
July 17, 1994: OBE's - Robert Monroe
The Art Bell Archive · Arthur William Bell III
February 24, 20231h 33m
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Show Notes
Robert Monroe, founder of the Monroe Institute and pioneering researcher of out-of-body experiences, recounts how spontaneous departures from his physical body in 1958 launched decades of consciousness research.
Monroe describes lying in bed when vibrations overtook him, and he floated to the ceiling to see his own sleeping form below. After a year of terror-filled episodes, he recognized the experience would not kill him and began systematic experiments, visiting distant locations and verifying details with witnesses who perceived him as a swirling gray mist. His research team developed the Hemi-Sync audio technology, using binaural beats to guide the brain into specific states of consciousness mapped through 20-channel EEG systems. Monroe outlines focus levels ranging from mind-awake-body-asleep states to realms beyond physical death, including a way station he calls the Park where newly deceased souls acclimate. The Institute's Lifeline program has documented over 2,000 retrieval runs by 400 participants.
Art Bell asks Monroe what awaits after death. Monroe answers without hesitation that there is nothing to fear, and that consciousness continues far beyond the physical body.
Monroe describes lying in bed when vibrations overtook him, and he floated to the ceiling to see his own sleeping form below. After a year of terror-filled episodes, he recognized the experience would not kill him and began systematic experiments, visiting distant locations and verifying details with witnesses who perceived him as a swirling gray mist. His research team developed the Hemi-Sync audio technology, using binaural beats to guide the brain into specific states of consciousness mapped through 20-channel EEG systems. Monroe outlines focus levels ranging from mind-awake-body-asleep states to realms beyond physical death, including a way station he calls the Park where newly deceased souls acclimate. The Institute's Lifeline program has documented over 2,000 retrieval runs by 400 participants.
Art Bell asks Monroe what awaits after death. Monroe answers without hesitation that there is nothing to fear, and that consciousness continues far beyond the physical body.