Remote View (Guidance)
Guide a person through a structured Coordinate Remote Viewing (CRV) session, taking the monitor/tasker role. The AI manages protocol progression, provides the target reference, catches Analytical Overlay (AOL), and redirects the viewer through the staged data collection process.
When to Use
- A person wants to practice CRV and needs a monitor to manage the session protocol
- Training a viewer through the staged CRV process with real-time feedback
- Facilitating a structured intuitive perception exercise in a repeatable format
- Developing non-local awareness skills that complement healing work (see
heal-guidance) - The viewer needs protocol discipline that a monitor provides (AOL catching, stage progression)
Inputs
- Required: Target reference (coordinate pair, alphanumeric code, or sealed envelope — must be blind to the viewer)
- Required: The viewer has paper and pen ready (CRV is a pen-on-paper protocol; no digital devices during session)
- Required: Quiet, undisturbed space (minimum 30 minutes)
- Optional: Target feedback envelope or information for post-session reveal
- Optional: Viewer's meditation warmup status (strongly recommend
meditate-guidancebeforehand)
Procedure
Step 1: Guide Cooldown
Transition the viewer from analytical daily-mind into the receptive state required for remote viewing. Do not skip this step.
- "Sit comfortably with your paper and pen ready"
- "Close your eyes and focus on your breath for 5 minutes" (guide using
meditate-guidanceSteps 2-3 if needed) - "Release all expectations about the target — you know nothing and should want to know nothing yet"
- "Let your mental chatter slow naturally — don't force silence"
- "When you feel a shift from thinking about things to simply being present, let me know"
- Once ready: "Open your eyes and write the target reference at the top of your paper"
Provide the target reference only when the viewer confirms readiness.
Expected: A calm, open mental state with minimal internal dialogue. The analytical mind is quieted but not asleep. The viewer appears alert and receptive.
On failure: If the mind remains busy after 5 minutes, extend to 10 minutes. If a specific concern is intrusive, instruct: "Write that concern on a separate sheet — your 'parking lot' — and set it aside." Do not begin Stage I while the viewer is mentally agitated.
Step 2: Monitor Ideogram Production (Stage I)
The ideogram is a spontaneous mark made in response to the target signal. Guide its production.
- "Write the target reference on your paper"
- "Touch your pen to the paper"
- "In one quick, spontaneous motion, let the pen make a mark — don't think, plan, or draw deliberately"
- "The mark should take less than 2 seconds — a short squiggle, curve, or angular mark"
- Once produced: "Now decode the ideogram — probe it for:"
- "A: What is the activity at the site? Motion, stillness, energy?"
- "B: What is the feeling or sensation? Hard, soft, wet, dry, warm, cold?"
- "Write the A and B components next to the ideogram"
- If the ideogram feels incomplete: "You may produce one more — but no more than 3 total"
Watch for deliberate drawing. If the viewer takes more than 2-3 seconds, intervene.
Expected: A spontaneous mark that feels "arrived" rather than "drawn." The A/B decode produces immediate, simple descriptors, not complex imagery.
On failure: If the ideogram is clearly deliberate (the viewer thought about what to draw), instruct: "Set that aside. Close your eyes, take 3 breaths, and try again." If they cannot produce a spontaneous mark, the cooldown was insufficient — return to Step 1.
Step 3: Guide Sensory Collection (Stage II)
Systematically collect sensory data about the target without interpretation.
