Lory Williams Free Remote Viewing Target Practice.
https://intuitivespecialists.com/target-pool/
Free targets and links to Lyn Buchanan
https://www.crviewer.com/P2it/p2index.php
Controlled Remote viewing is a science which was developed in the laboratories of Stanford Research Institute, International, in Palo Alto, California. The development was funded by the U.S. government, in the hopes that the researchers could find a way to take an average soldier, teach him/her how to do the work of a top-notch psychic, and then have him/her tell the commander what was over the hill, and where to point the guns. The problem was that CRV was a full science, and just could not be taught in a short military course. Therefore, a special unit was developed for operational military work.
The research arm of the development was performed at SRI. At the same time, the operationions arm was performed at Fort Meade, Maryland by U.S. troops, as they put the science into operational military applications.
The ong the general public between "remote viewing", which is basically a new term for "psychic", and "Controlled Remote Viewing", which is the name of the very highly developed and rigid science, developed at SRI and used by the U.S. government for almost a quareter century for intelligence collection.
There are four basic "modes" to Controlled Remote Viewing.The modes are: research, training, practice, and operations.
In research mode, the researcher is in charge of the session. No frontloading or any other information can be given, in order to keep the research pure and non-polluted. Because the very presence of a monitor always adds at least some pollution to a session, a session done in research mode will often not have a monitor, or anyone else in the room. If a monitor or anyone else is present, the session is always performed "double blind", and most often, the monitor is not allowed to say anything other than the coordinates and the start and end times. The monitor is never allowed to interact physically with the viewer and/or his/her transcript during the session.
In training mode, it is always a good idea for the trainer to know what the target is. In this way, the trainer can constantly appraise what is going on in the viewer’s mind and immediately either encourage or discourage it, as need be.
A training mode session is also valuable for training new monitors. They get to actually work with the new viewer on a one-to-one basis, and learn to "read the viewer" - that is, read the body signals and other "micromovements" of the viewer.. For that reason, it is usually a good idea for the monitor to also know what the target is.
In practice mode, the viewer is in total charge of the session. The monitor is there only to provide start time, coordinates, and session cueing. The monitor must be trained well enough by this point that he/she will never try to take charge of the session or tell the viewer what to do. The monitor may call the viewer’s attention to something the viewer has written down, but only verbally. The monitor should never reach over and invade the viewer's space by touching the transcript.
In operations mode, the target is always an unknown. After all, if the target were known, then they would not need a remote viewer. The monitor is basically there to provide the start time, coordinates, any cueing and the end time. In actual operations, the monitor may also suggest breaks, may actually banter back and forth about things not related to the target (as a sort of in-session break), and may both ask for clarification of some perception, or ask what the viewer would like to do or view next.
In operations mode, the viewer has to be in total control of the session. The monitor’s main duty in operational mode is to keep quiet unless speaking is absolutely necessary.
An Ideogram
An ideogram is a physical, graphic representation of a basic, or gestaltic concept. It requires extensive training on the part of the viewer, and is very much a martial art. The graphic must be produced as a sort of knee-jerk reaction to a concept which is in the viewer’s subconscious mind. It is trained in much the same manner as any other martial art, through countless physical repetition over years of time, and actually develops as a physical language system, whereby the subconscious mind can use the physical body to convey information to the conscious mind.
To develop an "ideogram language" is developed starting with 7 basic vocabulary words. The words are called out to the viewer student and they make a very simple graphic representation for that work. For example, they may make a wavy line in response to hearing the word, "water".
As their exercise continues, their conscious mind drifts away - just as it does with the young kids in karate classes, and their subconscious mind takes over the making of the movements. Over hundreds or thousands of times, the concept of "water" equates physically to a wavy line. Later, when a viewer is given a coordinate, the subconscious mind can tell the viewer that there is water at the site by the simple drawing of a wavy line. In this manner, the viewer can hear the coordinates read, make an ideogram, and then study it consciously, and as an example, respond, "I don't know what the target is, but it has water, land, and something manmade." From that point, the CRV process has methods for describing the various aspects of the target in order, for example, to tell whether the water is salty, marshy, clear, etc. In this manner, full, detailed descriptions of the target can be obtained.
This communication between the conscious and subconscious minds can be developed into a full language over time so that basically anything in the subconscious mind becomes available to the viewer's conscious mind. The benefits of that go a long way beyond just the ability to remote view.
See also "airogram", "gestalt", and "IAB sequence".
Autonomic Nervous System (ANS) or the Central Nervous System (CNS).
There is a fair amount of debate about whether the trained knee-jerk response of the ideogram comes from the Autonomic Nervious System (ANS) or the Central Nervous System (CNS). Both systems carry out various automatic functions within the body. As far as the viewer is concerned, the trained knee-jerk response which produces the ideogram is simply the body responding to some target knowledge which is located within the subconscious mind. The viewer needs to worry about training accuracy into the response, rather than worrying about which internal system is doing the job.