<MILABS

FORT
Spoiler: Could it be Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri?

WARNING! ANY LIKENESS BY NAME OR OTHERWISE TO ACTUAL
PERSONS OR PLACES IS TO BE REGARDED AS COINCIDENTAL AT THIS POINT.

Let's see if we can locate the Fort that I saw in a remote viewing session!

An attempt to communicate telepathically with Officer Agent Josh Bryant on July 26-27 2017 led instead to an encounter with a military psychiatrist through telepathy. Remote viewing around the psychiatrist revealed images from his work place. These details are found in the audio. The RV continued also after the audio and was written down. Find them here:

INFO PART 1: YouTube Army Fort | Remote View | The Orion Project

INFO PART 2: written PDF Fort Remote Viewed July 26-27 2017

INFO PART 3: Posted later. More written RV notes.

Also see: General Patton doesn't want me to find the Fort, July 30 2017

Psychiatrist talks some more, July 30-31 2017

WE ARE LOOKING FOR A MILITARY FORT

I discovered that the psychiatrist works at a military site which is called a "Fort".

The United States military is divided into five separate groups: Army, Air Force, Navy, Marines, Coast Guard.

In the beginning of the conversations with this man he did say that he was with the Army. It would hence be an Army Fort. It was clear especially in the continuing conversations that were documented in the second written part, that this site is not Navy. Based on both my remote viewing, and the things said many times in those conversations, I would safely exclude this site being of the Navy. But we have to be absolutely certain before the Air Force is excluded, although it is almost safe to say already that this site belonged to the Army. However, let's be painstakingly meticulous and explore all five options.

It is good to know that the U.S. has many cities that begin with the word "Fort", and these cities are not military Forts, but just cities with Fort in their name, and these are not to be put on my list of Forts. Examples include Fort Lauderdale, Fort Worth. Closed Forts also do not make it to my lists.

U.S. COAST GUARD their sites

There are no Coast Guard Forts that would fit the description. Looking at pictures of these and other information it is safe to exclude the Coast Guard. My Fort was also by no means situated at the coast.

U.S. MARINES their sites

The Forts listed are Army Forts used by the Marines and so these Forts will be looked at on the list of Army Forts instead or only.

U.S. NAVY sites

The Navy uses one Army Fort but there is no Navy Fort.

U.S. AIR FORCE their sites

The Air Force is using some Army Forts, and those Forts will be looked at on the Army list.

U.S. ARMY sites

Fort Rucker
Fort Greely
Fort Wainwright
Fort Huachuca
Fort Chaffee Maneuver Training Center
Fort Hunter Liggett
Fort Irwin
Fort Carson
Fort Logan National Cemetery
Fort Lesley J. McNair
Fort Benning
Fort Gordon
Fort Stewart
Fort DeRussy
Fort Shafter
Fort Benjamin Harrison
Fort Des Moines
Fort Leavenworth
Fort Riley
Fort Campbell
Fort Knox
Fort Polk
Fort Detrick
Fort George G. Meade
Fort Devens
Fort Custer
Fort Snelling
Fort Leonard Wood
Fort William Henry Harrison
Fort Dix
Fort Drum
Fort Hamilton
Fort Bragg
Fort Sill
Fort Indiantown Gap
Fort Buchanan
Fort Allen
Fort Greene
Fort Jackson
Fort Meade
Fort Bliss
Fort Hood
Fort Sam Houston
Fort A.P. Hill
Fort Belvoir
Fort Eustis
Fort Lee
Fort McNair
Fort Myer
Fort Pickett
Fort Lewis
Fort McCoy

Also watch out for:

Fort Richardson - which is now just a part of Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson

This must be a complete list. Phew. That's a lot of Forts to go through. 53 of them. The psychiatrist saying that it was not a Navy site and it being an Army site is looking plausible right now. But we have more clues than just it being a Fort.

OUR ARMY FORT HAS HEAVY SNOW IN WINTER

The next clue I would like to look at, which would eliminate many of them quite quickly, is that the military psychiatrist mentioned more than once that during winter time they get a lot of snow, and he means a lot of snow, so much snow that they have to have it plowed and it makes for rough terrain.

