1551 lines
91 KiB
Plaintext
1551 lines
91 KiB
Plaintext
SUBJECT: ALIEN ABDUCTION OR ALIEN PRODUCTIONS? FILE: UFO3057
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ALIEN ABDUCTION OR ALIEN PRODUCTIONS?: SOME NOT SO UNUSUAL PERSONAL
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EXPERIENCES.
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by Robert A. Baker Lexington, KY October 1992
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Recently, proponents of and believers in the reality of alien
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abductions Hopkins (1987), Jacobs (1992), Striber (1987) and the
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authors of the report _Unusual Personal Experiences: An Analysis of the
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Data From Three National Surveys_ (1992) have engaged in an intensive
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and far-reaching media blitz designed to convince the American populace
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that not only have millions of men, women, and children in this nation
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been abducted but that we, as a people, are powerless to do anything
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about it. Moreover, the Alien Abduction believers (AA) also consider
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this mystery to be on a par with the mystery of the origin of the
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universe, the mystery of man's destiny, and the mystery of life itself.
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Such an unusual belief and the accompanying argumant for a profound
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mystery is not only astounding enough in this day and age but it is
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amplified by such mind-boggling claims as "one out of every fifty adult
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American may have had UFO abduction experiences, "(Bigelow, 1992, pg.
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15) and "many of the presenting symptoms offered by these patients
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(alleged abductees) can only be satisfacorily explained by assuming
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that their abduction recollections have an objective reality."
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(Bigelow, 1992, pg. 11).
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Not only are such statements gross exaggerations and patently false but
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they also clearly reveal an amazing level of naivete and an absence of
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understanding of some of the intracacies and subtleties of normal human
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behavior. On the contrary, most of the presenting symptoms reported by
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the alleged abductees _can_ be satisfactorily accounted for without
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resorting to the highly improbable and physically unsubstantiated
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claims of abduction by alien spaceships. In fact, each and every one of
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the reported symptoms of an alien abduction as chronicled in the
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Bigelow report are in no way unique or unexplained. They are in fact,
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"Old Hat."(Even better, perhaps, "Old Hag" cf. Hufford 1982). They are
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quite familiar and very well known by many trained and experienced
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clinicians, students of anomolous behavior, and all medical
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practitioners interested in sleep disorders. For students of sleep
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disorders, hypnosis and suggestion, iatrogenesis, memory aberrations,
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and hallucinatory phenomena there is nothing whatsoever puzzling or
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unexplained. The argument by the AA proponents that "no current medical
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or psychiatric explanation for these accounts has proved viable" is
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flatly untrue. The corollary AA claim that "there is virtually no
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mention of these events in the literature of mental illness" is not
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only mistaken but shows an obvious ignorance of the medical literature.
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Under the current MEDLINE RECORD on hallucinations, for example, there
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are over 500 entries for the years 1990- through September 1992. AA
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believers are correct, however, if they have scanned the current
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psychological and psychiatric literature for entries bearing the
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headings or titles such as "alien abductions," UFO contacts, demon
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possession, extraterrestial rape, or exogenous interspecies breeding."
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If, however, the AA proponents will look under the category of Sleep
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Disorders they will find 500 MEDLINE entries(1990-1992) and 32
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entries(1989-92) for sleep paralysis. Perusal of these items will be of
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value with regard to alleged abductions by aliens and other such
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nighttime visitors.
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Nevertheless, at the moment, AA believers are proposing a cluster of
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key behavioral indicators which, they argue, when taken together
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constitute a syndrome common to all cases of abductions by aliens. The
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alien abduction syndrome (AAS) indicators and their prevalence are as
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follows: 1) Nearly one adult in five has wakened up paralyzed with the
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sense of a strange figure or presence in the room; 2) Nearly one adult
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in eight has experienced a period of an hour or more in which he or she
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was apparently lost but could not remember why; 3) One adult in ten has
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felt the experience of actually flying through the air without knowing
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why or how; 4) One adult in twelve has seen unusual lights or balls of
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light in a room without understanding what was causing them; 5) One
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adult in twelve has discovered puzzling scars on his or her body
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without remembering how or where they were acquired. (Bigelow, 1992,
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pgs. 14-15). According to the _Unusual Personal Experiences Report_
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cited earlier apparently 2 percent of the American adults sampled
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reported having had four or five of these "strong indicators" sometime
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in their lives. On this basis the AA believers have concluded that one
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out of every fifty adult Americans probably has suffered an "alien
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abduction." The AA enthusiasts also maintain that the typical abductee
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coming to therapy enters therapy "with complaints about anxiety,
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depression, phobias, or a pattern of frightening dreams. The patient
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might also be bothered about an incident involving an unexplained time
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gap in memory. In many respects the patient might present symptoms
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typical of post-traaumatic stress disorder. However, patients will
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often withold memories of the more bizarre UFO-related events, either
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out of fear they will be rejected or because the patients do not
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connect them with the symptoms. One woman known to Hopkins stated she
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had been in therapy for seven years and yet said nothing to her
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therapist about her consciously remembered UFO experiences. This
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reticience is not unusual. these patients might also have dreams or
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vague rememberances of such images as hospital operating rooms, bright
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lights, huge-eyed alien beings, or even 'impossible' animals such as
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very large owls or spiders. Careful questioning--especially under
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hypnosis--may reveal that patients have specific memories of having
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been immobilized by impassive alien beings who remove them, typically
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from a car or home, and then transport them into a UFO..." (Bigelow
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Report, 1992 pgs. 10-11). During adolescence and beyond, the abductions
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are likely to continue with increasing attention to the genitals and
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abdomen...Many such accounts from both male and female abductees
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suggest that reproduction experiments are central to the abduction
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experience...A variety of abduction locations have been described...In
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a majority, however, the abductees awake in bed, fully aware of their
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surroundings, but physically paralyzed to such a degree that they may
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not even be able to move their eyes. This state of paralysis often
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continues for several minutes. The abductees usually sense a presence
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in the room but very often actually see one or more diminutive,
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large-eyed figures standing beside the bed...Abductees may then be
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walked or floated toward a landed UFO, but very often they recall
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rising up in mid-air toward the bottom of a hovering UFO. This latter
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experience is often recalled later as a 'flying dream' in which the
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landscape below is remembered in vivid, accurate detail.(Bigelow, 1992,
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pg. 12)...Abduction experiences are often accompanied by inexplicable
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humming, beeping or puzzling sounds which, though perceived by the
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abductee, are usually inaudible to others in the same vicinity. Unusual
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visual phenomena, such as bright lights or floating, maneuvering balls
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of light inside one's room are also reported frequently." (op cit. pg.
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13).
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Although a number of additional unusual or anomolous events unique to
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the particular abductee have been reported by the AA believers, the
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above experiences seem to encompass the most common reports of the
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"abduction experience" and make up into the "abduction syndrome" (AS).
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Now let us see if there is any explanation for such unusual events and
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personal experiences _other than_ an actual UFO abduction by
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extraterrestial or interdimensional humanoid-like aliens.
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SLEEP PARALYSIS AND HYPNOGOGIC AND HYPNOPOMPIC HALLUCINATIONS
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Students of the sleep disorders are _very_ familiar with an unusual but
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non-pathological condition known as sleep paralysis (SP). SP is not a
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disease although it may often be mistaken for one especially when it is
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accompanied by nocturnal angina or nocturnal asthma. SP always occurs
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during the transition period between sleep and wakefullness and if the
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paralysis manifests itself as one is falling asleep it is called
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_hypnogogic_(predormital). If the paralysis occurs as one is waking up
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it is called _hypnopompic_ (postdormital). In both cases the subject is
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fully aware of his condition and is unable to move any of the voluntary
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muscles or speak. The paralysis may last for only a few seconds or for
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several minutes. The paralysis is terminated instantly whenever the
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subject moves any muscle or is touched by someone. The experience is
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nearly always accompanied by a feeling of anxiety or dread, acute
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tachycardia (rapid heart rate), dyspnea (difficult or labored
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breathing), and the sensation of a heavy weight pressing on the chest.
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The paralysis is frequently accompanied by auditory hallucinations such
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as heavy footsteps, noises of heavy objects being dragged, voices,
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humming, buzzing or ringing sounds as well as extremely vivid visual
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hallucinations particularly of people, demons, ghosts, animals, birds,
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et.al., being present in the bedroom. Of particular interest is the
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fact that all of these hallucinations are _superimposed on the reality
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of the room and the unusual situation the experiencer is in._ Therefore
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they _seem to be very real_ (liddon, 1967).
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As to the etiology of SP and it accompanying hypnopompic hallucinations
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(HH) the exact cause is unknown but the SP and HH syndrome is closely
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associated with disrupted sleep-wake cycles, periods of high stress,
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excessive alcohol and drug consumption, sleeping in unfamiliar or
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unusual places, and it is also known to be associated with narcolepsy
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(sudden short uncontrollable spells of sleep) but it can occur as an
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isolated and independent event in normal and healthy individuals
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(schneck, 1960). As for its prevalence, a number of seperate and
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independent studies have shown an occurance rate between 8.1 and 41
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percent in selected populations (Payn, 1965, Penn, et.al., 1981,
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Bell, et.al., 1984, and Fukuda, et.al., 1987). While it is more common
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in females and among divorcees and widowers and is strongly correlated
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with poor health, there is no sizeable correlation with age, race,
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education, or the size of the community (Sours, 1963).
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HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF THE SP AND HH SYNDROME
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In earlier times attacks of sleep paralysis were known as incubus (male
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demon) or succubus (female demon) attacks. The Latin word _incubus_
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means "one who presses or crushes". Ancient philosophers considered
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these attacks to be caused by indigestion and recommended fasting as a
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way to control them (Rehm, 1991). Descriptions of such demons leaping
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onto one's chest and choking the sleeper are reported by Horace,
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Plutarch, Herodotus, and Galen. In the early middle Ages the
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Judeo-Christian literature contained many stories of lustful angels
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visiting sleepers and engaging in intercourse. Even Saint Augustine
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(354-430AD) confirmed the existence of the incubi and the succubi and
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stated "These attacks are affirmed by persons of such indutitable
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honesty that it would be impudence to deny it." (Rehm, 1991) In German
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folklore the demon was called Grendal or "the grinder" and Slavic
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folklore refers to the demon Vjek who "lies down on the unsuspecting
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sleeper and compresses his chest." In general, these attacks are
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considered as "nightmares" and the Scandinavian term "mara", the Greek
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term "mora", the Bohemian word "murra", the Anglosaxon "moere", the
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French word "cauchemar", and our own English "nightmare" are all
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realted. It is also of interest to note that Thomas Aquinas in the 13th
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century believed that demons became succubi in order to extract sperm
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from men and use it to impregnate women when they took the form of
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incubi. Moreover, not only did the Medeival church accept these demons
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as real but their existence provided a most convenient explanation for
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embarassingly pregnant nuns, still born or defective infants, and so
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on. These nightmarish demon attacks not only flourished throughout the
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15th, 16th, and 17th centuries but have continued unabated into our own
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time as alien abductions and intergalactic breeding experiments.
