1 00:00:00,120 --> 00:00:02,600 Speaker 1: Thanks for listening to the best of Coast to Coast podcast. 2 00:00:02,759 --> 00:00:04,760 Speaker 1: If you want to hear more than just this highlight 3 00:00:04,840 --> 00:00:07,400 Speaker 1: from the show, become a Coast Insider and you can 4 00:00:07,480 --> 00:00:11,080 Speaker 1: listen to the complete program, plus recent episodes about out 5 00:00:11,080 --> 00:00:15,840 Speaker 1: of body experiences, the scientific search for extraterrestrial life, and 6 00:00:15,920 --> 00:00:19,159 Speaker 1: biblical prophecies which may have foretold our current state of 7 00:00:19,200 --> 00:00:22,200 Speaker 1: global turmoil. So head on over to Coast to coastam 8 00:00:22,280 --> 00:00:25,040 Speaker 1: dot com and sign up for Coast Insider to catch 9 00:00:25,120 --> 00:00:27,640 Speaker 1: up on what you may have missed from Coast to Coast. 10 00:00:28,080 --> 00:00:33,200 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio. Nancy, 11 00:00:33,240 --> 00:00:37,000 Speaker 1: would you say in intuition is based in the brain 12 00:00:37,320 --> 00:00:44,560 Speaker 1: or outside of it? Huh? Okay. So in my book 13 00:00:44,600 --> 00:00:46,920 Speaker 1: Psychic Intuition, I really, I mean I talk about that 14 00:00:47,120 --> 00:00:49,280 Speaker 1: towards the very end because it's sort of more of 15 00:00:49,320 --> 00:00:53,559 Speaker 1: a radical theory. But my theory is that the imagination, 16 00:00:53,640 --> 00:00:57,920 Speaker 1: what we call the imagination, is not this little private 17 00:00:58,440 --> 00:01:00,840 Speaker 1: mental playground that we have that we think nobody else 18 00:01:00,880 --> 00:01:06,360 Speaker 1: knows about, but it's actually kind of available. It's a 19 00:01:06,480 --> 00:01:11,640 Speaker 1: sensory organ and what is doing is it's translating mostly 20 00:01:11,720 --> 00:01:15,040 Speaker 1: vibrational data that's reaching our body, but we don't have 21 00:01:15,160 --> 00:01:19,160 Speaker 1: a specialized sensory organ to translate it to the brain. 22 00:01:19,680 --> 00:01:24,600 Speaker 1: So it's it's getting to us, and the imagine, what 23 00:01:24,680 --> 00:01:29,559 Speaker 1: we call the imagination, puts it into a format, usually 24 00:01:29,600 --> 00:01:32,720 Speaker 1: a sensory format like a visual image or a sound 25 00:01:32,840 --> 00:01:35,360 Speaker 1: or smell or something that we're going to say, oh, yeah, 26 00:01:35,400 --> 00:01:39,600 Speaker 1: that that's sort of what that means, and we get 27 00:01:39,600 --> 00:01:44,120 Speaker 1: it that way. So I think our imagination is the 28 00:01:44,280 --> 00:01:48,480 Speaker 1: part on the inside of us that translates what's on 29 00:01:48,520 --> 00:01:51,240 Speaker 1: the outside of us. Nancy, what do you call that 30 00:01:51,320 --> 00:01:54,240 Speaker 1: thing that we call a hunch? What is that in 31 00:01:54,520 --> 00:01:59,680 Speaker 1: your opinion, the hunch or the gut feeling, or the 32 00:02:00,080 --> 00:02:01,960 Speaker 1: any of that stuff. I mean, we have more new 33 00:02:02,120 --> 00:02:04,160 Speaker 1: transmitters in our in our gut than we do in 34 00:02:04,160 --> 00:02:08,000 Speaker 1: our brain. Um so where our gut is actually thinking 35 00:02:08,000 --> 00:02:12,880 Speaker 1: and feeling. Um So, that's another way that we're getting 36 00:02:13,480 --> 00:02:17,000 Speaker 1: It's our body telling us, you know, you've got information here, 37 00:02:17,440 --> 00:02:20,080 Speaker 1: do something with it. And in the way that I 38 00:02:20,120 --> 00:02:21,800 Speaker 1: look at it, it's sort of in