
Below is a common explanation of what each column label represents in typical CRV (Controlled Remote Viewing) session note layouts. Different schools or instructors may vary slightly, but you’ll often see something like this:
- S-2
- Short for “Stage 2,” which deals with basic sensory descriptors (colors, sounds, smells, tastes, textures, temperatures, etc.).
- D (Dimensions)
- Words describing size, shape, scale, or proportions—e.g., “tall,” “wide,” “deep,” “long,” etc.
- AI (Aesthetic Impact)
- Your personal, immediate reaction to the target—e.g., “This feels imposing,” “I sense tranquility,” etc.
- Reflects how you, as the viewer, feel about the target on a gut level, rather than the target’s own “emotion.”
- EI (Emotional Impact)
- Emotions present at or within the target—e.g., “joyful,” “somber,” “celebratory,” “fearful.”
- Differs from AI because EI is the emotional content of the target environment, not the viewer’s personal reaction.
- T (Tangible)
- Concrete, physically perceivable aspects of the target—e.g., “building,” “vehicle,” “water.”
- Things that have obvious physical form and can be touched or measured.
- I (Intangible)
- Abstract or conceptual aspects—e.g., “government,” “celebration,” “religious,” “ceremony,” “planning.”
- “I” items aren’t physically graspable but describe ideas, functions, purposes, or themes at the site.
- AOL (Analytical Overlay)
- When your conscious mind “jumps to a conclusion,” labeling or guessing at the target—e.g., “It’s a church,” “It’s a rocket.”
- In CRV, you acknowledge the guess as AOL, write it down, and set it aside so as not to contaminate further impressions.
- A/S (often written as “AOL/S”)
- Stands for “Analytical Overlay from the Signal Line” (sometimes just “AOL/S”).
- Occurs when your intuition or “signal” data blends with an analytic guess. It’s a bit trickier than a simple AOL, because it feels like genuine signal-based insight yet may still be partly guesswork.
- You label it as “AOL/S” or “A/S” to note that it’s somewhere between raw perception and outright analysis.