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Moreover, as one might expect, sleep paralysis and hypnopompic and
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hypnogogic demon attacks are a very popular literary theme. They have
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been described in great detail by writers from Edgar Allan Poe, Thomas
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Hardy, Guy de Maupassant, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Isaac
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Singer, Alex Munthe, J.R.R. Tolkien, Matthew G. Lewis and in our own
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time by Stephan King and Peter Straub. To illustrate the similarity
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between the fictional and factual accounts of this phenomena let us
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look first at Straub's fictional account taken from his 1979 novel,
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_Ghost Story_:
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"When sleep finally came to Ricky Henderson, it was as if he were
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not merely dreaming, but had in fact been lifted bodily and still
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awake into another room...He did not know how he knew it, but he
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knew that something was going to happen, and that he was afraid of
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it. He was unable to leave the bed; but even if his muscles were
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working, he knew with the same knowledge that he would be unable to
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escape whatever was coming...Beneath [the quilt], his legs lay
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paralysed...When Ricky looked up, he realized that he could see
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every detail of the wooden planks on the wall with a more than usual
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clarity...as he listened, he heard some complex form dragging itself
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out of the cellar...Ricky tried again to force his legs to move, but
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the two lumps of fabric did not even twitch...The noises from
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downstairs were suddenly louder - he could hear the thing
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breathing...Ricky's face was wet with perspiration. What most
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firghtened him was that he couldn't be sure if he were dreaming or
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not...But it did not feel at all like a dream. His senses were
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alert, his mind was clear, the entire experience lacked the rather
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disembodied, disconnected atmosphere of a dream...And if he was wide
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awake, then the thing banging and thundering on the stairs was going
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to get him, because he couldn't move."
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-- from _Ghost Story_
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Peter Straub, 1979
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For the actual account let us now turn to Dr, Ronald Siegel's
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description of his own personal experience with the SP and HH syndrome:
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"I was awakened by the sound of my bedroom door opening. I was on my
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side and able to see the luminescent dial of the alarm clock. It was
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4:20 A.M. I heard footsteps approaching my bed, then heavy
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breathing. There seemed to be a murky presence in the room. I tried
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to throw off the covers and get up, but I was pinned to the bed.
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There was a weight on my chest. The more I struggled, the more I was
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unable to move. My heart was pounding. I strained to breathe.
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The presence got closer, and I caught a whiff of a dusty odor. The
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smell seemed old, like something that had been kept in an attic too
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long. The air itself was dry and cool, reminding me of the inside of
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a cave.
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Suddenly a shadow fell on the clock. _Omigod! This is no joke!_
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SOmething touched my neck and arm. A voice whispered in my ear. Each
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word was expelled from a mouth foul with tobacco. The language
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sounded strange, almost like English spoken backward. It didn't make
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any sense. Somehow the words gave rise to images in my mind (ESP). I
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saw rotting swamps full of toadstools, hideous reptiles, and other
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mephitic horrors. In my bedroom I could see only a shadow looming
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over my bed. I was terrified...
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I signaled my muscles to move, but the presence immediately exerted
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all its weight on my chest. The weight spread through my body,
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gluing me to the bed. I was paralyzed. Still on my side, I was
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unable to turn my neck to see what was setting on me. I looked at
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the clock on the night table. It was still ticking audibly. Next to
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the clock was the book I had been reading. A library card--my card
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complete with coffee stains--marked my place. My eyes scanned the
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wall. I saw a spot I had been meaning to fix because the paint had
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peeled. In the corner was a cactus plant I had been nuturing for
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years. This was definitely my bedroom and it looked normal. I was
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aware of my surroundings, oriented, and awake. _This is no dream!
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This is really happening!_
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A hand grasped my arm and held it tightly. The intruder was doing
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the reality testing on me! The hand felt cold and dead...
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Then part of the mattress next to me caved in. Someone climbed onto
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the bed! The presence shifted its weight and straddled my body,
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folding itslef along the curve of my back. I heard the bed start to
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creak. There was a texture of sexual intoxication and terror in the
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room.
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Throughout it all, I was forced to listen to the intruder's
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indeterminable whispering. The voice sounded female. I _knew_ it was
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evil. It said something that sounded like
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'Deelanor...Deelanor'(Ronald spelled backwards). The intruder's
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heavy gelatinous body was crushing the life out of me. It was like
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breathing through a thin straw...Now the intruder was squeezing me
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like a soda straw. My childhood fear of suffocation was returning. I
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started to lose consciousness. Suddenly the voice stopped. I sensed
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the intruder moving slowly out of the room. Gradually the pressure
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on my chest eased. It was 4:30 AM
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I sprang out of bed, grabbed a flashlight, and turned toward the
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bedroom door. There was nothing there...(pgs. 83-85, Fire In The
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Brain, 1992)
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Dr. Ronald Siegel, the narrator of this experience is an outstanding
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psychologist, a distinguished University professor, and a
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world-renowned authority on the effects of drugs on behavior. Yet, he
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was so disturbed by this experience that he was in a dazed state most
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of the following day and was so intrigued by it that he spent several
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days looking into its cause and nature. because his perceptions of the
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clock and other items in his bedroom he felt there had to be _something
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real_ about the presence attacking him. He though at first it was just
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a bad dream or an anxiety dream. SInce these typically happen _before_
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awakening occurs, it could not explain how his experience began _after_
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his awakening. He then thought that it might have been a "night
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terror", i.e., a spontaneous awakening from sleep followed by
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physiological signs of extreme fear: tachycardia, rapid breathing, and
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heavy persiration. Yet, where the sleeper usually screams in panic or
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walks or runs out of the room, Siegel was paralyzed. Moreover, people
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rarely remember night terrors and, since they occur in non-REM
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(rapid-eye-movement-) sleep, they are not dreams per se, but the result
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of a failure to control one's anxiety after being suddenly awakened
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from deep sleep. Finally, night terrors are almost exclusively found in
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children not adults. Siegel finally concluded that he had, indeed,
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suffered from the well-known sleep paralysis phenomenon accomapnied by
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a hypnopompic hallucination. In his analysis and elucidation of this
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experience Siegel stresses that it is of the utmost importance to fully
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understand that with the right set, with the accompanying expectations
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and attitudes in the right setting--the physical and psychological
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environment--a false perception can have the full force and impact of
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reality. In his words, "True hallucinations are strictly mental
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creations. The mental elements-- the images, thoughts, fantasies,
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memories, and dreams are the only building blocks necessary for the
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construction of the final perception." (Fire In The Brain, pg. 96).
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There is, indeed, a fine line between mental experiences such as
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thoughts and between fantasies, dreams, and hallucinations and, for
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many people, these experiences can evolve or change into one another. A
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dream, upon awakening, can easily become an hallucination. Similarly, a
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thought as we are falling asleep can change into a dream. The internal
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perceptual mechanisms are very much alike and, in many situations, it
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is very difficult to tell whether the perception is real or illusory.
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Normally, real perceptions are more salient, more vivid, much clearer
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and are easily recognized as being due to an external rather than an
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internal stimulus. Neither can you change them by an act of will.
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Mental events that have these qualities (and many mental events we
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experience as the result of drugs, dreams, sleep deprivation, excessive
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stress, starvation, as well as SP and HH states do have similiar
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qualities) are almost impossible to distinguish from true perceptions.
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If someone as sophisticated and knowledgeable as Dr. SIegel had
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difficulty in recognizing the hallucination for what is was, what can
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we assume about those experiencers who are much much more naive? It is
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very easy to understand why they would be haunted and disturbed and,
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perhaps, even believe they were going crazy. It is also easily seen why
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they would repress such a frightening and unexplainable experience,
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avoid thinking about it, and evince--at a later date--symptoms
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equivalent to post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
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SP with the accompanying hallucination is a most frightening ordeal.
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The physical changes accompanying SP are open eyes, muscular paralysis,
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and respiratory difficulties. The sufferer is often pale, anxious, and
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afraid and is subject to highly erotic sensations. He or she is totally
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unable to move or to engage in voluntary movements of any kind despite
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the fact that he or she is awake, aware, and conscious. The paralysis
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is, indeed, a terrifying experience and one that is fully remembered at
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a later date. It is while the victim is caught up in the paralysis that
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the hallucinatory visions appear. In the hypnopompic state the brain is
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unable to instantly switch from the dreaming state to the waking state.
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At this time those brain circuits activated by the dreams continue to
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send signals--which could be the images of a ghost(most frequently), a
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demon (such as in the incubus and succubus or "old hag" attacks- This
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is the term that the folklorist David J. Hufford 1982 and others use to
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describe the SP and HH hallucinatory phenomenon) or an extraterrestial
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alien--to the cerebral cortex where the frontal lobes assume the
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signals are coming from the outside world rather than from within.
