In the first half, instructor Michelle Freed discussed the mechanics of remote viewing and its applications in criminal investigations. According to Freed, successful practitioners balance left-brain analytical thinking with right-brain intuitive perception. "If you want to be a world-class remote viewer, then you have to give up what it is to be human," she explained, quoting her mentor Joe McMoneagle. Freed insisted that remote viewing does not require drugs or altered states. She referenced an experiment at the Monroe Institute where muscle testing indicated remote viewers remain physically grounded despite projecting their consciousness to distant locations.
Her team has worked on high-profile cases including the Murdaugh murders and the Moscow, Idaho college student killings. She also noted that remote viewers contributed to locating Saddam Hussein, though such work often remains undisclosed. Freed claimed law enforcement increasingly uses remote viewers, though often without public acknowledgment. A notable example involved work for Homeland Security in 2019 regarding threats to the 2020 Olympics. Freed's session referenced "computers and a computer virus" alongside reports of "chaos" and "debris." She later realized her virus reference may have anticipated COVID-19: "I made an assumption... It was the furthest thing from my mind. Who would have thought in 2019 that there would be a virus?"
Freed also shared a recent success case in Oklahoma where remote viewing helped locate a man who had written a suicide note. "Police were able to kind of talk him down, and we feel like we had in some small way helped to save his life," she said.
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In the second half, author and dream expert Theresa Cheung spoke about the significance of dreams as tools for self-awareness and precognition. Cheung described dreams as "nocturnal intuition," explaining that humans maintain their precognitive abilities during sleep. "When you fall asleep, that doesn't change... What happens is they speak to us in this wonderful, wild, insane dream world where literally anything is possible," she emphasized. A key practice Cheung recommends is reviewing dreams several days after recording them. She claimed that retrospective analysis reveals patterns and meaning, saying "the best teacher for dream work is hindsight."
Cheung pointed out that every dream carries value: "Every single dream is precious and priceless wisdom from your soul, and it's trying to send you a message." She also addressed the prevalence of nightmares, positioning them as urgent communications from the unconscious mind. Rather than dismissing them, she suggested they represent escalating efforts to capture attention. "It's like a friend that keeps texting you, and you never reply. And after a while, that friend gets fed up and... shouts," she elaborated. She characterized these nightmares as acts of "tough love" when gentler messages have been overlooked.
Cheung noted that 98 percent of dreams are anxiety-driven, expressing concern about this trend. She identified falling as the most commonly reported dream archetype, stating it "rarely lands off its number one spot." Cheung explained these dreams indicate feelings of being unsupported in waking life, particularly noting that falling dreams increased dramatically during the pandemic when people remained homebound.