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Review - The Seventh Sense
By Lyn Buchanan

By Cassandra 'Sandy' Frost
8-8-7
 
For the first time in over a year, I took some time off last Saturday to actually read a book. I decided on Lyn Buchanan's "The Seventh Sense; The Secrets of Remote Viewing As Told By A 'Psychic Spy' For The U.S. Military," an original publication of Paraview Pocket Books, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
 
Lyn's careful word crafting provides us with the most readable, user friendly and understandable book yet written by a STARGATE vet.
 
In case you don't know who Lyn is, he's part of a handful of soldiers who served in the government's highly classified remote viewing (RV) program that, in cooperation with the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) and the Monroe Institute, developed the strict and scientifically verified protocol that was used as an intelligence gathering tool during the Cold War. RV, according to Lyn, can provide accurate information about places, events, things and individuals over distance and time without requiring use of the physical senses.
 
You know.
 
Psychic spying.
 
The foreword is written by New York Times bestselling author, award winning journalist, motion picture writer/director and magazine cover guy, Jim Marrs. Jim is a journalist's journalist and above all else, is smart. Probably more genius, than anything else. He, like Jack Anderson, was one of the first journalists to investigate and write about RV. He writes how he found himself in a journalist's paradise after he stumbled on to an undiscovered story with all the right ingredients to keep his writing hot, flowing and sexy.
 
Jim's foreword is poignant and provides a personal glimpse into RV's ugly dark side.
 
You know.
 
Back stabbing.
 
Dirty tricks.
 
I call it "Malice in Wonderland."
 
Jim' foreword is crisp, to the point and, more than anything else, revealing. There is a reason he's a regular on Jeff Rense's show, so when you're done reading this, surf on over to his site at http://www.jimmarrs.com/ and find out why.
 
Lyn throws down in his preface with a "Caveat Emptor" and then, with his first sentence, brilliantly sets the hook, deep and unshakeable, and off we go, following him down the rabbit hole.
 
He begins by describing how he lost control of one of his "gifts" and blew out a major portion of the entire NATO intelligence network, for both the good guys and bad guys, "from the North Sea down to Italy, though intelligence computers in Australia had been affected as well."
 
The story continues as Lyn explains how he was chosen to replace the retiring Joe McMoneagle and, through the process, went to the Monroe Institute and during a "session," put his "hand" through the wall. He then describes meeting the legendary Ingo Swann, the "Godfather of RV" and how he became the unit's guinea pig as the first to be taught how to RV by Ingo's students.
 
According to Lyn, his life was forever changed during a welcome speech given by then Lt. Skip Atwater who told Lyn, "In this room, it's OK to be psychic." This is the one insight that gives us permission to utilize abilities that had been previously hidden and/or ashamed of. "It is really OK to be who you are," he writes. "It really is ok to be psychic."
 
Then, unlike other STARGATE vets, Lyn boldly tries to make peace between the warring RV camps by writing:
 
"Each tells the unit's history as he/she saw it, interpreted it and believed it to be. Consequently, the history now being presented to the public is fractured and disjointed, contradictory and confusing. I know because my secondary job within the unit as database manager allowed me to see the data from all the taskings. There are several ex-military who are presently contradicting each other's accounts, with some telling of targets worked, and others saying there was never any such target.
 
"Let me put something to rest, as much as possible, even though I know full well that it will not stop the controversy; I have not seen any account of projects by any of the ex-military viewers, either in their lectures or in their writings, which I find to be false."
 
Chapter Three, "The Unit," includes a "Background" section that explains how the Russians were trying to "use psychics as passive intelligence collectors" that reportedly ventured into mind control. "Skip (Atwater) was put in charge of a project to test whether or not psychic spying could actually reveal our secrets to the enemy," he writes. Thus, the Army's RV unit was born, in a reverse engineering kind of way.
 
Lyn explains how Ingo Swann "got caught up in the idea that the process could be scientifically formulated and began working to develop his own understanding of what happens during a psychic event. One thing led to another, and he and Hal Puthoff developed a methodology that could actually be taught to the average person. The methodology does not 'teach someone to be psychic,' but instead teaches them to get rid of all those blocks that prevent them from using the natural and hidden talents they already have."
 
The following chapters describe "A Military Intelligence Tool" and "The Civilian World." "Reactions" describes, how one day, he walked into his "unit" in civilian clothes to get an allotment form. The clerk claimed that they had no idea who he was and that his files weren't there. After hearing the name "Buchanan," a clerk popped her head up over the cubicle wall and pointed to a closed and locked safe.
 
