We’re at the gate: Free webinars Friday night

 Derby List Contest 2010, Horse races, Webinars  Comments Off on We’re at the gate: Free webinars Friday night
Jan 212010
 

The first races in the ARV4fun Challenge are this weekend.  You’ll be ready to use Associative Remote Viewing (ARV) to pick the winners after attending one of the FREE 90-minute webinars on FRIDAY, JAN. 22

  • 7-8:30 p.m. Eastern Time (6 p.m. Central, 4 p.m. Pacific) 
  • 9-10:30 p.m. Eastern Time (8 p.m. Central, 6 p.m. Pacific)

To participate in either webinar, on Friday use the following GoToWebinar address:

https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/844056307

We’ll start on time, so give yourself extra time if you don’t already use Go To Webinar and need to download the software before the webinar begins. You can even register now with Go To Webinar so you’ll be ready to log on. 
 
During the webinar, we’ll monitor the chat feature.  This is activated by clicking the << marks to expand the window in the top right corner of your screen.  If you are unable to see the chat window, please e-mail your concerns to help@arv4fun.com or webmaster@arv4fun.com.  To minimize problems, you should close all other programs and files before joining the webinar.
 
Before the webinar, also be sure to register for one month’s FREE access to PRECOG10 (normally $100 per year).  This online site provides the tools you’ll need to do Associative Remote Viewing.  You’ll need access to PRECOG10 to do an ARV prediction for a horse race you’ll watch during the webinar.
  • Click to reach the registration page for PRECOG10.  Use the bottom field for new users that says Register For An Account.   

See you at the webinar!

The ARV4Fun Challenge Team — Marty, Tom and T.W.

The fun begins: Get acquainted with PRECOG10

 Horse races, Learn ARV, PRECOG10, Tools  Comments Off on The fun begins: Get acquainted with PRECOG10
Jan 202010
 

     

RVIS hagiaiso

Photosite

RVIS - mosque sketch

RVer's sketch of photosite

When you take the ARV4fun Challenge, you’ll be part of a groundbreaking experiment that will help us find out what’s possible with Remote Viewing (RV).  Instead of using the intellect or the usual five senses, or even just guessing, you’ll be gathering information from distant targets using intuition to handicap horse races.      

Why do I say it’s experimental? For one thing, you’ll start using the RV protocol during Friday’s webinar after less than an hour’s training.  That’s a very brief introduction.  Heck, I’m still a newbie after taking an online course and a four-day workshop.  When the RV protocols were being developed more than thirty years ago during the Cold War, it often took years to fully train members of  a top-secret military cadre how to use RV to spy on the Russians, find hostages, locate downed planes and such.      

To be sure, what you’ll be doing with Associative Remote Viewing (ARV) is much different from the early RV protocols developed and tested at SRI (Stanford Reserach Institute) and later at Princeton University.  The fundamentals, though, are the same.  And proven.  This intuitive capability does exist, including the ability to gather information about targets that are distant in space and time, including the future.     

Which brings me to PRECOG10, the online service Marty Rosenblatt developed that automates the ARV protocol.  It provides the tools you’ll need to begin developing  your intuitive skills by handicapping horse races in the ARV4fun Challenge.   To help ease your learning experience, register now for your one month’s FREE access  (normally $100 per year) and take a look around.    

Here’s a quick overview of how you’ll use PRECOG10 to handicap horse races:    