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While in this "waking dream" state the dreamer sees, hears, feels, and
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smells things that _are actually there_ in the environment. The real
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environment stimuli then become entangled with the dream stimuli and
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then both the true and the false perceptions are organized in such a
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manner that the brain assumes that it is wide awake when it is,
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actually, still asleep and dreaming. Moreover, awakening in a state of
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SP can cause one to hyperventilate and then feel a tightness or
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heaviness in the chest. The hyperventilation then diminsihes the supply
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of oxygen going to the brain and the lack of oxygen then produces
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_hyperacusis_, i.e., a condition in which ordinary sounds seem to be
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unusually loud. Then, even the slightest noise will cause the dreamer
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to experience numerous auditory hallucinations such as footsteps,
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garbled voices, heavy breathing, buzzing, humming, clanks, and bangs
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and so forth. If the oxygen supply is further restricted, the sexual
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pleasure centers in the brain are stimulated. Knowledge of this
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phenomena is often used in auto-erotic aphyxia, i.e., the practice of
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tying a rope around the neck during masturbation in order to heighten
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the orgasm. It is also why the AA syndrome is replete with images of
|
|
alien rape, probing of sex organs, and so forth. frequently, this sort
|
|
of sexual arousal is carried over from REM sleep and, in the male,
|
|
usually results in penile erection. Many autonomic nervous system
|
|
changes also occur, including changes in skin temperature and skin
|
|
resistance which give rise to tingling sensations, sensations of cold,
|
|
as well as the strong emotional responses of fear and panic. These
|
|
emotional effects give rise to heightened sensitivity to minor
|
|
environmental stimuli that, under normal circumstances, would usually
|
|
be ignored. The emotion of fear causes the pupils to dilate and then
|
|
even the most simple and innocent of shadows become monsters, ghosts,
|
|
demons, or threatening aliens.
|
|
|
|
THE HYPNOGOGIC STATE
|
|
|
|
In the hypnogogic state a number of equally frightening events can
|
|
occur. First, as one begins to fall asleep there is a significant
|
|
reduction of proprioceptive impulses coming from the relaxing
|
|
musculature. On occasions, when one is falling asleep this sudden
|
|
reduction is interpreted by the brain as a loss of balance as one is
|
|
startled awake. Further relaxation, as one continues to fall asleep,
|
|
causes a decrease in the amplitude and frequency of the brain waves as
|
|
the alpha waves of wakefullness are progressively replaced by the
|
|
slower theta waves. As a direct result of the loss of bodily sensation,
|
|
the hypnogogic dreamer begins to feel that he is floating through space
|
|
or that he no longer has a body, or that he is a free-floating mind or
|
|
awareness without a body, i.e. he has an "out-of-body" experience
|
|
(OOBE). This is why that many believers in the AA syndrome report
|
|
floating from their beds into a UFO and floating through walls and so
|
|
on. Usually accompanying this sensation is a loss of volition control
|
|
and a sense of paralysis, eg., if _there is no body there is nothing to
|
|
move._
|
|
|
|
Descending further into sleep and the hypnogogic dream state a number
|
|
of unusual images will often appear. these dream images most often
|
|
begin with flashes of or balls of light, that seem to be swelling and
|
|
growing larger as they approach the dreamer. No matter what form or
|
|
shape the images take, they are most frequently reported as round or
|
|
oval and they appear to expand in size the longer the dreamer observes
|
|
them. Known in the clinical literature as the _Isakower phenomenon_
|
|
this unusual but fairly common experience is named after the Austrian
|
|
psychoanalyst who first described its clinical characteristics
|
|
(Isakower, 1938). This phenomenon can occur while falling asleep or
|
|
upon awakening and may be accompanied by a gritty sensation around the
|
|
mouth as well as a milky or salty taste (Asaad, 1990). Many
|
|
psychoanalysts believe the experience represents an awakening of early
|
|
nursing experiences but Cavenar and Caudill (1979) suggest that it
|
|
merely reflects anxiety due to oral frustration or that it is simply an
|
|
association with dreams caused by anxiety or stress (Stern, 1961). Stern
|
|
also describes a condition known as _blank hallucinations_ which are
|
|
|
|
"stereotyped sensory perceptions without appropriate external
|
|
stimuli. Lacking any content related to persons, objects, or events
|
|
they are close to elementary hallucinations as which we designate
|
|
such unformed perceptions as sparks, lightening streaks, cloudlike
|
|
phenomena, etc...They differ in intensity, frequency, and duration,
|
|
to full hallucinations (or even pseudo-hallucinations, i.e.
|
|
hallucinations which are recognized as such but not perceived with
|
|
sensory distinctness). They may last a few seconds, or minutes, or
|
|
hours, or months...When awake the patient is usually aware of the
|
|
hallucinatory character of the phenomena (pseudo-hallucinations)."
|
|
(pg. 205)
|
|
|
|
Stern also notes that many hallucinatory phenomena of this nature,
|
|
i.e., sensations as dizziness, being engulfed by vague cloudy masses,
|
|
changes in body feelings, feeling of falling and sinking or floating,
|
|
distortions of space perception are strikingly identical with those
|
|
reported by patients with organic vestibular disturbances; they are
|
|
always felt as imminent death.
|
|
|
|
One of my own clients, after reading both Streiber's _Communion_ and
|
|
Hopkins _Intruders_ a few days later woke up and saw a tattletale gray
|
|
face glowing on the wall over his dresser. A few minutes later,
|
|
following a brief period of sleep, the image of the face reappeared. In
|
|
his words, "The face was a little bigger than mine. It glowed and had
|
|
large almond-shaped, jet black eyes bulginf out of its forehead. The
|
|
eyes had no pupils and the face did not look at me straight-on, it was
|
|
turned a little to the right. I was so mesmerized by the eyes I don't
|
|
recall any other feature other than vertical wrinkles on its cheeks
|
|
giving him a creepy creepy look." Over a period of several months the
|
|
client saw images of a dead deer, a red haze, a dog's face, a cascade
|
|
of bubbles all over the wall at the foot of his bed, numerous white
|
|
glows at his window, flashes of light, a Santa Claus figure, rabbits, a
|
|
pig's head, geometrical figures both in color and black and white--as
|
|
well as monkeys and numerous faces of both men and women. Of further
|
|
interest is the fact that his son also reported both hypnopompic and
|
|
hypnogogic dreams as well as the Isakower phenomena on at least two
|
|
occasions. Physical and mental exams of both the client and his son
|
|
could find nothing amiss. Both were, in every way, normal nad healthy.
|
|
Perhaps the most interesting aspect of all were the drawings my client
|
|
made of the "tattletale gray faces"; all were almost identical to the
|
|
cover illustration on Streiber's _Communion_. It is abundantly clear
|
|
that as Siegel has noted, "the drowsy person on the hypnogogic state is
|
|
just as open to suggestions as subjects in the hypnotized state."
|
|
|
|
Before leaving the topic of sleep paralysis it might be wise to look at
|
|
another common form of complete or partial muscular paralysis
|
|
(technically known as cataplexy) that is also associated with
|
|
narcolepsy mentioned earlier. Dr. William C. Dement, an authority on
|
|
sleep disorders, notes that people who suffer from narcolepsy also
|
|
suffer from cataplexy. Cataplectics are fully aware and are aware of
|
|
what is going on around them but are simply unable to move. These sort
|
|
of attacks can occur at any time, but most often occur when the victim
|
|
is emotionally aroused. People have fallen victim to cataplexy while
|
|
playing baseball, making love, or watching TV or a movie. While they
|
|
are wide awake they are totally unable to move a muscle. After a few
|
|
minutes of relaxation and calm, however, they usually gain full
|
|
muscular control. In the early 1960s, however, Dement and his
|
|
colleagues discovered that narcoleptic patients begin their night's
|
|
sleep by moving immediately from wafefullness into the
|
|
rapid-eye-movement (REM) or dreaming phase of sleep, rather than into
|
|
the non-rapid-eye-movement(NREM) phase (Dement, 1976). Therefore it is
|
|
clear that the hypnogogic hallucinations are vivid dreams associated
|
|
with periods of REM sleep. Dement was also able to explain the
|
|
mysterious attacks of sleep paralysis and cataplexy. We have known for
|
|
a long time that during REM periods of normal sleep the brain exerts a
|
|
powerful inhibitory influence that paralyzes the arms, legs, and trunk
|
|
of the sleeper. This paralysis allows us to have vivid dreams and still
|
|
remain asleep. If the intense activity of the dreaming brain were not
|
|
blocked at the level of the spinal cord by a strong inhibitory effect,
|
|
the sleeper would literally jump out of bed and carry out his dream
|
|
fantasies. Spinal inhibition has to be quite strong to keep the muscles
|
|
in check. Most of the time all we notice is an occasional twitch or
|
|
spasmodic jerk. Another regulatory mechanism, keeps the inhibitory
|
|
force in check while we are awake, except in narcoleptic victims. In
|
|
these patients the inhibitory process breaks through and drops them
|
|
like a rock. Nightly when the narcoleptic victim goes to sleep, the
|
|
first thing he experiences is cataplexy, and the other REM process soon
|
|
follows. But, if the vicitm tries to move before he is actually asleep,
|
|
he will find that he is paralyzed. Then, if he is particularly
|
|
imaginative, he will find himself caught up in some very realistic
|
|
experiences and will be convinced that he is not asleep. In fact,
|
|
although paralysis is the rule, many of the normal features of
|
|
wakefullness may remain. The dreamer may be able to move his arms and
|
|
legs, and even sit up in bed with the images still persisting. As for
|
|
the content of these hypnogogic hallucinations, it can be horrible or
|
|
benign, and in many instances it will be related to the dreamer's
|
|
current concerns. If such concerns be related to or involved with
|
|
science-fiction themes, horror novels or movies, media stories about
|
|
UFOs and aliens, then the dreamer will probably experience contacts
|
|
with aliens, ghosts or demons, or demented killers, or something
|
|
resembling and alien contact or abduction. Christopher Evans reported
|
|
the case of a scientist who had been struggling with a problem for
|
|
months with no success. He was getting very discouraged until one
|
|
morning he woke to see ghosts of the world's greatest scientists-
|
|
Newton, Galileo, Darwin, et.al.,-- marching past his bed, telling him
|
|
not to give up, that he would win in the end. (Evans, 1985) Similarly,
|
|
most of the ghosts, monsters, aliens and so forth that visit sleepers
|
|
in the middle of the night are creations of the dreaming brain putting
|
|
on its own SP and HH extravaganza.