"The clerk with whom I had been speaking looked over at the safe in question, then snapped back toward me, wide-eyed," Lyn writes. "She sat frozen for a moment. Then, as though spring-loaded, she jumped out of her chair and actually ran over to the rack of blank forms. She returned, however, as though wading upstream, and finally, from full arm's length, holding the paper between her thumb and one finger by only the smallest grip on one corner, handed me the blank allotment request form. Her eyes were focused on her desktop, as though to keep from looking into my voodoo eyes and getting some kind of double whammy."
 
"I returned to our office and asked what the people at the 902nd thought we did," he continues. "I was told that they were not supposed to know, but that all kinds of rumors had gone around up there'They know that we do things with our minds,' Bill answered. Then with a grin, he added: 'They think we do things with other people's minds, too.'"
 
"Reactions" again references RV's dark side. "I also have a huge file of very serious death threats against me, my family, my dog and my cat. There is an alarming number of people in the world who honestly believe that 'the government' (whom they can now identify as me, since they finally have a name to stick the blame to) has been invading their minds, destroying their lives though psychic means, spying on them psychically etc."
 
He concludes this chapter by writing "I have always viewed the world of espionage and secrecy as a fairly pointless game. I have always joked that if we want to kill our enemies, just drop all our classified documents on them. Those who weren't killed by the massive weight of it all would be left to read it, and would die from sheer boredom. When people these days ask about the military's use of remote viewing, I generally just want to tell them, 'That was a part of my old life. I'm starting a new life now.'"
 
In "What Do We Do with it Now?" Lyn writes that:
 
"One of CRV's strengths is that, when performed properly, it can find information that cannot be gained through any other meansAnother strength is CRV's reliable and often amazing accuracy. To everyone's surprise (mine included); the military's CRV unit had the highest accuracy rating of any of the intelligence community's vast array of intelligence gathering tools. That includes such awesome tools as 'spy in the sky' satellites, aerial photography, and even ground agents on site. The CRV method can produce information about a target site that is about 90 percent correct."
 
The next chapter explains how "The Seventh Sense" leads to "New Emotions." He then describes the importance of "Protection" and describes his findings on "The Human Mind," "Mind Melds" and "Sliding Around in Time."
 
"The Afterlife" describes how Lyn "successfully accompanied people through the death event and over to the other side about sixty-seven times."
 
"What I learned about death through these sessions changed my entire outlook on the subject," he writes. "Through all the experiences, one of four things happened on the other side. By 'the other side' I mean the end place ­ after the 'tunnel of light,' being greeted by long-dead loved ones, etc. Those experiences did happen to most of the people I accompanied into 'Heaven,' but not all. I would say that the experience was not present in about one third of these people. It never happened to any of the ones I accompanied into 'Hell,' nor any of those I accompanied into 'oblivion.' It only happened three times to those who wound up 'reincarnated.'"
 
"The Assigned Witness Program" describes a dream program Lyn developed to find missing children but never seemed to get off the ground due to, well, suspicious circumstances.
 
In "Proving It," Lyn describes how he quantifies, tracks and databases CRV sessions through metrics that score and categorize the results that substantiates the protocol's accuracy.
 
In "One Final Story" Lyn shows his fighting side in an open letter to Muammar Qadhafi.
 
After we pop out of the rabbit hole, a series of Appendices describes the nuts and bolts of remote viewing. Lyn carefully explains terminology, provides work sheets, describes front loading, offers exercises, provides methods for scoring RV sessions, offers a sample RV session and describes other RV methods.
 
My recommendation?
 
Buy "The Seventh Sense," read it and pass it on because this is the most readable, easily understandable and informative book written by a true RV insider and STARGATE vet.
 
More information about "The Seventh Sense" and Lyn's remote viewing training company, Problems>Solutions>Innovations or PSI, can be found at:
 
http://www.crviewer.com/
 
Cassandra "Sandy" Frost has, for the past five years, been a regular contributor to www.rense.com, including interviews with remote viewing greats such as Joe McMoneagle, Mel Riley and Lyn Buchanan as well as her seventeen part investigation into the Shriners. Sandy is a three time Society of Professional Journalists award winner and, most recently, has written, edited and published the first exclusively online investigation to be included in the Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc., "Extra, Extra" section.
 
Visit Sandy at:
http://sandyfrost.newsvine.com/
http://thecassandrafrostcollection.blogspot.com/
 
 
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