• Vol 19.3 • June/July 2004 •

Editor's Note

I first read about remote viewing in the mid-1980s, actually years after Mind Reach by Harold Puthoff and Russell Targ was first published. Eventually I ran across ideas developed by Ingo Swann (pictured with me above). My understanding was cursory. During the 1980s I also enrolled in a growth seminar where at a certain point participants were guided into having their own remote-viewing experiences. The seminar, called “Insight,” is designed to break down certain ingrained barriers and bring people into greater awareness of how they create their own realities. I found that an open, non-judgmental attitude held throughout the experience encouraged an inflow of personalized epiphanies and realizations. Perhaps it was during those few days that I felt my keenest recognition of the connectedness of all things. It’s a realization I try to keep with me and that helps me respond to my experiences and to others more with my heart than my head.

While this spiritual knowledge now seems the most natural thing in the world, there are still those who live in separation and respond to deeper ways of seeing with antagonism and doubt. As Joe McMoneagle suggested in his comments about the interdimensionality of UFOs, conventional rocket science that bases its power on Newtonian physics—three dimensions, linear time and space—will never allow for human interplanetary travel. Remote viewing has played a huge role in ushering in “ground truth” about the power and breadth inherent in human consciousness, particularly by its repeated demonstrations of minds quickly and automatically touching seemingly distant times, objects, and locales. Somehow I feel it’s no accident that remote viewers, inadvertently or otherwise, have spotted UFO craft during their journeys into the matrix.

We humans are only just beginning to make contact with the new realities that will eventually, I feel, invite the UFO entity more and more into our consensus understanding. Our intention at UFO Magazine is to add to that consensus with every issue, drawing upon the wide variety of opinions, facts, events, theories, and reflections that together are building something of an acceptance among our species. It may seem ludicrous when we cannot even accept each other!

But ya gotta start somewhere.We’ve produced well over 100 issues, by any measure a very good start.

Vicki Ecker

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