57 lines
3.0 KiB
Plaintext
57 lines
3.0 KiB
Plaintext
SUBJECT: PSYCHIC TRACES IN WITNESSES FILE: UFO1584
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Dan Wright's Newsletter March 21, 1989
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Deputy Director, Investigations
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Mutual UFO Network
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INVESTIGATOR'S EDGE
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Following a prolonged encounter with a glowing bell-shaped object on her
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property, a woman rather suddenly began having precognitive thoughts and
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dreams. Unfamiliar names popped into her mind, only to be used later in the
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day by family members. She proceeded to the phone seconds before it began
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ringing, knowing who was calling. In a vivid dream, someone she knew was
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dying in a house fire, a fact borne out by the next day's newspaper.
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Soon after a lengthy encounter on their farm with small triangular-based
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vehicles, a couple and their best friend (who also witnessed the event)
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gathered one evening and shared a sense of dread that, for whatever reason,
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they would not be getting together again. The next evening, the husband was
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killed in an auto accident.
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These two incidents are not taken from the Time-Life book series we've all
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seen advertised on TV, but rather are from my personal case files. Though we
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cannot begin to adequately explain such occurrences, in some extended close-
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encounters situations, one or more of the witnesses are left with some form of
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ESP. This aspect of UFO experiences has, unfortunately, been rather neglected
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by the investigative community and probably underreported.
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In that a long, involved UFO encounter is likely to take multiple interviews
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and weeks or months to sort out, an ESP/psychic awareness may manifest itself
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if the investigator has the foresight to look for evidence of same. After the
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basic facts of the aerial event have been gathered and one is satisfied that
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the claim is genuine, it is proper to ask (without mentioning anything
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specific) that the witness record any feelings or unusual experiences
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considered out of place. If something does present itself in the encounter's
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aftermath, the witness is likely to ask those questions so common to CE
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episodes generally: "Why me?" and "What does it mean?" If there is no
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indication that the paranormal recountings are delusive, the investigator
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must: (1) be honest in explaining our fundamental ignorance of the basis for
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these effects, (2) refrain from speculating on what might happen as a result,
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(3) assure the person that, it most recorded cases, any paranormal effects
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dissipate over time, and (4) for lack of precise knowledge as to why, try to
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counsel the person to accept it as an inadvertent gift left behind.
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Perhaps most importantly, ensure an open line of communication after the
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investigation is finished. Without any data to support the contention,
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witnesses with this sort of potential would appear ideally suited for repeat
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encounters at some future date.
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* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
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