Introduction to Remote Viewing Diary of Billie Berri
copyright 2005 by Jon Dieges
GALLERY OF PHOTOGRAPHS THAT
CONFIRM REMOTELY VIEWED SITES;
Beginning in 1980 Billie Berri experienced what
parapsychologists have labeled "Remote Viewing", the telepathic
capacity to see scenes in one's mind that are elsewhere, even
thousands of miles away. No satisfactory scientific explanation
has yet been developed for this ability, yet some people, like Billie,
had it to such a degree that it was overwhelmingly transformative
of her life. It was like becoming a "human tuning fork" and
developing the ability to detect the light of a flashlight amongst the
stars in the night sky, as she described it to me. From the
beginning I said to her "if someone is trying to tell you something,
for God's sake listen!"
What was extraordinary about her experience is that it came
about due to her great love for the Hooded and Bullock's Orioles
and Black-Headed Grosbeaks that came to her feeders. In the
end she came to realize she was literally seeing through the eyes
of these birds while they were migrating to and from Ojai.
With my strong urging she kept a detailed daily diary of
her remote viewing during the spring and fall migration periods.
These voluminous notes are accessible within this page through
another link. In addition, after her death, with the settlement of
her estate, I obtained the possession and copyright for this
material and have converted her "data"into maps showing the fall
and spring migration of her beloved birds. In theory, these maps
can be printed out and reassembled into a grand composite map
covering Southwestern America, Baja California, and the western
Mexican states of Sonora and Sinaloa. Neither of us had ever
traveled in these parts of Mexico.
Yet Billie's Remote Viewing was so accurate that I would keep
all maps away from her in order not to put thoughts in her mind by
mistake. Only after she completed a diary entry would I show her
the applicable map as a sort of positive reinforcement. During the
eighties I acquired a huge collection of U.S.G.S. Topographic
maps for the U.S. stretch of the bird migration, as well as similar
ones for Western Mexico and Baja California.
Once she came up with the names of two towns that I could not
find anywhere on the maps I had--Toro and Zubiate. She was
able to pinpoint where they were and the closest towns before and
after on the migration path, but I was not able to find them. Only
when I finally purchased the most up-to-date National Geographic
map of Mexico did I find these two towns, and they were exactly
where Billie said they were.
It will be tedious for visitors to this website to read through all
her notes and the maps I made based on them, but the effort will
reward you greatly. The shear volume of evidence contained
within her diary puts her feat of telepathy beyond the usual
scientific method questions of random chance, "blind" studies,
similar to using placebos in drug testing, reproducibility of results,
or the so-called criticism of evidence being "merely" anecdotal. If
you take the time to wade through her notes, "merely anecdotal"
would hardly be an applicable description.
Shortly after her Remote Viewing experiences began I told her it
was nearly useless information unless she could pin down the
exact coordinates of the location of the birds at any particular
time. In response she was able to not only pick out the names of
towns, highways, but streets as well, giving the exact names of the
street corner signs at an intersection.
In the end she experienced what has been popularly called
"burn-out". Finally she just could not do it anymore. It was too
draining and her life was falling apart in other ways. We always
wanted to co-author a book on this, but now cyberspace has
enveloped and overtaken us and the "blogosphere" rules the day.
Publishing her opus on the Internet seems to make more sense.
Copyright 2005 by Jon Dieges
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