe when if I come out and say, oh, I drew this thing and it happened, you know, obviously, why would, why would someone just believe me up front?
Speaker BYou know, of course they're going to want some kind of proof.
Speaker BSo, you know, I try and do that, but there's just, I mean, there's a difference between.
Speaker BAnd this is something Stanley Kripner talks about.
Speaker BIt's like skeptics and then there's scoffing.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BIt's like two different things.
Speaker BIt's like skepticism has its reasons and, and it can be, you know, it can be reasoned with.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BSkeptics can be reasoned with it.
Speaker BThey see data and they can change their minds, whereas the whole scoffing thing is just like they're not even trying to see what, what the data is.
Speaker BThey're not trying to understand the phenomenon.
Speaker AAnd that whole thing is monkeys in the peanut gallery throwing shells at you.
Speaker BYeah, it's like, oh, let me write this down.
Speaker BAnd yeah, Dick Gallagher, tell me what's there.
Speaker BIt's like, you want to be so scientific when it comes to the things that you like to study, but now when it comes to the science of remote viewing, you're not even going to take a moment to understand how a tasking works and what makes a good remote viewing target and things like that.
Speaker BYou know, it's like they, they don't want to put in the time to even get a base understanding of how, how the phenomenon works and how the data, you know, looks when it services.
Speaker BAnd it's just, yeah, it gets, it's just kind of childish.
Speaker BIt gets kind of childish and stupid after a while.
Speaker AWell, as I have said, you know, when the last year I was doing some shows with.
Speaker AWe call ourselves the Geezer Geeks.
Speaker AIt's a bunch of old guys that sit around and flap our gums on Saturday night about the events.
Speaker AAnd last August, I said, all right, guys, we need to make our election prediction.
Speaker AAnd there was still a lot of, well, I sure hope Trump wins.
Speaker ABut I don't know, it's looking kind of sketchy.
Speaker AYou know, who knows what's going to be pulled and this and that.
Speaker AAnd I said, my feeling, not my psychic ability, not any kind of vision or any kind of bolt from the blue or any kind of anything else or, you know, gazing in, navel gazing.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AIt feels to me, going back to what you and I were talking about earlier, it's a feeling, a knowing.
Speaker AYou know, the original word of for knowing or to know is gnosis, right?
Speaker AAnd gnosis, kind of like the student and the KA thing we talked about.
Speaker AGnosis meant not only knowing, but it's something you felt in your bones, something you just, you felt.
Speaker ASo I said, all right, I'm gonna cast my geezer gaze out.
Speaker AAnd it looks to me like by the middle of November.
Speaker AAnd this is all documented because we were live on doing a live stream.
Speaker AAnd I said, it looks like the middle of November, the election will be clearly over and it will be nothing more than a formality from October 15th on.
Speaker AAnd they're going, why do you think that?
Speaker AAnd I said, it's just, it's the way the energy is moving.
Speaker AI just, I don't care how much shenanigans are going to be pulled or attempted.
Speaker AThere's.
Speaker AIt's going to be overwhelming.
Speaker AAnd then I said, it will be a landslide.
Speaker AAnd then the two days before the election, a friend of mine also has his own shows.
Speaker AHe.
Speaker AHe's a graphic artist and he also does tarot.
Speaker ASo he does a Sunday morning show.
Speaker AAnd so I got on and I said, all right, just gotta pull some cards, little toss, a little tarot.
Speaker AHere's the.
Speaker AHere's the interrogation, Will we know it's over before the polls close.
Speaker AHe pulled three cards.
Speaker AKing of wands, queen of cups and ace of pentacles, I think, which all were basically yes cards.
Speaker ASo the night of the election, it was clear.
Speaker AI didn't think it was.
Speaker AI knew it was going to be a landslide.
Speaker AI didn't think it was going to be as big and have as to me it was the vote vibe felt around the planet.
Speaker AWe're still kind of resonating and ringing from the reaction of that.
Speaker AI think humanity got a big cosmic slap.
Speaker ASo what I saw, what I felt was all of a sudden there was.
Speaker AFor 30 years I've been complaining about government secrecy and crap and the medical system and the health system and the knowledge system and the, all of it just being completely full of.
Speaker AAnd now I'm seeing all of it being revealed is completely full of shit.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo on my merch store, my mindwear apparel, one of the first shirts I made was validated, vindicated, victorious.
Speaker ABut I've been, you know, the black sheep of the family, the tinfoil hat, wear the conspiratorium provocateur with my friends and family for decades.
Speaker AAnd now it's.
Speaker AWhen I talk to him, it's like, well, how do you like me now?