the middle of 39 00:02:22,639 --> 00:02:25,320 Speaker 1: what I call the sliding scale of intuition, where you 40 00:02:25,360 --> 00:02:30,880 Speaker 1: have educated guesses, which is like the real conservative more 41 00:02:30,880 --> 00:02:35,600 Speaker 1: like left brain stuff. On one end, you've got gut feelings, hunches, 42 00:02:36,240 --> 00:02:39,040 Speaker 1: you know, butterflies in the stomach, any any of those 43 00:02:39,080 --> 00:02:41,720 Speaker 1: sort of quasi emotional feelings that you don't really know 44 00:02:41,760 --> 00:02:44,040 Speaker 1: where they come from. That's in the middle. And then 45 00:02:44,040 --> 00:02:49,520 Speaker 1: on the far end, the kind of the least conservative end, 46 00:02:49,560 --> 00:02:52,680 Speaker 1: you've got all your your psychic information. You have no 47 00:02:52,720 --> 00:02:57,080 Speaker 1: clue where it's coming from. That's like clear sentience or uh, 48 00:02:57,760 --> 00:03:01,160 Speaker 1: clear intuition, any of that little voice we all hear 49 00:03:01,160 --> 00:03:04,840 Speaker 1: in our heads. Who that tries to push us in 50 00:03:04,840 --> 00:03:07,959 Speaker 1: a certain direction. Whether we take it or not, that's 51 00:03:08,000 --> 00:03:11,520 Speaker 1: another thing. But what is that little voice? Is that 52 00:03:11,560 --> 00:03:15,080 Speaker 1: coming from within us? Is that outside somewhere? Is it 53 00:03:15,200 --> 00:03:19,520 Speaker 1: some angel? Who's who's doing this? What's happening? I looked 54 00:03:19,520 --> 00:03:23,079 Speaker 1: at the studies of a whole bunch of and they're 55 00:03:23,080 --> 00:03:30,080 Speaker 1: pretty rare to studies of how schizophrenics experience voices in 56 00:03:30,120 --> 00:03:34,560 Speaker 1: their heads, and it turns out they usually come on 57 00:03:34,639 --> 00:03:37,880 Speaker 1: certain sides of their heads, like left, right side or back, 58 00:03:38,080 --> 00:03:42,680 Speaker 1: you know, front, something like that. Usually those voices are 59 00:03:43,240 --> 00:03:47,680 Speaker 1: somebody that they know where it's a consistent voice, not 60 00:03:47,800 --> 00:03:51,320 Speaker 1: a bunch of voices, although that depends and they're usually 61 00:03:51,360 --> 00:03:55,640 Speaker 1: telling schizophrenics more derogatory things than good things. So I 62 00:03:55,760 --> 00:03:58,840 Speaker 1: began to figure out how to distinguish between like a 63 00:03:58,920 --> 00:04:04,640 Speaker 1: voice in your head versus a schizophrenic voice. Interesting, take 64 00:04:04,880 --> 00:04:07,960 Speaker 1: a voice in your head, they think is a possible. 65 00:04:08,240 --> 00:04:11,720 Speaker 1: It's almost like a bleed through of two areas of 66 00:04:11,720 --> 00:04:15,280 Speaker 1: the brain. That broke is in the Wernicky sections of 67 00:04:15,320 --> 00:04:20,400 Speaker 1: the brain, in the temporal lobe, and one does language 68 00:04:20,400 --> 00:04:24,440 Speaker 1: comprehension and the other one does language speech. So sometimes 69 00:04:24,520 --> 00:04:28,720 Speaker 1: you may be hearing your thought that that thought though, 70 00:04:28,800 --> 00:04:32,880 Speaker 1: is it is it emanating from within? Let's say that 71 00:04:33,000 --> 00:04:35,880 Speaker 1: thought of you know, Nancy, don't do this. It's it's 72 00:04:35,920 --> 00:04:38,400 Speaker 1: not going to work for you, and then you decide 73 00:04:38,400 --> 00:04:41,960 Speaker 1: what you're going to do. Is that part of our 74 00:04:42,040 --> 00:04:44,880 Speaker 1: brain that gives us the ability to reason and think. 