ANNIVERSARY OF THE SINKING OF SS EL FARO
(This was originally posted on October 1, 2024)
Nine years ago today, October 1, 2015, the 800-foot-long freighter SS El Faro was sunk in Hurricane Joaquin with 33 sailors lost.
Four days before that, on September 28, 2015, I performed an RV session targeting any significant worldwide events within the next 96 hours. Here's the session summary:
I found a ship that would sink in a storm within 96 hours. At the time indicated in my session, she was still in port in Jacksonville, FL.
The Question:
How can a remote viewer not associated with the event perceive this while 33 sailors and hundreds of their loved ones are oblivious?
I suggest that some of the crew and many of the individual family members did know, for a brief moment, immediately after waking up some morning before the event. Hear me out, please.
Those individuals would have been woken from their sleep, likely from a dream, by a jolt.
They were jolted awake, out of their sleep, with a feeling of foreboding and doom.
Most of them would quickly dismiss it and start their day.
The others would be nagged for some minutes until it was lost as waking consciousness took over their attention.
For the few select, perceptive crewmembers, the waking jolts were experienced before they set sail from Jacksonville because that was the deadline for each of them to avoid this event.
The Problem in 3 parts:
Your awake state … intuitions get crushed.
Your conscious mind has near complete authority while you are awake.
Your unconscious tries to guide you throughout the waking day (for some of you, it has stopped trying). Still, consciousness discounts any data from the unconscious that it can't logically connect to your immediate attention and reality.
For example, with El Faro still in port in Jacksonville, a crewmember walking past an onboard survival craft (lifeboat) might find their attention unusually held by it for a moment until consciousness wrests back control and gets the sailor in motion again to where s/he was walking.
2. Your sleep state … well, you are asleep!
Unconsciousness reigns here, but with consciousness shut down, there is no awareness of information to consider.
3. Transitions … falling asleep and waking up. (Set aside falling asleep for now.)
At the first instant of waking, we generally have only a moment, perhaps 1-3 seconds, to grasp unconscious information while the conscious mind struggles with initial orientation to the world it is waking into.
We routinely fail to hold onto the data or dismiss it entirely.
The Unconscious Solution.
While you sleep, the unconscious can rudely and quickly wake you up with robust subconscious information, including consequential, negatively charged emotions.
This jolt instantly wakes the conscious mind, thus injecting that dream straight into your immediate attention.
Until you regain your composure, it's hard to think about anything other than that dream.
The impacts of ignoring these unconscious screams are arguably no more in quantity than a couple or a few per year for most of us:
An elderly relative shows up in your dream, and days later, they are no longer alive, and you failed to visit them or pick up the phone.
You awake from a dream of big, fast water, and the next day, you struggle to survive a rip tide at the beach.
You dream of being violently spun around amidst loud metallic sounds, and two days later, you survive (hopefully) a car accident.
How many lesser energy unconscious alerts are missed by you in a year?
Did you dream of friends or family members and miss an opportunity to make them aware of some possibility?
As parents, do you routinely dismiss the dreams of your children?
What if you paid more attention to receiving this information from your dream state? How might that possibly help you or someone you love?
And given your increased attention to your unconscious immediately upon awakening, how might that begin a positive feedback loop of increasing quantity and clarity from your quiet voice, as my friend calls it?
And what if you routinely prompted the unconscious for answers to specific questions before you went to sleep?
And what if during your conscious waking day, you spent a little time in the hobby of remote viewing, putting the unconscious in charge for a while?
Might that, over time, appropriately rebalance power between the two halves of your brain? The two ways of knowing?
To begin, consider the following:
Have a pen and paper on your nightstand.
Why? Informing the unconscious, you are prepared to receive.
2. Avoid watching videos before you fall asleep. If you do, keep it tame.
Why? Avoid loading the unconscious with imagination before sleep. We want reality.
3. When you awake, immediately make quick sketches of any visual elements. Use words to describe the rest. What primary emotion do you feel? Fear and doom should alert you. Just give it 60 seconds. Your primary focus is the last dream.
Why? Informing the unconscious that the data is important enough for you to record.
4. If alerted, be wary during your day. Contact loved ones you dream of.
Why? Informing the unconscious that you will act on the received information.
There is a more advanced version of this list when you are ready.
“The future presages itself.“
-Apocryphal Friedrich Nietze quote