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RE: Remote Viewing the Dark Side of the Moon - Part I

in #remote-sensing6 years ago (edited)

I have a friend who practice remote viewing. She once remote viewed Mars and with others members or her RV group saw group of alien creatures. She described them as classical grays as we call them.

To me the most important question is what this say about who we are and what is nature of reality. Funnily enough, even this phenomena is real, every remote viewer will say to you that they don't know really how this phenomena works.

Just recently I was commenting on someone post here on Steemit about phenomena in RV when at some period of day results can be less accurate. Because I couldn't remember exactly why is that, I send message to one of top RV I came across. Here is his response:

What you're thinking of is called "Sidereal time". It is the time used by astronomers. Because of the earth's rotation around the son, the stars >>appear<< to move in their location in the sky by almost 5 minutes every 24 hours. It only has to do with the location of the stars on any certain day of the year. But, a researcher names "Spotteswood" found data that would indicate that when the point on earth where you are is facing the center of the galaxy, it is harder (not impossible) to get as accurate remote viewing results. That time of day will change by around 5 minutes every day, so on one day of the year, the point of earth where you are may be facing the center of the galaxy at, say, 9PM (night time) and six months later, it will be at 9AM (daytime) because each day, the time when your point on the earth is facing the center of the galaxy comes 5 minutes later than it did the day before. Also, since the earth is round, when your point on the earth is facing the center of the galaxy, someone who is, say, 20 miles away from you will not be facing the center of the galaxy. In order to know when, you have to have a "sidereal clock" (which runs about 5 minutes slower than a regular clock). Anyway, that's what you're thinking of. For more details about it, look up either "Spotteswood" or "sidereal time". Anyway, I hope this helps.

Keep up with great articles!