Speaker AHow do you, how, how good does it feel when you put something out there and you're not sure of it, but you feel you.
Speaker AThat you have that knowing about it, that you're good with whatever it is that you put out there that like we were saying earlier, sans the ego or the, the investment in its return, you're just putting it out there and then later on the return comes to you, reality brings it back to you and you go, hey, good one.
Speaker AHere you go.
Speaker AHow does that feel?
Speaker BYeah, it feels good.
Speaker BAnd it's a bit different with the remote viewing because I know I can be intellectually honest in the fact that I'm usually blind to the target.
Speaker BSo it's not like anyone can accuse me of, you know, purposely trying to put out a certain narrative.
Speaker BIt's like I didn't even know what the target is at the time that I'm doing the.
Speaker BProducing the information.
Speaker BSo it's like I'm being as honest and transparent as I can when I put out the information.
Speaker BAnd I'm completely and admittedly open to being wrong.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BI'm not here saying I'm the all knowing omniscient, always right.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BIt's like, and, and that's the, that's what I get from the other side all the time.
Speaker BIt's like, oh, you're, you know, you guys are wrong or this and that.
Speaker BIt's like, yeah, I mean, no one's over here saying that, you know, that we're right 100% of the time.
Speaker BIt's just such a. I don't know if you're.
Speaker AWell, that goes with that other axiom, if you're never wrong, then you're never trying.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BAnd it's like, right.
Speaker BI like that sometimes we, when we do stuff for ffg, they'll take some clips of it and they'll put it on YouTube.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BSo our private.
Speaker BSome of the things that we do is only on the private site where something, sometimes some clips of it end up on YouTube.
Speaker BSo like we did a session on elon Musk.
Speaker BIn 2023, we did a session on Elon Musk.
Speaker BAnd so in that session, you know, I, I drew him.
Speaker BI drew his face.
Speaker BI drew this guy.
Speaker BHe's wealthy, he's an inventor, he's a mastermind, he's a technologist.
Speaker BI'm describing him and then I draw the capital and I drew the President.
Speaker BAnd I said something.
Speaker BThis guy is gonna be in the Capitol or he's associated with the President and the New World Order.
Speaker BSomething.
Speaker BI didn't know what it all meant.
Speaker BI just, I didn't even know who it was.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI'm just blindly working this target.
Speaker BThen, you know, we get the target reveal and it's Elon Musk and it's like, okay, I'm sitting there saying, what, Elon Musk is going to be in the White House or he's going to be in the Capitol?
Speaker BAssociated.
Speaker AWhat's going on here?
Speaker BYeah, what does that mean?
Speaker CLet's move on to Naim and go through his data.
Speaker ANaim.
Speaker COkay, so then here's Elon, pale white, blonde hair, inventor, problem solver extraordinaire, ingenuity, evil genius, hated or loved.
Speaker CAnd it's a divisive topic.
Speaker CAnd then here, this was like, I don't usually see people their full body.
Speaker CLike I usually see their face or I'll see like a.
Speaker BIf they're doing something, I'll see them.
Speaker BWhen I saw him here, it literally.
Speaker CLooked like a pose.
Speaker CLike it was like seeing a video game character.
Speaker CLike he was just like standing there posing.
Speaker CAnd the sense I got here was like, you know, very well dressed, Caucasian, suited mathematics, science, genealogy or his interests.
Speaker CHe's like a consultant mastermind, genius.
Speaker CI get like complex algebra or something about sequences and sequential.
Speaker CHe has a reputation, but then I get like he's in a secret society or tied to an elite group, members only.
Speaker CI even get like a trickster, but trusted by some.
Speaker CAnd I thought that was literally almost exactly the kind of pose I saw.
Speaker BYeah, that's it.
Speaker CSo, yeah, this is some more here.
Speaker CMale, 40 plus, pale, Caucasian, business, media, corporate type, person, bold Intimidating, courageous and outspoken and brave, but has problems or issues.
Speaker CAgain, I get like the mastermind.
Speaker CHe's trying to like calculate or solve a messy problem.
Speaker CI felt like he has a plan or a blueprint that feels like societal and organizational, but it's like a team or group effort that's being played out or is playing out.
Speaker CAnd technology, finance, education.
Speaker CAnd again, I get this geographical, topographical.
Speaker CMaybe that's the tunnel, tunnel stuff there.
Speaker CEvil genius vibe here.
Speaker CI see a wheel type thing.
Speaker CRotation currents, charge, ampers generation.
Speaker CThis felt like a free energy type device to me.
Speaker CSomething with a wheel on it that looks shaped kind of like this.
Speaker CSo we'll see if he's maybe working.