75 00:04:45,320 --> 00:04:48,480 Speaker 1: I sometimes think there's something on the outside feeding us 76 00:04:48,560 --> 00:04:51,960 Speaker 1: this information. Listen, you don't have to push me too far. 77 00:04:52,000 --> 00:04:53,640 Speaker 1: I've been woken up in the middle of the night 78 00:04:53,800 --> 00:05:00,000 Speaker 1: by the alien voice that interrupted all of my phone 79 00:05:00,360 --> 00:05:02,400 Speaker 1: my daughter for a year and a half after we 80 00:05:02,480 --> 00:05:06,080 Speaker 1: had a massive year of post item. So yeah, of 81 00:05:06,120 --> 00:05:10,880 Speaker 1: course you've got that. You've got I'm sure you must 82 00:05:10,880 --> 00:05:14,120 Speaker 1: have had the experience of, you know, maybe in the 83 00:05:14,160 --> 00:05:16,359 Speaker 1: middle of the night, or maybe when you're least expecting it, 84 00:05:16,720 --> 00:05:20,559 Speaker 1: you hear your name being called. You ever had that, yes, 85 00:05:21,240 --> 00:05:23,839 Speaker 1: y or But I also hear in the middle of 86 00:05:23,839 --> 00:05:27,480 Speaker 1: the this is weird. I will sometimes wake up in 87 00:05:27,520 --> 00:05:31,359 Speaker 1: the morning to a doorbell ringing and there is no 88 00:05:31,480 --> 00:05:35,039 Speaker 1: doorbell ringing, and there is nobody there, and there wasn't 89 00:05:35,080 --> 00:05:39,640 Speaker 1: anybody there, but I distinctly heard a doorbell ringing. Me too, 90 00:05:40,040 --> 00:05:46,520 Speaker 1: totally get it. Yep, yeah, exactly. I mean you sometimes 91 00:05:46,520 --> 00:05:48,840 Speaker 1: wonder is there something going on in my brain? I mean, 92 00:05:49,000 --> 00:05:51,760 Speaker 1: is there a malfunction somewhere or some kind of tumor 93 00:05:52,440 --> 00:05:59,200 Speaker 1: it's a weird feeling. No, No, I mean there could be, 94 00:05:59,400 --> 00:06:01,680 Speaker 1: but I don't think so. I think it's actually it's 95 00:06:01,720 --> 00:06:05,040 Speaker 1: pretty normal. I mean, everybody, everybody is a narrative going 96 00:06:05,080 --> 00:06:08,039 Speaker 1: on in their heads. You know, we take calls next hour, 97 00:06:08,160 --> 00:06:11,760 Speaker 1: Let's see how many people have that doorbell thing happen, 98 00:06:12,520 --> 00:06:16,920 Speaker 1: because that could be strange. Now, you've been training as 99 00:06:16,960 --> 00:06:19,760 Speaker 1: a remote viewer in addition to your work as an 100 00:06:19,760 --> 00:06:24,440 Speaker 1: intuitive and you call your work TSP, so tell us 101 00:06:24,480 --> 00:06:29,480 Speaker 1: about that. I've been working on that for very for 102 00:06:29,600 --> 00:06:36,760 Speaker 1: many many years and TSP it stands for tested ESP. 103 00:06:36,920 --> 00:06:41,000 Speaker 1: So it's not a perfect acronym, but basically it's tested 104 00:06:41,040 --> 00:06:45,760 Speaker 1: because in the process the protocols that I use, you're 105 00:06:45,800 --> 00:06:50,160 Speaker 1: getting continuous feedback from your client. And the reason I 106 00:06:50,279 --> 00:06:55,400 Speaker 1: developed that was because I got really a little bit 107 00:06:55,440 --> 00:06:58,679 Speaker 1: frustrated with some of the regular types of remote viewing. 