We exclude the following since they are not likely to have snow in winter let alone heavy snow in winter:
Fort Huachuca (South Arizona), Fort Buchanan (Puerto Rico), Fort Allen (Puerto Rico)

Closed bases off the list: Fort Snelling, Fort Benjamin Harrison
Cemetery: Fort Logan National Cemetery

Our updated list of snowy U.S. Army Forts is:

Fort Rucker
Fort Greely
Fort Wainwright
Fort Chaffee Maneuver Training Center
Fort Hunter Liggett
Fort Irwin
Fort Carson
Fort Lesley J. McNair
Fort Benning
Fort Gordon
Fort Stewart
Fort DeRussy
Fort Shafter
Fort Des Moines
Fort Leavenworth
Fort Riley
Fort Campbell
Fort Knox
Fort Polk
Fort Detrick
Fort George G. Meade
Fort Devens
Fort Custer
Fort Leonard Wood
Fort William Henry Harrison
Fort Dix
Fort Drum
Fort Hamilton
Fort Bragg
Fort Sill
Fort Indiantown Gap
Fort Greene
Fort Jackson
Fort Meade
Fort Bliss
Fort Hood
Fort Sam Houston
Fort A.P. Hill
Fort Belvoir
Fort Eustis
Fort Lee
Fort McNair
Fort Myer
Fort Pickett
Fort Lewis
Fort McCoy

Also watch out for:

Fort Richardson - which is now just a part of Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson

I thought it would be straightforward to eliminate Forts such as in California and Hawaii but even those have snow in winter and I will not make a rushed decision and risk "my Fort" escaping off the list. 47 remain

GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION

Ok so we have got 47 U.S. Army Forts and it would be one of those. But instead of being scared of rushed decisions and the right one slipping away, let's just look at the clues we have got.

For sure, time and time again when I remote view the Fort, it is located in the North-East quarter of the United States. So it is nowhere on the Western half of the USA, and it is also not anywhere on the southern half of the USA. I get that very clearly time and time again. There is nothing vague about that, and, this information comes many times and is consistent.

Furthermore, I have sensed time and time again, that our Fort is thinking about a Navy base that is located on the North-Eastern coast of the USA and it being the "closest Navy base" and their own Fort "not being Navy at all", and telepathy from our Fort clearly states that this Fort is not Navy. Their "go to" Navy is located on the coast that is near to New York or thereabouts, it is the close one, it is the one that they have a connection to. The closest coast as well as their closest Navy base at the coast is found directly East to approximately where New York is located.

We also know for certain that our Fort has heavy snow in the winter, even to the point of pipes at the Fort freezing. I am confident to say that our Fort is in the North-Eastern quarter of the United States. I am also confident that this Fort is close to the vertical line that one would draw across the center of the country, it is close to the center, but a bit on the Eastern side, regarding its horisontal position along the West and East. It is also not situated at a coast and it does not have direct access to the ocean.

With this in mind, we can bravely go forward and trust my remote viewing because this is all clear and consistent, and we eliminate most Forts from the list of possible matches.

Just a reminder. Why am I remote viewing a United States Army Fort, drawing remote viewed layout maps of it and now trying to locate it in real life? I have no interest in military secrets. They are the ones who, supposedly, contacted me first, and now I am only trying to figure out if they exist, and if they do exist, I want to find them. They contacted me first. If they did.

Ok so first we have this empty U.S. map with all the states. I have divided the country into four quadrants.


Map provided by

I consistently feel that the Fort that I remote viewed is located within the red circle on this map. The blue circle shows where the Navy base would be which is their "go-to" Navy base in collaboration:

Looking at the locations of the Army Forts on our list, here are the ones I have excluded because they are not in a location consistent with the Fort I have seen, either because they are not in the area marked by the red circle also many of these are located near the coast and their closest Navy base would not be directly East bound to about where New York City is located. So these would be excluded from the list of possible matches:

THESE 35 OR 74% GO AWAY:

Fort Rucker (Alabama)
Fort Hunter Liggett (California)
Fort Irwin (California)
Fort Lesley J. McNair (Washington D.C.)
Fort Benning (Georgia)
Fort Gordon (Georgia)
Fort Stewart (Georgia)
Fort Polk (Louisiana)
Fort Detrick (Maryland)
Fort George G. Meade (Maryland)
Fort Devens (Massachusetts)
Fort William Henry Harrison (Montana)
Fort Dix (New Jersey)
Fort Drum (New York)
Fort Hamilton (New York)
Fort Bragg (North Carolina)

