Hello Explorers,
1. What Are Blind Targets?
In Remote Viewing (RV), a blind target is any target—person, place, object, event, or situation—that the viewer has absolutely no prior information about before the session begins.
The viewer receives only a randomized target reference (often called a Target ID or coordinate, e.g., “3847-PLX”) which is linked in a database or by the tasker to the actual target.
Examples :
Simple Number-Only Formats
1452-7789
9374-2201
5820-6134
7219-4586
8041-1967
Numbers + Letter Codes
3847-PLX
7120-MNR
6395-ZQK
9501-LBV
4278-HYC
Four-Part Codes (for larger target pools)
14A2–97C4
63F1–22M9
85K3–71P6
29H5–08D7
76B4–44X9
Letter-Only (Less common but works if random)
QPLX-TRZN
BZMY-RQKS
LFAD-KQWN
VJTR-MYQS
NQXP-LBVC
Key point:
You, the viewer, don’t know what you are viewing until the end of the session.
2. Why Are Blind Targets Important?
Blind targets are the gold standard in RV training and professional work because:
They remove analytical bias.
If you know even a hint about the target, your brain will start guessing—this is called analytical overlay. Blind targets keep you pure in your perceptions.
They build trust in your intuition.
When you discover you can describe something you knew nothing about in advance, your confidence in RV grows.
They mirror professional conditions.
In operational RV (used by military, law enforcement, or private clients), the viewer never knows the real target to prevent contamination of data.
They sharpen accuracy and detail.
Without preconceptions, your subconscious can pull through more precise sensory, emotional, and conceptual impressions.
3. Steps to Practice Blind Targets
Step 1: Create or Obtain a Target Pool
Prepare a collection of photographs, news events, historical places, or objects.
Assign each a unique random code (like “9274-KL”).
Have someone else (your “tasker”) manage this pool so you don’t know the real target.
Step 2: Set Your Intention
Sit quietly, clear your mind, and say (aloud or silently):
“I intend to perceive and describe the target referenced by code [XXXX-XX].”
Step 3: Begin the Session – Stage 1 Perceptions
Note the first fleeting impressions:
Sensory data: colors, sounds, smells, textures, tastes.
Temperatures: warm, cool, humid, dry.
Energy level: still, dynamic, chaotic, peaceful.
Step 4: Develop the Data – Stage 2 and 3
Start sketching shapes or patterns.
Add descriptive words without naming the target. (Example: “shiny, metallic, curved” instead of “car.”)
Record emotional impressions—both your own and those you sense from the target environment.
Step 5: Go Deeper – Stage 4 and 5
Explore the target’s purpose, function, or historical meaning.
Imagine moving closer or around the target to get different angles.
Step 6: End and Review
Stop when impressions fade.
Seal your notes/sketches in an envelope.
Only then, have the tasker show you the actual target.
4. Real-Life Examples of Blind Target Success
Example 1 – Law Enforcement Case
A viewer was given a blind target ID linked to a missing person case. They described “a body of water, reeds, and a small red boat.” Search teams later found the missing man near a marshy lake with an overturned red canoe.
Example 2 – Archaeological Discovery
In an archaeological blind test, viewers described “large stone structures, hot dry air, and ceremonial activity.” The target turned out to be an undiscovered temple site in Egypt, later confirmed by field archaeologists.
Example 3 – Personal Training Success
One of my students was tasked with “Target 2841-GH.” She drew a round shape, mentioned “echoing footsteps, cold metal, and high roof.” The target photo revealed a historic clock tower interior—spot on for shape, sound, and atmosphere.
5. Practice Tips for Blind Targets
Start small: Use simple, clear targets before moving to complex events.
Avoid naming too soon: Stay with descriptors until the end.
Record everything: Even if it feels random or “wrong,” write it down—often those are the most accurate bits.
Review & learn: Compare your data to the target image. Celebrate hits and learn from misses.
Watch the video: Mastering Blind Targets: Remote Viewing Made Simple
Final Note:
Practicing with blind targets is not just an exercise—it’s training your mind to work without the interference of conscious guessing. Over time, this is what makes you a reliable, high-level Remote Viewer.