108 00:06:59,480 --> 00:07:02,480 Speaker 1: And I'm sure, I mean, your your listeners probably know 109 00:07:02,560 --> 00:07:07,119 Speaker 1: about most of them. But you have controlled remote viewing, 110 00:07:07,839 --> 00:07:11,160 Speaker 1: which was developed in nineteen seventy three by Ingo Swan 111 00:07:11,640 --> 00:07:16,120 Speaker 1: and put Off and Targ the physicists at SRI, and 112 00:07:16,400 --> 00:07:21,119 Speaker 1: they put together protocols. Basically, it's what I mean, it's 113 00:07:21,120 --> 00:07:26,280 Speaker 1: what I call clairvoyance with protocols, and it's the I say, 114 00:07:26,280 --> 00:07:29,040 Speaker 1: where did I write? Oh yeah, SRI. I defined it 115 00:07:29,200 --> 00:07:34,560 Speaker 1: as the acquisition and description by mental means of information 116 00:07:35,160 --> 00:07:41,120 Speaker 1: blocked from ordinary perception by distance, shielding or time. Okay, 117 00:07:41,120 --> 00:07:44,680 Speaker 1: so that's so it's it's basically just clairvoyance, but they're 118 00:07:44,720 --> 00:07:48,200 Speaker 1: giving you a system for doing it. You've also got 119 00:07:48,880 --> 00:07:51,720 Speaker 1: ARV associated remote viewing, which is like a binary choice 120 00:07:51,800 --> 00:07:57,360 Speaker 1: future prediction type of viewing. You've got ARV extended remote viewing, 121 00:07:57,400 --> 00:08:01,320 Speaker 1: which is sort of this relaxed version of Lion darkened room, 122 00:08:01,920 --> 00:08:06,680 Speaker 1: try and tune into your target and then somehow record 123 00:08:06,920 --> 00:08:12,640 Speaker 1: whatever you're coming up with later. But most people would 124 00:08:12,640 --> 00:08:16,720 Speaker 1: I in the fifty years or so that you know, 125 00:08:16,840 --> 00:08:20,160 Speaker 1: since seventy three, I mean, yeah, there's been a few variations, 126 00:08:20,280 --> 00:08:21,680 Speaker 1: or they says, oh yeah, they have a brand new 127 00:08:21,720 --> 00:08:24,640 Speaker 1: type of remote viewing, But when I'm looking at them, 128 00:08:25,440 --> 00:08:30,239 Speaker 1: they're kind of all the same system. These might change 129 00:08:30,240 --> 00:08:33,800 Speaker 1: the terms, they might switch around a few of the protocols, 130 00:08:33,800 --> 00:08:35,880 Speaker 1: you do this here instead of here, whatever, but it's 131 00:08:35,880 --> 00:08:37,800 Speaker 1: all kind of the same thing. So I got really 132 00:08:37,800 --> 00:08:40,079 Speaker 1: frustrated with that, and I got frustrated, and I thought 133 00:08:40,080 --> 00:08:44,040 Speaker 1: it's time to push the envelope, you know, let's push 134 00:08:44,080 --> 00:08:47,560 Speaker 1: it further than where it's been and to solve some 135 00:08:47,600 --> 00:08:51,200 Speaker 1: of the issues I had, which for anybody who is 136 00:08:52,360 --> 00:08:57,440 Speaker 1: a little bit intuitive, if you're doing something like with 137 00:08:57,559 --> 00:09:02,040 Speaker 1: the CRV control remote viewing protocols, it makes you got 138 00:09:02,040 --> 00:09:05,160 Speaker 1: to stop and think. You have to draw your idiogram. 139 00:09:05,160 --> 00:09:06,960 Speaker 1: You got to divide it up. Then you have to 140 00:09:06,960 --> 00:09:11,360 Speaker 1: do you know, abc D gestas and define them, and 141 00:09:11,400 --> 00:09:13,680 Speaker 1: then you have to in the next section, you know, 142 00:09:13,760 --> 00:09:18,000 Speaker 1: write your descriptors. I mean, it gets very mentally heavy, 143 00:09:18,040 --> 00:09:20,840 Speaker 1: and you just say, well, wait a second, can't I 144 00:09:20,920 --> 00:09:23,840 Speaker 1: just get there faster? And if I get there faster, 145 00:09:24,080 --> 00:09:28,400 Speaker 1: I'll give you more information. So that was, you know, 146 00:09:28,480 --> 00:09:31,480 Speaker 1: sort of what pushed me into developing this, and I've 147 00:09:31,480 --> 00:09:34,600 Speaker 1: been doing this in all of my private readings for 148 00:09:34,679 --> 00:09:37,319 Speaker 1: a long time now. 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