271 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
271 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
SUBJECT: ABDUCTED BY ALIENS ? FILE: UFO3018
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
USA Weekend, June 25-27, 1993
|
|
[Editorial correspondence: 1000 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 2229-
|
|
0012]
|
|
|
|
Front cover: ABDUCTED BY ALIENS? Thousands of Americans--including
|
|
Sky Ambrose--say it has happened to them. What's up?
|
|
|
|
by Frank Kuznik
|
|
|
|
(c) 1993 USA Weekend, a division of Gannett Co., Inc.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tens of thousands of seemingly ordinary people have a very strange
|
|
tale to tell involving spaceships and odd-looking creatures. Are they
|
|
getting carried away?
|
|
|
|
Skye Ambrose--yes, that was her name before all this started--says it
|
|
happened 3 1/2 years ago on a remote, moonlit stretch of Colorado
|
|
highway. Enticed by circular flashing lights in the sky, she and a
|
|
friend pulled off Interstate 70, cut the headlights, and then watched
|
|
in disbelief as ethereal black waves began to envelop the car.
|
|
|
|
"Oh my God. What are those?" Skye said to her friend, who had noticed
|
|
something else.
|
|
|
|
"Look! A falling star." The words were barely out of her mouth before
|
|
the star turned into a glowing ball of white light. It stopped above
|
|
a field, hovering no more than 100 feet from the car. As the women
|
|
watched in speechless amazement, two beams of light, brilliant with
|
|
pinks, purples and blues, dropped from the ball to form a shimmering
|
|
"V".
|
|
|
|
"You know those people who say they've been kidnapped by a UFO?"
|
|
Ambrose said weakly to her friend. "Well, that's not going to happen
|
|
to us. We're not getting out of this car!"
|
|
|
|
Suddenly the lights vanished. All at once, the women felt exhausted
|
|
and irritable, their nerves frayed. A short drive brought them to
|
|
Goodland, Kansas, where they found a motel and, inside, unpleasant
|
|
surprises in the bathroom mirror.
|
|
|
|
Ambrose's friend stared in shock at the deep flush tainting her
|
|
normally pale complexion. And Ambrose was equally affected--
|
|
colorless and drawn, with her ordinarily curly hair plastered flat
|
|
against her head.
|
|
|
|
But the worst shock came in the morning, when Ambrose looked at a map
|
|
and realized that it had taken three hours to drive the 72-mile leg
|
|
of the trip on which they had seen the UFO. Even with the stop for
|
|
the encounter, that left nearly two hours unaccounted for. Where had
|
|
they gone?
|
|
|
|
By any rational measure, the idea is absurd: aliens kidnapping people
|
|
to take them aboard flying saucers for bizarre experiments. Space
|
|
creatures used to be the stuff of tabloid headlines, and still are:
|
|
A recent "Weekly World News" ran the story "Hillary Clinton adopts
|
|
alien baby"--with a photo. But these days you can spot aliens, or at
|
|
least serious discussions of them, everywhere from the office of a
|
|
Harvard psychiatrist to high-rated network miniseries. They are the
|
|
subject of talk shows, best-selling books and scholarly debate at
|
|
symposiums--and sometimes they're as close as the neighbor down the
|
|
street, people like 45-year-old Skye Ambrose. She is to speak July
|
|
17-18 at the Seattle UFO Research Conference. Sample topics:
|
|
"Multiple Participant Abductions" and "Analysis: NASA UFOs on Videos."
|
|
|
|
The few mental-health professionals who take the subject seriously
|
|
have found themselves overwhelmed by patients like Ambrose, ordinary
|
|
people who claim no initial interest or belief in UFOs but who
|
|
suddenly seem beset by symptoms that closely resemble post-traumatic
|
|
stress disorder.
|
|
|
|
Even skeptics acknowledge that a growing number of people around the
|
|
globe are convinced that they have had a close encounter of the fourth
|
|
kind (abduction). Indeed, a recent survey by the Roper Organization-
|
|
-commissioned by UFO believers--suggests that one in 50 adult
|
|
Americans, a total of 3.7 million people has had a series of "unusual
|
|
personal experiences" that could point to an abduction.
|
|
|
|
"That number's in the ballpark," insists John Mack, a Harvard Medical
|
|
School psychiatrist currently treating some 60 professed abductees.
|
|
"I was shocked when I saw it. But the more I get into this, the less
|
|
I can account for it with any conventional psychiatric explanation."
