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General Instructions for using the Tasker's
Worksheet

The tasker's
worksheet is to be used by individuals who are designated
to choose targets for the public demonstration experiments of
remote viewing that are being conducted by The Farsight Institute.
You should print out the worksheet with your web browser. The
worksheet should be filled out with a pen or pencil as you work
through target ideas. Before filling out this worksheet, be sure
to read the general requirements
for targets for this experimental series. These general requirements
describe how the target will look once it is finalized. As long
as the target concept satisfies our published general requirements
for these experiments, it will be accepted as the target for
the given weekly demonstration. The worksheet is for your use
only: do not send it via fax to the Institute. Your contact with
the Institute will normally be through email.
First, wait for our Experiment Facilitator
to contact you (via email) to tell you that our encrypted sessions
are posted on our web site. Then begin working on your target
choice. NOTE: To maintain
consistency across all experiments, our Experiment Facilitator
must be informed of the target decision as soon as possible after
the posting of the encrypted sessions. After
emailing our Experiment Facilitator with your target concept,
he will then frame the target in its final form as per our wording,
punctuation, and syntax requirements, as well as certify appropriate
dates and locations that are pertinent to the target. He will
also send it back to you for your final approval.
To use the worksheet, begin by stating a general
target concept. For example, you may want the viewers for this
experiment to view the Washington Monument on a particular day,
or the destruction of the Hindenburg blimp, or the launch of
a space shuttle, or whatever. Just write this down in the place
for the general target concept.
All targets for this experimental series will
have an essential cue and three target aspects. The essential
cue is the most general statement of the target, and this will
most closely correspond with your general target concept. The
first numbered aspect will always be an exact copy of the essential
cue, with the possible addition of a date and/or time. The second
and third numbered aspects are other parts of the target on which
you want the viewers to focus. Remember, you will need to keep
in mind that a viewer's perspective when remote viewing is comparable
with the placement of a camera at a given location and time.
Thus, when you write the information that will be used for the
second and third numbered aspects, keep in mind that the finalized
forms for these aspects will address the idea of identifying
the viewing perspective, sometimes explicitly.
After you fill out the space for the general
target concept, fill out the second most important thing that
you want the viewers to perceive. Remember that this needs to
be a physical location. You want the perspective of each viewer
to be at that location so as to maximize their ability to perceive
that which is desired. Do not write something vague, like the
thoughts of a person. Use specific, concrete language. Where
do you want each viewer's perspective to be, pointed in which
direction? Be as precise as possible. Then fill out the third
most important thing that you want the viewers to perceive. Follow
the same directions as per the second important item.
Feel free to include dates and times and specific
locations. The more information you give the Experiment Facilitator,
the easier it will be for him to frame the final target wording
to exactly match your ideas.
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