Hello Explorers!
Remote Viewing allows us not only to explore the health of individual historic figures, but also to observe trends in populations across centuries. From pandemics and epidemics to lifestyle evolution, Remote Viewing can reveal how general health, longevity, body size, and resilience have changed through time.
In this e-class, we explore population health energetics across Europe, Russia, China, and beyond, revealing how environmental pressures, societal changes, and genetics shaped human vitality.
Why It Works
Energy patterns reflect population health: Crowds, families, and communities leave energetic signatures.
Historical events imprint on health: Wars, famine, epidemics, and migrations are visible in energy fields.
Body size and vitality evolve: Remote Viewing can sense trends in height, weight, and longevity across generations.
Emotional and cultural influences: Collective stress, joy, and resilience affect physical and energetic health.
By observing trends rather than individuals, we can uncover hidden patterns of human development and adaptation.
Step-by-Step Process: Viewing Generational Health
1. Define Your Focus
Example cues:
“Describe the general health and vitality of people living in Russia during the 1800s.”
“Scan the population of Europe during the 14th century Black Death.”
“Observe changes in average height and longevity of Chinese families over 300 years – 18th Century (1700–1750).”
2. Enter Observer Mode
Meditate or take 3–5 minutes to clear your mind.
Visualize a wide lens encompassing crowds, communities, and generations.
3. Scan Energetic Patterns
Observe overall vitality: strong, weak, balanced, or stressed.
Notice trends: taller or shorter, stronger or frailer, long-lived or short-lived.
Sense effects of pandemics, wars, or environmental changes on populations.
4. Observe Emotional and Social Influences
Collective stress or trauma: wars, famine, epidemics.
Collective joy or prosperity: periods of peace and abundance.
Cultural or societal practices influencing health, e.g., diet, activity, lifestyle.
5. Record Your Impressions
Draw timelines, sketches, or diagrams to illustrate population health trends.
Use colors to represent vitality:
Green = healthy, robust
Yellow = moderate stress or weakness
Red = widespread illness, epidemics, or famine
Real-Life Examples
Case 1: Europe – 14th Century
Remote Viewing of European populations during the Black Death revealed:
Drastic energy reductions in many areas (correlating with mass illness).
Some pockets of vitality in rural areas with access to clean water and better nutrition.
Height and weight appeared smaller than pre-plague generations due to malnutrition.
Case 2: Russia – 1800s to Early 1900s
Viewing multiple generations:
Energy patterns showed resilience in colder northern regions.
Longevity increased slowly over generations, influenced by diet, climate, and social stability.
Epidemics (cholera, smallpox) left visible energetic disruptions in certain cities.
Case 3: China – Ming to Qing Dynasty
Observed general vitality improvements during periods of agricultural expansion.
Collective stress during wars and famines appeared as weakened energy fields.
Trends showed taller, stronger bodies in prosperous periods, with longer average lifespans.
Practical Tips
Work in generational snapshots: focus on one century, region, or community at a time.
Track changes visually: use timelines, energy flow diagrams, or charts.
Pay attention to environmental and societal influences: climate, warfare, diet, and epidemics.
Observe patterns, not individuals: focus on population trends and collective health signatures.
Conclusion
Remote Viewing generations of people allows us to:
See how health and vitality evolved over centuries.
Understand the impact of epidemics, pandemics, famine, and prosperity on populations.
Track physical changes: size, longevity, and resilience across generations.
Deepen insights into the interplay between environment, culture, and human health.
By combining Remote Viewing with historical context, you can explore how humanity’s health evolved and identify energetic signatures of major societal events.
Short Practice Assignment
Choose a region and time period (e.g., Europe 1600s, Russia 1800s, China 1700s).
Set your cue: “Describe the general health, vitality, and physical characteristics of people living in [region/time].”
Enter observer mode (3–5 minutes).
Scan energetic patterns — note collective vitality, energy flow, and blockages.
Observe trends — height, weight, longevity, resilience.
Consider societal influences — famine, epidemics, war, prosperity.
Record your impressions — create a visual timeline or diagram showing generational health trends.
Goal: Develop the ability to perceive population health trends over time and deepen your understanding of human vitality across generations.
