186 lines
9.2 KiB
Plaintext
186 lines
9.2 KiB
Plaintext
SUBJECT: Alien Abductees by Dr Karla Turner FILE: UFO1015
|
|
|
|
PART 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Alien Abductions in the Gingerbread House"; by Dr. Karla Turner.
|
|
|
|
World renowned UFO researcher Jacques Vallee has repeatedly
|
|
referred to the similarities between UFO and abduction reports and
|
|
the stories of folklore and fairy tales. I disagree with Dr.
|
|
Vallee on many, many points of UFOlogy, but here I will grant that
|
|
there is one fairy tale which does have something important to tell
|
|
us about the alien abduction phenomenon. It is not, however, what
|
|
Dr. Vallee might think.
|
|
|
|
The story of Hansel and Gretel presents a lesson that every
|
|
abductee should heed. These innocent children, wandering lost and
|
|
frightened in the forest, came upon a gingerbread house that seemed
|
|
to offer them shelter and sustenance. The owner of the house, a
|
|
wizened old woman, was frightening to them at first, but their
|
|
hunger pushed the children to accept her offer to come inside and be
|
|
fed.
|
|
|
|
And so they entered the gingerbread house and promptly became
|
|
the old woman's captives. Kept in cages, the two children were
|
|
abundantly fed. It was not for their benefit, though. In fact,
|
|
they were being fattened up for the oven! The deceptive nature of
|
|
the gingerbread house and of the old woman's offer of food worked
|
|
quite well.
|
|
|
|
It is the deceptive quality of this story that holds a warning
|
|
for humans who are abducted by aliens. Like Hansel and Gretel, we
|
|
are initially terrified by our encounter with aliens, but in too
|
|
many cases, our fear is overcome by the words of our abductors and
|
|
by the thoughts and experiences they present to us.
|
|
|
|
I, too, am an abductee, and my quest to discover the nature of
|
|
my own experiences led me into abduction research over the past four
|
|
years. Working with many other abduction cases, I have learned just
|
|
how basic the deception of alien actions can be.
|
|
|
|
My family and I also delved into our own experiences, both past
|
|
and present. Barbara Bartholic, a dedicated UFO investigator from
|
|
Tulsa, Oklahoma, worked closely with us and helped us fill in the
|
|
gaps in our recollections of strange encounters through hypnotic
|
|
regression. Ms. Bartholic, by the way, began her own research as an
|
|
assistant to Jacques Vallee in cattle mutilation investigations, so
|
|
her expertise in ufology is wide-ranging. I have recently written a
|
|
book, Into the Fringe, about the startling and often disturbing
|
|
results of our personal investigations, and it will be published by
|
|
the Berkley Publishing Group in November 1992.
|
|
|
|
But my interest soon expanded past the merely personal, and for
|
|
the past several years I have worked as Ms. Bartholic's research
|
|
associate, exploring literally hundreds of sighting and encounter
|
|
cases with her. And what I've learned through this work has raised
|
|
far more questions than answers. In fact, it has taught me to be
|
|
wary of those researchers who do claim to have answers. I have yet
|
|
to hear of a single theory or explanation that accounts for all of
|
|
the data.
|
|
|
|
Some researchers have pointed out patterns of events in the
|
|
abduction experience, such as the physical examination, the taking of
|
|
sperm and ova, and the later presentation of a hybrid baby to the
|
|
abductee. Other patterns include the training of the abductee in some
|
|
way and the delivery of a warning of some upcoming global disaster.
|
|
Yes, these events are frequently reported, as one researcher has said
|
|
in boringly repetitious accounts, and it is tempting to think that
|
|
the explanation for alien abductions may lie in these patterns.
|
|
|
|
So the researchers announce that the problem is solved. The
|
|
aliens are doing cross-breeding experiments, UFOlogists tell us.
|
|
Never mind the overwhelming evidence against the viable
|
|
commingling of different species. Or, we are told, the aliens are
|
|
here to save us from destroying ourselves and our planet through
|
|
violence, drug use, epidemic disease, pollution, and resource
|
|
depletion. Never mind that these problems have grown worse, not
|
|
better, since the ETs began visiting us.
|
|
|
|
Or, most infuriating of all, we are assured that there are no
|
|
actual aliens, that our experiences spring from our own subconscious
|
|
turmoil or from our need for fantasy fulfillment. Never mind that
|
|
many abductees are young children, too young to be suffering from
|
|
such psychological disturbances. Well, then, the resourceful
|
|
researcher counters, the imagined aliens must spring from some
|
|
collective human super-psyche that is mirroring our failures and
|
|
dangers back to us. This particular theory adores the archetypal
|
|
gray ET, because it resembles some sickly fetal form of humanity and
|
|
must therefore be an objectified warning of what our species is in
|
|
danger of becoming if we don't mend our ways. Never mind that many,
|
|
many abductees have no dealing with grays, but instead are
|
|
victimized by robust reptoids and insectoids. Not to mention the
|
|
totally human-looking blond beauties and black-headed, black-robed
|
|
clan with the widow's peak hairline.
