Bruce Moen - Afterlife Knowledge Guidebook (Review)

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The book provides a step-by-step guide for using exercises and techniques to prove the existence of the afterlife to oneself. It includes scripts for exercises ranging from relaxation to advanced soul retrieval.

Some of the techniques described include exercises for building energy, accessing unconscious material, achieving different states of consciousness, contacting nonphysical helpers, and performing soul retrievals.

The reviewer thinks Moen could clarify the relationships between beliefs and identity, guides/Aspects of Self and the 'disk', and how the heart, left brain and unconscious access nonphysical information.

Afterlife Knowledge Guidebook: A Manual for the Art of Retrieval and Afterlife

Exploration.
Written by Bruce Moen
Reviewed by Matthew Fike, PhD
Volume 5 of Exploring the Afterlife Series

 Book Review

It took Bruce Moen over three years to prove to himself that the afterlife is real. Being an engineer
who values efficiency and simplicity, he wrote Afterlife Knowledge Guidebook: A Manual for the Art
of Retrieval and Afterlife Exploration to help others prove its existence to themselves more swiftly. As
he puts it, “My intent in writing this book is to help guide you to prove to yourself beyond all doubt
that our afterlife exists, and to demonstrate the benefits that flow from that knowledge” (259). Like
the workshops from which it evolved, the Guidebook proceeds step by step. Its major sections—
concepts of consciousness, tools of conscious exploration, afterlife exploration techniques, and
retrieval-based exploration—take the reader from simple exercises for relaxation and building energy
to advanced retrievals, with a myriad of approaches in between. Precise scripts for the exercises are
included for those who want to make their own recordings, but one might better order Moen’s six-
CD set on his website (www.afterlife-knowledge.com). All twenty-six exercises are also available on a
single MP3 CD.

The theory of consciousness developed in the first section features two key concepts. First, Charles T.
Tart’s “State-Specific Memory” holds that “the memory of an event is stored within the area of
consciousness in which that event occurred” (7). Second, the “Hemi-Sync® Model of Consciousness”
enables access to unconscious material and nonphysical realms through focused attention. As Moen
explains the model, “Once you can identify the feeling of any area within consciousness, merely
remembering and reexperiencing that feeling will automatically shift your awareness back to that
area of consciousness” (6). Ironically, for all his “logical, rational, engineer’s perspective” (34), he
bases his system on feeling.

The trouble is that beliefs keep one from having conscious recall and must be adjusted slowly, lest
one experience a Belief System Crash. Progress is possible through addressing Aspects of Self
through inner dialogue and achieving a balance between what Moen calls the Perceiver (the
unconscious information gatherer) and the Interpreter (which works by association to bring the
nearest similar thing to awareness). A mixture of metaphors may clarify the point. Moen believes that
when we click out, the Interpreter’s circuit breaker flips; but we are still perceiving information that
can be remembered later in “time-release-memory pills” (293). As a result (and this is my own
addition), the frontier of an individual person’s consciousness is pushed back.

How, then, does Moen’s technique work? As it turns out, feeling is not the only non-engineer-like
thinking required. Like the priming water in an old-fashioned hand pump, pretending and fantasizing
start the process; eventually, fantasy yields to the imagination, which can grasp things that are real
and unexpected. After the focus of attention shifts to nonphysical reality, nonphysical Helpers can be
of service. Once one begins to contact persons who are stuck, the most important thing is the ability
to project love. Moen considers “Feeling and Building Love Energy” to be the most important
exercise in the book because a blast of Pure Unconditional Love (PUL) often alters a stuck soul’s
awareness enough for a Helper to get its attention. After an encounter with the dead, one needs to
try to verify information about them or compare notes after a partnered exploration. Either or both
methods should lead directly to confirmation that the afterlife is real.

Although Moen’s system is thus simple to describe, anyone who wants to follow it will need to spend
months or years practicing the exercises and to avoid, if possible, the mistakes he made as he was
learning. These include thinking that nonphysical perception is just like physical perception,
mistaking the quality of images for their reality/accuracy, discarding information gathered by
imagination, and thinking that he had to go out of body to do soul retrieval. As far as Moen is
concerned, OBE is unnecessary because soul retrieval is possible without going as deep as one does
in an OBE. Since everything is consciousness, we are already everywhere anyway; therefore, shifting
focus is the key to successful retrievals.