|
|
|
|
Contrary to popular belief, narcolepsy is not a rare disorder. Dement
|
|
and his coworkers found over 2,000 sufferers in the San Francisco Bay
|
|
area alone, and they have estimated as many as 100,000 people in the
|
|
nation may be afflicted with this condition. The total number of people
|
|
having hypnopompic and hypnogogic hallucinations must be sizeable
|
|
indeed, including both narcoleptics and non-narcoleptics. What is
|
|
equally cleaar is that the Roper survey is sampling this very extensive
|
|
population. McKellar and Simpson (1954) made an attempt to identify SP
|
|
and HH experiences in college students and found as many as 67% of them
|
|
reporting such imagery. Even this substantial figure is considered by
|
|
McKellar to be an underestimate of the real number, and in 1979 he
|
|
characterized the SP and HH imagery as a universal human phenomenon
|
|
(McKellar, 1979). McKellar also made a very useful distinction between
|
|
hypnogogic "sequences" and hypnogogic "episodes". Sequences are simply
|
|
a group of rapidly changing images of objects, persons, or places in
|
|
apparently random order and they lack any sort of coherence. Episodes,
|
|
on the other hand, involve schemes or themes of longer duration, with
|
|
clear definition and structure. Their content may often be a mere
|
|
continuation of recent perceptions and thoughts, or on other occasions,
|
|
more symbolic or dreamlike, or fantistic, unreal, or totally foreign
|
|
and unrelated to the mental life of the person when awake.
|
|
|
|
HYPNOSIS AND SUGGESTION
|
|
|
|
Whether known and admitted or known and denied, believers in alien
|
|
abductions should relaize that hypnosis is, essentially, social
|
|
compliance, relaxation and suggestion as well as the fact that--just as
|
|
in dreams and the hallucinatory states--fact and fiction are readily
|
|
and easily confounded. Very few memories obtained via hypnosis emerge
|
|
completely pure and veridical. With regard to memories of traumatic or
|
|
highly emotional events--especially those involving fear--these, in
|
|
particular, are usually confused and confabulated. This is especially
|
|
true for those individuals who have experienced the SP and HH syndrome
|
|
and are still not sure whether or not what they experienced was real.
|
|
This experience is, to most, so unique and so frightening they do,
|
|
indeed, want to be reassured that they are not "losing their mind." If
|
|
such victims are fortunate enough to be treated by a mental health
|
|
professional who is familiar with the SP and HH syndrome are, in no
|
|
way, "crazy" or bedeviled. They will also be reassured that no demons,
|
|
no incubi nor succubi, no ghosts nor monsters, no little gray, red, or
|
|
green men nor exotic extraterrestial aliens have, in the past, or will,
|
|
in the future, attack, rape, violate, or experiment upon, or abduct
|
|
them. The anxiety of and the fear and trembling of the victim will be
|
|
focused upon and relieved. If, on the other hand, the victim falls into
|
|
the hands of therapists who are unfamiliar with the SP and HH syndrome,
|
|
they may be told, "Don't worry. It was only a bad dream, a nightmare.
|
|
You are not going crazy. Are you sure that you were not molested as a
|
|
child? What do you feel guilty about? Are you having trouble with your
|
|
spouse?" And so on. This common therapeutic approach would indeed,
|
|
leave the SP and HH sufferer feeling disgruntled and frustrated and
|
|
looking elsewhere for an answer and for someone who _can_ help. If such
|
|
a victim has also heard of the AA syndrome (and in our day and time not
|
|
having heard of it is, frankly, impossible, considering the amount of
|
|
time and attention that the media has given to the subject) he or she
|
|
may conclude that he or she "is" or "was" also an abductee.
|
|
|
|
Let us, for example, look at two typical instances of the AA syndrome
|
|
as described by Budd Hopkins and Whitley Streiber and then compare and
|
|
contrast them with the typical SP and HH cluster of symptoms. First,
|
|
Hopkins:
|
|
|
|
"(Sandy) wanted to report a dream she had recently...which she felt
|
|
had been almost too real to have been literally a dream. The essence
|
|
of her recollection was that _she had been awakened in the night,
|
|
paralyzed, and taken from her house by three shadowy, large-headed
|
|
figures._" (pg. 44)
|
|
|
|
"Andrea had read my book...and wanted to tell me about several
|
|
'dreams' she remembered from her childhood...About six weeks before
|
|
she wrote to me she 'dreamed' that she awoke in her bedroom with a
|
|
small, gray-skinned figure standing beside her bed. The man she
|
|
lives with was asleep next to her, but _she was unable to move to
|
|
alert him in any way._ She was floated out of her bed, across a
|
|
field behind her apartment and into a UFO. Then, as she sat
|
|
paralyzed, on a table, the small figure pressed a long needle up her
|
|
nostril..." (pg. 124)
|
|
|
|
Ed had been napping in his truck when..."I awoke completely
|
|
paralyzed. I was wide awake, but _the only thing I could move_ was
|
|
my eyes...(_the radio mike) was within easy reach but I couldn't
|
|
move._ It seemed like I lay there for a long time, but it probably
|
|
wasn't more than a couple of minutes. The paralysis left." (Under
|
|
hypnotic regression, Ed remembers being transported to a UFO and
|
|
forced to copulate with female aliens.) (pg. 132)
|
|
|
|
"(Dan's) recollection involved his waking up in bed and seeing three
|
|
of the large-headed, black-eyed creatures standing in his room...He
|
|
felt that the experience was totally realistic and yet dreamlike at
|
|
the same time...(Under hypnotic regression): Does she seem real or
|
|
does she seem something out of a dream? She was real....(she rapes
|
|
him) Can you embrace her? Do you hug her? No, it's just like I lay
|
|
there..."Does the room look like a dream room? It seems like my
|
|
room.... She does the whole thing? And you don't move? Right."
|
|
(pgs.149-151)
|
|
|
|
From _Intruders: The Incredible Visitations At Copley Woods_, 1987
|
|
|
|
Now let us look at Streiber's descriptions:
|
|
|
|
"I don't remember falling asleep or lying awake...It was as if I had
|
|
become profoundly paralyzed. Although I wanted desperately to move,
|
|
I could not...a state of raw fear so great that it swept about me
|
|
like a thick, suffocating curtain, turning paralysis into a
|
|
condition that seemed close to death...Sometime in the night I awoke
|
|
and found myself unable to move or even open my eyes. I had the
|
|
distinct impression that there was something in my left nostril...I
|
|
tried to struggle...The next thing I remembered, it was
|
|
morning...There are six figures standing at the end of the bed
|
|
looking right at both of us...They are
|
|
menacing-looking...Strange...I feel like I've just gotten some kind
|
|
of weight on me. I want to get up...They're just standing there."
|
|
|
|
from _Communion_, 1987
|
|
|
|
"In the wee hours of the night I abruptly woke up. There was
|
|
somebody quite close to the bed...I caught a glimpse of someone
|
|
crouching just behind my bedside table...I could see by the huge,
|
|
dark eyes who it was...I felt an indescribable sense of menace. It
|
|
was hell on earth to be there, and yet I couldn't move, couldn't cry
|
|
out, couldn't get away. I lay as still as death, suffering inner
|
|
agonies. Whatever was there seemed so monstrously ugly, so filthy,
|
|
and dark and sinister...I still remember that thing crouching there,
|
|
so terribly ugly, its arms and legs like the limbs of a great
|
|
insect, its eyes glaring at me...Every muscle in my body was stiff
|
|
to the point of breaking. I ached. My stomach felt as if it had been
|
|
stuffed with molten lead. I could hardly breathe."
|
|
|
|
from _Transformation_, 1988
|
|
|
|
When we compare these reports with the descriptions of the SP and HH
|
|
hallucinations cited earlier, i.e. the Siegel report, it is very hard
|
|
to tell one from the other. Streiber's and Hopkins' and Siegel's
|
|
accounts are, for all practical purposes identical. _The essential and
|
|
significant difference is that SP and HH victims going to knowledgeable
|
|
therapists are told about sleep paralysis and hallucinations whereas
|
|
those going to believers in alien abductions are told they have been
|
|
abducted!_
|
|
|
|
For those who have experienced SP and HH hallucinations and who place
|
|
themselves in the hands of the AA believers, their major reason for
|
|
doing so is because, they too, believe they must have been abducted. If
|
|
they were not already entertaining such a belief why would they seek
|
|
help from the likes of non-professionals like Budd Hopkins, an artist,
|
|
or David Jacobs, a History professor or deliberately seek out
|
|
therapists like Dr. John Mack, Edith Fiore, Irma Laibow, et.al., who
|
|
have publicaly announced they believe UFO abductions are real and who
|
|
have developed a reputation for treating those who believe they have
|
|
been abducted? In Dr. Mack's own words, "I will usually start
|
|
(treatment) with a review of the circumstances that caused them to
|
|
contact me at this time. We examine the experiences and feelings that
|
|
make them suspect that they have been abducted, such as the missing
|
|
time episodes, a history of unexplained lights or beings in their
|
|
immediate surroundings, unusual dreams or nightmares that seem
|
|
abduction-related, or powerfully affecting close sightings of strange
|
|
craft." (Mack, 1992)
|
|
|
|
Once the alleged abductee is in the believer's hands the process of
|
|
legitimizing the abduction begins, most often with regressive hypnosis.
|
|
What is of particular interest here is that, in most of the cases
|
|
involving the use of hypnosis the client is told or is lead to believe
|
|
(or in many instances is asked _ahead of time_) some of the details or
|
|
particulars concerning the abduction. It is these details and
|
|
particulars that are reinforced, enhanced and elaborated upon via
|
|
suggestion during the ensuing hypnotic interview in which an elaborate
|
|
AA _production_ is created by the hypnotist and the eagerly cooperative
|
|
and highly suggestible client.
|
|
|
|
Dr, Martin Reiser, a psychologist and hypnosis consultant for the Los
|
|
Angeles Police Department, viewed videotapes of Budd Hopkins
|
|
interviewing a subject under hypnosis and Reiser concluded that Hopkins
|
|
was telling the subjects ahead of time that abductions happen, that
|
|
they are very common, and that there is no question that alien
|
|
abductors do exist. Hopkin's response was, "Well, these cases are so
|
|
outrageous and the person feels so uncomfortable talking about them
|
|
that, unless you assure the person by your manner that you believe
|
|
them, you will not get the story." Reisler responded, "I think much of
|
|
what was felt and perceived by these two subjects could be explained in
|
|
rational reasonable ways that don't involve UFOs or UFO experiences."