Speaker BOn something like that.
Speaker CAnd then this, you know, I don't know, this came to me.
Speaker CSo I just put it in there.
Speaker CI see the Capitol and I see a, like first I see a person at a desk, which I'm assuming after the fact now is like a president or the president, and.
Speaker CAnd then the Capitol and I get like, overthrow, cancel Constitution demands, tear down, disable New World Order.
Speaker CSo I don't know if Elon's trying to become the president or so.
Speaker ANice session name.
Speaker AFascinating.
Speaker BHere we are a couple years later and he's right hand man.
Speaker BHe's on the TV with Trump doing, speaking from the Capitol, running the Doge, you know, Department of Government Efficiency.
Speaker BThat's there, that's on YouTube.
Speaker BThat was posted on YouTube way back then.
Speaker BAnd, and you could see the comments.
Speaker BSome people are like, oh, this is garbage.
Speaker BThis is.
Speaker BWhat are these wackos talking about?
Speaker BAnd now, you know, months later, now you see some people there saying, oh my God, he was right.
Speaker BYou know, how did he know that?
Speaker BAnd it's like, hey, I was okay with being wrong, but you better be okay with me being right.
Speaker BThat's, that's, that's the thing.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker AYeah, that's sweet.
Speaker BYeah, it's like it's there.
Speaker BIt's an experiment.
Speaker BThat's how I always see, you know, the remote viewing thing.
Speaker BIt's, it's an ongoing experiment.
Speaker BEvery time you do it, it's an experiment.
Speaker BIt's an experiment that we know works and can produce good information, but it's always an experiment every time it happens.
Speaker BSo I'm okay with it being with it going wrong.
Speaker BYou know, I'm not perfect.
Speaker BNo one's perfect.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut acknowledge the, the truth to it, you know, acknowledge when it's right.
Speaker BYou know, don't be so quick to dismiss it when it's right, when it's wrong.
Speaker BYou know, you're quick to dismiss it, but when it's right, what happens then?
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BNo one wants to acknowledge it in those moments.
Speaker BAnd it's like, yeah, can we have.
Speaker AA, can we have a little balance, please?
Speaker AI mean, that's, that's why I, I asked to have this conversation with you nine, because I have been a follower and a consumer and I really want to explore more of the technique just for myself.
Speaker ABut I have had way more fun just watching all of it unfold with, with you guys at Future Forecasting.
Speaker ABack in the 90s, when Courtney dropped his book and then started Russell Targ's work, that Third Eye Spies for people who haven't seen it, highly recommended.
Speaker AIt's, it's one of those, you go, oh, okay, there's that stuff going on.
Speaker ABut as it's unfolded, Dick just did a, an interview with Glenn Wheaton, didn't he?
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker AAnd I highly recommend that as well.
Speaker AIf.
Speaker AWhen you see the amount of work and the adherence to these people that go on about follow the science.
Speaker AScience and you know, and all that, it's like, well, yeah, every time I follow the science, all I find is money.
Speaker AAnd it's not science denial.
Speaker AIt's, look, scientific method has been breached.
Speaker AAnd it's, it's just like what Doge and what we're seeing with all of this government exposing, exposure of, of just corrupt and broken systems, that some of it's by design, a lot of it's just organically is just corroded into a bunch of corrupted crap for decades.
Speaker AAnd you can't, you can't unfuck that.
Speaker AIt has to be replaced.
Speaker ASo the, the idea that there is models, there is methodology, there is protocol, there is the scientifically documented steps, and it doesn't even have to be science.
Speaker ASystems and processes are what's missing in the majority of how people think and experience life.
Speaker AThey don't think about, well, if I do this, then that'll happen.
Speaker AOr if I plan ahead, maybe I can think about this.
Speaker AOh, I didn't see that.
Speaker AAnd just more engagement with the reality that they inhabit.
Speaker AAnd it's difficult, I think, because of all of the carefully crafted and curated narrative of creative crap that's been stuffed into craniums, that's caused, you know, chaos and confusion in the consciousness, which spills out into the conversations that people have.
Speaker AAnd nobody's going anywhere.
Speaker AThey're just bumping into each other, clearing that field by focusing on the origin of our existence, of the Reality we inhabit, which is our consciousness, is what I'm really hopeful and, and trying to push as much as possible.
Speaker AAnd having this conversation with you today is given me a whole lot of hope.
Speaker AAnd thank you very much for sharing the reality that you inhabit with, with consciousness, because I think if anybody wants an example of how to start understanding the consciousness you inhabit, watch Naim's work on his YouTube channel.
Speaker AAll links will be down in the bottom in the description.