The method that Afterlife Knowledge Guidebook lays out is indebted to a number of sources and
traditions. Of course, Moen reproduces the Monroe cosmology of Focus levels 22-27, but much of
the borrowing from The Monroe Institute® is unacknowledged: his energy exercise involves forming
a resonant energy balloon; he uses Monroe’s phrase “preparatory process” but alters its steps
significantly; one wonders if what Moen calls 3-D Blackness is something akin to Focus 15 (see 183ff.
and 185); and PUL obviously recalls Focus 18. In addition, the role of imagination in his system
resembles Carl Jung’s technique of active imagination, which enables dialogue with characters in
dreams and other inner figures (in other words, Aspects of Self). Regarding active imagination, a
homology may be helpful: Monroe is to the binaural beat as Moen is to active imagination. Just as
Monroe used the binaural beat to develop Hemi-Sync, Moen applies active imagination to afterlife
exploration in a way that Jung never considered.

Moen also seems to have borrowed various things from remote viewing. All of the following sound
similar to that technique. Moen writes, “Contact often begins with a fleeting image, a feeling, a
thought, etc.” (213). He urges practitioners of his system to perceive and record raw data but not to
interpret it. When the Interpreter strays too far from these data, the result is Interpreter Overlay,
similar to what remote viewers call Analytic Overlay. When this happens, Moen’s advice is to back
away from the false interpretation, much as remote viewers draw a line in their notes, write “AOL,”
and redirect their attention to the data stream. As well, accounts of soul retrievals at Moen’s
workshops and remote viewings both receive objective evaluation. Each participant submits the
name of a dead loved one and can later confirm that someone else’s notes match the name, again
confirming that the afterlife exists (260).

Along with noticing some of these unacknowledged debts, readers may have some unanswered
questions about Moen’s theory of consciousness. First, some connection to Reiki and other types of
energy work would have helped. For example, since a Reiki practitioner’s tingling hands are a sign of
energy flow, what is the relationship between Reiki and the book’s energy-building exercises? The
question is very relevant because energy workers in various traditions have the sensitivity to use
Moen’s methods with great success. Second, this statement—“beliefs are the very bricks and mortar
of your identity” (67)—seems insufficient. Surely identity is greater than what we believe, even if
some beliefs are unconscious. In particular, how do psyche and soul relate to a human being’s
identity? Two final points need clarification. What is the relationship between guides that are Aspects
of the Self and what Moen’s calls the “disk” (soul group)? Also, in terms of access to nonphysical
information, what is the connection between the heart, the left brain, and the unconscious? Apart
from these substantive matters, the physical book itself is marred by some minor lower-order errors
and by a cover so poorly attached that it separates from the spine before one is halfway through.

Oddly, the most interesting thing in the book has nothing to do with the afterlife or soul retrieval but
rather with what Moen calls “Pure Doubtless Intent,” a state of consciousness in which it is possible
to walk on water, fly through the air, and levitate by merely expressing the desire. Of course, if Moen
had written more about it, the book would have veered off topic; but it is fascinating to wonder how
someone might apply the Hemi-Sync Model and State-Specific Memory to this area of
consciousness. As for his next project, Moen states that he plans “to include the partnered
exploration workshop material . . . as a separate book in the Exploring the Afterlife Series” (308). If it
is as helpful as the Afterlife Knowledge Guidebook, it will be a significant contribution to the
literature of consciousness exploration. Quibbles aside, the book provides important tools for the
exploration of consciousness and may enable solutions for anyone who has had a “non-experience
experience” at The Monroe Institute.

Matthew Fike is a professor of English at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, SC.

https://www.monroeinstitute.org/book-
review/Afterlife%20Knowledge%20Guidebook%3A%20A%20Manual%20for%20the%20Art%
20of%20Retrieval%20and%20Afterlife%20Exploration.

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