|
|
|
|
In describing his own use of hypnotic regression, Dr. Mack states,
|
|
"Initially, my technique was to determine in advance with the abductee
|
|
which abduction experience(s) would be targeted in the session." (Mack,
|
|
1992). There is no doubt whatsoever here, in either the mind of the
|
|
hypnotist or the mind of the person being regressed as to whether an
|
|
abduction did or did not occur. This is well assured and agreed upon by
|
|
both parties before the hypnosis begins. As Dr. Mack continues, "Having
|
|
learned _in advance of the details_ surrounding the particular
|
|
abduction experience being targeted, I ask the experiencer to go back
|
|
to the time in question and, when he is ready, to begin the narrative
|
|
of that night, automobile trip, or whatever other circumstance obtained
|
|
when the abduction began." (Mack, 1992). In such a "believing" and
|
|
"highly suggestive" atmosphere using the powerful suggestive technique
|
|
called "hypnosis", under the influence of a prestigious, demanding, and
|
|
charismatic "believer" who is piling suggestion atop suggestion onto
|
|
the relaxed and compliant victim, it would be a miracle indeed if
|
|
anyone would do anything other than agree "Yes, oh yes! I was--I must
|
|
have been--abducted by aliens!"
|
|
|
|
One can also be very certain that a tremendous amount of social
|
|
reinforcement and support follows the admission of not only being a
|
|
victim but having the details of one's abduction dovetail with those of
|
|
previous victims. Even if the hypnotist makes a maximum conscious
|
|
effort not to "put words into the client's mouth or images into his or
|
|
her head" (which considering the lack of hypnotic training and skill is
|
|
highly unlikely, beside the strong motive to confirm one's beliefs) it
|
|
will be done away. As a result, _it can be safely said that every case
|
|
of alien abduction involving the use of hypnosis is iatrogenic, i.e.,
|
|
caused by the hypnotist himself._ As for those cases that the AA
|
|
believers present in which no hypnosis was involved, they are most
|
|
likely the result of a highly suggestible (Baker, 1990), imaginal
|
|
(Ring, 1992), or a fantasy-prone (Wilson and Barber, 1983, Basterfield
|
|
and Bartholomew, 1988, Rhue and Lynn, 1987) personality type falling
|
|
prey to the highly influential media and misinterpreting their SP and
|
|
HH hallucination as another legendary UFO abduction. There is, however,
|
|
another possibility--someone who is lying and seeking attention and
|
|
notoriety and, of course, money. There is no quicker way of drawing a
|
|
crowd than to claim a UFO abduction.
|
|
|
|
Iatrogenesis
|
|
|
|
For those AA believers who would question iatrogenesis, i.e., the
|
|
creation and shaping of the disorder by the therapist, as the most
|
|
plausible explanation for the proliferation of the AA syndrome, a
|
|
recent paper by the Canadian psychiatrist Merskey is of considerable
|
|
significance and relevance. Like alien abductions which began in our
|
|
time with the case of Betty and Barney Hill in the 1950s, cases of
|
|
multiple personality disorder (MPD) have been diagnosed in
|
|
unprecedented numbers, mainly in North America, since 1957. Because of
|
|
the widespread publicity surrounding the concept, it is doubtful that
|
|
any case of MPD can now arise that is not specifically promoted by
|
|
suggestion or prior preperation by a therapist. To determine if MPD was
|
|
ever a spontaneous phenomenon, Merskey examined in detail case after
|
|
case reported in the early literature giving particular attention to
|
|
alternative diagnoses that could account for the phenomena as well as
|
|
to the specific ways in which the first alternate personality emerged.
|
|
The earlier cases involved amnesia, striking fluctuations in mood, and
|
|
are dealing with hysteria, to mistake it for something else...As a cirr
|
|
sometimes cerebral organic disorder. The secondary personalities
|
|
frequently appeared following hypnosis and several amnesiac patients
|
|
were specifically trained to come up with new identities. Many others
|
|
showed overt iatrogenesis. None of the reports fully excluded the
|
|
possibility of artificial production. Merskey concludes his long and
|
|
careful review with the statement that the diagnosis of MPD today
|
|
represents a total misdirection of thera peutic effort and this
|
|
misdirection seriously hinders the resolution of serious psychological
|
|
problems in the lives of patients. Dr. Paul R. McHugh of Johns Hopkins
|
|
School of Medicine emphatically agrees. In his words,
|
|
|
|
"Just as the divines of Massachusetts were convinced they were
|
|
fighting Satan by recognizing bewitchment, so the contemporary
|
|
divines--these are the therapists--are confident that they are
|
|
fighting perpetrators of a common expression of sexual oppression,
|
|
child abuse, by recognizing MPD.
|
|
|
|
The incidence of MPD has of late taken on epidemic proportions,
|
|
particularly in certain treatment centers. Whereas its diagnosis was
|
|
reported less than two hundred times from a variety of supposed
|
|
causes in the last century, it has been appled to more than 20,000
|
|
people in the last decade and largely attributed to sexual
|
|
abuse....the proper approach to end epidmics of MPD and the
|
|
assumptions of a vast prevalence of sexual abuse in ordinary
|
|
families is for sychiatrists to be aware of the potential, whenever
|
|
we are dealing with hysteria, to mistake it for something else...As
|
|
a corrective, psychiatrists need only review with a patient how the
|
|
MPD behavior was diagnosed and how the putative memories of sexual
|
|
abuse were suggested. These practices will eventually be
|
|
discredited, and this epidemic will end in the same way that the
|
|
witch trials ended in Salem....Major psychiatria misdirections often
|
|
share this intimidating mixture of a medical mistake lashed to a
|
|
trendy idea. Any challenge to such a misdirection must confront
|
|
simultaneously the professional authority of the proponents and the
|
|
political power of fashionable convictions." (McHugh, 1992, pgs.
|
|
507-509).
|
|
|
|
In 1984 Dr. C.H. Thigpen, who along with Dr. H.M. Cleckley wrote _The
|
|
Three Faces of Eve_, one of the first popular accounts of MPD, reported
|
|
that over the 25 years following their book hundreds of patients were
|
|
sent to them by therapists who had diagnosed them as MPDs and by others
|
|
who were self-diagnosed. Of all these cases Thigpen and Cleckley found
|
|
only one that was "undeniably a genuine multiple personality."
|
|
(Thigpen, 1984)
|
|
|
|
Experienced therapists well know that medical diagnosis is both
|
|
heuristic and variable (Merskey, 1986) and that some diagnoses are
|
|
preferable to others because the presenting symptoms appear to
|
|
originate undependently of either the doctor or of social demands, or
|
|
because they lead to more success in prognosis or because they are the
|
|
best guides to treatment. In Merskey's words, "They (diagnoses) may be
|
|
influenced by psychological factors or by social expectations, whether
|
|
we are talking about cancer pain, endogenous depression, or
|
|
post-traumatic-stress disorder. However, it is reasonable to reject
|
|
those diagnoses which most reflect individual choice, conscious
|
|
role-playing, and personal convenience in problem-solving, provided we
|
|
have alternatives which are less trouble intellectually, and at least
|
|
as practical socially and therapeutically, and not morally
|
|
objectionable. Hence I am evaluating MPD as a diagnosis with the
|
|
implicit view that certain other diagnoses are acceptable alternatives:
|
|
mania, certain depressive illnesses, schizophrenia, obsessional
|
|
neurosis, and even some conversion or dissociative symtoms arise in
|
|
very many cases of MPD, without medical induction or social
|
|
facilitation...Some authors have already maintained that MPD is
|
|
produced by the interest of doctors and others." (pg. 329)
|
|
|
|
Upon completing his exhaustive review of all of the most publicized
|
|
cases, Merskey reports,
|
|
|
|
"No case has been found here in which MPD, as now conceived, is
|
|
proven to have emerged through unconscious processes without any
|
|
shaping or preperation by external factors such as physicians or the
|
|
media. In respect of this argument, we may have reached a situation
|
|
comparable to Heisenberg's principle of uncertainty: observation of
|
|
the phenomena changes it. If this is true it means that no later
|
|
case, probably since Prince, but at least since the film _The Three
|
|
Faces of Eve_, can be taken to be veridical since none is likely to
|
|
emerge without prior knowledge of the idea. (Merskey, 1992, pg. 337)
|
|
|
|
Similarly, as in the case of the alleged alien abductions it means that
|
|
no case probably since the Betty Hill claim (and at least since the
|
|
film _Close Encounters of the Third Kind_) can be taken to be veridical
|
|
since none has likely emerged without prior knowledge of the idea.
|
|
Merskey also adds,
|
|
|
|
"It is likely that MPD never occurs as a spontaneous persistent
|
|
event in adults. The cases examined here have not shown any original
|
|
conditions which are more autonomous than a fugue or a second
|
|
identity promoted by overt fantasies or conscious awareness. The
|
|
most that may be expected without iatrogenesis is that an overt
|
|
inclination for another role could cause the adoption of different
|
|
conscious patterns of life...Without reinforcement, such secondary
|
|
changes would ordinarily be expected to vanish.
|
|
|
|
Suggestion, social encouragement, preperation by expectation, and
|
|
the reward of attention can produce and sustain a second
|
|
personality. Admittedly, if only those physicians who expect the
|
|
disorder can see it, those who do not believe in it cannot see it.
|
|
However, like others, I was willing to entertain its existence and
|
|
never found it myself before the dramatic rise in reported cases or
|
|
since. Meanwhile it is not necessary to treat patients who have had
|
|
terrible childhoods and who have conversion symptoms, by developing
|
|
in them an additional belief in fresh personalities. Enthusiasm for
|
|
the phenomenon is a means of increasing it. (Merskey, 1992, pg. 337)
|
|
|
|
These two paragraphs could just as well have been written referring to
|
|
the AA syndrome instead of the production of multiple personalities.
|
|
Quite clearly, suggestion, social encouragement, preparation by
|
|
expection and the reward of attention can produce and sustain the
|
|
belief in an alien abduction. Moreover, physicians and therapists who
|
|
believe in and expect the disorder can see it, those who do not believe
|
|
in it cannot see it. And, most certainly, enthusiasm for the AA
|
|
phenomenon is surely a means of increasing it!
