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COORDINATE REMOTE VIEWING
STAGE 2
A. Concept:
Stage II presents to the viewer's cognition signal line
data relevant to physical sensory input. The classic explanation
of this is that such data are exactly equivalent to "sensations
the viewer would experience were he physically present at
the site." In effect, this allows the viewer to come
into closer contact with the signal line through recognition
and objectification of sensory facts relevant to the site.
This information centers around the five physical senses:
touch, smell, sight, sound, and taste, and can include both
temperature (both as a tactile "hot/cold to the touch"
sensation, and/or a general environmental ambience) and "energetics"
(i.e.g, magnetism, strong radio broadcasts, nuclear radiation,
etc.).
B. Definitions:
1. Sense: Any of the faculties, as sight, hearing, smell,
taste, or touch, by which man perceives stimuli originating
from outside or inside the body.
2. Sensory: Of or pertaining to the senses or sensations.
3. Tactile: Of, pertaining to, endowed with, or affecting
the sense of touch. Perceptible to the touch; capable of being
touched; tangible.
4. Auditory: Of or pertaining to hearing, to the sense of
hearing, or to the organs of hearing. Perceived through or
resulting from the sense of hearing.
5. Dimension: Extension in a single line or direction as
length, breadth and thickness or depth. A line has one dimension,
length. A plane has two dimensions, length and breadth. A
solid or cube has three dimensions, length, breadth and thickness.
C. Site Requirements:
Sites for Stage II training are selected for their pronounced
manifestation of sensory information. Examples: sewage treatment
plant, airport, pulp mill, botanical garden, chocolate factory,
steel mill, amusement park, etc.
D. Clusters:
Stage II responses tend to come in groups or "clusters"
of words--usually 3-4 words, though sometimes more--pertaining
to different aspects or gestalts of the site. If for example
a body of water and an area of land are present at the site,
a group of sensory Stage II words might be produced by the
viewer relating to the land, then another group relating to
the water. This is particularly noticeable in sites whose
ideograms product two or more "A" and "B"
components. Stage IIs will tend to cluster in respect to the
"A" and "B" components to which they relate.
Stage II responses cluster in another sense as well. Frequently,
types of sensory responses will come together. For example
two or three tastes, smells, colors, or textures may cluster
together as the viewer objectifies his perceptions on the
paper.
E. "Basic" Words:
True Stage IIs are generally simple, fundamental words dealing
directly with a sensory experience: i.e. rough, red, cold,
stinging smell, sandy taste, soft, moist, green, gritty, etc.
When objectified words go beyond the "basics" they
are considered "out of structure" and therefore
unreliable.
F. Aperture:
After a proper Stage I Ideogram/A/B sequence has been executed,
the aperture (which was at its narrowest point during Stage
I) opens to accommodate Stage II information. Not only does
this allow the more detailed sensory information to pass through
to the viewer, but it is accompanied by a correspondingly
longer signal "loiter" time--the information comes
in more slowly, and is less concentrated. Towards the end
of Stage II, and approach the threshold of Stage III, the
aperture begins to expand even further, allowing the acquisition
of dimensionally related information. (see below.)
G. Dimensionals:
As the viewer proceeds through Stage II and approaches Stage
III, the aperture widens, allowing the viewer to shift from
a global (gestalt) perspective, which is paramount through
Stage I and most of Stage II, to a perspective in which certain
limited dimensional characteristics are discernable. "Dimensionals"
are words produced by the viewer and written down in structure
to conceptualize perceived elements of this new dimensional
perspective he has now gained through the widening of the
aperture. These words demonstrate five dimensional concepts:
vertical-ness, horizontal-ness, angularity, space or volume,
and mass. While at first glance the concept of "mass"
seems to be somewhat inappropriate to the dimensional concept,
mass in this case can be conceived in in dimensionally related
terms as in a sense being substance occupying a specific three
dimensional area. Generally received only in the latter portion
of Stage II, dimensionals are usually very basic--"tall,"
"wide," "long," "big." More
complex dimensionals such as "panoramic" are usually
received at later stages characterized by wider aperture openings.
If these more complex dimensionals are reported during Stage
II they are considered "out of structure" and therefore
unreliable.
H. AOL:
Analytic overlay is considerably more rare in Stage II than
it is in Stage I. Though it does occasionally occur, something
about the extremely basic sensory nature of the data bits
being received strongly tends to avoid AOL. Some suppositions
suggest that the sensory data received comes across either
at a low enough energy level or through a channel that does
not stimulate the analytic portion of the mind to action.
In effect, the mind is "fooled" into thinking Stage
II information is being obtained from normal physical sensory
sources. The combination of true sensory data received in
Stage II may produce a valid signal line "image"
consisting of colors, forms, and textures. Stage II visuals
or other true signal line visuals of the site may be distinguished
from an AOL in that they are perceived as fuzzy, indistinct
and tending to fade in and out as one attempts to focus on
its constituent elements rather than the sharp, clear, static
image present with AOL.
I. Aesthetic Impact (AI):
Aesthetic impact indicates a sudden and dramatic widening
of the aperture, and signals the transition from Stage II
into Stage III. In normal session structure, it occurs only
after two or more dimensionals occur in the signal line. On
occasion, however, AI can occur more or less spontaneously
in Stage II, especially when a site is involved with very
pronounced Stage II elements, such as particularly noisome
chemical plant. AIR is the viewer's personal, emotional response
to the site: "How the site makes you feel." It can
be a manifestation of sudden surprise, vertigo, revulsion,
or pleasure. Though some sites seem to consistently elicit
similar AI responses in any person who remote views them,
it must still be borne in mind that an AI response is keyed
directly to the individual's own personality and emotional/physical
makeup, and that therefore AI responses can differ, sometimes
dramatically so, from viewer to viewer. AI will be more fully
discussed in the section of this paper dealing with Stage
III.
J. Drills/Exercises:
To promote flexibility in producing Stage II responses,
an exercise is usually assigned viewer trainees. This consists
of producing a list of at least sixty sensory response type
words, dealing with all the the possible categories of sensory
perceptions: tastes, sounds, smells, tactile experience, colors
and other elementary visuals, and magnetic/energetic experiences.
When giving the assignment, the trainer emphasizes reliance
on "basic" words as described above.
K. Format:
Following is a sample Stage II format:
(FORMAT FOR STAGE II)
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Name
Date
Time
(Personal Inclemencies/Visuals Declared)
(STAGE I -
Coordinate) (Ideogram) A across angle up angle down angle
across angle down
solid
B Structures
(STAGE II -
Sensory Data) S2 white
warm
unclean smell
AI Break
Smells Gross!
AOL Break
Smells like
dirty air
(STAGE I -
Coordinate) (Ideogram -
multiple) A Up angle across angle down
Solid
B Structure
A Angle across angle down
Solid
B Structure
A Flat
Hard
B Land
(STAGE II) S2 grey
white
rough
noisy
densely populated - S4 (note this
as Stage IV, not II)
warm
smell of fumes
Confusion Break
"Thud" or scraping sound.
Can't tell.
(Stage II - Dimensionals) tall [Note: this is the start
of dimensionals]
high
solid
wide
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