|
|
|
|
No, too many researchers seem to find a theory and cling to it
|
|
in spite of data that contradict it. And it is the ideas of these
|
|
researchers that dominate ufology. But if the public had access to
|
|
the raw data, to the first-hand reports of abductees, especially
|
|
those unfamiliar with UFO-oriented books, magazines, and lecturers,
|
|
they would find a much less neatly organized set of patterns. These
|
|
"virgin" cases--people uncontaminated by ufological literature
|
|
supply a staggering picture of human-alien contact events.
|
|
|
|
What follows here is an overview of these "virgin" reports, a
|
|
list of recurrent experiences that taken together gives us a close-up
|
|
view of what the aliens are doing here on earth. This data doesn't
|
|
tell us for certain just what sort of creatures the aliens are, or
|
|
what their purpose here may be. But it does tell us what humans are
|
|
experiencing and what they are observing in the actions and
|
|
capabilities of the aliens. Every detail in the following list has
|
|
been reported by more than one abductee, and in many cases the
|
|
details have turned up quite frequently.
|
|
|
|
ABDUCTION "CHECKLIST".
|
|
|
|
If these reports can be believed--and there is no reason to
|
|
doubt the honesty of the reporters--the abduction phenomenon
|
|
includes the following details.
|
|
|
|
-- Aliens can alter our perception of our surroundings.
|
|
|
|
-- Aliens can control what we think we see. They can appear to
|
|
us in any number of guises, and shapes.
|
|
|
|
-- Aliens can take us--our consciousness--out of our physical
|
|
bodies, disable our control of our bodies, install one of their own
|
|
entities, and use our bodies as vehicles for their own activities
|
|
before returning our consciousness to our bodies.
|
|
|
|
-- Aliens can be present with us in an invisible state and can
|
|
make themselves only partially visible.
|
|
|
|
-- Abductees receive marks on their bodies other than the
|
|
well-known scoops and straight-line scars. These other marks include
|
|
single punctures, multiple punctures, large bruises, three- and
|
|
four-fingered claw marks, and triangles of every possible sort.
|
|
|
|
-- Females abductees often suffer serious gynecological
|
|
problems after their alien encounters, and sometimes these problems
|
|
lead to cysts, tumors, cancer of the breasts and uterus, and to
|
|
hysterectomies.
|
|
|
|
-- Aliens take body fluids from our necks, spines, blood
|
|
veins, joints such as knees and wrists, and other places. They also
|
|
inject unknown fluids into various parts of our bodies.
|
|
|
|
-- A surprising number of abductees suffer from serious
|
|
illnesses they didn't have before their encounters. These have led
|
|
to surgery, debilitation, and even death from causes the doctors
|
|
can't identify.
|
|
|
|
-- Some abductees experience a degeneration of their mental,
|
|
social, and spiritual well-being. Excessive behavior frequently
|
|
erupts, such as drug abuse, alcoholism, overeating, and promiscuity.
|
|
Strange obsessions develop and cause the disruption of normal life
|
|
and the destruction of personal relationships.
|
|
|
|
-- Aliens show a great interest in adult sexuality, child
|
|
sexuality, and in inflicting physical pain on abductees.
|
|
|
|
-- Abductees recall being instructed and trained by aliens.
|
|
This training may be in the form of verbal or telepathic lessons,
|
|
slide shows, or actual hands-on instruction in the operation of alien
|
|
technology.
|
|
|
|
-- Abductees report being taken to facilities in which they
|
|
encounter not only aliens but also normal-looking humans, sometimes
|
|
in military uniforms, working with the alien captors.
|
|
|
|
-- Abductees often encounter more than one sort of alien
|
|
during an experience, not just the grays. Every possible combination
|
|
of gray, reptoid, insectoid, blond, and widow's peak have been seen
|
|
during single abductions, aboard the same craft or in the same
|
|
facility.
|
|
|
|
-- Abductees--"virgin" cases--report being taken to
|
|
underground facilities where they see grotesque hybrid creatures,
|
|
nurseries of hybrid humanoid fetuses, and vats of colored liquid
|
|
filled with parts of human bodies.
|
|
End of part 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
**********************************************
|
|
* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
|
|
********************************************** |