Fort Indiantown Gap (Pennsylvania)
Fort Greene (Rhode Island)
Fort Jackson (South Carolina)
Fort Bliss (Texas)
Fort Hood (Texas)
Fort Sam Houston (Texas)
Fort A.P. Hill (Virginia)
Fort Belvoir (Virginia)
Fort Eustis (Virginia)
Fort Lee (Virginia)
Fort McNair (Virginia or Washington D.C.)
same as Fort Lesley J. McNair?
Fort Myer (Virginia)
Fort Pickett (Virginia)
Fort Lewis (Washington State)
/

Also not in Alaska:
Fort Greely
Fort Wainwright
Fort Richardson
which is now just a part of Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson

/

Also not in Hawaii:
Fort DeRussy (Hawaii)
Fort Shafter (Hawaii)

AND SO THE LIST ONLY HAS 12 FORTS REMAINING THAT COULD BE THE ONE I SAW:

Fort Chaffee Maneuver Training Center (Arkansas)
Fort Carson (Colorado)
Fort Des Moines (Iowa)
Fort Leavenworth (Kansas)
Fort Riley (Kansas)
Fort Campbell (Kentucky)
Fort Knox (Kentucky)
Fort Custer (Michigan)
Fort Leonard Wood (Missouri)
Fort Sill (Oklahoma)
Fort Meade (South Dakota)
Fort McCoy (Wisconsin)

Among the 12 possible matches, some are closer to the area I feel the Fort to be in and others do not feel as close to the target area. Here I divide the 12 into "most likely 6" and "less likely 6". On this map, the more likely 6 are red and the less likely 6 are blue:

Most likely 6:
Fort Des Moines (Iowa)
Fort Leavenworth (Kansas)
Fort Riley (Kansas)
Fort Leonard Wood (Missouri)

Fort Carson (Colorado) too far west
Fort Meade (South Dakota) too far west

Less likely 6:
Fort Chaffee Maneuver Training Center (Arkansas) too far south
Fort Campbell (Kentucky) too far south, too far east
Fort Knox (Kentucky) too far south, too far east
Fort Custer (Michigan) too far east, surrounded by water
Fort Sill (Oklahoma) too far south
Fort McCoy (Wisconsin) too close to water

Fort Custer (Michigan) and Fort McCoy (Wisconsin) are too close to water to be a match. The Fort I was seeing was far from large waters and they thought that their closest "go-to" water site was directly straight to the East to the coast someplace near to New York City.

Next I overlap the map with the red circle with the map with the 12 possible matches and we get this:

The three Forts that are actually inside the circle, are:
Fort Des Moines (Iowa)
Fort Leavenworth (Kansas)
Fort Riley (Kansas)

But I am going to consider all 12.

THE TYPE OF TRAINING

The Army Fort that I saw had a barracks building where military recruits have beds and where they shower and sleep. I did take a look at a few of the recruits there, and it was very clear that they were new in the military. I have known many of my supposed military officers for many years now, including Major Cunningham, General "Gunman" Patton, Captain Marsden and others, and there is a big difference between the routined higher ranking officers and these new recruits at "my Fort". The recruits at this Fort feel like they have just arrived there, they are excited to be there, they think it is fun rather than serious, they still feel whiny about having to make their beds in the morning, some of them get tired and need to sleep extra and miss some of their physical training sessions.

When the recruits at "my Fort" do the salute with the straightened back and the hand at the forehead and say "Yes Sir!" it feels like strain on their back to make the back straight and it is still not so smooth and natural like when the officers do the salute. Also many of the recruits at "my Fort" are thinking that they are only going to stay there for about two weeks, many think that they don't really make an effort and do not care about doing their best, many are still excited about having their hands on the rifles that are supplied to them by the military site.

At this Fort the recruits do the obstacle course which includes the tires to jump across, a white pole to use their hands to scoot across above the ground, a rope system where they grab on a rope and lift their legs up and the weight of their body has them slide across the rope to a target location where they drop down. There is also the mention repeatedly by the psychiatrist of the deep diving pool.

