Secret CIA workbook claims that repeating a five-digit number can reduce pain signals in the body

A ‘workbook’ created by a secret US military program claimed to have cracked the code for reducing pain signals in the body by repeating a five-digit number.

This “Gateway Intermediate Workbook,” prepared by the Monroe Institute of Applied Sciences in 1977, was just one training tool the private group provided to the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM) for metaphysical espionage.

On page 14 of the 21-page document, that was released by the CIA in 2003, includes a section of “daily tools” to reduce pain signals, remember life experiences and “charge the body for great speed and strength.”

Although many people try to reduce pain with medications, the report states that this can be achieved in minutes by using only your mind.

“To reduce pain signals,” the once-secret training document advised, “look with your eyes closed at the part of your body that is the source of pain signals.”

‘As you look, repeat the number 55515 in your mind.

“If you do these two things, the pain signals will slowly decrease until they are no longer important.”

The meditation training was part of a series of top secret programs funded by the CIA roughly 1972 to 1995, exploring methods to increase awareness and human potential for spies and special operations teams.

This “Gateway” workbook, prepared by the Monroe Institute of Applied Sciences in 1977, was just one training tool the private group provided to the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM) for a metaphysical spy craft. Above is a diagram from the workbook

The document claims that if you close your eyes, look where your pain is and repeat a five-digit number, the pain will leave your body.

The document claims that if you close your eyes, look where your pain is and repeat a five-digit number, the pain will leave your body.

Many of these projects, with names like “Star Gate” and “Grill Flame,” focused on psychic espionage or “remote viewing” of distant areas of interest in time and space.

But others had more tangible, physical goals, like the workbook.

“You will learn even better ways to develop and master your physical self through the application of your total being,” the document reads. “You can use them whenever you want.”

The workbook also described a method “to charge the body for great speed and strength,” in which U.S. Army INSCOM personnel were guided to “close your eyes, breathe deeply, think of the physical action to be are carried out and to the strong energy of red.’

It could be this simple, according to the team at the Monroe Institute: “As you exhale, open your eyes and perform the action you want to accomplish.”

Another “daily aid” claimed to help subjects regain lost memories.

“To remember any part of your life experience, close your eyes and gently touch the center of your forehead with the fingers of your right hand,” the document says.

“When you do this, you immediately remember and remember what you consciously desire.”

Today, the Monroe Institute’s unclassified approach to pain management continues to focus on meditation – now aided by tonal recordings that call it ‘ Hemi Sync (short for Hemispheric Synchronization) that play sound at specific frequencies.

Hemi-Sync’s “audio guidance technology” promotes synchronization between the left and right brain, the institute claims, to improve consciousness.

Above, Monroe Institute founder Robert Monroe at a soundboard working on the audio frequencies at the heart of his Hemi-Sync's

Above, Monroe Institute founder Robert Monroe at a soundboard working on the audio frequencies at the heart of his Hemi-Sync’s “audio conduction” technology, which, he claimed, connects the left and right hemispheres of the brain. brain synchronizes to increase consciousness.

Citing work published by the Journal of the American Medical Association in 2016: the institute now holds the position that “meditation can teach you to live in your discomfort, which can ultimately teach your brain to push aside those messages of pain and allow you to feel relief.”

Six years after the 1977 Gateway Intermediate Workbook was prepared, the US Army INSCOM commissioned a report on the Gateway Process from the Monroe Institute.

US Army Lieutenant Colonel Wayne M McDonnell, author astonishing 1983 Pentagon studyrecommended the then-secret process as “a training system designed to bring greater strength, focus and coherence…to alter consciousness.”

“There is a sound and rational basis in terms of physical science parameters for considering Gateway plausible in terms of its essential objectives,” he reported.

Joe McMoneagle – a Vietnam veteran who served as Remote Viewer No1. in one of INSCOM’s paranormal spy programs – is now on the Advisory Board and works as a ‘Gateway’ trainer for the Monroe Institute Today.

The stunning official Pentagon study was conducted to better understand what the military's intelligence colleagues were doing by sending personnel to a small institute in Charlottesville, Virginia - the Monroe Institute - to test the group's 'Gateway Experience'. study.

The stunning official Pentagon study was conducted to better understand what the military’s intelligence colleagues were doing by sending personnel to a small institute in Charlottesville, Virginia – the Monroe Institute – to test the group’s ‘Gateway Experience’. study.

But according to McMoneagle, the Gateway techniques mastered by the Monroe Institute have sometimes caused both pain and relief for the experienced paranormal spy.

In one disturbing case, Remote Viewer No. 1 was instructed to view a distant ‘UFO target’ with his mind’s eye, only to encounter an apparently equally psychic and hostile ‘entity’.

“I felt like something was entering my being and hitting a nerve ending, making me sick immediately,” McMoneagle admitted in an interview from 2021.

“I felt like I was going to project vomit and found myself slamming back into my body while sitting up, and I hit my head on my monitor,” he continued.

Reflecting on the episode, in which he and a colleague both “kept our heads aching,” McMoneagle said his experiences with Gateway’s work forever changed him and his view of the nature of the world.

“You have to ask yourself where reality begins and ends when you get involved in these kinds of things,” he said.

‘For me this experience was very real, but I can only report on it.’