This book is a compilation of papers, manuals & comments to help students of (CRV) or Controlled Remote Viewing, learn this amazing intuitive art. We present from the CIA Star Gate archives and from prominent practitioners of remote viewing for the first time together in one book. First, we include a paper from the father of Remote Viewing and the creator of CRV - Ingo Swann. The document is titled 'Co-ordinate Remote Viewing (CRV) technology 1981-1983, Three year project'. After this we present two differing CRV manuals. The first by Ingo Swann's top CRV student and the only person trained in all CRV stages by Ingo Swann (Tom McNear). This is titled: 'Coordinate Remote Viewing Stages I-VI and Beyond' - 1985. The second, a later manual was created primarily by Paul H. Smith with help from the 'then' team of military Controlled Remote Viewers, titled: ‘The DIA CRV Manual’ – 1986.
I recently came across the phenomenon of remote viewing, surprised to discover that not only had world’s militaries used this technique for spying, it has been in play by the business world for similar reasons, has been used by agents of police departments to locate missing persons and solve crimes, and just for fun by those adept enough in its skills. The premise of the book – and it’s processes – is that each of us possesses the innate ability to discern things far beyond the scope of our normal sensory set of skills. It merely takes a certain amount of training to ensure that what you come up with in the process isn’t simply a figment of fantasy. Daz Smith includes herein a pair of manuals developed by governmental agencies to teach remote viewing, some kibitzing on the subject by various experts, and toward the end, the process itself. What’s missing is an actual hands-on series of lessons. However, the process is clear enough, and anyone with the tenacity to learn this skill has the process in hand with this book. My rating: 17 of 20 stars
I will give it a 10, although it is a times a bit of a boring read, still to me this one is an essential book on the subject. Why? Because it does give you the first exercises, and to me that is essential, some people do not require the need to know how an idea was developed, its initial ideas, and how it was reshaped through its usage, this book does just that, and as bonus Daz gives some very good tips on his own method, the special attention on the ideograms as a method, or the importance of Stage I. I learned a lot about Ingo Swann and how they developed, but I did not have the opportunity to view the exercises themselves, or the first texts themselves. Very good stuff. Perhaps this book is not entry-level, perhaps this one is intermediate level, but not really advanced either, but even very pro practitioners would benefit from reading it.
Daz Smith is a master remote viewer, and he shares his thoughts and perceptions of what happens during the RV process to help you dial it in yourself. He gives tips on what to watch for, what to avoid, and how to work the whole CRV protocol so you can start practicing remote viewing yourself. I really enjoyed the book. I think anybody who is considering learning remote viewing would find it interesting.
Complete and through guide of remote viewing. This book takes you through a brief history of the subject, followed by a comprehensive manual of the remote viewing stages. I thought the author did a phenomenal job presenting the information in a clear and concise matter, allowing the reader to follow along as he explains the nuts and bolts of CRV in an easy to understand manner.