The drill sergeant type of guy at this Fort is specifically there to weed out the weak from the rest, and knows that many are going to quit. Also I have read clearly from all of the staff at the Fort whom I have read, that the physical tasks at the training here is really not made physically demanding, although the recruits think so, because, the real but secret purpose of them being here is for their performance to be looked at and evaluated more for their mental capability and potential than for their actual current physical performance on the obstacle course. Said again, the physical obstacle course is made easy because it is not the point at this stage of their education, but the recruits do not know this and think that they are there to do their best physically speaking, it is a sort of trick but that is how it is.

The reader of my website who was himself in the U.S. Army has himself completed the basic training at both Fort Jackson and Fort Benning. He says that there is no deep diving pool segment for Army basic training. This could suggest that the pool segment is given to Marines, and, that my Fort is a joint Army-Marines Fort, but we will look at that later.

The reader says that the first stage of a person's military training will always be the Basic Training, this is true for all of them no matter what specializations they go to later. The second stage of military training for everyone, is the AIT.

The third stage after AIT, airborne school or air assault school, but that has to be in the person's contract and most of the time it is. But if they are just medical MOS they won't do air assault or airborne school because they don't need it. Or if they are in finance or management they will not do or need air assault or airborne. So you either get shipped off to a permanent station, OR you go to airborne school or air assault school.

I ask what is a fourth stage, he says there isn't one, they are now soldiers and are stationed, they are out on the field working. Also on a fourth stage, they wouldn't be acting like rookies who are whiny about making their beds and thinking about quitting after they just see what it's like for two weeks.

That means that our Fort trains recruits on basic training, the first stage of their military career. I have received information in the remote viewing and telepathy which consistently says from the psychiatrist that there is no training of recruits in jumping from airplanes.

Airborne school and air assault school, they would jump out of airplanes. Airborne school they jump out airplanes, and air assault school they jump out of helicopters. If they are in airborne school or in air assault school would they still train with jumping the tires and crawling under logs on the obstacle course? No, reader says. Are you sure?, I ask. Yes, he says. That means they are either basic trainining or AIT.

As for AIT which is the second step, which comes after basic training, do recruits do the obstacle course with tires and crawling under logs during AIT? Only in infantry, he says.

Let's compile this:
Stage 1: Basic Training. Obstacle course included
Stage 2: AIT. Obstacle course only for infantry.
Stage 3: a) stationed and working, b) airborne school, c) air assault school - none of these have obstacle course

This means that the Fort I saw is doing either Basic Training or AIT for infantry.

BASIC TRAINING

We should still consider all five types of military just once again:
1. Coast Guard
2. Marines
3. Navy
4. Air Force
5. Army

The psychiatrist made it clear that his Fort is not with the Navy. It is also clear that they are not the Coast Guard.

Marines have Basic Training at two locations:
1. Parris Island, South Carolina
2. San Diego, California

Air Force have Basic Training at one location:
1. Joint Base San Antonio (JBSA) Lackland in San Antonio, Texas

Army has Basic Training at five locations: United States Army Basic Training - Locations
"Basic Combat Training" is the same as "Basic Training".
1. Fort Benning in Columbus, Georgia; also provides Infantry and Armor OSUT
2. Fort Jackson in Columbia, South Carolina; largest of all BCT locations.
3. Fort Knox, Kentucky
4. Fort Leonard Wood in St. Robert, Missouri; also provides Corps of Engineers, Chemical Corps, and Military Police OSUT
5. Fort Sill in Lawton, Oklahoma; also provides Artillery OSUT

AIT INFANTRY

We should still consider all five types of military just once again:
1. Coast Guard
2. Marines
3. Navy
4. Air Force
5. Army

We ignore Navy and Coast Guard because those are not it.

Marines do AIT Infantry at two sites:
1. SOI East at Camp Geiger, North Carolina
2. SOI West at Camp San Onofre in California

Air Force has no infantry.

Army does AIT Infantry only at Fort Benning.

SUMMARY

Looking at the training which the recruits at our Fort go through, and their attitudes and other clues, they must be doing either Basic Training or AIT Infantry training because there is an obstacle course. They do behave like new recruits which would make it more likely that they are doing Basic Training than the AIT Infantry training, however, let's be guided by the presence of the obstacle course.