|
|
|
|
Most abductees, say sympathetic psychiatrists like Mack, show no sighs
|
|
of mental illness. What typically brings them to a therapist is an
|
|
anxiety they're desperate to identify and overcome. Usually with the
|
|
aid of hypnosis, they're led back through a missing-time experience
|
|
or what they had thought was a dream to discover memories of a
|
|
scenario in which they're taken aboard an alien craft and poked and
|
|
prodded by inscrutable, bug-eyed creatures.
|
|
|
|
That is how Sky Ambrose's tale emerged--under hypnosis by John
|
|
Carpenter, a psychiatric social worker in Springfield, Mo. "After my
|
|
first hypnotic regression," she says, "I could still say to myself
|
|
that I was crazy. But after my friend had her session and came up
|
|
with the same story, separate from me, with so many matching details,
|
|
I couldn't dismiss it as a hallucination."
|
|
|
|
Under hypnosis, Ambrose says, she learned that the beams from the ball
|
|
of light contained two beings, perhaps 5 1/2 feet tall, thin, white,
|
|
and virtually featureless except for two huge, dark eyes. They
|
|
floated the women to an enormous craft in the sky, then took them to
|
|
a small, circular room in which Ambrose's friend underwent surgery.
|
|
What resembled a small computer chip with tiny hooks or feelers was
|
|
implanted deep within her nose. Alarmed at first, Ambrose found
|
|
herself being calmed, she says, by two aliens who rubbed and stroked
|
|
her head, and a third with glittering eyes that held her entranced.
|
|
Both women then were taken before the tallest of beings, who
|
|
telepathically assured them that the aliens meant no harm.
|
|
|
|
"He communicated that they're the guardians of Earth and have been for
|
|
millions of years," says Ambrose. "They're working with people who
|
|
have chosen to do this work with them." Then, the women say, they
|
|
were returned to their car, with no memory of their abduction. The
|
|
friend says she later suffered nosebleeds as a result of the implant
|
|
but has never had a medical examination to detect it.
|
|
|
|
Other than an alien invasion, what might account for the abduction
|
|
phenomenon? Skeptics note that these stories are contemporary
|
|
variations on age-old themes and scenarios. "Abduction delusions
|
|
[abound] in folklore," says Robert Baker, a University of Kentucky
|
|
professor emeritus. "Since the Middle Ages, people have been abducted
|
|
by dragons, ogres, leprechauns, fairies, and so on. They're not
|
|
crazy; they're victims of what are commonly known as 'waking dreams,'
|
|
delusions you have when you're in a hypnopompic [waking up] or
|
|
hypnogogic [falling asleep] state."
|
|
|
|
Most abduction stories begin in bed, with the victim being awakened
|
|
by beings who magically slip into the bedroom, transport their
|
|
paralyzed victim through solid walls and seldom leave any signs of
|
|
their visit. This bears a striking resemblance to the phenomenon of
|
|
sleep paralysis, a well-documented but poorly understood state in
|
|
which one is awake but still paralyzed by the neurological mechanism
|
|
that inhibits muscle tone during sleep. "Almost 90 percent of the
|
|
time, sleep paralysis is accompanied by a certainty that there is
|
|
something threatening in the room with you," says David Hufford, the
|
|
author of the book "The Terror That Comes in the Night."
|
|
|
|
And there are other caveats. Some researchers say that scenarios of
|
|
being held against one's will and physically violated suggest masked
|
|
memories of childhood abuse. Nor does the fact that two people report
|
|
experiences stand as corroboration, according to critics. "It's very
|
|
easy for two people to have the same kind of hallucinatory experience
|
|
at the same time, then reinforce each other," says the University of
|
|
Kentucky's Baker. What's more, "it's been demonstrated that you can
|
|
hypnotize people who don't claim to have been abducted, tell them they
|
|
have had an abduction experience, and they'll report the same thing
|
|
that so-called real abductees report."
|
|
|
|
Yet even doubts are fascinated. "I, myself, don't believe" in
|
|
abductions by aliens, says Laurence Goldstein, author of "The Flying
|
|
Machine and Modern Literature." "But to say something is imaginary
|
|
is not to say it's unreal: the imagination is a real faculty that can
|
|
penetrate to truth. Flying saucers are ... authentic manifestations
|
|
of anxieties. Therefore, we don't want to just dismiss the whole
|
|
controversy as ridiculous. We want to ask why these things are going
|
|
on."
