For centuries, spirituality and science have been seen as opposing forces. Yet, the deeper we explore consciousness, metaphysics, and quantum reality, the more these two realms seem to intertwine. Modern research is beginning to confirm what mystics, sages, and secret societies have long claimed—that the human mind possesses extraordinary, untapped potential that goes far beyond what we were taught to believe.
At The Awakened Prepper, we are dedicated to uncovering the scientific evidence behind spirituality, metaphysics, and the power of human consciousness. This section is a comprehensive resource hub featuring cutting-edge studies, declassified government experiments, and peer-reviewed research that challenge mainstream assumptions about reality.
Here, you will find free access to some of the most groundbreaking and controversial investigations ever conducted, covering topics such as:
🔹 The Science of Consciousness – Research into near-death experiences (NDEs), out-of-body experiences (OBEs), reincarnation, and the nature of awareness beyond the brain.
🔹 Quantum Physics & Consciousness – Studies on the observer effect, non-locality, and how intention may influence reality at a fundamental level.
🔹 CIA & Government Experiments – Declassified files from MK-Ultra, Project Stargate, and military-funded research into remote viewing, ESP, and psychic abilities.
🔹 Mind Over Matter – Investigations into prayer, meditation, energy healing, and experiments where focused intention appears to alter physical reality.
🔹 Fringe & Forbidden Research – Academic and underground studies on telepathy, psychokinesis, collective consciousness, and extraordinary human abilities.
🔹 Multimedia & Open Archives – Videos, lectures, podcasts, and declassified CIA documents detailing real-world investigations into the limits of human potential.
Many of these studies were once hidden, dismissed, or ridiculed, yet today, they are being re-examined by serious researchers, physicists, and neuroscientists. As more evidence emerges, one thing becomes clear: we may be far more powerful than we ever imagined.
This section of our website is designed to bring you closer to the truth—beyond dogma, beyond skepticism, and into the mysteries of consciousness and the fabric of reality itself.
Peer-Reviewed Research on Consciousness and Psi Phenomena
Testing ESP with Zener cards – a classic method where a “sender” tries to telepathically transmit symbols to a “receiver.” Modern peer-reviewed studies of psi phenomena (telepathy, precognition, psychokinesis, etc.) have accumulated a sizeable body of evidence. In recent years, parapsychology research has even appeared in top mainstream journals
. A comprehensive 2018 review in American Psychologist concluded that meta-analytic data “provides cumulative support for the reality of psi” – with results that cannot be explained away by flaws or fraud, and an overall evidence base “comparable to that for established phenomena” in psychology . For example, a famous precognition study reported that people could predict seemingly random future events at slightly above chance levels (p < 0.01) , sparking widespread debate. Similarly, decades of Ganzfeld telepathy experiments (in which a receiver in sensory isolation “reads” images from a sender) have shown a small but consistent ESP effect – with receivers guessing the correct target ~31% of the time vs 25% by chance . Rigorous meta-analyses of Ganzfeld trials and other ESP tests confirm these statistically significant, if subtle, effects . While controversies remain, the scientific literature on consciousness and psi indicates that human perception and intention may extend beyond classical boundaries of mind and matter . Key resources and studies include:
- “The Experimental Evidence for Parapsychological Phenomena: A Review” – Etzel Cardeña (2018) – American Psychologist. Open-access overview of psi research, meta-analyses, and theoretical frameworks .
- Bem (2011), Cornell University – Precognition experiments. Nine tests suggesting people’s responses can be influenced by future events; published in JPSP .
- Storm et al. (2010) Meta-analyses – Ganzfeld ESP trials. Pooled results from 30+ studies show an overall hit rate (~32%) above chance (25%), supporting a telepathy effect .
- Radin et al. (2016) – Mind–Double-Slit Experiment. Tests whether focused attention can alter quantum interference patterns; found small but significant shifts, implying consciousness may interact with photons .
- Princeton PEAR Lab (1979–2007) – Mind-Machine studies. University laboratory that collected extensive data (~ PEAR’s 28-year program) on mental intention affecting random number generators and other devices . (PEAR’s results, while modest in effect size, reached odds beyond trillions-to-one against chance over millions of trials.)
- Meta-analyses by Tressoldi, Utts, Radin, et al. – Summaries of psi research. Various papers pooling data from experiments on telepathy, precognition, remote viewing, and micro-PK, many showing statistically significant outcomes. These include assessments that the overall evidence for psi is “much greater than that provided in many routine studies in cognition” according to some Bayesian analyses, although mechanism and reproducibility remain uncertain.
