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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 133.8
EAN num: 9780743462686
ISBN number: 0743462688
Label: Paraview Pocket Books
Manufacturer: Paraview Pocket Books
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 320
Printing Date: February 18, 2003
Publishing house: Paraview Pocket Books
Sale Popularity Level: 196113
Studio: Paraview Pocket Books
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Product Description:
For the past thirty years, the United States government has secretly trained a select corps of military personnel in the art of 'remote viewing' -- the psychic ability to perceive the thoughts and experiences of others through the power of the human mind....
Now, for the very first time, Lyn Buchanan -- a world-renowned expert on remote viewing and its potential -- tells the complete, candid story of his experiences. Assigned for nearly a decade to a clandestine U.S. Army intelligence group, Buchanan trained military personnel who utilized their inherent psychic abilities as a data-collection tool during the Iran hostage crisis, the Chernobyl disaster, and the Gulf War.
In this incredible account, Buchanan tells how he was selected for his unique psychic abilities, and how he was transformed from an ordinary soldier into one of our nation's leading psychic spies. Working on top-secret government and military projects using 'mental espionage' created permanent, life-altering changes within Buchanan. Now, after many years of analysis and interpretation, he reveals the techniques and mental exercises used to train remote viewers, and demonstrates that each of us carries a dormant psychic ability that we can explore and use ourselves.
For anyone interested in a hard, scientific look at the reality of psychic covert operations in the world today, or anyone who has ever wondered if he or she could have the inherent skills to become a remote viewer, this fascinating chronicle of life as a psychic spy will reveal the answers.
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Rated by buyers
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The Author writes beautifully and this book really gives you an insight into his remote viewing experiences and thinking. Its not as historically or factually heavy as some on the scene but its a fantastic ride to hear one of the military psychic spies tell of his personal experiences in a way that makes you feel as though the dialogue is personal with you the reader.
I found this to be an enjoyable, inspirational book in a field where most of the books can be dry and soulless. A very welcome addition to my remote viewing library.
Rated by buyers
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First part is a good read. One can get lots of useful concepts out of. The second part, the one gives clues and exercise on how one can jump start his/her remote viewing abilities is even much more useful. The exercises might appear difficult to do, or not really effective for the skeptics, but I can attest they work. I have had quite a bit of amazing results since I was able to "reinvent the wheel", a new (little) language made of symbols that we meet in every day's life that the Universe/God/Cosmic Consciousness can use to talk back to us.
Rated by buyers
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Trying to describe the process of remote viewing and how it truly works takes someone who is a gifted writer. Lyn Buchanan does just that in a very masterful way. Many who read this book go on to study Controlled Remote Viewing with Lyn's company, P>S>I and find that his claims in the book are not fabricated, but easily replicated in a lab setting. While Remote Viewing in and of itself can be considered very abstract, Lyn Buchanan expresses the nuances and brain processes of it in a very clear way. Although other military men participated in this project, Lyn Buchanan seems to have the best grasp of what remote viewing truly is and what can be done with it. I highly recommend the book -- it is a great read.
Rated by buyers
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I'd like to start by saying that, while this book is informative for anyone new to the subject, it is hardly the best. It does provide an interesting backdrop to the topic of remote viewing, because it was the US military who really formalized the process that is used today. But if you want a more wholistic approach to the subject, I'm sure there are better books out there.
Secondly, I believe that Lyn Buchanan job is to dissemenate at least some level of disinformation, because:
A) he says in the book that remote influence is not possible, but Ingo Swann and others say it is. Being told that something is not possible discourages people from trying it, and will also make it more difficult to acheive because you've been 'primed' to believe that it isn't possible.
B) In this book and in his subsequent books, he maintains the mantra that the US government has terminated Remote Viewing studies. To believe that, you'd have to be a fool.
C) Military service is like smoking; Nobody every really quits.
On the upside, I actually had my very very first and completely unintentional Remote Viewing experience while reading this book. I was about half way through the book and had come across some paragraphs that were descibing what it was like to be emmersed in the 'remote target'. Many of the desciptions I found to be very similar what it feels like to be in a lucid dream, another area of conciousness I am facinated with.
I thought to myself, 'I'd like to try to remote view something in this reality while in a lucid dream.'
Then I thought 'Well if I was going to do it, what target would I choose?'
My subsequent thought was 'I guess I'd read the last word in my roomate's bedside journal, because I don't know what's in it and it changes every night'
My subsequent thought was(and I'm not sure why I thought this) 'IF I were be in a dream right now performing the session, the word I would find would be 'it'.
After that brief pause from reading the book, I went back to reading. I didn't think anything more of the word I had chosen because I didn't think I had actually done anything; I was merely thinking outloud.
When I got home later that day, I found myself in my roomates room using his computer (because mine was not working). I glanced over at his journal and thought. "Hmmm, i wonder...."
I picked it up, opened it to the last page, and the last sentence on the last page was 'That day was the happiest day of my life, I am so glad I was there for it.'
Needless to say, my interest has been peaked.
Rated by buyers
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Excellent book by an actual participant of a secret program I learned of in the 1960s as a young Army wife. Only problem is Buchanan sides too much with the military and doesn't tell all that was done to some psychics. For a closer version of the truth, read Psychic Warrior by Brian Moorehouse.
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