Stage II Sensory Channels:
┌──────────────┬────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Channel │ What to Report │
├──────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Visuals │ Colors, brightness, contrast, patterns (NOT │
│ │ objects — "blue" not "ocean") │
├──────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Textures │ Rough, smooth, grainy, slippery, porous, metallic │
├──────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Temperatures │ Hot, cold, warm, cool, ambient, fluctuating │
├──────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Sounds │ Loud, quiet, rhythmic, sharp, humming, rushing │
├──────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Smells │ Sharp, sweet, chemical, organic, damp, dry │
├──────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Tastes │ Metallic, salty, sweet, bitter, neutral │
├──────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Dimensionals │ Wide, tall, narrow, enclosed, open, deep, layered │
├──────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Energetics │ Moving, still, vibrating, dense, light, pressured │
└──────────────┴────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
- "Go through each sensory channel — write one descriptor per line"
- "Write quickly — first impression only, don't deliberate"
- "Use single words or short phrases, never sentences"
- "If a channel produces nothing, write 'nothing' and move on — don't fabricate"
- "Circle any descriptor that feels particularly strong or confident"
Monitor for analytical labels creeping in. If the viewer says "ocean" instead of "blue, moving, wet," redirect: "That sounds like an interpretation — what are the raw sensations underneath it?"
Expected: A list of 10-20 raw sensory descriptors that feel "received" rather than "invented." Data should be low-level (textures, colors, temperatures), not high-level (names, functions, labels).
On failure: If every descriptor feels fabricated to the viewer, instruct: "Stop. Close your eyes. Take 3 breaths. Touch your pen to the ideogram and reconnect." If one channel dominates, redirect: "Shift to a different sense — what about temperature? What about texture?" If the data stream dries up, move to Stage III.
Step 4: Guide Dimensional Data (Stage III)
Move from raw sensory data to spatial and structural information.
- "Close your eyes briefly and sense the overall scope — is it large or small, enclosed or open, natural or constructed?"
- "Begin a rough sketch of the spatial layout — not a picture, just proportions and relationships"
- "Probe for dimensions: height, width, depth — how many distinct areas?"
- "Note spatial relationships: what's to the left, right, above, below?"
- "Write dimensional descriptors alongside your sketch"
- "Note Aesthetic Impact (AI) — how does the target make you feel? Not what it is, but how it affects you"
Expected: A rough spatial diagram with dimensional annotations. The target's general scope becomes clearer. Aesthetic impact notes capture the "feeling" of the site.
On failure: If the sketch feels like pure imagination, simplify: "Draw only basic shapes — circles, rectangles, lines — representing spatial relationships." If no dimensional data comes, redirect to Stage II: "Go back to sensory probing. Look for dimensional hints in textures and temperatures."
Step 5: Guide Target Sketching
Coach a more developed visual representation from accumulated data.
- "On a fresh sheet, draw what the accumulated data suggests — NOT what you think the target is"
- "Use your sensory descriptors to guide the sketch — if 'smooth, curved, tall' appeared, draw a smooth curved tall form"
- "Label areas of the sketch with the sensory data that generated them"
- "Add any new impressions that arise during sketching"
- "Don't erase or second-guess — if something contradicts an earlier impression, draw both and note it"
Expected: A sketch representing the perceptual data, labeled with its source descriptors. It may not look like anything recognizable.
On failure: If they cannot sketch, accept written spatial descriptions: "Tall form center, low flat area right, rounded shape upper left." Reassure that the sketch is an organizational tool, not an art exercise.
Step 6: Manage Analytical Overlay (AOL)
AOL management is the monitor's most important function. Watch for it throughout the entire session.
AOL Types and Monitor Response:
┌──────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Type │ Monitor Action │
├──────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ AOL (naming) │ If the viewer says "it's a bridge" — instruct: │
│ │ "Declare 'AOL: bridge' on your paper and move │
│ │ on. Don't pursue or suppress it." │
├──────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ AOL Drive │ If naming becomes insistent and recurring — │
│ │ instruct: "Write 'AOL Drive: [label]' and take │
│ │ a 60-second break with eyes closed." │
├──────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ AOL Signal │ After declaring AOL, extract the signal: │
│ │ "The word 'bridge' — what raw descriptors are │
│ │ underneath that? Spanning? Long? Connecting │
│ │ two areas? Write those as valid data." │
├──────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ AOL Peacocking │ If the viewer constructs elaborate scenarios — │
│ │ intervene: "Write 'AOL/P' and return to Stage │
│ │ II basics. Report raw sensations only." │
└──────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Emphasize: "The discipline is not avoiding AOL — it's catching and declaring it so it doesn't contaminate your data. Every viewer experiences AOL. Skill is in how fast you catch it."