Sources: Comprehensive review by Cardeña
; Ganzfeld ESP meta-analysis data .
Quantum Physics & Consciousness – Observer Effects and Non-Locality
Research at the intersection of quantum mechanics and consciousness suggests intriguing links between mind and matter at fundamental levels. Quantum theory has well-documented non-local effects (entangled particles influencing each other instantaneously across distance) that violate classical notions of separateness
. Some physicists have pointed out that Bell test experiments “falsify the local realist theory” of nature – implying that our reality is deeply interconnected in ways that might allow information or influences to bypass space-time constraints. Building on this, a few theorists propose that consciousness itself could be a non-local phenomenon, potentially able to interact with physical systems in anomalous ways.
Notably, Henry Stapp, a physicist at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, developed a “quantum-consciousness” model in which directing mental intention can bias probabilistic quantum events
. In line with this, experimental evidence indicates that focused consciousness can produce slight but significant changes in quantum systems. For example, studies by the Institute of Noetic Sciences had meditators concentrate on a double-slit optical system and found that mindful observation perturbed the interference pattern beyond what chance fluctuations predict . Such results, while small in magnitude, support the idea that the observer effect in quantum physics might extend to human observers – i.e. mind influencing matter. Other experiments on “quantum retrocausation” suggest future measurements can affect past states of particles , hinting that time and causality in quantum events aren’t rigid – a finding that dovetails with precognition research in psychology.
On the theoretical side, physicists like Bernard d’Espagnat and others have argued that quantum mechanics implies an underlying holistic reality. D’Espagnat noted that entangled particles behave as part of one system, and he spoke of a deeper level of existence where separation is illusory
. This aligns with speculation that mind and world are entangled at a fundamental level. While far from proven, these ideas lend a measure of plausibility to claims of telepathy or psychokinesis by showing that non-local connections and observer-dependent effects are real phenomena in physics. In summary, cutting-edge research in the quantum realm – from the conscious observer experiments to theories of quantum consciousness (e.g. Penrose–Hameroff’s orchestrated objective reduction) – is forging new dialogues between physics and the study of consciousness . They invite us to consider that mind and reality might be more deeply interwoven than classical science once assumed.
Sources: Summary of Stapp’s quantum mind model and experiments showing intentional effects on photon interference
; discussion of Bell non-locality by d’Espagnat .
Government Research Programs – CIA & Military Experiments
Declassified CIA document from Project MK-ULTRA (1950s–60s), a program exploring mind control techniques. Throughout the Cold War, intelligence agencies undertook secret research into consciousness, “psychic” abilities, and mind manipulation, often under code names now revealed in declassified files. One infamous example is Project MK-ULTRA, a covert CIA program (1953–1973) focused on mind control and behavior modification. As later reported to the U.S. Senate, “Project MK-ULTRA… was a covert CIA mind-control and chemical interrogation research program” that used dozens of unwitting test subjects in attempts to alter mental states
. MK-ULTRA funded over 130 sub-projects – from giving LSD, mescaline and other drugs to unwitting civilians, to testing hypnosis, sensory deprivation, and electroshock – all aimed at finding ways to influence or control the human mind . Many documents were destroyed on orders of CIA Director Richard Helms in 1973, but surviving evidence shows the program’s extraordinary (and often unethical) scope. For example, CIA researchers explored “remote hypnosis” and psychotropic substances as potential espionage tools, and one subproject infamously resulted in the death of a civilian (Dr. Frank Olson) after a secret LSD exposure . These revelations, brought to light in 1975 hearings, painted a grim picture of the lengths government agencies went in probing the limits of consciousness and compliance.