Speaker AWatch future forecasting group.
Speaker AListen to and look at the empirical data that's actually been around for decades.
Speaker ADecades this stuff has been around.
Speaker AJust because it's there doesn't mean that you, that you can deny it or that you have to deny it because it's there.
Speaker AYou have to examine it and you've got to do it with some kind of observational neutrality, sans all the bullshit that everybody keeps wrapping around whatever the subject is.
Speaker AMusk, as we were talking to tech bros, they all use first principles, thinking right?
Speaker AAnd to me, that's what I call in my philosophy the nut of the nugget.
Speaker AWhat is that thing that you're really trying to understand and examine?
Speaker AGet rid of all the wrappers and the, and the nonsense that people have put around it and look at and examine it for what it is and then expand and add information, the more information that's available.
Speaker AAnd that's literally what you guys do with your protocol.
Speaker AYou go to that blackboard in your mind, you meditate, you get into that Zen zone, and you have detached from ego and anything else, and you're focusing on the information that you've been asked to go look at.
Speaker AIn its purest sense, you're looking for the nut of the nugget.
Speaker BYeah, I mean, physically closing our eyes, you're literally, you know, shutting out the world in the sense that you're blocking off all this information that's coming in, you know, visually, and that's freeing up space for your to process information because you're, you're actually always processing visual information.
Speaker BLike to us it feels like nothing.
Speaker BWe're just breathing and, you know, we're just living.
Speaker BBut yeah, all this has to be processed every, you know, every moment there's all this processing going on just to give you the illusion of what's, you know, physically outside of you.
Speaker BSo, and you know, when we go into the remote viewing state, in order to get that moment of insight, to get that clarity, you want to try and shut out some of that no, you know, the outside noise and what's happening outside and tune into that part of us that is connected with, you know, the greater field of awareness, which is some kind of unconscious or subconscious or, you know, whatever kind of word that, you know, people want to use to describe it, but it's there and it's, it's what's pulling the strings for your whole life.
Speaker BIt's what's, you know, making everything happen.
Speaker BWe, we're taking credit for something that we ultimately aren't worthy of being credited for.
Speaker BYou know, I mean, it's like we're just puppets on a string when it comes to our, you know, where our thoughts and our, you know, motivations come from.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BI like to think of it, we're like a worker in a factory and there's a conveyor belt with stuff coming by and then what we think of as the ego or the conscious mind, all we can do is just pick up what comes off that conveyor belt.
Speaker BSometimes we don't pick up something.
Speaker BSometimes we let some things go by, but that's the scope of our choice making process.
Speaker BIt's like.
Speaker BYeah, we don't.
Speaker ASometimes you're like you.
Speaker ASometimes you're like Lucy and I love Lucy where she's standing there and all the cupcakes coming by and you're shoving them in, you're trying not to miss one and.
Speaker BYeah, so it's like we gotta take a moment and understand the wider scope of what's going on with ourselves.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BAll this stuff on the outside is.
Speaker BCan entertain you forever, you know what I mean?
Speaker BAll this stuff, politics and government and the world and what's happening here and this show and this, every.
Speaker BAll these addictions and things that we do.
Speaker BBut really it's the, the control or the power or the, the.
Speaker BWhat's really important is what's happening inside.
Speaker BAnd you know, figuring that out because that's the key to, key to living a better life ultimately and getting to some state of humanity where we're actually, I don't know, in line.
Speaker BMore in line with, I guess, our natural state or something.
Speaker BI don't, I don't know how to describe it, but what's going on right now is.
Speaker BYeah, I think we're, we're a far cry away from where we could be.
Speaker AYeah, I think that we're kind of heading in the generally a better direction.
Speaker ADo you see that or.
Speaker BYeah, I think it's getting better because there's, you know, more information is available to people.
Speaker BSo before we didn't have much Choice in terms of what we could focus on.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BIt was kind of like you were spoon fed, everyone was spoon fed kind of the same thing with no, you know, no way to look away or turn to something else.
Speaker BWhereas now there's so many different avenues and ways for people to put information out that the chances of someone kind of breaking free of the, of the trans, of, of, you know, society is a lot higher.
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BBut it also comes with a whole bunch more nonsense.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThere's also a whole bunch of people just putting out, you know, a whole bunch of nonsense and distractions as well.
Speaker BSo it's a double edged kind of sword.
Speaker ABut the, the responsibility of knowledge is, is the thing that I am most concerned about going forward.
Speaker AI think the liberation of information and the, the ubiquitous access to it is, is critical and required as we move forward.
Speaker ABut it's going to be messy because people, the whole idea of how to think was replaced with what to think and that's clogged the craniums of too many carbon units.