|
|
|
|
Finally, in considering how patients, doctors and other therapists,
|
|
come to believe in MPD or to present the popular pattern, Merskey
|
|
offers four explanations as to how MPD is created: first, is the
|
|
misinterpretation of organic or bipolar illness; second, is the
|
|
conscious development of fantasies as a solution to emotional problems;
|
|
third, is the development of hysterical amnesia, followed by retraining
|
|
by the therapist; fourth, is the creation by implicit demand of alters
|
|
under hypnosis or by repeated interviews. In similar fashion--with the
|
|
possible exception of any sort of organic illness and this possibility
|
|
cannot be totally excluded--so is created the popular pattern of alien
|
|
abductions that so many credulous therapists believe in: first, is the
|
|
misinterpretation of the SP and HH syndrome; second, is the conscious
|
|
development of fantasies of abduction and rape as a solution to
|
|
emotional problems(In female abductees some of these emotional problems
|
|
may well involve guilt and/or grief over abortions as Dennis Stacy has
|
|
suggested); third, is the development of hysterical amnesia and post-
|
|
traumatic-stress disorder symptoms followed by retraining by the
|
|
therapist to insure the client provides the proper script complete with
|
|
all of the AA symptoms; and fourth, the creation of a credible AA
|
|
scenario by implicit demand under hypnosis or as a result of shaping in
|
|
repeated interviews. It is highly unlikely today that any case of
|
|
alleged AA could possibly have escaped the pervasive influence of the
|
|
media or iatrogenesis. If any such cases do exist the burden of proof
|
|
rests upon the shoulders of the claimants: the victim and their
|
|
therapist. Merskey concludes that the diagnosis of MPD may not give the
|
|
best treatment nor is it helped by such an extraneous and exciting
|
|
diagnosis. ANother ill effect, he notes, is that the value and good
|
|
sense of psychiatry becomes suspect as wonders multiply. These words
|
|
are even truer and more applicable in the case of AA claims made by
|
|
native therapists.
|
|
|
|
MISSING TIME
|
|
|
|
With regard to "missing time" experiences it is regrettable that the
|
|
Roper surveyers did not restrict their questions about "lost time" to a
|
|
population made up exclusively of long distance truck drivers. Had they
|
|
done so the number of those answering affirmatively to the questions
|
|
about missing time would have approached 100 percent. Nearly every
|
|
driver we have ever heard of or talked with had reported this "sleeping
|
|
wakefullness", blanking out", or "lost time" experience. Periods of
|
|
amnesia or forgetfulness while driving are a familiar experience to
|
|
nearly everyone--especially to drivers who travel long distances over
|
|
familiar routes. Williams (1963) reports on one case in which a woman
|
|
driver had so many periods of amnesia while driving in New Jersey that
|
|
she sough psychiatric help. She could remember stopping at traffic
|
|
lights in the town preceding the one she was then in, but could recall
|
|
nothing in between. Due to repeated experiences of this sort in which
|
|
she could recall nothing of what had happened over stretches of 25 or
|
|
30 miles or more, and sometimes as long as an hour or two, she feared
|
|
she was suffering from some sort of emotional instability. The _missing
|
|
time phenomenon_ is really very common and is not restricted to
|
|
automobile or truck drivers. Automobile passengers also report this
|
|
sort of experience, but their actions are more likely to pass unnoticed
|
|
than those of the driver. Alternate drivers on long-distance trucking
|
|
teams frequently report that their alternates sometime appear to be in
|
|
a daze and operating the vehicle more or less mechanically. This, along
|
|
with the driver's glass stare is a sure sign it is time to switch
|
|
drivers. Long distance drivers and airline pilots suffer from these
|
|
periods of "missing time" quite frequently. One long hauler reported:
|
|
|
|
"I discovered this fact (amnesia) while driving at night from
|
|
Portland, Oregon, to San Francisco, California. The lights of a town
|
|
approached and I realized that I had been in an almost asleep
|
|
condition for about 25 miles. Inasmuch as I knew the road I had
|
|
traveled was not straight, it was apparent that I had negotiated the
|
|
road, making all the turns, etc..I did not remember the stretch of
|
|
road at all.
|
|
|
|
I purposely tried it several times after that and found that I could
|
|
drive miles and miles without memory of it, and while resting. In
|
|
each case whenever any driving emergency appeared, I became fully
|
|
awake." (Williams, 1963)
|
|
|
|
It is difficult enough when driving with somebody else, but even more
|
|
difficult when driving alone. As one solitary traveller reported:
|
|
|
|
"I have noticed whenever I make a trip to New York City via the
|
|
Merritt Parkway (Connecticut) that in spite of a good night's rest,
|
|
I have to fight off going into a trance...I have observed also that
|
|
if I go to New York City via the Boston Turnpike which passes
|
|
through many towns, I always find the trip interesting and am never
|
|
in danger of a monotonous drive...as well as I can recall, the only
|
|
times the monotony of driving on a road like the Merritt Parkway has
|
|
affected me have been when I am driving alone. (Williams, 1963)
|
|
|
|
The trance and missin gtime experience also seem to occur under two
|
|
other conditions: first, when drivers are forced to follow trucks or
|
|
other large vehicles for considerable distances; and second, when they
|
|
drive at night and their range of vision is restricted to the area o
|
|
fthe headlight beams. Reed, in his _Psychology Of Anomolous Experience_
|
|
(1974) discussed this missing time experience at length and explained
|
|
it in terms of the level of mental organization or schematization
|
|
required by a situation. While the task of driving a car is itself
|
|
highly skilled, its component activities are all overlearned and
|
|
habitual to the experienced driver. Steering, shifting gears, giving
|
|
signals, etc., all become automatic acts which do not require focused,
|
|
conscious attention. Furthermore, our experience of time and its
|
|
passage is determined by events--either internal or external. When a
|
|
person reports a "time gap" he is not saying that a piece of time has
|
|
disappeared but that he failed to register a number of _events that
|
|
normally serve as time markers_. The experience that is reported and
|
|
that actually seems so strange is actually 'waking up" when one is
|
|
already awake and being aware of a blank period in his recent past.
|
|
Since most of us live our lives by the clock such that certain habits
|
|
take place at certain times, we are disturbed when we find we have
|
|
missed a period of time. A driver wakes up in New York and realizes
|
|
that he remembers nothing since Boston. ALthough the driver describes
|
|
his experience in terms of time, he could just as well describe in in
|
|
terms of _distance_, or even more accurately in terms of _events_,
|
|
i.e., in terms of, in this case, the _absence of events_. Even though
|
|
there were events during the missing time, none of them had any
|
|
alerting significance. The time gap is experienced when no events of
|
|
significance occur, e.g., there is nothing unusual about the traffic,
|
|
there is clear visibility and smooth unchanging road surface, there are
|
|
no warning signs, and the demands of the driving tasks are few and
|
|
unchanging.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, when we learn and master a complex skill like walking or
|
|
talking or driving a car, once we have perfected each component of the
|
|
skill its performance becomes automatic, in the sense that we can
|
|
withdraw our attention from this level and focus on the next higher
|
|
level. We do, however, have to attend to ways in which basic skills
|
|
like driving must be organized in response to environmental
|
|
demands--particularly when the demands are stressful or unfamiliar. The
|
|
skilled tennis player cannot relax his concentration because his
|
|
opponent will continually be introducing changes in the environment. No
|
|
matter how automatic his stroke or eye-hand coordination may be, he
|
|
must still stay alert. But if all we are required to do is walk along a
|
|
lonely beach for miles, we can do it and never notice or know that we
|
|
are doing it. It is possible to do two things at once as long as one of
|
|
the activities is automatic and does not require focused attention. We
|
|
do a lot of things without thinking, reflexively, as when a child
|
|
suddenly and without warning darts in fron tof our car. We hit the
|
|
brakes and stop the car without thinking. The driver realizes that he
|
|
has been driving _automatically_ when the situation does change and
|
|
events demanding his active attention "wake him up." He hits the brake
|
|
suddenly without thought. Or as he gets closer to New York City,
|
|
traffic increases, sirens intrude, highway signs appear, and the
|
|
driver's automatic routines are now inadequate--he must reorganize his
|
|
skills and pay attention to the rapid changing conditions. When he
|
|
"wakes up" he realizes that, among other things, he is now in New York
|
|
before he supposes he should be. As Reed says, "In one sense he is
|
|
correct in describing what has happened as a "gap". But the gap is not
|
|
in time, but in alertness or his high level of conscious attention."
|
|
(Reed, 1974, pg.20).
|
|
|
|
In short, the experience of missing time is best considered in terms of
|
|
the absence of events. Most of the time we cannot remember what took
|
|
place simply because nothing of any importance occurred. Singer, in his
|
|
_Inner World of Daydreams_ (1975), points out that the missing time
|
|
experience is quite ordinary, common, and universal and is not merely
|
|
restricted to driving on an interstate highway. He asks,
|
|
|
|
"Are there ever any truly 'blank periods' when we are awake? It
|
|
certainly seems to be the case that under certain conditions of
|
|
fatigue or great drowsiness or extreme concentration upon some
|
|
physical act we may become aware that we cannot account for an
|
|
interval of time and have no memory of what happened for seconds and
|
|
sometimes minutes." (Singer, 1975)
|
|
|
|
With regard to falling asleep and dreaming unless we program ourselves
|
|
ahead of time to remember our dreams, they disappear into thin air as
|
|
soon as we realize that morning and a busy day is upon us. If they are
|
|
particularly annoying, anxiety arousing, or frightening then we may
|
|
recall the emotional upset but may be very hazy about the specific
|
|
details. In the event of an SP and HH experience, however, there is no
|
|
difficulty at all in recall. The more one reflects upon the missing
|
|
time experience and its correlates and the circumstances surrounding
|
|
its occurance, the clearer it becomes that it is a normal, everyday,
|
|
and ordinary mental event that has nothing whatsoever to do with either
|
|
UFOs, or alien abductions. The fact that one has a missing time
|
|
experience and after either a hypnotic and brainwashing session of
|
|
suggestion and then associates the "missing time" with an AA in no way
|
|
either substantiates or authenticates such a claim. Not only are our
|
|
daydreams as difficult to recall as our nightmares but also their
|
|
content and the total amount of time we devote to them are--in most
|
|
instances for most of us--forever beyond recall. Where oh where did all
|
|
this "missing time" go?
