Remote Healing of Tomato Plants Deliberately Infected With the Tobacco Mosaic Virus
In a triple-blind study supervised by virologists at the University of California at Davis, Spiritual Sight demonstrated its remarkable potential by successfully healing tomato plants deliberately infected with the Tobacco Mosaic Virus. Compared to the control plants, the infected plants had more fruit, grew bigger, and entered a second life cycle. This research, a beacon of hope, was peer-reviewed, published by the University of Arizona, and presented at their International Consciousness Studies Conference in 2011. What is a triple-blind study? The triple-blind study is a complex process. In this method, the identity of the infected and control plants is concealed from everyone involved, including the researchers, project manager, monitors, and remote viewers. Each plant is assigned multiple numbers, making it impossible to determine which number corresponds to a specific plant. A total of 23 viewers made over 1000 efforts to remote view the plants, ensuring the statistical soundness of our results.
The healthy tomato plant on the left is at the start of the study, and the diseased plant is on the right. Of course, the viewers are only given the numbers that correspond to the plant and remote-viewed them at a distance.
Which plant is the diseased one? At the end of the study, the plant on the LEFT is the diseased one, and the one on the right is a control plant at the end of its life cycle. The diseased plant was found to be still infected with the virus.
WHAT ARE THE CONCLUSIONS OF THIS STUDY?
The study unequivocally concluded that the Controlled Remote Viewing Protocol (CRV) was the only effective method. Other protocols, such as guessing, hunches, meditating to reach an emotional connection with the plants, and mock-controlled remote viewing protocols that had distinct steps, were also tested. However, none could match the precision and accuracy of the CRV protocol.
The plants were healed despite remaining infected with the virus.
It's important to note that there was no intent to heal the plants. The sole purpose was to identify, through remote viewing, which plants were infected. This underscores that the healing of the infected plants was so remarkable.