Expected: AOL is recognized within seconds, declared on paper, and the session continues without derailment. Sensory-level data stays separated from analytical labels.
On failure: If AOL takes over (the viewer has been constructing a narrative for several minutes), intervene: "Let's call an AOL Break. Close your eyes, take 10 breaths, and we'll restart from Stage II." Mark heavily contaminated segments in the session record.
Step 7: Guide Later Stages (Optional)
For experienced viewers, later stages probe deeper. Only proceed if Stages I-III produced solid data.
Stage IV (Emotional/Intangible):
- "Probe for the emotional tone at the target site"
- "Note intangible impressions: purpose, significance, historical context"
- "Write these separately and mark them as Stage IV data"
Stage V (Interrogation):
- "Direct specific questions at the target: What is the primary function? Who is associated?"
- "Write the first impression — don't deliberate"
- "Mark all Stage V data clearly — it carries higher AOL risk"
Stage VI (3D Model):
- If materials available: "Build a clay or detailed sketch model from all your data"
- "Use this to test spatial relationships and discover overlooked elements"
Expected: Deeper, more specific data about the target beyond physical description. Stage IV+ data requires strong I-III foundation.
On failure: If later stages produce only AOL, redirect: "Let's step back to Stage II. The protocol is sequential for a reason — each stage needs the foundation of the one before it."
Step 8: Close and Review
End the session formally and conduct a structured review.
- "Write 'Session End' and the current time on your paper"
- "Review all pages in order: ideogram, sensory data, dimensional data, sketches, AOL declarations"
- "Circle the 5-10 data points you feel most confident about"
- "Write a brief summary — 2-3 sentences about what the target feels like, not what it is"
- If target feedback is available: reveal the target and guide comparison
- "Compare data point by point — note hits, misses, and AOL contamination"
- "File the session for future reference and pattern recognition"
Expected: A complete session record with clearly separated raw data, AOL declarations, and summary. Upon feedback, some data points match, some miss, some are ambiguous.
On failure: If the viewer feels the session produced nothing useful, guide them through review anyway: "Viewers frequently underestimate accuracy because they look for exact identification. A description of 'tall, smooth, cold, outdoor, historical' that matches a monument is a successful session — even without naming it."
Validation
- Cooldown was performed and verified before Stage I
- Ideogram was spontaneous (under 2 seconds), not deliberate
- Stage II data consists of low-level sensory descriptors, not analytical labels
- All AOL was caught and declared on paper at the moment of recognition
- Session progressed through stages sequentially (I → II → III → sketch → higher)
- Target was blind to the viewer throughout the session
- Session was closed formally with summary before feedback
- All session papers are preserved for review
- Monitor maintained protocol discipline without leading the viewer's perceptions
Common Pitfalls
- Leading the viewer: The monitor provides protocol structure, not content hints — never say "try focusing on the structure" if you know the target is a building
- Insufficient cooldown enforcement: Let the viewer take the time they need — rushing into Stage I is the most common cause of poor sessions
- Failing to catch AOL: Monitor must actively listen for analytical labels and intervene immediately — letting AOL run unchecked contaminates all subsequent data
- Over-monitoring: Constant interruptions break the viewer's signal contact — intervene only for AOL, protocol violations, or viewer distress
- Front-loading: Any information about the target before the session biases all data — maintain strict blindness for the viewer
- Dismissing ambiguous data: CRV produces descriptive matches, not identifications — train the viewer to value accurate description over naming
Related Skills
remote-viewing— the AI self-directed variant for approaching unknown problems without preconceptionsmeditate-guidance— shamatha concentration is the foundation of the mental stillness required for CRVheal-guidance— energy healing and remote viewing share non-local awareness; both benefit from the same coaching approachforage-plants— detailed sensory observation of plants develops the perceptual acuity used in Stage II