It’s safe. It’s real. It exists.
(Lyn Buchanan, on the Ark of the Covenant)
When Lyn Buchanan—renowned military remote viewer and former member of the U.S. Army's secret psychic spy program—joins your podcast, you expect the unexpected. But nothing could have prepared CJ and me for what he revealed during an episode of All Things Unexplained.
We asked Lyn a simple, open-ended question: Do you know where the Ark of the Covenant is? Without hesitation, he replied: Yes.
We gasped.
Lyn didn’t just claim knowledge of the Ark’s location—he described it in stunning detail, and explained how he and another viewer, known by the number “032,” had seen it through remote viewing. What he described shook us—and it may shake the foundations of everything we think we know about history, secrecy, and the metaphysical nature of perception itself.
A vault in the shadows
According to Buchanan, the Ark of the Covenant is currently underground. It sits in what he described as a “cave-like” location—a dead-end corridor deep within the Earth. But this is no ordinary vault.
Lining the path to the Ark are statues and symbols representing demons from various world religions and belief systems, placed intentionally as psychic and psychological deterrents. Whether carved or crafted, their purpose is clear: to strike fear into anyone who dares get too close.
And someone—or some group—is making sure no one does. Lyn claims there are individuals assigned to protect the Ark to the point of lethality. They have one job: guard the Ark at all costs.
It’s not hidden because it’s lost.
It’s hidden because it’s powerful.
Why would the ark be hidden?
Biblical lore tells us the Ark housed the stone tablets of the Ten Commandments and carried the presence of God Himself. But it also acted as a terrifying weapon—striking down those who approached unworthily and leveling cities when carried into battle.
If you believe Buchanan’s account, this is no myth.
One cannot help but ask: Why bury something of such cosmic importance underground, surround it with demons, and then guard it with blood oaths and death threats? The answer, perhaps, lies in the same place Lyn’s knowledge came from: remote viewing.
Remote viewing: seeing what shouldn’t be seen
Remote viewing is the psychic skill of gathering information about a target—people, places, or objects—without using conventional senses. From 1978 through the 1990s, the U.S. military and intelligence community poured millions into developing this practice under projects like Stargate, where Buchanan served as a leading operative.
Remote viewing isn’t guesswork or hypnosis. It’s structured. Trained. Repeatable. Viewers are given only coordinates or cryptic references, and from that, produce accurate sketches, descriptions, and even timelines about people and places they've never visited.
When we asked Lyn about viewing the Ark, he explained that he didn’t go looking for it randomly. He and 032 were tasked with viewing a "mystery" location—blind to them—but they both described eerily similar scenes:
A cave or tunnel.
A chamber with ornate, sacred energy.
And most unsettling, statues that shouldn't be there.
But Buchanan said something even more curious: “I’ve heard a lot of people say the location, and I’ve never heard them say it right.”
It’s as if some power—governmental or spiritual—allows just enough folklore to leak into public consciousness, while the real location and meaning remain cloaked.
The protectors
When we pressed Buchanan on who is protecting the Ark, he didn’t say. He simply nodded solemnly. The implication was clear: these are not random mercenaries or archaeologists. They are initiates, perhaps part of a larger cabal, bound by purpose and possibly even metaphysical training. It reminded me of Indiana Jones—but not the Disney version. The real kind. The kind whispered about in Cold War basements and leaked in redacted CIA files.
To say this matches other remote viewers’ accounts would be an understatement. The late Ingo Swann, who helped design the original protocols for the Stargate program, once described secret chambers beneath the Earth containing ancient technology. Pat Price—another legendary viewer —spoke of bases manned by non-humans beneath Mount Hayes in Alaska. These aren’t conspiracies. These were government-funded operations.
And the Ark may be part of that same underground narrative—literally and figuratively.
Is this just an allegory?
It’s tempting to call this an allegory. Maybe the “demons” are symbols of inner fear. Maybe the “cave” is symbolic of hidden knowledge. But when Lyn Buchanan speaks, there’s a calm, military precision to his words. He’s not speculating. He’s reporting.
And here’s where it gets stranger: he’s not the only one. Since airing the episode, we’ve been contacted by others—people who’ve claimed to have dreamed of such places, or seen them during near-death experiences. A few described similar statues. A few described being warned away.
We even received one cryptic comment on the podcast that said simply:
“Lyn’s right. It’s real. And it’s not meant for us.”
What now?
We live in a time where truth is stranger than fiction, and fiction may contain more truth than we’re prepared for.
Buchanan’s revelation isn’t just a curiosity—it’s a challenge. A challenge to historians, theologians, scientists, and yes, remote viewers: what else lies in the shadows, waiting to be found or remembered?
As for us, we’ll keep exploring. We’ll keep asking questions.
And if the Ark is real…
And if it's guarded…
Then we must also ask the most dangerous question of all:
Who is it being guarded from?














