Tomorrow, I will be heading into John Vivanco's Remote Viewing training weekend with a couple of friends. One is a "Pod" member I've known for a number of years. The other is a fellow YouTube Creator and psychic channel, DeEte Carver, who collaborated with me on part 3 my interview with John. There will be a few others attending, as well. John keeps the classes small; so, I'm glad about that; and, I'm very much looking forward to this class.
For those of you asking about where you can get RV training, I recently posted this, in reply:
"I am aware of a couple of resources online. Prudence (Pru) Calbrese is the former director of TransDimension Systems (TDS). John performed professional RV work for Pru at TDS. You can watch a multi-part training session lead by her on YouTube. Part 1 can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uij1c... Also, check out Courtney Brown's Farsight Institute. He too offers free online training. farsight.org/learning.html One other tip...look into Binaural beats - Theta beats. Listening to those may help you become a better Remote Viewer -- open you up to another world of perceptions and experiences. Good luck."
Some have also asked about how we've fared with the fires. Thank you for asking. My family was evacuated for three days - an exhausting, expensive, sucky experience. Hope you never have to do that. When I talked to John Vivanco in the middle of it all, he said it was pretty crazy in his area. He could see flames from his house, trees exploding, which I never saw from mine. All I ever saw was smoke in the distance.
This isn't my first experience being evacuated due to fire. While my children were evacuated from school and their campus had spot fires on the ground and one structure's roof got a little toasted (fire fighters stopped it), the worst we saw at home was light fall-out of ash and a few burnt leaves. Last time we evacuated, it was crazy! Firefighters were staged at the park, where I shoot some of my videos. We saw flames within a mile of our house...all around...ash was falling like snow; so, really, for this one -- with blue skies, calm winds, and smoke in the distance I wasn't concerned.
For those of you watching the fires on TV, keep in mind that the NEWS loves destruction and will show fire footage, even well-after the flames are out...and then they'll talk for hours about the potential for more destruction. That was the case with the Lilac fire. It never grew beyond the 4100 acres on the first day. Sure, some folks lost ranch structures and their homes; but, like I said, it never grew beyond the 4100 acres. The NEWS kept reporting zero percent contained. Well, what does that mean? Containment means -- best I've gleaned from interviews with CalFire folks -- that all the smoldering hot spots have been put out; so, for most of the time we were evacuated, it was just an issue of CalFire stomping out hot-spots, preventing new ones from sparking-up.
As for the memes about LASER weapons and Agenda 21 and suspicious fires -- ugh: The location of where this fire started is along the Interstate15, just north of the 76. Fires have started here before. Humidity was incredible low that day, 5 to 7 percent...plus, you have the heat and the Santa Anna winds and the presence of plenty of dry fuel (foliage, grasses along the freeway). All it takes is a spark from a chain or an idiot with a cigarette. Conditions are ripe for catastrophic fires. The steep terrain in that area also makes it incredibly difficult to fight fires. I want to add that it is NOT suspicious if a tree survives next to a burning structure. This happens with house fires all the time...doesn't prove foul play. Also keep in mind that embers float and can spark fires anywhere. as was the case with my children's school, located two miles from the fire, an ember landed on a roof and started a fire on that structure; so, the meme reporting nonsense about trees not burning and concretes structures going up, as if the roof was concrete too and completely impervious to fire? Come-on.
The evacuations in my area -- miles and miles away from the fire -- were likely more precautionary, in light of the fact that the Santa Anna winds were stiff inland and could spark new fires from the hot spots CalFire was trying to contain. I heard one fire chief on the NEWS express the potential of the fire reaching the coast. Personally, I never had any concern about the fires reaching my house. Why? Wind speeds here were 5 mph...on the other side of the hill, in a micro-climate miles away...it was a totally different story...20+ mph.
Search4TruthReality
Tomorrow, I will be heading into John Vivanco's Remote Viewing training weekend with a couple of friends. One is a "Pod" member I've known for a number of years. The other is a fellow YouTube Creator and psychic channel, DeEte Carver, who collaborated with me on part 3 my interview with John. There will be a few others attending, as well. John keeps the classes small; so, I'm glad about that; and, I'm very much looking forward to this class.
For those of you asking about where you can get RV training, I recently posted this, in reply:
"I am aware of a couple of resources online. Prudence (Pru) Calbrese is the former director of TransDimension Systems (TDS). John performed professional RV work for Pru at TDS. You can watch a multi-part training session lead by her on YouTube. Part 1 can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uij1c... Also, check out Courtney Brown's Farsight Institute. He too offers free online training. farsight.org/learning.html One other tip...look into Binaural beats - Theta beats. Listening to those may help you become a better Remote Viewer -- open you up to another world of perceptions and experiences. Good luck."
Some have also asked about how we've fared with the fires. Thank you for asking. My family was evacuated for three days - an exhausting, expensive, sucky experience. Hope you never have to do that. When I talked to John Vivanco in the middle of it all, he said it was pretty crazy in his area. He could see flames from his house, trees exploding, which I never saw from mine. All I ever saw was smoke in the distance.
This isn't my first experience being evacuated due to fire. While my children were evacuated from school and their campus had spot fires on the ground and one structure's roof got a little toasted (fire fighters stopped it), the worst we saw at home was light fall-out of ash and a few burnt leaves. Last time we evacuated, it was crazy! Firefighters were staged at the park, where I shoot some of my videos. We saw flames within a mile of our house...all around...ash was falling like snow; so, really, for this one -- with blue skies, calm winds, and smoke in the distance I wasn't concerned.
For those of you watching the fires on TV, keep in mind that the NEWS loves destruction and will show fire footage, even well-after the flames are out...and then they'll talk for hours about the potential for more destruction. That was the case with the Lilac fire. It never grew beyond the 4100 acres on the first day. Sure, some folks lost ranch structures and their homes; but, like I said, it never grew beyond the 4100 acres. The NEWS kept reporting zero percent contained. Well, what does that mean? Containment means -- best I've gleaned from interviews with CalFire folks -- that all the smoldering hot spots have been put out; so, for most of the time we were evacuated, it was just an issue of CalFire stomping out hot-spots, preventing new ones from sparking-up.
As for the memes about LASER weapons and Agenda 21 and suspicious fires -- ugh: The location of where this fire started is along the Interstate15, just north of the 76. Fires have started here before. Humidity was incredible low that day, 5 to 7 percent...plus, you have the heat and the Santa Anna winds and the presence of plenty of dry fuel (foliage, grasses along the freeway). All it takes is a spark from a chain or an idiot with a cigarette. Conditions are ripe for catastrophic fires. The steep terrain in that area also makes it incredibly difficult to fight fires. I want to add that it is NOT suspicious if a tree survives next to a burning structure. This happens with house fires all the time...doesn't prove foul play. Also keep in mind that embers float and can spark fires anywhere. as was the case with my children's school, located two miles from the fire, an ember landed on a roof and started a fire on that structure; so, the meme reporting nonsense about trees not burning and concretes structures going up, as if the roof was concrete too and completely impervious to fire? Come-on.
The evacuations in my area -- miles and miles away from the fire -- were likely more precautionary, in light of the fact that the Santa Anna winds were stiff inland and could spark new fires from the hot spots CalFire was trying to contain. I heard one fire chief on the NEWS express the potential of the fire reaching the coast. Personally, I never had any concern about the fires reaching my house. Why? Wind speeds here were 5 mph...on the other side of the hill, in a micro-climate miles away...it was a totally different story...20+ mph.
And, that's my two-and-a-half cents on the fires.
8 years ago | [YT] | 2