Robert Snow, Pt 1. - Police Detective proves Reincarnation
Feb 10, 2022, 02:38 AM
Robert Snow believed the indisputable facts of his case made it necessary to go public. The truth is self-evident.
This is a two part interview. Bob covers the details of the past life regression session in the first segment.
38 years with the Indianapolis Police Department, Snow retired in 2007 with the rank of Captain. Author of more than 20 books, his works have also been published by Reader's Digest, Playboy, The National Enquirer and multiple others.
On a fluke, he agreed to a past life regression session. That session opened a window into a reality he would not have imagined in his wildest dream. Following through with the intent to prove the whole thing a pile of poo... it backfired when the "memories" he hoped to debunk began to bear fruit.
Determination, attention to detail and tenacity paid off. His case for reincarnation is rock solid. Of 28 identifiable points for corroboration, all 28 have been confirmed. 100%.
In Pt. 2, he ticks off the "hits" in Carroll Beckwith's 17-thousand-page diary. He also mentions some amazing paranormal events that happened during his time in the Police Department and the downside of going public with his story...
Portrait of a Past-Life Skeptic: The True Story of a Police Detective's Reincarnation,
Amazon.
Amazon Reader Review (Edited): "The fact the author is a police Captain adds credibility to the story and to his investigation of the origin of the vivid memories and specific details he experienced during a regression performed by a hypnotherapist (if you read the book, keep in mind these events happened in the early 1990's before Google and the prolific use of the world wide web). It is also worth noting that CPT Snow was required to take 2 lie detector tests in order to tell his story in the TV program Proof Positive (he passed both)."
The previous book is Looking for Carroll Beckwith: The True Stories of a Detective's Search for His Past Life. Amazon.
Listed on Goodreads, Robert L. Snow answers this question: Can you tell us a two-sentence horror story? An editor from a major publisher told me he loved my book, and we spent a year fine-tuning the manuscript. Then he rejected it.
Follow Robert Snow on Amazon. Link.
Wendy's blog. https://talkingtonightlights.wordpress.com/
38 years with the Indianapolis Police Department, Snow retired in 2007 with the rank of Captain. Author of more than 20 books, his works have also been published by Reader's Digest, Playboy, The National Enquirer and multiple others.
On a fluke, he agreed to a past life regression session. That session opened a window into a reality he would not have imagined in his wildest dream. Following through with the intent to prove the whole thing a pile of poo... it backfired when the "memories" he hoped to debunk began to bear fruit.
Determination, attention to detail and tenacity paid off. His case for reincarnation is rock solid. Of 28 identifiable points for corroboration, all 28 have been confirmed. 100%.
In Pt. 2, he ticks off the "hits" in Carroll Beckwith's 17-thousand-page diary. He also mentions some amazing paranormal events that happened during his time in the Police Department and the downside of going public with his story...
Portrait of a Past-Life Skeptic: The True Story of a Police Detective's Reincarnation,
Amazon.
Amazon Reader Review (Edited): "The fact the author is a police Captain adds credibility to the story and to his investigation of the origin of the vivid memories and specific details he experienced during a regression performed by a hypnotherapist (if you read the book, keep in mind these events happened in the early 1990's before Google and the prolific use of the world wide web). It is also worth noting that CPT Snow was required to take 2 lie detector tests in order to tell his story in the TV program Proof Positive (he passed both)."
The previous book is Looking for Carroll Beckwith: The True Stories of a Detective's Search for His Past Life. Amazon.
Listed on Goodreads, Robert L. Snow answers this question: Can you tell us a two-sentence horror story? An editor from a major publisher told me he loved my book, and we spent a year fine-tuning the manuscript. Then he rejected it.
Follow Robert Snow on Amazon. Link.
Wendy's blog. https://talkingtonightlights.wordpress.com/