Heart-Powered Remote Viewing: Making A Quantum Leap
Lately I’ve been listening to David Clements, an Oxford physicist and mathematician, who has shifted from traditional physics into cosmic connections and Source energy exploration. I love everything he shares about his discoveries. What struck me most is that his turning point into this new journey began with remote viewing.
Remote viewing and quantum entanglement are two areas that I’ve long been interested in, so I decided to do some research to better understand how they work—and to try them myself. I’ve included what I’ve discovered here, along with some beginner-friendly exercises. If you’d like to take this journey into remote viewing with me, welcome. I’ll be reporting back on what I uncover along the way.

What is remote viewing?
Step right into the adventure zone! Remote viewing is the practice of perceiving distant or unseen targets using only the mind. It’s not fantasy or wishful imagination, but rather a disciplined way of opening the heart and intuition to information that exists beyond ordinary senses.
Ever wondered what your friend’s new vacation home in Sedona looks like, without visiting? Or felt the urge to check if your planned camping spot is safe? Some even ask bigger questions—like what unusual sights might be happening on Orion right now. Remote viewing is about tapping into those possibilities.
A Glimpse Into History
During the Cold War, both the U.S. and Russia invested heavily in remote viewing. These weren’t spies sneaking into buildings, but trained individuals who could accurately describe hidden locations and activities without ever leaving their office. Astonishingly, many of their descriptions of secret sites, inventions, and even building layouts were later confirmed to be true.
What seemed like science fiction turned out to be a real tool both governments found useful. Click Here for more info on remote viewing history
The Science Behind Remote Viewing: Quantum Entanglement
So how does it work? One theory points to a mind-bending concept from quantum physics known as Quantum Entanglement.
Entanglement describes the mysterious connection between particles where the state of one is instantly linked to the state of another, no matter how far apart they are. It’s as if there’s a cosmic hotline between them.
That means you could be sitting in Colorado, focusing your heart and mind, and tune into something happening in San Diego—or beyond. This “spooky action at a distance,” as Einstein called it, is at the core of modern quantum studies and may also underpin the power of remote viewing.
Beginner Remote Viewing Checklist
1. Preparation
Choose a quiet, distraction-free space.
Have pen, paper, or sketchpad ready.
Take 2–3 minutes of deep breathing to relax your body and clear your mind.
Shift focus to your heart center, imagining breath flowing in and out of your heart.
2. Set Up Target (Randomized & Blind)
Ask someone else to prepare a sealed envelope with a picture or word (unseen target).
OR use a random number generator / online target pool.
Make sure you have no prior knowledge of the target. (This prevents bias / “sensory leakage.”)
3. Intention & Emotional State
State your intention clearly: “I intend to perceive information about this unseen target for the highest good.”
Invoke an emotional state (curiosity, wonder, or compassion). Research shows positive emotional intelligence boosts accuracy.
4. Session
Write down the date, time, and your state of mind.
Let impressions flow (words, colors, textures, sounds, emotions, images).
Record EVERYTHING without judgment—even fragments.
Spend 10–20 minutes receiving impressions.
5. Documentation
Sketch shapes, patterns, or images that come to mind.
Write down sensory data: “cold, metallic, blue, flowing, tall.”
Avoid interpreting too soon—stick to raw impressions.
6. Closure
Express gratitude for the process and close the session.
Take a few breaths to ground yourself.
7. Feedback & Validation
Open the target (envelope, image, location info).
Compare your notes/sketches with the actual target.
Highlight hits, near-hits, and misses.
Note any patterns (e.g., always good with shapes, weak on numbers).
8. Repeat & Track Progress
Keep a journal of sessions and accuracy percentages.
Over time, refine your strengths and notice recurring intuitive channels (visual, sensory, emotional).
Practice weekly for steady improvement.
This way, you’re combining:
Scientific structure (random targets, blind testing, feedback loops).
Spiritual/mystical depth (heart-centered awareness, gratitude, intention).
This makes your practice credible, repeatable, AND deeply connected.
Let me know what happens!
Jenna@jennadukehart.com
