Thank you UncaYimmy for setting up this private thread. Hopefully the discussions here will be clearer and lead to more progress. Here are the answers to your questions:
1) While you are looking at me, do you visually (meaning with your eyeballs) see anything besides the external parts of my body and clothes?
When I look at you with my ordinary sense of vision I see you in the same way as we all would. I see the front of you that is facing me, and see the exterior surface of you, and do not see beneath the clothes or skin and do not visually detect anything that would hint medical conditions that are not externally identifiable, such as the condition in your example of a possibly broken bone.
To form the medical perceptions I need to see the person with my eyes, possibly to know where they are to locate the source of the information, and believe that I then detect
vibrational information that I perceive through the sense of feeling. These medical images form in my mind, and not in the world around me. The perceptions are thus, I believe, not formed by normal eyesight.
2) You've indicated elsewhere that you "download" information and see images in your mind. Does this happen while you are looking at me or do you need to shut your eyes and/or look away?
The perceptions either come to me on their own, usually when it is the case of more serious health information whose "vibrational signature" is more loud than others, or the perceptions come about from a conscious effort I make to detect information. When I "download" information, this refers to a conscious effort when I reach into the vibrational information of a person's body. To do this I need to first look at the person with my eyes. It is often a very brief look. In almost all cases I will then either close my eyes or look away, and the images begin to form in my mind based on the vibrational patterns that I felt in the person. I close my eyes or look away to not be distracted by the ordinary sense of vision. However, I think I could continue to look at the person and would still be able to place my focus on the perceptions that form in my mind and choose to not let myself be distracted by real world images. So, the answer is, that the images will form whether I look away or not, but that I prefer to look away to have less of a distraction from other sources of information. You see, although the medical images are
based on information in the real world, the medical images I am looking at are in my mind. Not in the world around me. That is why once I've formed the images it is helpful to look away, or to close my eyes to see them better.
3) How long does it take before these images form?
I think it depends on the strength of the vibrational information that forms the perceptions. Perceptions that come to me on their own, from more severe health problems, appear immediately. And in cases where I have to search for information it takes a while longer for the perceptions to form, since the vibrational information is not as strong. Typically it takes from "no time" to a few seconds. Sometimes I spend up to a minute forming images very carefully, if I picked up on a hint of a health problem and want to work on forming the entire perception of it. It really takes very little time. But on a test I want to be allowed more time than it normally takes, just in case.
4) Can you stop these images at will once they start?
When it comes to severe health problems, their images are very clear and come to me on their own and can be impossible to ignore. When it comes to perceptions that are formed from weaker information and from a conscious effort of mine to focus on them, as soon as I take my focus away from them I no longer detect the images. So it depends on the strength of the information, as well as where my focus is. It is often possible to focus on other things and ignore the images, just like you can have music playing in the background and hear it well when you are listening, and when you focus on something else you won't even be aware of the music at all as if it's not even there.
4a) If not, how long before they go away on their own?
The images do not linger, and do not fade away gradually. I would say as soon as I am no longer continuously perceiving them, and do not hold them alive in my memory, they can be gone.
5) Can you manipulate these images in your mind. For example, can you zoom in/out? Rotate them?
Yes, and I do that most of the time. The images of health problems appear in their most relevant angle and magnification that best describes the situation. However I can go from there and choose to look at structures in the body from any angle that I choose, and from any level of magnification that I want. I find that going deeper into organs, seeing the tissue structure, and individual cells, and molecular level, going into the atoms, that after the atomic level comes what I call the vibrational level of magnification, where all things appear to be vibrational structures, and I believe that this is what I am fundamentally perceiving, that forms the larger scale composite information. I can observe images from several angles and several levels of magnification simultaneously.
6) You've mentioned elsewhere that these images are (or can be) real-time. If I, the person being viewed, were to move, would the images in your mind reflect these movements?
I think so, although I do not have much experience with this. I will consider finding out in the upcoming study. I believe so, because I often detect when people swallow, for instance. I strongly believe the answer is yes.
I am by the way considering simpler tests that do not involve already occurring health information, but the detection of induced sensory experience. For instance, a person could pinch their back, or have a finger in a bucket of ice water behind their back, and I do not see their head. Something like that could possibly be done. For instance I've experienced sensing the taste of what people eat, while not seeing their face. I will look into some of these options in the upcoming study.
7) As best you can describe what you would see if, for example, I were missing a molar?
I would see the oral cavity, which looks very different when the mouth is closed than when it is open, it is dark, smaller, and has a different shape. I perceive the teeth, the gums, and always also the jawbones, but not the facial muscle or skin or other adjacent structures of the face. Interestingly, only relevant parts of the body appear in the images, unless I choose to look at other parts as well and add them to the image. According to my perceptions, the jawbone is associated with the health of teeth.
I typically detect the missing molar when I do the head-to-toe reading of a person, where I am looking through the vibrational feeling of a body to find anything that is out of ordinary or of interest. I know what the vibrational aspect of a missing molar feels like, or,
I know what a missing molar feels like, so I can superimpose that with the actual image I am perceiving and detect a resonance when there is a match. I can then work to verify the match by making an effort to form a clearer image of the area, looking for characteristics of a missing tooth, such as the absence of the feeling of the dense tooth material, or the feeling of the socket in the gums that is also distinctly different when a tooth is missing. Often I detect the missing molar right away, because it is something that is "different", but I can also choose to search for it if I didn't detect it already. I do not know if I can detect all cases of missing molars, I do not have the experience to tell me that, but it is one of the types of information I think I am quite good at.