Speaker AAnd the shift that I think we're going to see as people realize the reality isn't what they were told.
Speaker AThere's going to be a lot of head explosions and people going oh, you mean this thing that I believed my existence depended on isn't real?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd we're going to have to have, you know, I think those of us that are aware of those things and know that those that, that's going to happen to a lot of people are going to have to be compassionate to those that are going through it because it's not going to be pretty for them.
Speaker AIt's certainly not going to be pretty for us because we're going to have to deal with them losing their.
Speaker ABut we also have to realize that we can't save them all.
Speaker AAnd it's a, it is a personal choice.
Speaker AIt is something that people have to make the, the decision upon among them within themselves to wake up to this new reality and take responsibility for the knowledge and the information that they get.
Speaker ASo it's, I think we're going to see some carbon unit crashes and chaos going forward and it's going to be unfortunate, but it's going to be necessary because the majority of this change I think is going to be extremely profound.
Speaker AI'm feeling more optimistic in my iteration, this iteration journey than I've ever experienced or ever felt.
Speaker AI'm very optimistic and I'm very much looking forward to participating in this transformative disruption that I think we're going through not only as a.
Speaker AAs humanity and a species and the planet, but I think it's also from.
Speaker AIn the.
Speaker AIn a cosmic sense.
Speaker AI think the.
Speaker AThe telemetry that we have indicates that we're getting bombarded by this galactic current sheet of energy.
Speaker AThat is something that seems to have some kind of cyclical nature to it.
Speaker ABut it's very profound in the way it affects the energetic manifestations that we are.
Speaker AAnd we're seeing it manifest in the sun and the earth and the plants and in ourselves.
Speaker AAnd I think that that's actually a good thing too.
Speaker AI think the energy shift we're in is facilitating this transformation of humanity that I could be just high on my own fumes, but I think we're entering the age of consciousness, and some people call it enlightenment.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker AI think it's.
Speaker AWe are entering a phase where the consciousness is going to become the focus of reality from which understanding and knowledge and wisdom and enlightenment can come from.
Speaker AYou can't have those things unless you're conscious of them, I guess is my point.
Speaker BYeah, I agree with you.
Speaker BI'm.
Speaker BI'm very optimistic.
Speaker BI mean, I'm.
Speaker BI'm able to see the things that are going on in the world.
Speaker BAnd even with the negative things that happen, I mean, I'm.
Speaker BI have a knowing of.
Speaker BOf, you know, being at peace and being able to go with the flow.
Speaker BAnd I think, you know, a lot of people see the direction of technology or AI and robotics.
Speaker BA lot of people see that as a very negative thing.
Speaker BAnd of course, it has potential for negative things to happen.
Speaker BBut I just think that the focus on information, our understanding of information through technology is getting so advanced that I think it's almost impossible for, for us not to start to look at consciousness.
Speaker BLike you're saying.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BIt's gonna lead back.
Speaker BIt's gonna lead to having to look at consciousness.
Speaker BYou can't do brain implants and talk about digital telepathy and all this stuff without at some point saying, okay, hold on, wait, but how does this happen in the, in biology?
Speaker BHow does this already happen in.
Speaker BIn, in reality?
Speaker BYou know, it's gonna.
Speaker BThe, the.
Speaker BThe doors that it opens up will ultimately, I think, lead back to consciousness.
Speaker BSo, yeah, I'm excited for the future.
Speaker BI'm excited for now.
Speaker BI mean, the fact that I can do remote viewing and reach so many people and, you know, have work published and have people see what's happening and change their minds and, and see reality in a different way.
Speaker BI mean, that wouldn't be possible at any other time in the past.
Speaker BI mean, this is now.
Speaker BThe now that I'm in is beautiful.
Speaker BAnd I'm looking forward to just continuing to play my part to the best role that I can.
Speaker AWell, Naim, I am grateful to have been able to connect with you and have this conversation and certainly just been in awe of watching your work unfold, which led me to say, hey, I really got to talk to this guy because he's connected in that space that I think our future is in.
Speaker AOur reality is now, but our future really is going forward.
Speaker AAnd I, I, I couldn't be more excited for the, the future of humanity, but I am extremely excited and very grateful to have met you and had this conversation about your experience in it, because I think you're in the pioneer.
Speaker AYou're in lead jeep, my friend.
Speaker AThe future's coming and, and you're, you're making a path out there, and God bless you for it.
Speaker AAnd thank you.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker BI appreciate it.
Speaker BMy pleasure being on.
Speaker BThank you for having me.
Speaker BIt was a great conversation.







