remote-viewing.com
Do some traders have the gift of intuition?
By Greg Kolodziejzyk
Tim Bourquin: Hello, everybody, and thanks for joining me for another interview. I got an interesting one for you today. My guest today is Greg Kolodziejzyk. He was referred to me by another interviewee, Rob Booker, who had talked to him and thought he had an interesting story to tell.
Greg has been a trader, but he also has an interesting way of his approach to the markets. For 13 years, from between 1998 and 2011, Greg has been conducting an experiment studying the role of intuition as a trading methodology, and during that time period Greg used a protocol he invented called "associative remote viewing," which uses a form of intuition to predict the future direction of random financial markets, and he was able to generate nearly $150,000 of profits over the 13-year period, resulting in a success rate of 60% correct trades. The chance of Greg's success doing this due to chance is less than 1 in 31,000.
So I thought that was an interesting idea. We talk about a lot of different things here on these interviews about trading, and I wanted to get Greg on the line to talk about that. So first of all, Greg, thanks for joining me over Skype today.
Greg Kolodziejzyk: You bet, Tim.
Tim Bourquin: All right. So there will be some skeptics about this. I think you're the first to admit about that in our previous conversations via email about this, that it's not about predicting the future; yet, it's a little bit different way that you approach the market. So talk about why you decided to look at the markets this way.
In 1984, I read a book called "The Mind Race" by Russell Targ and Keith Harary. It was huge, and I loved it. For a long time, I wondered if that was possible or not.
If it were, you could get rich in the stock market.
