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Remote Viewing

Ingo Swann

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"Give me a moment or so, and I'll try -- if that's what you want. Now, let me explain. When the distortion in the sine wave line took place I was NOT trying to effect the equipment. I was simply trying to sketch what I could "see." In other words, I didn't DO anything except just sketch. But maybe drawing it set up some kind of connection. "Is that an effect?" I asked again. Puthoff looked at Dr. Hebbard for the answer -- and he and Puthoff began muttering in inaudible tones. Now, I noticed that the doctoral candidates were unobtrusively evacuating the room. The last two turned and virtually ran, one of them crashing directly into one of the big, and totally visible, orange structural supports. "Gosh," I said. "I hope he didn't hurt himself." "Who?" Puthoff asked. "The guy that collided with that pillar," I replied. The SECOND perturbation was not quite as dramatic as the first one, and didn't last as long. But from the looks on the three remaining faces, I knew I had done something. I then said I was tired, and which I was. Puthoff now asked Drs. Lee and Hebbard if they would sign their names as witnesses directly on the chart paper. Both agreed, and did so. The next thing I remember about all this was Puthoff and I getting into his car in front of the Varian Hall of Physics. It was dark, and I could see stars. They were very beautiful. And I, well I think its fair for the purposes of this archive to say that my head was in the process of swelling up with smugness.
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