There are many paths of personal development – paths for developing perception, mindfulness, observational skill, and, among them, extrasensory perception.
Who among us wouldn’t want to expand their capabilities, experience something that makes them feel exceptional, and gain new abilities in the process?
But many developmental paths contain hidden traps and opportunities for self-deception. If someone only wants to believe in their abilities without genuinely verifying them – there is no shortage of opportunities to acquire that belief. However, only one of these methods actually puts that belief to the test in an objective, verifiable way.
I have seen many procedures – including “hypnotic” sessions (I use quotes intentionally, because the desired hypnotic state is rarely actually reached in the proper sense) – where the practitioner, instead of helping the client arrive at genuine truth, was busy imposing their own beliefs about the world onto the client. Afterward, people leave such “therapies” feeling convinced of their own uniqueness – but filled with someone else’s suggestions about themselves that they don’t truly understand and don’t know what to do with. More confusion arises than existed at the start – not the kind of productive confusion that can accompany positive shifts in belief and worldview, but the kind that is simply another unverifiable story created by someone on the outside.
The same thing happens in many cases involving channeling and other techniques for perceiving the “spiritual world.” If we don’t understand what we’re dealing with and how our own mind influences what information we receive – we cannot obtain a truly accurate picture of reality.
If we genuinely want to develop and authentically expand our horizons, we must begin with learning to understand how the human mind works: what perception filters it uses, how it responds to stimuli and information – in other words, through what “lenses” we actually see the world. Only then can we begin to understand what we are actually perceiving and why we perceive it one way and not another. This requires some preparation, so it may seem “boring” – though in reality it is every bit as fascinating as “flying through the cosmos,” and it carries enormous practical developmental value for everyday life.
When I began teaching people Remote Viewing techniques – supplementing them with other developmental practices that represent the essence of the cumulative knowledge I had gathered 20+ years of my own practice and experience – I noticed that what is most needed when developing human perception abilities is precisely this: learning and understanding how deeply one’s individual conditioning, life experience, and the way one’s environment programmed our minds from early childhood all affect what actually reaches our consciousness in the process of perception.
Each of us carries certain perceptual filters that influence how clearly our consciousness is able to perceive true reality. Some of these filters are universal – the patterns that shape us in today’s society operate similarly across people. Others are entirely individual: personal beliefs, dominant physical senses (some people are primarily visual, others kinesthetic or auditory), emotional patterns, and the accumulated weight of past experiences.
What matters – and this is crucial – is that even the very first steps in learning about one’s perception filters can yield enormous practical benefits. Suddenly we begin to understand that what seemed to us objectively fixed and immutable may in fact be an unconscious filter that was imposed on us – and that noticing it, and consciously stepping around it, can open a previously inaccessible level of insight and understanding on any subject.
In my work with the possibilities of the human mind and consciousness – having engaged with virtually all, or at least the vast majority of extrasensory perception techniques – I have in practice tested many of these development tools. While each of them offered valuable lessons, it was only when I began the practice of Remote Viewing that I observed something consistently: it produces a genuine breakthrough in most practitioners who approach it seriously.
Thanks to working with Remote Viewing, not only did my general level of knowledge and consciousness increase significantly – greatly enriching my range of perception and understanding of the world – but through this method I also became much more aware of what I actually KNOW and what I don’t know. In short: I stopped living in beliefs about the world, and became truly aware of what I know, and what it is still worth discovering. That is extraordinarily valuable knowledge.
Jakub Qba Niegowski – Extrasensory Awareness Development Specialist
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