136 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
136 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
|
||
THIS FILE WAS DOWNLOADED FROM
|
||
MAINBASE BBS (040 - 965819) Malm”, Sweden
|
||
A superb TEXTFILES BBS
|
||
|
||
FROM UFO MAGAZINE Vol 3, No 2 1988
|
||
|
||
You won't necessarily find Mike Bershad nor many like him aboard
|
||
the bandwagon that salutes benevolent ETs and broadcasts a
|
||
hopeful message about their mission on earth. Mike is "in touch"
|
||
with another form of entity, and if "they" have any mission, it's
|
||
an urgent, overriding necessity to plunder human anatomy with
|
||
speed and calculation.
|
||
|
||
The lives of many abductees distill abruptly into issues of
|
||
emotional survival. Few are blithe and unaffected by their
|
||
ordeals in the netherworld, though an individual trauma can be
|
||
offset by the catharsis of "going public"
|
||
|
||
Abduction has not yet broken free of its identification with myth
|
||
and hallucination, but the time approaches. For the time being,
|
||
Mike is content with partial memory.
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
"This is the first time I've written about my abduction
|
||
experience, although I've been written about (see Budd Hopkins'
|
||
Missing time') My name is not Steve Kilburn (the alias used in
|
||
the book) but Michael Bershad."
|
||
|
||
"Many people have told me that they'd love to meet an alien
|
||
or be taken for a ride in a flying saucer. My viewpoint is
|
||
somewhat different."
|
||
|
||
"The most terrifying thing I've ever encountered was looking
|
||
into the eyes of one of these 'creatures.' To describe their eyes
|
||
as black, shiny and oval simply doesn't do them justice. it's
|
||
true that the eyes lacked an iris, pupils, eyelids, eyelashes.
|
||
But there was more. I sensed no emotion, no feeling, no
|
||
humanity, and consequently, no exchange of any understanding
|
||
whatsoever."
|
||
|
||
"If anyone thinks that an abduction experience is
|
||
enlightening or fun, think again. I was totally powerless, and
|
||
was made to comply with whatever they wanted me to do. My
|
||
slightest thought was monitored, and I was accorded no more
|
||
respect than a laboratory rat. An examination of my body was
|
||
made, and I now understand how a frog in a classroom of biology
|
||
students must feel. But the sheer terror came from the
|
||
uncertainty of what was to come. Would my heart be removed?
|
||
Would they pull off a leg, just to see what would happen? I had
|
||
no way of knowing and they dealt with my questions the way most
|
||
adults handle children, by humoring me with idiotic platitudes or
|
||
simply by ignoring me altogether. It's true that I was not
|
||
physically harmed, but I continue to bear the emotional trauma of
|
||
this experience even today, many years later."
|
||
|
||
"I do not know that the creatures I saw were 'aliens' or that
|
||
the object I was taken into was a flying saucer. I simply know
|
||
what I perceived, from the memory of my hypnotic regressions. The
|
||
creatures were most assuredly foreign to me; where they were from,
|
||
I had no idea. The object I was walked into seemed disc-shaped,
|
||
yet I had no way of knowing if it could fly. These aren't mere
|
||
semantic quibbles; if any truth is to be ascertained from
|
||
abductees' stories, the abductees better stick to what they
|
||
actually experienced and leave 'conclusions' and speculation to
|
||
the investigators and science fiction writers. Somebody has to
|
||
bear the responsibility for telling the truth as objectively as
|
||
possible, and it might as well be those who have had 'the
|
||
experience' itself. It's hard enough dealing with the abduction;
|
||
adding bells and whistles only clouds an already muddled issue."
|
||
|
||
"I have never claimed with 100 percent certainty that my
|
||
hypnotic memory of events is what actually happened to me. But
|
||
that presents some problems for me, personally."
|
||
|
||
"- When I recounted my story to my parents, I expected them to
|
||
be incredulous. Quite the contrary. They reminded me of a UFO
|
||
sighting I told them I had at the approximate time and place of my
|
||
abduction experience. I was amazed, as I had no recollection of
|
||
this at all. They found that strange!"
|
||
|
||
"- A licensed polygraph administrator concluded that my test
|
||
results proved that I hadn't made up the story."
|
||
|
||
"- A highly reputable neurosurgeon told me, after several hours
|
||
of consultation and examination in his hospital office, that a
|
||
science 'greater than our own' had examined my body. He also
|
||
informed me that he had tried to trick me concerning the medical
|
||
examination that the creatures performed upon me; I was steadfast
|
||
in my recollections when he questioned me and this upset him.
|
||
Incidentally, he didn't believe in UFOs."
|
||
|
||
"- The psychologists I dealt with were not convinced that UFO
|
||
beings carried me off. They were convinced that something external
|
||
left an extraordinary impression on me. In other words, it wasn't
|
||
my vivid imagination, as I would have preferred to believe!."
|
||
|
||
"Some time after my hypnotic sessions were over, I had an
|
||
experience that bears repeating. My wife and I were at a business
|
||
party in Southampton, N.Y. It was a beautiful summer night, and
|
||
electric terrace lanterns illuminated the patio and house. After
|
||
an hour or so, the lights suddenly went out. We noticed the
|
||
neighbors also were without lights. Most everyone loved the idea,
|
||
and candles were brought out to enliven the festive atmosphere."
|
||
|
||
"I suddenly grew panicky, very nervous, and headed for a fence
|
||
at the perimeter of the yard. I became nearly incoherent, mumbling
|
||
wild things to myself like 'they're coming back for me...they know
|
||
I've talked..' etc.
|
||
|
||
"I know exactly where to look. Up and off in a distance,
|
||
perhaps a mile away, a huge, glowing ball of light hung above the
|
||
tree line. Fortunately my wife followed me and she, too, saw the
|
||
light. To prove to myself that I wasn't crazy, I insisted that she
|
||
tell me exactly what she saw, and she told me she saw exactly what
|
||
I did. The light slowly dipped behind the trees, and moments later
|
||
the electricity came on again."
|
||
|
||
"Did the light have anything to do with the blackout? I have
|
||
no way of knowing. No one else at the party was drawn to the edge
|
||
of the yard, or even saw the light, as far as I know. And my wife
|
||
implored me to 'keep it quiet,' as these were business clients of
|
||
hers."
|
||
|
||
"Part of me doesn't want to believe that I was abducted and
|
||
examined by 'aliens'. but as farfetched as this hypothesis seems,
|
||
it's more logical than any of the other explanations I've heard.
|
||
I'm well educated, and I'm aware of what whether balloons and
|
||
satellites look like; I've also never involved myself with alcohol
|
||
or drugs. And sadly, I no longer believe in the Easter Bunny or
|
||
Santa Claus."
|
||
|
||
"But before I die, I pray that I get the answer to this one
|
||
question: What exactly happened to me that night on Route 40?"
|