In a somewhat less nefarious vein, the U.S. military and intelligence community also investigated psychic phenomena for espionage. The Stargate Project (1970s–1995) is now well-known: a secret U.S. Army/DIA unit based at Fort Meade that researched remote viewing, telepathy, clairvoyance and other psi abilities for intelligence gathering
. Initiated due to reports that the Soviet Union had its own psychic research, Project Stargate (under codenames Grill Flame, Center Lane, Sun Streak, etc.) contracted psychics and trained personnel to attempt “remote viewing” of targets – effectively using the mind’s eye to see distant places or objects. The program brought in talented individuals (including Uri Geller and Army intel officers like Joe McMoneagle) to locate hostages, describe foreign facilities, or preview future events. Over years of testing at SRI International and later within military ranks, the “viewers” often produced uncanny sketches and details (sometimes with ~65% accuracy on known validation targets, as claimed in reports) . A declassified CIA overview notes that Stargate’s “primary focus… is on anomalous phenomena, including parapsychological and related biophysical interactions (e.g., telepathy, remote viewing, psychokinesis)” – directly acknowledging the reality of those investigations . Ultimately, the CIA concluded in 1995 that while certain hits occurred, psychic intel was too unreliable, and the unit was disbanded. However, hundreds of pages of Stargate remote viewing session transcripts and research reports have since been released under FOIA, offering a rare official look into government-sanctioned psi experiments. (For instance, in one 1984 session a remote viewer psychically described specific details of a Soviet weapons factory that were later verified, an episode recounted in now-declassified files.)
Beyond Stargate, the CIA and military conducted other mind-related programs. The U.S. Army’s “Gateway Process” analysis (1983) examined methods to achieve out-of-body experiences and altered states for intelligence applications, in collaboration with the Monroe Institute’s meditation techniques. That report’s conclusion was strikingly optimistic: “There is a sound, rational basis in terms of physical science for considering Gateway to be plausible… Intuitional insights of a practical nature are within reasonable expectations.”
In other words, Army analysts found the idea of training soldiers in astral projection or expanded consciousness physically and psychologically credible . They even outlined step-by-step protocols for inducing OBEs under control (using binaural beats, hypnosis and meditation) to potentially gather intelligence beyond conventional means . This extraordinary document, now public, reads like a sci-fi manual for consciousness exploration. Likewise, declassified files show that ESP and telepathy experiments were conducted at Stanford Research Institute under CIA/DIA contracts – for example, tests where a “sender” in one room attempted to mentally transmit images to a “receiver” in an EEG shielded chamber. Some trials yielded above-chance results, fueling further interest.
In summary, these government programs – from MK-ULTRA’s mind-altering trials to Stargate’s psychic spies – demonstrate a long-standing, if secretive, official curiosity about the untapped potentials of the mind. Today, many original documents are freely accessible via the CIA’s FOIA Reading Room or archives, offering a trove of data on what was attempted, what was achieved, and what ethical boundaries were crossed in the pursuit of metaphysical abilities.
Sources: CIA’s own description of MK-ULTRA (mind control & drug experiments)
; overview of Project Stargate’s psychic intelligence work ; declassified Army report on the Gateway process (OBE training) .
Fringe & Unconventional Studies (NDEs, OBEs, Reincarnation, Telepathy)
In addition to formal lab research, a wealth of “fringe” studies have examined extraordinary human experiences suggestive of consciousness beyond the body. Near-Death Experiences (NDEs) are a prime example. Medical researchers have documented that 10–20% of cardiac arrest survivors report lucid, detailed experiences while clinically dead (no measurable brain activity)
. In a large Dutch study of 344 cardiac patients who were revived, about 18% recounted an NDE – often involving clear awareness, veridical perceptions, or a feeling of leaving the body – during the period of unconsciousness when their brain function had flatlined . The lead researcher, cardiologist Pim van Lommel, noted that these NDEs “cannot be simply reduced to oxygen deficiency, hallucination, or drug effects”, since patients with no physiological triggers still had them . Moreover, many were permanently transformed by the experience (losing fear of death, gaining heightened empathy, etc.). High-profile cases like Pam Reynolds’ NDE during brain surgery (where she accurately described surgical tools and conversations while under deep hypothermic cardiac arrest) have further challenged the assumption that consciousness ceases when the brain stops. To probe this mystery, hospitals have even placed hidden targets (images) near ceilings to see if OBE-ing patients can later identify them – part of projects like the AWARE study on veridical NDE perceptions. While conclusive evidence of “soul separation” remains elusive, NDE research continues, published in journals such as The Lancet and Resuscitation. These studies keep alive the question of whether mind can function independently of the body in extreme conditions.
Closely related are Out-of-Body Experiences (OBEs) and astral projection. Psychologists have induced OBE-like phenomena in healthy people by stimulating the brain (e.g. the temporoparietal junction, which can cause one to feel located outside one’s physical form). But beyond neurology, organizations like the Monroe Institute have developed training methods (using tailored audio frequencies, meditation, etc.) to provoke controlled OBEs. Intriguingly, the 1983 Army analysis of the Monroe “Gateway” program concluded that “the out-of-body state may be an extremely effective way of accelerating the process of enhancing consciousness and of interfacing with dimensions beyond time-space.”