We ignored Navy and Coast Guard sites because those are not consistent with being my Fort.

Basic Training from Marines, Air Force, and Army give us this list:
(Marines) Parris Island, South Carolina
(Marines) San Diego, California
(Air Force) Joint Base San Antonio (JBSA) Lackland in San Antonio, Texas
(Army) Fort Benning in Columbus, Georgia; also provides Infantry and Armor OSUT
(Army) Fort Jackson in Columbia, South Carolina; largest of all BCT locations.
(Army) Fort Knox, Kentucky
(Army) Fort Leonard Wood in St. Robert, Missouri; also provides Corps of Engineers, Chemical Corps, and Military Police OSUT
(Army) Fort Sill in Lawton, Oklahoma; also provides Artillery OSUT

AIT Infantry from Marines, Air Force, and Army give us this list:
(Marines) SOI East at Camp Geiger, North Carolina
(Marines) SOI West at Camp San Onofre in California
(Army) Fort Benning, Georgia

Looking again at the geographical locations, we EXCLUDE:

Basic Training
(Marines) Parris Island, South Carolina
(Marines) San Diego, California
(Air Force) Joint Base San Antonio (JBSA) Lackland in San Antonio, Texas
(Army) Fort Benning in Columbus, Georgia; also provides Infantry and Armor OSUT
(Army) Fort Jackson in Columbia, South Carolina; largest of all BCT locations.

AIT Infantry
(Marines) SOI East at Camp Geiger, North Carolina
(Marines) SOI West at Camp San Onofre in California
(Army) Fort Benning, Georgia

And REMAINING ARE:

Basic Training
(Army) Fort Knox, Kentucky
(Army) Fort Leonard Wood in St. Robert, Missouri; also provides Corps of Engineers, Chemical Corps, and Military Police OSUT
(Army) Fort Sill in Lawton, Oklahoma; also provides Artillery OSUT

So. Based on the geographical location, all of the AIT Infantry sites are excluded. And three Basic Training sites remain. Also our Fort is called a Fort and the three Basic Training sites that remain here are all three called Fort.

Is one of these three our Fort?

Fort Knox?
Fort Leonard Wood?
Fort Sill?

Our final three:

GREEN TANK

The Fort having an obstacle course, plus the geographical location that I saw for it, leaves us with only three options: Fort Knox, Fort Leonard Wood, Fort Sill.

There was a green tank parked outside as a decoration on the base, the tank was also like a kind of mascot for the base. It was dark green and not beige. I did feel that it was from World War II, which means we should also consider it being World War I even though I am not feeling it, and it was not a replica, it even has seen its fair use of mechanical oil, I even saw scenes of a battle field and the military issue flat drink bottle from it. I did not see that it would have a large white star painted on it. The gun was not proportionally very thin but thicker.

If we do an internet search for "Fort Knox green tank" we learn that there is an entrance sign made out of red bricks with golden text and on top of the sign is a green tank with a white star on the side. Fort Knox

"Fort Leonard Wood green tank" there is a Fort Leonard Wood military museum that has tanks, Military Museums of Fort Leonard Wood. It seems on Google Maps that the museum is located on Fort Leonard Wood grounds but I am not sure.

"Fort Sill green tank" has a military museum with tanks, U.S. ARMY ARTILLERY MUSEUM, FORT SILL, LAWTON, OKLAHOMA, USA

All three final contestant Forts have got at least one green tank which is decorative/museum and is not being used.

Also see this green tank on Fort Knox: Fort Knox green tank

THE ENTRANCE SIGN

Here is a map of the layout that I saw when remote viewing the Army Fort.

The entrance sign that I saw was located as on the map that I drew. A street for cars runs across left to right "under" the sign. There is a round patch of grass with a flagpole that has the US flag on it. Then there is a large courtyard further "up" with grass and the green tank was there on the grass. It was not solid grass all across the courtyard there, but some beige sand along the building to the right which is where I saw the psychiatrist on the 2nd floor (first ground floor, then up one floor: some people call that the 1st floor, but one floor up from ground floor).

The sign was a solid rectangular gray slab that stands up. It had engraved text that goes either into or comes out of the surface of the sign (refer to the audio to see which one I reported). The text was painted in yellow golden text. It was not a wooden sign.