|
|
|
|
ABRASIONS, SCRAPES, SCABS, SCARS, AND BRUISES
|
|
|
|
According to the AA believers, "The patient may also have one or two
|
|
unexplained scars on the legs--or occasionally on the upper body--which
|
|
he or she feels are the result of these quasi-medical examinations."
|
|
Moreover, these puzzling scars take the forms of a characteristic
|
|
"scoop mark or straight-line cuts" and the abductees feel very uneasy
|
|
about the origins of these marks. The alleged reason for the uneasiness
|
|
is that neither the abductee or any one else remembers how they
|
|
received them or where they came from. According to the Bigelow report
|
|
results this totals 14,800,000 people who made this claim. What is
|
|
surprising is that the total is not larger or even 100 percent of the
|
|
sampled population since everyone who examines their body carefully at
|
|
any given time will, invariably, discover one or more abrasions,
|
|
scrapes, scabs, scars, or bruises they are at a loss to explain. If you
|
|
doubt this examine your body, carefully, in a full length mirror or
|
|
else have your spuse do do. COncerning the so-called characteristic
|
|
scoop mark or straight-line cut what would be most helpful in this
|
|
regard are some photographs of these typical wounds. To my knowledge no
|
|
such photographs have been made public nor has any of these alleged
|
|
wounds been inspected by a licensed dermatologist or forensic expert
|
|
who might be able to determine what sort of instrument, if any, made
|
|
these incisions. What is much more likely is that the 14,800,000 people
|
|
who responded affirmatively to the question _were not claiming that the
|
|
puzzling scrapes, scabs, scars, and bruises they discovered on their
|
|
bodies were either scoop marks or straight-line cuts_. Allegations of
|
|
"peculiar incisions, needle marks, triangular bruises, and scoop-like
|
|
scars of unknown origin seem to add further 'evidence' as to the
|
|
existence of some kind of anomalous event." (pg.53) Accompanying such
|
|
claims is the statement that children are "actually found absent from
|
|
their cribs, dazed in a nearby field, or outside of the bolt-locked
|
|
home at night." Unfortunately, there is no documentation of any sort to
|
|
support these sensationalistic claims nor any reference to the efforts
|
|
of local law enforcement personnel or FBI personnel to validate or deal
|
|
with such crimes. In the same vein we are also barraged with further
|
|
unsupported and undocumented claims that many people "have actually
|
|
witnessed an abduction occurring--observing the beam of light engulfing
|
|
the individual, watching someone floating out his window, and
|
|
witnessing the existence of small beings as well. With multiple
|
|
witnesses, documented absences, correlating wounds and perfectly-round
|
|
scorched areas of earth, the phenomenon becomes much more than mythical
|
|
or imaginary." Where, pray tell, is the documentation for all these
|
|
hysterical claims? Where are these witnesses? Who are these people
|
|
making such claims? Where is the proof of such stupendous,
|
|
mind-boggling, earth-shaking, science-challenging claims? Where oh
|
|
where?
|
|
|
|
MISCELLANEOUS SHORTCOMINGS OF THE AA SCENARIO
|
|
|
|
Thoughtful readers of the AA literature must have some while ago begun
|
|
to take with a grain of salt many of the published statements of some
|
|
of the AA proponents. For example, according to Dr. John Mack, alien
|
|
abductions are not only common but they are increasing in number. In
|
|
his words, "hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of American men,
|
|
women, and children may have experienced UFO abductions, or
|
|
abduction-related phenomena." What is puzzling about this statement is
|
|
the fact that supposedly educated and trained therapists seem to
|
|
believe it. For the aliens to carry out a logistical operation of this
|
|
magnitude, any night in the year when we would happen to step outside
|
|
and look up, we could not help but see hundreds of UFO spaceships
|
|
flitting back and forth like fireflies. Pictures of human and inhuman
|
|
bodies shuttling back and forth from spaceship to bedroom and vice
|
|
versa in broad daylight would fill not only the checkout-counter
|
|
newspapers but the pages of the New York Times, the Boston Globe, and
|
|
the Washington Post as well. Dennis Stacy, editor of the MUFON monthly
|
|
UFO journal, has also questioned Mack's statistics and in the September
|
|
1992 issue of _Fate_ magazine noted:
|
|
|
|
"The claim that almost four million Americans alone have been
|
|
physically abducted in, say even the last 50 years clearly boggles
|
|
common sense, not to mention the otherwise unencumbered imagination.
|
|
And remember, this is only the potential number of individuals
|
|
theoretically abducted: since some abductees report several repeat
|
|
experiences, the total number of actual abductions, assuming that is
|
|
what is involved, could easily be two, three, or four times that
|
|
amount. Moreover, these numbers apply only to a target American
|
|
population of 185 million. If we are to assume that one in every 50
|
|
people with a population of several billion has actually been
|
|
abducted at one time or another, we are now looking at a potential
|
|
body count of some several hundred millions. The logistics of an
|
|
ongoing extraterrestial invasion on that kind of scale simply won't
|
|
compute." (pg. 65)
|
|
|
|
When properly used statistics can clarify and illuminate but when used
|
|
carelessly without forethought they merely obfuscate and cinfuse and
|
|
serve as tools of propaganda to promote some end. Mack's particular
|
|
use is an excellent example of what Paulos calls "innumeracy."
|
|
|
|
As for the aliens physical appearance, it is highly improbable that
|
|
they exist as they have been descired in their little gray homonid
|
|
form. In a fascinating paper concerned with the human tendency to
|
|
project human qualities upon the external world Coffey (1992) reminds
|
|
us that not only is there no incontrovertible evidence whatsoever that
|
|
aliens exist, but evolution itself is not the ineluctable following of
|
|
physical laws but, instead, is merely a chain of contingent events,
|
|
which easily could have been otherwise. Change any one of the many past
|
|
events in our biological history which is a cascade effect and it will
|
|
dramatically influence everything that follows. If, by some cruel
|
|
stroke the chordates had failed to survive millions of years ago then
|
|
neither verterbrates, nor mammals, nor ourselves would have ever
|
|
evolved; we simply would not be here now. The Burgess shale fossils,
|
|
representing a time just after the Cambrian explosion 570 million years
|
|
ago completely refute the anthropomorphic idea that diversity increased
|
|
with time. Instead, the evolutionary pattern shows rapid
|
|
diversification followd by decimation with perhaps as few as 5%
|
|
surviving. In Coffey's words, "The survivors resemble the winners of a
|
|
lottery rather than creatures better designed than the unlucky majority
|
|
who do not survive." Steven Gould (1990) not only concurs, but points
|
|
out that if we were to replay life's tape there is no reason whatsoever
|
|
to assume that our particular type of self-conscious being would ever
|
|
be expected to appear again. As Gould notes, our evolution is not a
|
|
repeatable occurance. If anything, we are the embodiment of
|
|
contingency. What this means is that it is so highly improbable as to
|
|
approach impossibility that there is any humanoid intelligence of any
|
|
sort--albeit housed in different bodily frames--to be found anywhere
|
|
else in the cosmos. Coffey sums up quite succinctly our anthropomorphic
|
|
fallacy: "The evolutionary conclusion that humanoid intelligence
|
|
elsewhere is improbably is not due to any anthropomorphic bias but
|
|
because of the deep understanding that evolution has no real goal other
|
|
than adapting creatures to specific local environments. Neither we, nor
|
|
our mode of intelligence, are the highpoint of evolution. The pathways
|
|
of evolution are too circuitous for that ever to be the case." (pg. 28)
|
|
Little gray homonids who bear a marked resemblance to human fetuses but
|
|
who are able to communicate telepathically? Dragons and fairies are
|
|
equally, if not more, probable. If the aliens came from any space at
|
|
all it is from "inner" rather than "outer." It is also high time that
|
|
we realize that all our scenarios of extraterrestial life from those of
|
|
SETI supporters to those of the Star Trek series are all _nothing but
|
|
projections of ourselves_! If, as the AA believers insist, the aliens
|
|
and alien-technology are in our midst why would NASA be aiming their
|
|
very costly radio telescopes at the stars? According to Coffey, the
|
|
hope for finding human intelligence elsewhere is a religious
|
|
conviction. In his words, "It is religious in that it rests upon faith
|
|
not a rational comprehension of the message the evolutionary record
|
|
cries out to us: of humans elsewhere there will be none forever."
|
|
|
|
As for believers in alien abductions perhaps their convictions are also
|
|
religious and are motivated by the same forces that inspire the SETI
|
|
scientists. Whatever these forces may be they make up the real mystery
|
|
surrounding the entire phenomena of UFOs, alien abductions, beliefs in
|
|
alternate realities, and so on. Why, it is important to ask, would so
|
|
many educated and credentialed individuals in the mental health field
|
|
ignore their scientific training and clinical experience to
|
|
authenticate the anxieties of the SP and HH hallucinations victims? Why
|
|
have they forgotten the cardinal principle of therapy: _first do no
|
|
harm_? Their rationalization that whether the abductions are _true_
|
|
(and they insist they are) or false is of little matter since they must
|
|
treat the client's _belief_ that he or she was abducted--will not hold
|
|
water. The belief that one was abducted when reinforced and confirmed
|
|
by the therapist not only causes an increase in panic and anxiety
|
|
(because they are now left exposed and totally helpless to prevent
|
|
further abductions) but aggravates the original trauma. If there was
|
|
even a smidgen of doubt as to the reality of their prior experience,
|
|
the therapist's authentication of an abduction removes all traces of
|
|
conjecture. As a result, the hapless client is now quite likely to have
|
|
new nightmares about his previous experience. Moreover, the client is
|
|
now absolutely certain that his SP and HH syndrome was an honest-to-God
|
|
abduction! Elevating the vicitm's anxiety level is no conceivable way
|
|
therapeutic!
|
|
|
|
A few weeks ago I was contacted by one of Hopkins' clients who could
|
|
not understand why I doubted Hopkins' belief in the abduction delusion.
|
|
He was quite upset because I challenged the reality of his experience.