In their view, practiced individuals could potentially project consciousness to gather information remote in space or time . Indeed, remote viewing can be thought of as a type of trained OBE focused on specific targets. Some of the Stargate Project personnel claimed to do exactly that – describing, for instance, “floating out” to inspect a distant secret facility. While conventional science remains skeptical, small experiments have reported cases of verifiable OBE perceptions (e.g. a person accurately describing details in another room while in deep meditation). The psychological “noise reduction” theory suggests that techniques like sensory deprivation, meditation, or hypnosis can reduce brain noise and thus unmask subtle psi signals . This aligns with the fact that many verified remote viewers and OBErs practice intense mind-quieting disciplines.
Another line of unconventional research investigates reincarnation and past-life memories. Pioneered by Dr. Ian Stevenson at UVA and continued by Dr. Jim Tucker, this research catalogs young children who spontaneously recall details of a previous life that can later be verified. Over 2,500 such cases have been studied. Often these children start speaking of a “past life” around ages 3–5, describing a former family, location, or manner of death with striking accuracy. In numerous instances, researchers were able to find a deceased person whose details matched the child’s statements – including names of relatives, how they died, and specific events that a 3-year-old could not normally know
. “Studies of children who spontaneously report information about a past life to which neither they nor those around them had access” have been published in peer-reviewed journals . For example, a boy in Sri Lanka who gave over 30 correct facts about a man who died in another village, or an Oklahoma child who recalled being a World War II pilot (later confirmed in historical records). Researchers carefully rule out fraud or coaching, and while no single case is irrefutable, the collection as a whole presents evidence suggestive of some memory transfer or continuity of consciousness. Some theorize it could be a rare form of ESP or genetic memory, while others argue it’s reincarnation in the literal sense. Regardless of interpretation, the meticulous documentation of these cases (see UVA’s Division of Perceptual Studies publications) provides fascinating data points about the potential transmigration of consciousness.
Finally, telepathy – mind-to-mind communication – straddles the line between fringe and lab science. Beyond the ganzfeld telepathy experiments noted earlier, there have been “dream telepathy” studies (at Maimonides Medical Center in the 1960s–70s) where a sleeper attempted to receive images “broadcast” by someone focusing on a picture. In a landmark series, psychologist Montague Ullman found significantly above-chance correspondences between dream content and target images, suggesting information transfer during REM sleep. Later studies have had mixed results, but meta-analyses (e.g. Storm & Sherwood, 2003) still show a small positive effect overall. Additionally, countless anecdotal reports of spontaneous telepathy exist – for instance, sensing a loved one’s distress from afar, or knowing who’s calling before the phone rings (the latter was even tested experimentally by Rupert Sheldrake, who reported above-chance success rates under controlled conditions). While anecdotes aren’t proof, they often inspire formal experiments. Remarkably, even animals have been tested for telepathic-like abilities (e.g. whether pets know when their owner is coming home), although such studies are contentious. The fringe domains of telepathy, OBEs, NDEs, and reincarnation each carry their own controversies and methodological challenges. Yet, in all these areas, serious investigators have applied scientific rigor – publishing case studies and experimental findings in journals, and sometimes obtaining results that defy conventional explanations. For the curious reader, there are open-access reports and databases available (for example, the Journal of Near-Death Studies archives, or the UVA case collections on past lives) that offer a deep dive into this fascinating fringe.
Sources: Van Lommel’s Lancet-study summary (18% of clinical death patients had NDEs)
; CIA Gateway report on OBEs beyond space-time ; Cardeña on children recalling past lives (Mills & Tucker, 2015) .
Experimental Studies on Meditation, Intention, Prayer, and Healing
Beyond “extrasensory” perceptions, researchers have explored how altered states of consciousness and directed intentions can produce measurable effects – on the brain, body, or even external targets. Meditation, for instance, has graduated from a mystical practice to a frequent subject of scientific inquiry. Neuroscientists have mapped how deep meditation alters brainwave patterns, increases coherence between hemispheres, and can induce remarkable states of calm and focus. In the context of psi, meditation is often used as a tool to enhance psychic performance by reducing mental noise
. Classic studies at the Menninger Foundation in the 1970s showed that advanced Zen meditators could produce unusual physiological states (like stopping and restarting their heart), suggesting a high degree of mind-body control. Relatedly, the “noise reduction” hypothesis in parapsychology argues that quieting the mind via meditation, hypnosis, or sensory isolation (ganzfeld) can facilitate ESP by allowing subtle intuitive impressions to emerge . Indeed, many ESP experiments find stronger results with participants who practice mindfulness or other mental disciplines. Thus, meditation is both an object of study (for its mental/health benefits) and a method in consciousness research (to cultivate latent abilities).