Detecting health information is based on both visual information as well as what things feel like.
7a) When you say that you can see inside the body, how do the images appear? Feel free to use the following as references if it helps:
MRI
Ultrasound
X-Ray
Colonoscopy
The images do not appear among the things I see with my eyes in the world or in the person. The images appear in my mind, more like images based on memory but very clear. The images are in actual color. Much of the internal of the body is in pink and orange, along with white, red, and other colors.
Compared to MRI images, my images are not cross-sections of the body. The images include
relevant structures that involve the health information, which sometimes means that structures physically distant from one another in their location in the body are perceived in the same image, even though there becomes "unspecified space" in between the different locations. So those are some major differences: The images are three-dimensional, and only involve relevant structures. Also, the perception involves more than just the structures and shapes. I also perceive the texture of tissues, and information about what the problem is and other information that is not just visual. Also, the images are in color. But just like in MRI, I can distinguish the different types of tissues and layers.
There is no resemblance with my perceptions to the 2D ultrasound. The quality of the 2D ultrasound seems very poor. 3D ultrasound is very similar to my perceptions in being clear in 3D shapes, however my perceptions also hold information that is felt, and information that is understanding, and reaches into deeper magnifications even down to the sub-atomic level if necessary and if I want to.
I would rarely perceive an area of the body all at once as large as in this X-ray image linked to in your question, or an area as large as this all with the same clarity throughout. Typically only the affected area would be perceived, and even if I chose to look at the entire arm bones, the fracture would still be clearer than the arm bones themselves. To see a fracture, the image would begin being at the site of the fracture and would reveal information that also relates to other tissue types that are affected by the fracture, and also with information that is felt.
The colonoscopy image has the most resemblance among the images provided, to the perceptions I have, although my images are never quite this bright in color. The brightness of this image provided in your question appears to not be authentic and to be accomplished with a bright light source, and is not quite the brightness I perceive in tissues. The perceptions have information about shape, texture, and color in a way that is similar to this picture, although my perceptions also tell me
what it is about and gives me perception of
feeling what is involved.
I was very happy to see this image of the colonoscopy, it resembles very well the type of images that I see and it feels like a great relief to know that others can see what I see.
8) When you are seeing these images, can you use your normal vision to see the physical world around you?
Yes, my normal vision is never switched off. I am aware of the normal vision images, and the images perceived with this ability, as being two different categories of vision and they never get confused. I always know what visual perception was derived from normal vision, and what was derived with the ability that uses the sense of feeling to form images.
I especially recognize this red color from the inside of the colon. If I may say so, the most beautiful human tissues are,
1) The woman's uterus/cervix. It is beautifully red and has beautiful folded layers.
2) Yellow bone marrow. I love the way it looks like fluffy whipped pudding.
3) Liver on the tissue level. Love that reticular tissue. It makes such a perfect pattern.
4) I've also started to appreciate the appearance of the spleen, and the folds of the brain.
There are beautiful things in the body, and if you spend as much time as I have seeing them, you learn to appreciate tissues.
9) Once the images stop, can you bring them up again at a later time?
Yes, by remembering them. On one occasion I chose to do the head-to-toe reading of a person I know, who was not in the same room as me at that time, and was able to form the images and derive health information I had not detected in him before.
10) You've mentioned "feelings" in addition to images. Do you mean physical feelings (sense of touch) or do you mean an emotional sensation such as one might describe a "gut reaction" that a person is being deceitful?
The medical perceptions are, I would say, as much visual as they are feeling. The feeling information is both such that would be felt if you touched the tissues. The hardness of bone, the glossyness of muscle or of the surface of the liver for instance, but mostly information that is not such that you would perceive by touch. Temperature, density, weight, sometimes even taste and scent.
Taste and scent are extremely rare. Typically the
only thing I smell is sometimes the stomach organ, which can smell like some type of sausage, or actually it smells like hydrochloric acid (I've smelt this in the chemistry lab). Also sometimes the brain smells exactly like a damp mossy forest floor covered in mushrooms. Galactose sugar has a distinct smell, too, and often I detect a human's personal feromone signature scent, which is a scent none of us can perceive by the sense of smell with the nose.
10a) Do images always come with feelings? If not, do you ever get feelings without images?
The images always come with some form of feeling or another, more or less. For instance, a fracture would look like the ends of the bone and revealing the image of the red bone marrow, but I would also
feel the sharpness of the shards of bone, and the density of the bone tissue, and the feeling of the periosteum which is the thin layer of white connective tissue that covers bones. There is always feeling involved, of one form or the other. No I never get just the feeling without a visual image, because the visual images are so easy to form, especially if I'm picking up the information by feeling things about them.
I know this is a lot to ask all at once, but I think it's important to lay a foundation of what it is you are experiencing.
Not at all, thank you for giving me the opportunity to share more about what it is I am experiencing. I enjoyed answering your questions.