|
|
After he had the original and very powerful fear emotions revived,
|
|
reinstated, and then reinforced by Hopkins' hypnotic ministations, he
|
|
was now totally convinced his alien contact was real. His last angry
|
|
letter assured me that I was the one who was crazy. "You were not
|
|
there! It didn't happen to you! You just don't know! I know what is
|
|
real and what is not real!" The point that every victim of the SP and
|
|
HH syndrome invariably seem to miss is: _that if it didn't seem to be
|
|
real it wouldn't be an hallucination_!
|
|
|
|
Another very serious shortcoming in the AA scenario has been noted by
|
|
Dan Wright, MUFON's Deputy Director of Investigations (1992). According
|
|
to Wright, "By a fair reading of MUFON's case files, one would have to
|
|
conclude that _abductions rarely occur_....In my 14-year association
|
|
with MUFON, no aspect of the subject has had more significance than
|
|
so-called 'abduction phenomena.' From an investigative standpoint,
|
|
however, these are potentially the most widely mishandled
|
|
investigations. And that is caused _solely_ by the utter secrecy of the
|
|
self-appointed 'experts' handling these cases (pgs 10-11). Wright is
|
|
most incensed, however, by the failure of the claimants to submit their
|
|
abduction findings to outside experts for independent analysis. In
|
|
Wright's words, "Authority without responsibility. Ah, if life could be
|
|
so sweet for us all!" Wright further criticizes the abductologists on
|
|
their failure: 1) to determine the credibility of their witnesses; 2)
|
|
their failure to check the validity of their claims with police,
|
|
neighbors, friends,a nd so on; 3) their failure to report the verbatim
|
|
questions and replies obtained under hypnosis; 4) their failure to
|
|
insure the qualifications and training of the hypnotist; and 5) their
|
|
failure to follow reasonable scientific guidelines for enabling others
|
|
to understand the origins and purposes of any alleged alien
|
|
intelligence. Wright does not buy their argument that their sole
|
|
purpose is to help abductees through a traumatic period in their lives.
|
|
Maganimous and commendable though such altruism may be, it is no excuse
|
|
for thier shoddy and unscientific behavior. This, of course, raises
|
|
another mystery: Why have the AA believers been so reluctant to be
|
|
candid and open?
|
|
|
|
Certainly, Dr. John Mack has been quite candid and open with regard to
|
|
his therapeutic approach in helping alleged abductees. One of his more
|
|
interesting techniques is that he calls "the breathwork technique", a
|
|
technique he says he learned with Stanislay and Christina Grof.
|
|
According to Dr. Mack:
|
|
|
|
"The breathwork enables us to move into and through the affectively
|
|
disturbing places and to work with energies and resistances which
|
|
are held in the body. I explain at the beginning the importance of
|
|
the breath and of breathing to the work. I tell the person about the
|
|
breath, that it goves him power and connects him to the life giving
|
|
forces of the cosmos. Early in the relaxation process I ask the
|
|
individual to establish a deeper than normal, full slow rhythmic
|
|
breathing pattern and bring him back to his breathing again and
|
|
again." (Mack, "Helping Abductees," IUR July/August, 1992, pg. 14)
|
|
|
|
What is particularly curious about his technique is that dyspnea so
|
|
often accompanies and is an integral part of hte SP and HH syndrome.
|
|
The pressure on the chest, the difficulty in breathing, and so on,
|
|
clearly indicates that Mack is sensitive to such complaints on the part
|
|
of his abductee clients. It also further strengthens the link between
|
|
the so-called abductions and the SP and HH syndrome.
|
|
|
|
Also noteworthy is hte recent report by Basterfield (1992) in which a
|
|
normal, healthy Australian housewife experienced a classical AA
|
|
experience -- two decades ago -- in which the abductor was a man-like
|
|
entity with long blond hair and he was dressed in a white ski suit. As
|
|
Basterfield says, what is significant about this report is that "a
|
|
witness of impeccable character was apparently subjected to an
|
|
escalating sequence of events terminating with an abduction, then a
|
|
visitation a week later. During this abduction she never physically
|
|
left the presence of two UFO researchers who were sitting next to her."
|
|
Although it could be argued this was not a "true" abduction,
|
|
Basterfield stresses that it passes all four criteria of the Center For
|
|
UFO Studies (CCUFOS) definition of an abduction. This also invalidates
|
|
David Jacob's remarks that "in the abduction phenomenon abductees are
|
|
never physically in place when they have an abduction
|
|
experience...Researchers have not collected a single csae of an
|
|
abduction in which the victim was actually in a normal location while
|
|
the abduction was occurring." There should be little doubt but that
|
|
Basterfield's case is just one more example which attests to the true
|
|
_psychological_ nature of hte AA syndrome.
|
|
|
|
Concerning the many and various claims made by the AA believers as to
|
|
the material evidence left behind by the elusive aliens, these
|
|
notorious physical artifacts are very hard to come by. Curiously enough
|
|
some while ago Jerry Clark, Vice President of CUFOS and Don Schmitt,
|
|
CUFOS Director of Special Investigations, took a trip into the wilds of
|
|
rural Illinois to inspect that rarest of rare finds: an extraterrestial
|
|
implant. A man claiming to be an abductee reported that at one point
|
|
his abductors stuck a small implant up his nose (presumably _en route_
|
|
to the brain). A few nights after one of his abduction experiences his
|
|
car struck a bridge and he was thrown through the windshield. At the
|
|
hospital his skull was X-rayed to check for injuries. Shortly after
|
|
this accident the man caught a serious cold, and as he was blowing his
|
|
nose he felt something emerge. It proved to be a strange sperical
|
|
object which looked like the one the aliens had placed in his head.
|
|
After meeting the man where he said he would be Clark and Scmitt
|
|
engaged in pleasantries for two or three minutes and then he unwrapped
|
|
his present. In Clark's words, "Don and I stared at it incredulously.
|
|
_It was a ball bearing._ At that point, of course, it was difficult for
|
|
the two of us to keep our faces straight. But soon curiosity set in,
|
|
and we spent the next hour or so hearing the man's story, all the while
|
|
wondering if he realized that his tales of alien encounters in the face
|
|
of manifestly bogus evidence made him look ridiculous...No such luck.
|
|
He looked and sounded sincere, and he mentioned other persons who could
|
|
confirm aspects of his experience." (Clark, April, 1992, pg. 20) Clark
|
|
and Schmitt also had the man's X-rays sent to them becuase if there was
|
|
an alien implant or a human ball bearing it should show up. When the
|
|
X-rays arrived and wereinspected they showed nothing out of the
|
|
ordinary. This story is exemplary in that it shows how easy it is for
|
|
many seemingly ordinary and stable people to create, harbor, and
|
|
maintain a bizarre but status-enhancing delusion. As for all of the
|
|
reputed implants, stolen fetuses, unexplained pregnancies, metallic
|
|
pieces of unearthly aircraft et.al., none of these artifacts are
|
|
available for public inspection and none of the exogenous conceptions
|
|
have ever been authenticated by any reputable physician or have ever
|
|
been reported in any reputable medical or scientific journal.
|
|
|
|
As for the alien's reputed transportation system this is equally
|
|
nebulous and if the UFO spacecraft have the performance characteristics
|
|
described in numerous reports they are unique indeed in that they defy
|
|
the known laws of physics although these laws seem to hold in all parts
|
|
of the known universe (Merkowitz, 1967)
|
|
|
|
When one takes a close, careful, and hard look at the entire AA
|
|
scenario one finds not only hundreds of unanswered factual questions,
|
|
countless logical flaws, reams of unsupported claims, piece after
|
|
missing piece of "supposed" material confirmatory evidence, no
|
|
unimpeachable photographic evidence, no abduction attested to by
|
|
multiple witnesses, and nothing whatsoever to contradict the evidence
|
|
that the reported alien encounters were anything more than the SP and
|
|
HH syndrome, delusions, or a deliberate hoax.
|
|
|
|
Why are images of little gray men showing up in the hallucinations of
|
|
the American populace when such images in the Nordic countries are of
|
|
golden-haired humans and Italy are of reptilian beasts?? Our aliens
|
|
are, of course, straight out of the final scenes of _Close Encounters
|
|
Of The Third Kind_ and off the cover of _Communion_, images that
|
|
literally thousands of American men, women, and children have seen over
|
|
and over. In every way, the description of the aliens and their
|
|
robot-like behavior now trotted out before us by Hopkins, Jacobs,
|
|
Bullard, Streiber, Mack and the rest are more like carefully
|
|
orchestrated _theatrical productions_ rather than anything else. All of
|
|
the alien abductologist's work is carefully scripted to produce the
|
|
maximum amount of awe, fright, and mytification with the minimal amount
|
|
of clarification and explanation. They, in every way, support what Eddy
|
|
Clonts, editor of the supermarket tabloid _Weekly World News_ said
|
|
recently, "Everybody else is trying to demystify everything. We're
|
|
trying to do the opposite, to mysify them." If the AA believer's aim
|
|
was to create a mind-boggling and stupendous mystery out of a common
|
|
but not well known sleep disorder, they have succeeded admirably. They
|
|
have, indeed, with the media's help, produced a winner!
|
|
|
|
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
|
|
|
|
Whether intentional or not, the entire AA scenario is an elaborately
|
|
staged hoax -- a production dumped upon the American scene by a naive
|
|
and credulous group of sensationalistic-minded zealots and misguided
|
|
psychotherapists who should know better. Acting in the name of altruism
|
|
and aided and abetted by an enthusiatic and uncritical media, these
|
|
alarmists have not only created a full-blown neurosis in many people
|
|
suffering from a fairly common sleep disorder, but they have also
|
|
raised the anxiety level of an alreadt beleaguered and overstressed
|
|
populace. Acting in the name of beneficence and good citizenship, they
|
|
have succeeded in doing considerable harm and have, in the process, not
|
|
only managed to discredit sceince and medicine but psychology and
|
|
psychiatry as well. Such _alien productions_ disguised in the name of
|
|
_alien abductions_ are, indeed, as Philip Klass aptly phrased it some
|
|
years ago (1989) "a dangerous game," a game that no one who is _truly_
|
|
concerned about the welfare of others would ever want to play.
|
|
|
|
Robert A. Baker
|
|
Lexington, KY
|
|
October 1992
|
|
|
|
|
|
REFERENCES
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|
1. Assad, Ghazi. 1990. _Hallucinations In Clinical Psychiatry_,
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|
|
|
|
<<<<< END >>>>>
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* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
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