When the Questions Began
When the Questions Began
My interest in remote viewing did not begin with a book, a research paper, or a prior desire to study the subject. It began with an experience that came before all of that. About sixteen years ago, images, scenes, and impressions began appearing in my mind unexpectedly. At first, I did not regard them as something worthy of research or study. I treated them as passing thoughts or fleeting mental images, much like any other thoughts that come and go.
Over time, however, I began to notice that what I was seeing did not resemble ordinary day-to-day expectations. At times, the images involved killings, violent confrontations, or disturbing events that felt too significant to dismiss as ordinary imagination.
I do not remember exactly when I began documenting these impressions, but I clearly remember that once I started writing them down, they felt more real. I would record what I saw and then closely follow the news, television broadcasts, and social media—not to prove anything to anyone or persuade others that what I was seeing was accurate, but to determine whether these events would eventually become known to the public.
I felt that if what I was seeing was accurate, it would not remain hidden. It would become a known event witnessed by everyone. For that reason, I paid close attention to public events to see whether they matched what I had previously recorded.
As these experiences continued, they evolved from simple curiosity into a genuine sense of concern and responsibility toward what I was seeing. At times, I thought about warning or protecting others, yet at the same time I was extremely cautious and did not trust people easily. For that reason, I rarely spoke about what I was going through, and fear was one of the primary reasons for my silence.
There was no single event that changed everything. Rather, it was a series of repeated experiences that gradually convinced me that what was happening was larger than personal observations alone. After many such experiences, I became convinced that this subject deserved scientific investigation and systematic study—not merely observation or note-taking. That was the point at which the real research journey began.
I did not begin with the concept of remote viewing itself. I began with an experience I was trying to understand. After years of questioning and searching, I found that the term that most closely matched what I had been studying was remote viewing.
When concern turned into questions, the research journey began