I've tried that and it just doesn't work - When I close my eyes, I 'see' nothing or what I think I 'see' has nothing to do with my target - what am I doing wrong?

I don't think you are doing anything wrong - you may be trying to hard, may have too much on your mind, or you may not have very good visualization skills. Here's a slightly different process called image-streaming. I actually prefer to call it idea-streaming. It's what I used to do before I learned how to use my visualization skills, and it can work quite well. Sometimes I use it to supplement my regular remote viewing data.

1. You will need a tape recorder or an assistant to write down your perceptions

2. Lie down, relax, close your eyes and go through your warm down process

3. Say to yourself that the perceptions you are about to speak will be related to your target - which is the photograph you will be looking at on a certain date at a specific time.

4. Now you will begin the idea-streaming process. Just say the first thing that comes to mind. It might be a word, a concept, a color, a smell, someone you know, an object, a visual scene, anything at all. Don't try too hard, just let the ideas flow out into your tape recorder.

5. After about 5 minutes or so, take a break, Get up, out of your chair and do something different for ten to 30 minutes.

6. After your break, I want you to do step number 4 again. For 5 more minutes, idea-stream into the tape recorder.

7. Optional - Repeat steps 5 and 6 one more time if necessary.

8. Listen to your 3 recordings, and write all of your perceptions down into three lists

9. Now go through each list and pick out common elements. There may be a certain color that keeps re-occurring; you may find certain concepts that appear in all three lists - like farm life, or Eastern Europe, the color blue, or a French accent. It might be circular things, tall objects, wet feeling, hot and dry - whatever you think seems similar. It's during this review process that you will realize that there might be a certain common 'theme' to your perceptions.

10. Write a session summary that contains the common perceptions from your three lists and your impression of them.

That's it! The session summary is your remote viewing data. You probably will not be able to identify specific aspects of your target, but specifying general aspects will assist your judge in choosing the actual target from a pool without difficulty.