The Investigator’s Toolkit: 7 Ways to Verify Intuition
Intuition: one of the 4 major ways of knowing that may be related to nonlocal consciousness
Over the past two articles, we explored the inner landscape of intuition:
🔹 Intuition vs. Projection, Fear, and Fantasy
(10 tests for separating genuine intuition from the most common internal distortions)
🔹 Intuition vs. Noise and How Your Mind Builds Meaning
(22 tests that help separate genuine intuition from contextual, emotional, sensory, and cognitive impostors)
Here, we move from understanding the impostors to practical techniques you can use in real investigations. These are hands-on methods for separating the Signal (true intuition/ESP) from the Noise (fear, imagination, bias, memory, bodily reactions, group influence).
Below are 7 field-tested techniques you can use to verify whether a perception is intuitive, emotional, psychological, or environmental—so you can stay calibrated in any investigation.
1. The "Descriptors Only" Rule
Target: Intellectual & Imagination ImpostorsThe fastest way to trigger a false positive is to Name what you are sensing. Naming things ("It's a demon," "It's a priest") loads the brain with cultural baggage.
The Technique:
Force yourself to describe attributes (adjectives), not nouns.
How to do it:
❌ Wrong: "I sense a little girl running in the hallway." (This triggers the Imagination Impostor to build a dress, a face, and a sad backstory).
✅ Right: "I sense something small, fast-moving, light energy, low to the ground."
Why it works: It keeps you in the Sensory/Data layer and prevents the Intellectual layer from jumping to conclusions.
This is the ultimate scientific control. You cannot have "Expectation Bias" if you have no expectations.
The Technique:
Physiological fear mimics intuition. You must recalibrate the instrument (your body).
The Technique:
We often project our current mood onto a room.
The Technique:
Imagination follows a logical script (Ghost Story). Reality is often random.
The Technique:
How to do it:
❌ Wrong: "I sense a little girl running in the hallway." (This triggers the Imagination Impostor to build a dress, a face, and a sad backstory).
✅ Right: "I sense something small, fast-moving, light energy, low to the ground."
Why it works: It keeps you in the Sensory/Data layer and prevents the Intellectual layer from jumping to conclusions.
2. The "AOL Break" (Analytical Overlay Break)
Target: Cognitive Patterning & Memory Distortions
This is a classic Remote Viewing protocol. When your brain insists on a specific image or memory, you must "dump" it to clear the line.
The Technique:
This is a classic Remote Viewing protocol. When your brain insists on a specific image or memory, you must "dump" it to clear the line.
The Technique:
If an image pops into your head vividly (e.g., "I see a red door!"), acknowledge it, write it down immediately on the side of your paper, and label it "AOL" (or "Interpretation"). Then, explicitly tell your brain: "Thank you, I have written that down. Now, back to the signal."
Why it works: Your brain is like a child wanting attention. If you ignore the image, the brain screams louder. If you write it down, the brain feels "heard" and stops nagging you, allowing the real intuition to return.
Why it works: Your brain is like a child wanting attention. If you ignore the image, the brain screams louder. If you write it down, the brain feels "heard" and stops nagging you, allowing the real intuition to return.
3. The "Blind" Investigation Protocol
Target: Belief, Expectation & Memory FiltersThis is the ultimate scientific control. You cannot have "Expectation Bias" if you have no expectations.
The Technique:
Assign a "Case Manager" who knows the history of the location. The investigators (the "Sensors") must go in Blind—knowing nothing about the haunting, the deaths, or the history.
How to do it:
If the owner says, "My mom died in the kitchen," do not tell the investigators.
Send them in. If they independently gravitate to the kitchen and report chest pains (heart attack symptoms), that is Genuine Intuition.
If they say "I feel a murder in the basement" (when no murder happened), that was a Projection/Impostor.
How to do it:
If the owner says, "My mom died in the kitchen," do not tell the investigators.
Send them in. If they independently gravitate to the kitchen and report chest pains (heart attack symptoms), that is Genuine Intuition.
If they say "I feel a murder in the basement" (when no murder happened), that was a Projection/Impostor.
4. The "Somatic Reset" (3-Breath Test)
Target: Body-Based & Emotional ImpostorsPhysiological fear mimics intuition. You must recalibrate the instrument (your body).
The Technique:
When you feel a sudden spike of "activity" or "dread," stop. Do not speak. Close your eyes.
Inhale for 4 seconds.
Hold for 4 seconds.
Exhale for 8 seconds.
The Test:
If the feeling disappears: It was likely adrenaline/biological fear.
If the feeling remains or becomes clearer: It is likely an external presence.
Inhale for 4 seconds.
Hold for 4 seconds.
Exhale for 8 seconds.
The Test:
If the feeling disappears: It was likely adrenaline/biological fear.
If the feeling remains or becomes clearer: It is likely an external presence.
5. "Triangulation" (Cross-Referencing)
Target: Social & Suggestion Impostors
Group dynamics often lead to mass delusion. "Did you hear that?" "Yeah, I think so!"
The Technique:
Group dynamics often lead to mass delusion. "Did you hear that?" "Yeah, I think so!"
The Technique:
Separation. If an investigator senses something, they should write it down silently or whisper it into a dedicated recorder without telling the others.
The Validation:
The Validation:
Compare notes after the session.
Investigator A (written log): "Felt heat in the corner at 10:05 PM."
Investigator B (audio log): "Saw a shadow in the corner at 10:05 PM."
Result: High probability of Genuine Intuition.
Investigator A (written log): "Felt heat in the corner at 10:05 PM."
Investigator B (audio log): "Saw a shadow in the corner at 10:05 PM."
Result: High probability of Genuine Intuition.
6. The "Me vs. Not Me" Audit
Target: Projection & Memory-Based DistortionsWe often project our current mood onto a room.
The Technique:
Before starting an investigation, every team member must do an "Emotional Audit."
Current State: "I am tired, I had a fight with my partner today, I am anxious about money."
The Application:
Current State: "I am tired, I had a fight with my partner today, I am anxious about money."
The Application:
If that investigator later says, "I feel an angry spirit who is worried about finances," the team can flag that as a likely Projection (Impostor), not a ghost.
7. Pattern Interrupt Questions
Target: Imagination-Based ImpostorsImagination follows a logical script (Ghost Story). Reality is often random.
The Technique:
When you get a "download" of information, ask yourself: "Is this what I would EXPECT to find here?"
The Test:
If you are in an old Victorian house and you sense a "Victorian lady in a white dress," be skeptical. That fits the Expectation Filter too perfectly.
If you are in an old Victorian house and you sense "A 1980s punk rocker looking for his drugs," pay attention. That contradicts the visual script and is more likely to be Genuine Intuition.
The Test:
If you are in an old Victorian house and you sense a "Victorian lady in a white dress," be skeptical. That fits the Expectation Filter too perfectly.
If you are in an old Victorian house and you sense "A 1980s punk rocker looking for his drugs," pay attention. That contradicts the visual script and is more likely to be Genuine Intuition.
🌟 Remember:
🤫 Intuition whispers; impostors shout.
🧘 Intuition is steady; impostors are emotional.
✨ Intuition surprises you; impostors repeat what you already believe.
🤫 Intuition whispers; impostors shout.
🧘 Intuition is steady; impostors are emotional.
✨ Intuition surprises you; impostors repeat what you already believe.
- Chris
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