|
|
|
|
The first rash of UFO sightings in this country happened nearly a
|
|
century ago, and some observers see a similar case of millennial fever
|
|
in today's outbreak of abduction reports, "that sense of some
|
|
apocalyptic cycle in history impending and the fear of being taken
|
|
over by some powerful alien force." Goldstein says, "Back then, it
|
|
culminated in H.G. Wells "War of the Worlds." We have abductions, and
|
|
films like "Aliens."
|
|
|
|
Goldstein sees the "alien invasion" as a reflection of everything
|
|
from an us-vs.-them fear of illegal immigrants (aliens) to the loss
|
|
of privacy in the 1990s (the invasion of personal space). But the
|
|
biggest theme, he says, is the end of one era--the Cold War--
|
|
coinciding with the start of a millennium. "That sense of some new
|
|
cycle about to begin is symbolized by a terror of the alien taking
|
|
over. ... Americans are ambivalent about the future, and that shows
|
|
up in UFOs."
|
|
|
|
Skye Ambrose, for one, insists that her experience is no metaphor.
|
|
In contrast to the many abductees who feel trapped and frightened by
|
|
their encounters, she embraced and explored hers. The results have
|
|
been dramatic, she says. "It's like going through reincarnation, and
|
|
within that I'm not quite 4 years old."
|
|
|
|
Ambrose left her career in real estate sales and marketing and is not
|
|
a massage therapist. She says she has replaced the fear, insecurity
|
|
and tension in her life with spiritual growth. She's writing a book
|
|
about her abduction experiences, and learning more about the aliens'
|
|
grand designs for evolutionary mid-wifery. "I know now that I chose
|
|
to go through this. I'm cooperating with a universal purpose."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SIDEBAR:
|
|
|
|
ABDUCTED? AUTHOR SAYS NO
|
|
|
|
Former New York Times science editor Walter Sullivan outlines signs
|
|
of extraterrestrial life in a revised edition of his "We Are Not
|
|
Alone: The Continuing Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence"
|
|
(Dutton, $23), in stores this week. In a Q&A with USA Weekends's
|
|
Richard Vega:
|
|
|
|
Q: Do you believe in life on other planets?
|
|
A: Of course, of course.
|
|
|
|
Q: Have extraterrestrial beings ever visited Earth?
|
|
A: There is a possibility, but not in recent times.
|
|
|
|
Q: Will we ever have contact with alien creatures?
|
|
A: Oh, absolutely. That's the whole justification for the SETI
|
|
[Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) program. That's a big
|
|
program--something like $10 million a year is being put into that by
|
|
the [U.S.] government, the theory being that the distances are so
|
|
great that travel may be impractical. But radio, of course, is far
|
|
cheaper.
|
|
|
|
Q: Have people ever been taken aboard UFOs?
|
|
A: I think it's imaginary. People hallucinate and believe this sort
|
|
of thing. It may be commercial in some cases; they want a good story
|
|
to sell. But with most of them, I don't think that's true. They
|
|
sincerely imagined this thing.
|
|
|
|
Q: As long as you believe in extraterrestrial life, why not also
|
|
believe in the UFO abduction phenomenon?
|
|
A: Suppose you were from another civilization, and you could do what
|
|
we cannot do, which is travel at the speed of light. Your
|
|
civilization is probably 100 light years away. That means it would
|
|
take you 100 years to come here. You are not going to suddenly carry
|
|
off some girl and give her an experience and bring her back. You are
|
|
going to manifest yourself in a more convincing way.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
EXTRATERRESTRIAL INTELLIGENCE: A CALL-IN
|
|
|
|
As scientists debate life elsewhere in the universe, and UFO stories
|
|
make headlines, we want to know what you think (touch-tone telephone
|
|
users only):
|
|
|
|
1. Do you believe intelligent beings exist elsewhere in the universe?
|
|
|
|
YES, press 1 NO, press 2
|
|
|
|
2. Do you believe space aliens have visited Earth, now or in the
|
|
past?
|
|
|
|
YES, press 1 NO, press 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
CALL 1-900-225-5872
|
|
|
|
A call costs 29 cents, the price of a stamp. One call per household,
|
|
please; duplicate calls won't count. Callers under age 18 must have
|
|
a parent's or guardian's permission. The lines are open from 6 a.m.
|
|
Friday to 12 midnight Tuesday, Eastern time. If you can't call, write
|
|
your vote on a postcard and mail it by July 5 to: "Aliens", USA
|
|
Weekend, 1000 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 22229. Watch for results
|
|
later this summer in USA Weekend.
|
|
|
|
|
|
-- end of article --
|
|
|
|
|
|
**********************************************
|
|
* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
|
|
********************************************** |