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Technical Remote Viewing Contest


Test Your TRV Skills, Compete for Prizes and Have Fun!
By Jeff Lucas

      PSI TECH will give away free Technical Remote Viewing products to one skilled and hard working Technical Remote Viewer. In light of recent events and the serious nature of our Special Operations projects, we are providing our trainees with this contest to introduce much needed fun into their training. This is an opportunity to demonstrate your skill level to your teachers, peers, and the entire world.

      To enter the contest, simply work a single session using the following TRNs: 4728/9672 (minimum S1 - S4 plus at least two movement exercises, summary and analysis) and submit the session to us. The sessions will be judged on accuracy and adherence to TRV structure and the winner will receive The Generation II Basic Training Course, The TRV Advanced Training System, and the Special Applications Course: Optimum Trajectories as a reward for their successful work. These products have a combined retail value of over $1300.00.

The winning Technical Remote Viewer will be awarded the Generation II Basic Training Course, The TRV Advanced Training System, and the Optimum Trajectories Course.
All entries must be received by January 30, 2002.

Read the contest rules before entering.

Target Reference NumbersTM: 4728/9672

You may submit your session via regular mail or e-mail.

Mailing address:

PSI TECH TRV Contest
13240 NE 20th Street Suite 18
Bellevue, WA 98005

*E-mail: TRVContest@psitech.net

Tips for Maximizing Your Chances for Success

Tip #1: Stay in structure! I can not stress this enough. Remember, Technical Remote Viewing is a rigorously applied highly structured attention management skill and it works effectively provided you do not deviate from the proven techniques. If you have learned TRV and practiced consistently for at least three months, while staying in proper TRV structure, you can trust your data. If you have not TRVed in a while, I suggest that you start practicing again before participating in this contest. You have until January 30, 2002 to submit your session.

Tip #2: Remember to take a break twenty minutes into the session. Get up, stretch your legs, and walk around for a few minutes. Then resume your session as instructed in your course.

Tip #3: Declare ALL of your AOLs and AIs and take the required breaks. Do not hold anything back or the flow of data will stop. In session, we must remain in a state that is robotic and neutral. The only way to do this is to constantly 'dump' our personal feelings (which constantly arise, because we are human) by identifying and declaring them, when they undergo a significant change. If we do not, the session comes to a grinding halt.

Tip #4: If the data warrants it, don't be afraid to perform creative movement exercises.

Tip #5: If you were interrupted while working your session, distracted, or had difficulty with AOLs, you may perform a second session several hours after the first. This will help you determine whether or not your first session was off. But remember you may only submit a single session to us.

Tip #6: Draw your freehand S3 sketches quickly, in fifteen seconds or less. Do not be concerned with perspective or details. Remember, this is your body's autonomic rendition of the site elements. If you spend too much time on these, your imagination will gladly attempt to fill in the details.

Tip #7: Your summary may only contain words and data that appeared in your session. Describe the target and the site aspects using these words only. Everything you write in your summary must be supported by the data in your session. Your analysis, not your summary, is where you should attempt to name, identify, or guess what the target is.


Official Contest Rules


  1. Only one session per entry. Only one entry permitted per person. Only one entry permitted per household. Use the Target Reference Numbers (4728/9672) and work a single Technical Remote Viewing Session (S1 - S4 and at least two movements plus summary and analysis.) Write as neatly as possible while maintaining the proper cadence so that your writing is legible. All sessions must be hand written, though it is permissable to type the summary and analysis. Submitted sessions must be Technical Remote Viewing sessions (not a variation of TRV) performed by a trained Technical Remote Viewer. Entries using techniques other than TRV or sessions performed by those who lack training will not be judged.
  2. Provide your real first and last name, mailing address, telephone number and e-mail address with your entry so that we can contact you and ship your prize if you are the winner. Entries which do not contain contact information will not be judged. In the event that the winner can not be notified by PSI TECH via the provided contact information, a runner up will be selected, chosen as the winner and awarded the prize.
  3. Entries must be received by January 30, 2002 and cannot be returned.
  4. Employees of PSI TECH International Inc. or Lifequest Industries, their families, and professional remote viewers are not eligible to enter the contest.
  5. Sessions will be judged by PSI TECH staff on the basis of accuracy and adherance to TRV structure at the sole discretion of PSI TECH.
  6. One winner will be selected. The winner will be announced in Mid-February 2002 and will be notified by e-mail or regular mail. All participants agree to allow PSI TECH International, Inc. to publish his/her name and session on the PSI TECH International, Inc. (psitech.net) web site and/or in PSI TECH publications.
  7. All materials received will become the property of PSI TECH International, Inc. and will not be returned. PSI TECH International, Inc. will not be responsible for sessions that are damaged or lost in the mail.
  8. Void where prohibited by law. Questions about this contest should be directed to trvcontest@psitech.net.


*E-mailed sessions should be scanned at approximately 72 DPI and sent in grayscale .jpg or .gif format with a maximum size of 100 kb per image file (session page.) For clarity, the images should be a minimum of 500 pixels wide but no wider than 800 pixels. Provide a cover sheet containing your name, mailing address, e-mail address, and telephone number.



TRV Contest Winning Session: On December 7, 2001, PSI TECH announced our first Technical Remote Viewing Contest. The following submission was selected as as the winning session. The winner is a PSI TECH trained Technical Remote Viewer from Europe who learned the skill of TRV via PSI TECH's video training course and Online Training Center.

The TRV Contest Winning Session: Kyle, a 25 year old physics major from Europe, and winner of the first Technical Remote Viewing contest, defended his title valiantly. When I notified Kyle that he had won a second time, as the online students were waiting anxiously, I jokingly told him that he should run for his life.

The Language Barrier And Technical Remote Viewing: What I can share from my relative short experience with this issue is that initially it can be confusing and demand and a much higher effort in concentration. During the first sessions there's a sense of disorientation and our brain will often produce words in both languages, which demands a strong conscious effort to think in English.

Those Pesky Paradigms: Collecting data about people and events remote in time and space with just a pen, paper, and alert mind sounds like an invention of a modern day PT Barnum. Yet almost all Americans believe they possess ESP or a sixth sense.

Who Can Learn TRV?: When the remote viewing military team was operating at Fort Meade, Maryland, a psychologist was hired and tasked to study the team and determine what the criteria was that would make the best remote viewer. They performed test after test, and when the study was through and the report submitted, it was revealed that there are no key recognizable selection criteria.

What is Remote Viewing and Why Remote Viewers Abhor Being Referred to as “Psychics”: People have traditionally romanticized psychic experiences and made the unknown mysterious. Remote Viewing wrecks all that fun. We cut right to the chase and make a point of striving for accuracy and consistency. Remote Viewers learn the specific protocols and then they work to accomplish increasingly better results.

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