  1. Start by going to the  New Remote Viewing Session link.  Select the radio button by the horse race.  You’ll get a page with a six-digit number at the top.  That’s your coordinate.  Be sure to hit “save” at the bottom of the page. 
  2. After you do the viewing session (you’ll learn how to do this at the webinar), return to PRECOG10.  Choose the Analyst/Judge Page and enter your six-digit coordinate.  A page with links for photosites (Choices) for each horse will appear.  
    • As you view each of the photosites (Choices) associated with your coordinate, you will enter a Confidence Ranking (CR) based on the transcript and sketch from your remote viewing session.  The page provides a link to the 0-7 Targ scale, a confidence ranking system developed by one of the first RVers, Russell Targ.
  3. After the race, Tom Atwater will e-mail you the race results with an outcome letter (A, B, C …)  that’s associated with the photosite for the winning horse.
  4. You’ll use PRECOG10’s Admin: Predictions and Actualization/Outcome section to choose the outcome letter of the winning horse’s photosite from a drop-down box under Select Actual Outcome.  The outcome letter associated with the photosite you chose earlier on the Analyst/Judge Page  is already shown on the Admin page as a prediction for that coordinate. 
  5. When you press the Save Changes button at the bottom of the Admin page, the result (Hit, Miss or Pass) will be automatically recorded in your My Stats section, which archives all the information associated with that viewing.  Tom also keeps records for the horse races separately.  (My Stats can include your predictions for the lottery and other things.) 
  6.  Marty Rosenblatt will e-mail a picture of the photosite associated with the winning horse for your Feedback session.  This is an opportunity to review the transcript of your viewing session once again.  Chances are good that now you’ll find that you “saw” more than you realized.

Register by clicking here for PRECOG10.     

Select the bottom field for new users that says Register For An Account.

Jan 192010
 

If you’ve already signed up for one of the FREE webinars we’re offering on Jan. 22,  way to go!  

But maybe you want to know a little more before you commit to spend 90 minutes staring at your computer screen with a bunch of people you don’t know on a Friday night.  So here are my top ten reasons for why you should join us:

  • It’s free.
  • You’ll learn about Associative Remote Viewing (ARV).  
  • You’ll find out how to use PRECOG10, one of very few online sites that let you practice ARV and track your success.
  • You’ll get to use ARV to handicap a horse race during the webinar. 
  • If you’re a handicapper, you can add a new way of choosing the winners before the races begin in the 2010 Derby List Triple Crown Contest  (you must register separately for that contest before midnight, Jan. 22) .
  • If you have some experience in remote viewing, you can have fun using your skills.
  • You might find out something surprising about yourself.
  • You can check off that New Year’s Resolution to try new things.
  • If you’re interested but you think this is wacky, no one else has to know. (We won’t tell if you don’t.)   
  • Did I mention it’s free?

What are your top reasons for attending one of the Jan. 22 webinars and joining the ARV4fun Challenge?

Take the ARV Challenge — for the fun of it!

 Derby List Contest 2010  Comments Off on Take the ARV Challenge — for the fun of it!
Jan 182010
 

Horse Racing at Laurel Park

A few days ago, my friend Tom Atwater mentioned a contest that sounds like a lot of fun–picking the winning horses in two races each week leading up the Triple Crown. The Derby List Triple Crown Contest attracts a lot of people like Tom who know their horses.  No actual money is bet, but you can track your success in two contests.  And it’s free.  The deadline to register for their contest is Jan. 22.

Which got me to thinking:  how well would someone do in this contest who doesn’t know beans about the sport of kings?  I’m the person you see at the track making $2 show bets.

Even if I don’t know much about racing, I have an ace-in-the-hole called Associative Remote Viewing.  ARV is a scientifically based protocol that helps you to more reliably access a dimension that isn’t bound by time and space.  So I can just go forward in time and view the winner.  It almost sounds like cheating doesn’t it?  But my mentor, Marty Rosenblatt, and others say it’s something anyone can learn to do, so I don’t feel too bad.

Which brings me to the ARV Challenge: Let’s get as many people involved using ARV as possible and see how we fare as a group.  Marty will provide training to those who need it and give us a month’s free access to the PRECOG10 database.  Tom will provide the horse sense and manage statistics.  I will blog about how we’re doing.  The rest is up to YOU!

You can sign up for the ARV Challenge any time between now and the Belmont Stakes in June.  To get started, please choose from the links below: