Lynn Buchanan’s Stargate Recollections: Remote Viewing, Encounters, and Ethics
To the point
Lynn Buchanan recounts his role in the Fort Meade Stargate program, detailing remote-viewing training, out-of-body experiences, alien encounters and abduction memories, and advocates using these abilities ethically to help missing people and soldiers despite substantial uncertainty.
Lynn Buchanan recounts his role in the Fort Meade Stargate program, where after a rival sabotaged a German lab, General Stubbleine recruited him to explore psychic phenomena and even learn how to disrupt enemy computers with the mind. The initiation blended CRV training with anedagram-style subconscious drills, progressing from sensing water and structures to sketching, while in-session feedback dwindled to force independent targeting. He describes the beacon exercises that exposed the unpredictability of targets and how blending multiple methodologies eventually became his own approach. A pivotal Monroe Institute gateway retreat yielded a convincing out-of-body experience, and alongside his Christian faith as a Methodist minister, convinced him to devote his gifts to helping others. In the 8200 era he worked on three of four bases (not the Pyrenees), producing sessions that aligned closely with Pat Price’s descriptions for targets in Alaska (Mount Hayes), Zimbabwe, and Mount Zeal in Australia. He explains a four-category view of extraterrestrials—friendly, equal or less psychic, more psychic but not necessarily benevolent, and enemies—arguing that some groups may be here to guide or threaten humanity, which complicates feedback and testing. He recounts abduction memories that resurfaced decades later, including a childhood encounter and a later adult event with a gray being and a mysterious control panel recovered through hypnosis. He recalls moon and Titan investigations in which he described patches and structures on the Moon and encounters with alien beings on Titan, noting that some experiences involved beings beyond human comprehension. He closes with a reflection on the extraordinary potential of the human mind, the enduring possibility of remote viewing in some form, and a call to use these abilities ethically to help missing people and soldiers while acknowledging substantial uncertainty remains.
Source: youtube.com