Let's see pictures of entrance signs for the three bases.

Fort Knox 1
Fort Knox 2
Fort Knox 3
Fort Knox 4
Fort Knox 5
Fort Leonard Wood 1
Fort Leonard Wood 2
Fort Leonard Wood 3
Fort Sill 1
Fort Sill 2
Fort Sill 3
Fort Sill 4
Fort Sill 5

Fort Knox: not a perfect match with what I saw. It is a solid and not a wooden sign, but it is red bricks and not a gray concrete slab. It does have yellow golden text, and a green tank on top of the sign instead of out there on a courtyard grass nearby to the sign. I did see red bricks on the buildings near the sign, so could that have been the red bricks of the sign - I don't want to draw those kinds of connections because then anything could be said. I still with what I saw.

Fort Leonard Wood: the sign with the map could that be that I saw the round patch of grass with the U.S. flag on a flagpole and instead it was a U.S. flag sign on a round patch of ground? Again I do not want to make those kinds of connections. The flag sign is not consistent with what I saw. The other sign is indeed a gray slab but the text on it is white and not yellow golden.

Fort Sill: the two thin wooden signs mean nothing. I was seeing a solid sign that was like a gray rectangular slab that is standing up on one short side. I'm not feeling the other signs at all either.

Based on the entrance signs, I am not feeling Fort Sill at all. The best match that I am feeling is the shape and color of the Fort Leonard Wood sign that is like a gray slab, even if the text was not yellow. If I had been seeing the Fort Leonard Wood flag sign then it would be all messed up, to say that instead of seeing a U.S. flag shaped sign that is on a round patch I would have seen a round patch of grass with a U.S. flag and that all not being a sign, if you follow what I am saying here. As for Fort Knox the decorative tank is there, the text is yellow golden, and that again could have been a slightly confused rendering of my early remote viewing skills. Still, I am going to say that there is nothing in the Fort Sill signs that feels true. The Fort Leonard Wood gray slab shaped sign feels the most right.

MAP OF THE GROUNDS


Here is my sketch of the Army Fort I saw. Click on the image for a larger view.

The trees are thin smallish rather low-growing and rather pale and weak-looking pine trees. Not the tall and handsome dark green pine trees.

The sign at the main entrance is a gray rectangular slab possibly out of concrete and it has etched into it text that is carved into the slab so that the text does not lie flat against the surface but sinks in, the letters have then been painted in yellow golden text.

The dark green tank that is parked straight in front of the entrance as a permanent decoration is of course a significant clue.

Maybe let's spy on the Forts from a bird's eye view using Google Maps with the satellite view to see if there are Forts that have a layout acceptably similar to that of "my" Fort and to eliminate ones whose layout could not possibly allow them to be "my" Fort. The other details of my Fort can be found in the audio and text that detail the remote viewing. There are also additional written RV reports on the Fort that I have not yet posted.

Google Maps provides a view of the Forts seen from above, the maps might be a few years old who knows:

Fort Sill Maps

Fort Leonard Wood

Fort Knox

Looking at the Forts on the maps, I'm just not "feeling" Fort Sill.

Also looking at Google search images I am not "feeling" Fort Sill based on the variety of pictures that show up.

Looking at Fort Knox on the maps the energy of that place is more like the site that I found. It has a very "Army" kind of energy if you are psychic you can have fun feeling the energy of Fort Knox on that map it is really a fun experience, and Fort Sill does not offer you that energy at all.

Looking at pictures of "Fort Knox Army" search results, this building strikes a chord with what I saw in RV at least there is a feeling and an image that is similar, here is a printscreen of it, Fort Knox Building. I also like this picture of this red brick building, Fort Knox bldg and Fort Knox bldg page. I like this one because of the red brick building that wraps around a green grass courtyard: U.S. Army Human Resources Command headquarters at Fort Knox.

