STORIES AND THEIR PSYCHIC CONNECTION

By: Bryan Boodhoo

The role of storytelling in remote viewing has been explored in HRVG. Story telling is a natural progression exercise in which the viewer gives permission to themselves to allow information to “cascade”. In a typical CRV, TRV, and other methods of Remote Viewing, there’s a tendency to pose a question or a movement order to explore aspects of the target. Doing things in this controlled fashion is one way of obtaining new information. The issue with this is that the viewer has to use their conscious mind to formulate a question based on the data that is presented to them. There’s thinking involved, the very thing that those methodologies actively try to avoid. There is data on the periphery that may be ignored because it doesn’t fit the answer to your question/ movement order.

Story telling is more of a right brained activity. It has flow, it allows information to come from different angles, from the periphery. It allows a viewer to tell a story without their own judgements coming into play. The viewer’s job is to execute the methodology in this flow state, the data that is collected will be the result of this.

Does story telling have a role in obtaining psychic information?

If we take an objective view on our reality, we can see that predictive linguistics is rampant. It presents itself especially within Sci- Fi. Let’s say your job is a writer of sci- fi. You must come up with a plot. Where is this story based? Does it involve humans, if so, where? What time period, how far into the future? Let’s say you choose 100 years in the future. You start doing your outline, you are currently in an open search for ideas and concepts to formulate for your book. You are indirectly operating under a “temporal assumption”. As you are in story telling mode, ideas will start to come to you that may be representative of actual reality 100 years from now.

The potential of this viewpoint can open doors for analysis of sci-fi, and future based stories. If Clif High were start up his predictive linguistics program and run analysis of old Sci fi related material. The product will likely reflect some corroboration of actual events that may happen in the future or has happened already. Of course, the data would have a sci-fi lens on it but artifacts from reality will likely reflect. Take Star Trek as an example. There are plenty of artifacts that showed up in our modern age that were merely ideas in sci-fi.

What if a group of remote viewers were to a story based 20 years into the future? They indirectly use the temporal assumption to construct their story. After the story and data has been analyzed, it will likely reflect things that have occurred or will occur in the future. This indirect use of the temporal assumption may be the driving force for many of the predictive linguistics that presents itself today.