Researchers have also conducted controlled trials on prayer and intention to see if the mind can influence health or events at a distance. Dozens of healing intention studies – where healers or prayer groups direct intention toward a patient or biological system – have been published. The outcomes are mixed but intriguing. A systematic review found that out of 23 randomized controlled trials on distant intercessory prayer, 57% (13 studies) showed significant positive effects (better health outcomes in prayed-for groups), about 39% showed no effect, and one showed a negative effect
. The variability suggests factors we don’t yet understand (or simply the challenge of isolating such a subtle effect). In one famous and daring experiment, cardiologist Leonard Leibovici tested retroactive prayer: he randomly selected patients who had been in the hospital 4–10 years in the past and had people pray for their recovery – long after they’d either recovered or died. Astonishingly, the prayed-for group showed statistically shorter hospital stays and shorter fevers compared to the control group, even though the prayers were offered years later . The study, published in the BMJ, admitted it had no explanation within our current scientific paradigm, yet the outcomes differed significantly (p = 0.01) . Other well-known studies include the Byrd (1988) trial, which found that heart patients fared better when prayed for (fewer complications), and the MANTRA II study (2005), which found no effect of intercessory prayer for cardiac surgery patients. Overall, reviews note that while distant prayer/healing results aren’t uniformly reliable, enough positive findings have been reported to warrant further investigation . Researchers emphasize rigorous blinding and the use of objective endpoints (e.g. wound healing rates, or growth of cell cultures) to test mind-over-matter influences in medicine.
Mental intention on physical systems has also been tested in non-biological settings. The Princeton PEAR lab (mentioned earlier) asked participants to mentally influence random event generators (REGs) or even the behavior of falling dice. Across millions of trials, they observed very small shifts away from pure randomness that corresponded to the operator’s intentions
. While each trial’s effect was tiny (almost imperceptible), the consistency over many years led PEAR scientists to claim odds against chance on the order of billions-to-one. Likewise, the ongoing Global Consciousness Project (GCP) deploys dozens of REG devices worldwide and has found that during major events (like global New Year’s celebrations, terrorist attacks, mass meditations, etc.), the network’s random outputs deviate from expectation by small but cumulatively significant margins. For example, during the 9/11 attacks, the GCP data showed anomalous spikes well beyond chance fluctuation. The implication – still controversial – is that collective human attention or emotion might imprint on random systems, suggesting a mass mind-matter interaction. These experiments in collective consciousness effects provide a bridge between individual intention studies and broader field consciousness hypotheses. (Data from the GCP are publicly available for independent analysis.)
On the more “energy healing” side, labs have tested practitioners of Reiki, therapeutic touch, Qigong, and other modalities for measurable effects. Some studies report that healer intention can influence the growth of cell cultures or the recovery of stressed animals. For instance, a controlled study of mice with surgically created wounds found that those receiving distant Reiki healing had modestly faster wound closure than controls. Other experiments have used electrophotonic sensors or magnetic field detectors around healers and found transient signals when healers enter focused states. These results remain on the fringe of acceptance, but organizations like NIH’s Office of Alternative Medicine did fund several such studies in the 1990s, some of which showed statistically significant outcomes. A 2008 review on “Biofield therapies” (energy healing) concluded that while evidence is inconclusive overall, there are repeated indications of positive effects not easily explained by placebo – including in vitro studies where human expectation shouldn’t play a role.
Finally, researchers are delving into psychedelic states and other altered states to see how they expand consciousness. Clinical trials with psilocybin and DMT report phenomena like feelings of mind expansion, entities encountered, and sometimes telepathic or precognitive visions. While much of this falls outside traditional psi research, it intersects in fundamental ways: these substances reliably induce non-ordinary consciousness where people often report mystical insights or interconnectedness with everything – themes also noted by meditators and NDErs. Scientists at Johns Hopkins and elsewhere have cautiously suggested that studying these states might reveal how the brain can act as a filter or receiver of consciousness (rather than its sole producer). If the brain’s filtering is loosened (by psychedelics, or in an NDE), perhaps consciousness can access information beyond the individual – an idea long proposed by philosophers and now tentatively broached in academic discussions.
