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One of the reasons it’s fun to use Associative Remote Viewing (ARV) to handicap horse races — or to predict the outcome of any sporting event, for that matter — is that it doesn’t get sidetracked by logic. Let’s be real — there are reasons why a horse is a 50-1 longshot instead of the favorite. But when you use remote viewing to predict the winner, you’re focusing on the outcome itself, not on “past” performance.
Sunday’s third race of the National Handicapping Championship (NHC) contest was a perfect example of this. Three of four Pegasus ARV players who had individual NHC entries chose Pegasus Papou in Race C. Although Pegasus finished second, the $22 payout exceeded the winner’s combined win/place return of $9.60. ARV tasking for the race was to “Describe and sketch the photosite for the horse with the highest win/place payoff.” The importance of setting clear intentions was evident, with place horses earning higher payouts than the winners in four of the ten races. In this particular race, one of the players said he relied more on intuition than ARV.
These same three ARVers finished in the top half of the contest’s 1,526 players. The contest winner netted $75 from the hypothetical bets. ARV handicapper Essie finished at 281 with $37.40, Mike at 415 with $32 and Tom ranked 750 with $22.
All in all, a fun day!