Woman uses remote viewing to help others
- By Tortue PSI
- Published 11/19/2008
No tea leaves, no crystal balls.
But by tapping into her subconscious, the Amarillo social worker has accomplished many mystical feats.
She helped authorities in Arkansas locate a missing child. She assisted archeologists in exploring the history of a monolith in Lebanon.
And she's aided billion-dollar corporations in deciding which products to market.
She did it all by using "controlled remote viewing" - a method of obtaining information without relying on the normal five senses.
Heady stuff for a mother of seven who has worked for Catholic Family Service for 10 years.
Her career spans 35 years, from missionary work in South America to heading up the CFS refugee resettlement program in Amarillo. In her spare time, she is a certified hypnotist.
But CRV is the most fascinating thing she has ever encountered, the 49-year-old Washington native said.
"It's mystical in the way electricity is mystical," Lambert-Williams said. "We know it works, but we don't really understand how."
Remote viewers use a set of established protocols to mentally access information normally hidden from the five senses by space or time. Those protocols were established in the early 1970s by the United States military.
