I'm definitely down to try it sometime this weekend. Only I'll be honest with you.
currently I'm most noticeably proficient with a rectangular psi wheel made out of a bank reciept. if you have any materials like that I'm confident if distance is not a factor I'd be able to move it clockwise and anticlockwise
I've so far come to the conclusion that I can consistently move most materials I currently work with from at least about 5 to 6 feet away without noticeable air currents aside from myself breathing through my nose
back at my parent's house i rotated 3 different materials from similar distances while wearing a nose and mouth mask with the vents and windows closed so that was an eye opening learning experience
If I manage to really get in the zone and communicate the intended experience you'll definitely at least notice the psi wheel bob up and down quite a bit
for some reason full rotations have seemed just a bit tricky recently at times.
The larger and heavier materials I train with move aswell when I'm in the zone to what seems to be varying degrees.
The laminated blue cardboard wheel most noticably has moved and bobbs up and down quite a bit when it for some reason has seemed like it was reluctant to turn in a certain direction.
So yeah, I'm not tryin to bore you to death with this bitching and moaning.
I just thought that it'd save more time for everybody if I'd be able to work with such a material as I mentioned in the beggining of this drawn out babble if I land a timeslot to give it a real and good attempt
Hey guys. Let me know if anyone else is working on it so I don't get confused about results or something.
I've already seen a good clockwise movement and an unintended anti clockwise movement and I just want to clarify who the one or ones making them happen actually are, lol.
This is awesome, higheriam I think I just saw you fiddling about with the psi wheels, but I can't work out if its me moving it now you have gone , I think it could be Owltwelve!
This experiment has given me some insight into my own perception of objects I think, In the live feed for some reason I perceived the receipt and lotto ticket as being like bricks, even though I wasn't trying to. Right beside them from the start I was a able to move the paper psi wheel, while the lotto ticket felt like it was glued to its stand. Draspy, thought it may have been him locking it, but I think it was me also. So I am beginning to wonder how much you perception of something has an effect when trying to move it . I think this may also apply to light intensities on radiometers and air strength on pin wheels, Maybe big items are not as hard to move as I first thought, it might be about illusionary perceptions, if you think man thats impossible, it will be
just a thought
-- Edited by Treasure Hunter on Sunday 6th of February 2011 01:37:57 PM
i agree, its all a matter of how we perceive things, distance is an illusion as well as time. With that live experiment across a vast distance proves, all kinetic energy is the same. Free your mind from the restrictions and explore an endless world of possibilities.
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Usually when I joined, someone was already practicing on the regular psi-wheel. So, I usually took the receipt or something else for practicing. However, more-or-less the same happened .. I started feeling the responsiveness and sensitivity of the object decreasing even when Draspy wasn't around. It was me shielding my own pk again.
A few days ago we tried remote pk on my psi-wheel with Lwr and we couldn't move it almost at all. Though, after some practice on higheriam's feed, my psi-wheel at home has become a lot more responsive for me again. This live experiment really helps and it helps a lot. Thanks again for all your effort in setting this up, higheriam!
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The unreal hath no being; there is no non-being of the Real; ~Krishna
A stable-minded person will neither hug nor hate the world, he will take things as they come.