In sum, experimental research on mind’s causal powers – whether through focused meditation, prayer, or altered states – has yielded tantalizing, if controversial, evidence that intentional consciousness can sometimes influence the material world. These effects are generally small and not always replicable on demand, but across many well-controlled studies, they appear to be more than statistical flukes
. Such findings invite us to broaden our scientific models to include the role of mind, intention, and consciousness as active elements in nature, not just passive byproducts of brain chemistry. As technology improves (e.g. more sensitive RNGs, better neuroimaging of healers, larger sample sizes for prayer studies), researchers continue to test the limits of mind over matter – an endeavor at the cutting edge of science, bridging the gap between the seen and the unseen.
Sources: Review of 23 prayer trials (57% showed positive effects)
; retroactive prayer RCT (significant reduction in illness duration) ; Radin & others on mind influencing random systems .
Multimedia Resources (Lectures, Documentaries, Podcasts)
For those interested in exploring these topics further, there are numerous free multimedia resources featuring experts and firsthand research accounts:
- Documentary – Third Eye Spies (2019) – A feature-length documentary on the CIA’s psychic spying programs (Stargate). It reveals how “for more than 20 years the CIA studied psychic abilities for use in their top-secret spy program”, with extensive interviews and declassified footage . (Available free with ads on platforms like Tubi and PlutoTV.)
- Documentary – The Day I Died: The Mind, the Brain, and NDEs (BBC, 2003) – An hour-long BBC documentary on near-death experiences, featuring Dr. Sam Parnia and case studies like Pam Reynolds. (Often found on YouTube or Vimeo; presents medical perspectives on consciousness during clinical death.)
- *Lecture – “Consciousness and the Observer Effect” by Dean Radin (IONS) – A recorded talk by Dr. Dean Radin, chief scientist at IONS, discussing quantum physics experiments on mind-matter interaction and why observer consciousness might influence quantum outcomes . (Free on YouTube via the IONS channel.)
- *Lecture – “Science and the Taboo of Psi” (Google Tech Talk) – A presentation by Dean Radin at Google, summarizing decades of psi research in an accessible way. Covers Ganzfeld results, presentiment experiments, and the implications for science. (YouTube).
- Interview Series – New Thinking Allowed – Psychologist Jeffrey Mishlove hosts in-depth interviews with researchers in consciousness, parapsychology, and spirituality. Notable episodes include conversations with Russell Targ (on remote viewing at SRI), Edwin C. May (Stargate program director), and Dean Radin (global consciousness). (All episodes are free on the New Thinking Allowed YouTube channel.)
- *Podcast – “Reality Uncovered” (CIA’s Project Stargate) – A podcast episode featuring former Army remote viewer Joe McMoneagle, who describes his most striking experiences in the military’s psi program and the evidence that convinced him of its reality. (Free on major podcast platforms.)
- Podcast – “Buddha at the Gas Pump” interviews – This ongoing podcast has dozens of interviews with meditation teachers, NDE survivors, and consciousness researchers. For example, an episode with Dr. Bruce Greyson delves into NDE research and its implications for the mind-brain relationship. (Streamable on YouTube and podcast apps.)
- Video Lecture – “The Holographic Universe” by physicist Michael Talbot – An older but classic talk explaining a theoretical model where reality and consciousness are deeply intertwined holographically (inspired by Pribram and Bohm). Provides a thought-provoking framework to understand psychic phenomena. (Search on YouTube – often available as a recorded lecture.)
- CIA Archive Footage – The CIA has released some original videos from the Stargate program’s experiments. For instance, there is archival footage of Uri Geller’s 1973 SRI tests (bending metal and telepathy experiments) and Ingo Swann’s remote viewing sessions, which can be found on CIA websites or YouTube compilations. These raw videos offer a rare glimpse into psi experiments as they happened under lab conditions.
Each of these resources is freely accessible online and provides a rich, engaging look into the realms of spirituality, consciousness, and metaphysical abilities through the lens of research. Whether you prefer to read declassified documents, watch scientists explain their findings, or listen to firsthand experiencers, the above collection covers a broad spectrum. For easy website integration, all links provided are direct and require no paywalls, allowing readers to delve deeper into any area of interest with a single click. Enjoy exploring the frontiers of consciousness through these studies and stories that bridge science and the spiritual