Fort Leonard Wood on the maps. Take a look at this place on Fort Leonard Wood: Fort Leonard Wood courtyard. If you look at the map I drew there are many things that are a match. The pale gray street for cars going left to right across the front, then going up you get a round patch of grass where a U.S. flag on a flagpole would be. Going further up you get the grass courtyard with red brick building along the top and right of the courtyard. The building on the left I may have just not seen at all during RV because I don't see everything everywhere. The canteen or dining facility would be right where it was supposed to be in my RV images. However there should be a barracks further up from the canteen and with a large empty courtyard next to it, and that is not there. There is however also the exact type of small paths that run around across the forests on that side of this area. Everything is a match except for the barracks not being there and the barracks courtyard.

Fort Leonard Wood on internet search images. I like this one Fort Leonard Wood Morelli Heights Hotel Exterior don't know if it is on the base but it is red brick and there seems to be a flagpole and there IS a gray slab sign with golden yellow text on it. This is their Army Museum. Courtyard, does it look familiar? Take a look at my drawing. This is the site that I also saw on Google Maps. Here it has the U.S. flag on the flagpole exactly like on my drawing - here is the website that has the picture.

One more thing remains. How do I feel the "energy" of Fort Leonard Wood? It does feel like a match with the place that I remote viewed where the psychiatrist was. Fort Sill has a very soft feminine energy and some of that comes from the grass there and lack of trees. Fort Knox feels extremely much like Army, like I said if you are any bit sensitive to energies and the feeling of things take a look at Fort Knox to experience a really exotic Army feeling. But Fort Leonard Wood has that right type of feeling to it like the Fort that I saw, kind of like in between the feeling of Fort Sill and Fort Knox.

CONCLUSIONS

I've spent hours and days on this case of finding out if the Army Fort I saw was a real place. After thorough investigation, which mainly relies on the Fort being a Basic Training Army Fort because of the obstacle course and recruits I saw, plus the geographical location on the U.S. map that I felt, it only left three possible options: Fort Sill, Fort Knox, Fort Leonard Wood. Fort Sill I am not feeling or finding any photographs that are similar to things I have seen, also it is too far south on the map of the U.S.

How do I then know whether it is Fort Knox or Fort Leonard Wood? Fort Leonard Wood was the only one of these two that had a sign that I was "feeling" and happy with, the gray slab sign. Fort Knox has at least the green tank at the entrance sign but Fort Leonard Wood has an entire museum with several tanks. The map of Fort Leonard Wood matches really well with what I saw and drew, except for the barracks not being where I thought. I even found a photo that looks like what I was looking at, and the road, flagpole with flag, round patch of grass for the flagpole, grass courtyard, beige pathways next to the buildings around the green grass, the red brick buildings, the layout of right side and front building, the front building being a canteen, plus the many small paths going around the forests at the back of this location, were a match. One would just say that the psychiatrist's office is perhaps not on the next floor up from the Fort Leonard Wood library, and the barracks and barracks courtyard were not where I had seen, also the green tank is perhaps not placed on the green grass courtyard in front of the flagpole. But I have only been remote viewing for a week and this was pretty much my first case so far. Also the energy of Fort Leonard Wood feels right, and, it is located very good on the United States map considering where I felt that my Fort was located, close to the center of the US but on the Eastern side and located so that straight East would take you to the coast of New York or thereabouts.

I am happy to say that my Fort was probably Fort Leonard Wood. I cannot be certain but many things indicate to that.

This page has taken me many hours to write but it has been the most fun I have had so far with The Orion Project website and books.

Now what? Like General Patton asked on July 30 2017 (find the link at the top of the page), what will I do once I find my Fort? I will do nothing. It is not possible to contact a U.S. Army Fort and ask them if their psychiatrist has spoken to me telepathically regarding UFOs and aliens and if he injured his shoulder in the 1970's from the canoe and longbow archery speed contest that he was doing. One day I will meet my guys in real life, and I do enjoy looking into the details that I see from them and that they say to investigate those leads as far as is possible.

The reader of my website who was himself in the U.S. Army had looked at Fort Leonard Wood on Google Maps and found a green tank that is parked outside, it is very close to the building that I saw and drew which is also on the photo, go up and to the right from the tank to find it nearby on the map:
Green Tank at Fort Leonard Wood

The doctor thinks many times to a diving pool, one that is deep but is not wide enough to swim laps in. The reader of the website found a pool that looks to be small and deep, just left from the building with the canteen that I drew:
Pool near the building and courtyard at Fort Leonard Wood

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