US Psi Squad

Biographies

Michael P.

His own experience


I have been interested in ESP for as long as I can remember. I started studying on my own. It didn't seem to matter how much I read, or what I tried on my own, I just couldn't get it to work. I spent hours trying to put myself in the right frame of mind by using deep breathing patterns and staring at a candle's flame. I didn't astral project, remote view (actually remote viewing was not a known term back then), have visions or anything else.

I was fortunate enough to be employed in a town (as a police officer) where one of Bevy's earliest students (Neil) worked. We became friends and I went with him to a couple of ESP classes he was teaching at a community college.

Until I met Neil, I was better versed in ESP than anyone I had ever met. I am a voracious reader and I had read just about everything I could find on ESP. When I began talking to Neil, I learned that I knew almost nothing. I learned more from Neil in a few hours than I learned from all those books.

Let me give you a for-instance. I was riding with Neil to the college for a class when he handed me a sealed envelope. It was to be used in the class that night for practice. He told me to hold the envelope in my left hand and just relax. I did, and as always nothing happened.

He then told me to try again, and to pay attention to my own feelings--my own physiology. This time, I noticed that as I held the envelope I could feel a pain in the area of my left chest and my breathing would become shallow and quick. The pain was present all the time I held the envelope. When I put it down the pain stopped and my breathing returned to normal.

Neil told me to pick it up again and to try to clear my mind. I was to just let any wandering thought flow right in. Within a few seconds I had my first remote vision. I saw a young man standing on the shoulder of a highway. Though I couldn't see the highway, I could see one of those metal rails they put up in front of bridges and things like that. The young man was standing in front of the rail. He was wearing a green tee shirt. He was so clear that I know I would recognize him if I ever saw him. The only unusual thing was his hair. I told Neil that it was combed funny. It was down all the way around, kind of like Moe of the Three Stooges except longer. Then I told Neil that I looked like "a helmet."

Neil then told me what was in the envelope. It contained paint scrapings off a motorcycle. A hit-and-run driver had killed the owner of the motorcycle while he was stopped on the shoulder of the road. He died because a broken rib had pierced his lung.

A short time after that, Neil took me to Bevy's house to work on a criminal case that had been sent to her by a police department. At one time Bevy had operated a Psi Squad that worked on a lot of criminal cases. Neil had been a charter member. For some reason, she had stopped working those cases. She said that it was because she got tired of working with bloody clothes and murder weapons. However, a new case that she found very interesting had come up and she wanted to start again. The problem was that several of her old members had moved away, and training new members was always difficult because so many of her students were housewives. Some of the stuff one has to handle working homicides tends to make housewives puke. Police officers aren't as squeamish, so she was recruiting police officers. I was fortunate enough to be in the right place at the right time and to know the right person for an introduction.

That was about 16 years ago. That was the real beginning of my training.

Bevy is a natural teacher. She loves teaching and couldn't stop herself if she tried. Going out to dinner with her and her husband is always a mini-seminar.

I guess the important thing for you to know is Bevy BELIEVES that anyone can learn to do what she does-and brother does she do it. She says that ESP is just like developing any muscle. The more you use it the quicker you become proficient.

Several years after I began working with Bevy I finally got to take one of her Basic Courses in a classroom. By then I was an old hand. I just took the course because I love to hear Bevy teach. I was astounded. There was so much that I had never gone over before. There were things I could practice. It was laid out from simple to more difficult. I learned and I improved.

As far as astral projection, well, there is astral projection and there is remote viewing. In the first (astral projection) you pretty much place yourself in a trance and send a piece of physical self (well maybe it's more of a metaphysical self) off to look things over and hope you get back okay. In the other (remote viewing) you relax while setting in a chair (or talking on the phone, or typing on your computer if your Bevy) and tell your mind what you want to see. Your mind does all the work while you make notes of what you are seeing. No trance, no out-of-body, no astral projection, and no worry about getting back and finding out the house has burned down with you in it while your metaphysical self was on a journey. We don't advocate out-of-body experiences, and Bevy isn't going to going to teach you how.

I believe you will learn a lot from Bevy's course. Just remember that it is only the first step. It takes time and practice to reach the level you desire-I'm not there yet. Doubt that I ever will be. But it's a little like eating salted peanuts. Once you start, it's very difficult to stop. And why would you want to stop-it's fun. Enjoy the trip.

 

Back to Michael P.

Back to Michael P.

Back to Biographies

 


Copyright © 1998-2004 - US Psi Squad - All rights reserved