that it was nothing more than a distended bladder. Evidently the total
physical relaxation encourages this body process.
In the control room twenty feet down the hall, a human monitor (I
or one of several others) communicates vocally through a sound
system with the person in the booth. The monitor also feeds HemiSync sound into the subject’s headphones, either to test responses to
new frequencies or to aid the subject in achieving desired states of
consciousness. Finally, the monitor observes and notes changes in
instrument readouts on the subject’s physiological condition. Often an
assistant is present to help in the processing.
Here is a typical “entry” report, the beginning of an OOBE,
transcribed from an early file recording during an experiment:
SS/ROMC (OFFICE MANAGER) 7 MINUTES IN—TEST #188
“I am going rapidly now through a tunnel—I was standing straight
up and now I am just sort of sucked up through this tunnel. It is very
narrow and I am rapidly shooting through this tunnel. Now I can see
a point of light at the other end. I am traveling rapidly to this point of
light. It is like I am on some type of light beam that is helping to
propel me. I am coming out. I am going into a different dimension
and I have just completely slowed down. And I am right at the
opening of this point. And now I am gently coming through and
everything is green. It is so bright that it is almost blinding because of
coming out of a dark tunnel. It is a different feeling. Now it is a real
strong energy that seems to be pressing against me. It is a great
feeling now. This is a new energy level. I feel a strong—everything
around me is green. It is so bright that it is taking me a minute to
adjust and to absorb where I am.”
There was one “small” problem. Once our subjects passed through
the light or achieved the out-of-body state, they were not particularly
interested in hour after hour of dull searching for new effective sound
frequency patterns. They would still perform the tasks, but beyond
the tunnel and into the light was Paris! Keeping them on the farm was