184 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
184 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
SUBJECT: TIME MAGAZINE AND JOHN MACK.... FILE: UFO2240
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thanks to a ParaNet contributor for supplying this article, and thanks to Time
|
|
also.
|
|
|
|
BEHAVIOR
|
|
|
|
THE MAN FROM OUTER SPACE
|
|
|
|
Harvard psychiatrist John Mack claims that tales of UFO abductions are real.
|
|
But experts and former patients say his research is shoddy.
|
|
|
|
BY JAMES WILLWERTH/BOSTON
|
|
|
|
The young man had slowly become aware of his enigmatic memories, of
|
|
otherworldly beings lurking in his life, of ''strange coincidences'' and time
|
|
out of joint. What was happening? Who could tell him? Casting about for help,
|
|
says the boyish Pennsylvania health-care worker, ''I saw this article in the
|
|
newspaper about Dr. Mack. And I thought if you can't trust a Harvard
|
|
professor, who can you trust?''
|
|
|
|
John Mack is more than a Harvard professor; he is a respected author (his
|
|
book on T.E. Lawrence, A Prince of Our Disorder, won the Pulitzer Prize in
|
|
1977), a psychiatrist who helped found the clinical psychiatry department at
|
|
Cambridge Hospital and a noted scientific advocate of environmental and
|
|
antiwar causes. Under Mack's hypnotic guidance, the young man ''remembered''
|
|
being abducted repeatedly by aliens, taken to a spaceship and having a probe
|
|
inserted in his anus. He also recalled past lives, including one as a young
|
|
Indian warrior called Panther-by-the-Creek, who died in battle. Even more
|
|
astonishing, Mack believed every word.
|
|
|
|
The story of ''Dave Reynolds'' is one of 13 recounted by Mack in his new
|
|
book Abduction (Scribners), the result of his study of scores of
|
|
''experiencers,'' people who he believes have come in contact with
|
|
extraterrestrial visitors. The striking similarity of their memories and
|
|
Mack's academic reputation have led UFO believers to proclaim Abduction as
|
|
the most important step yet in scientifically validating abduction
|
|
experiences. A 1991 Roper poll found that 4 million people have had at least
|
|
some abduction-related experiences, such as seeing unusual lights or missing
|
|
time. ''Until John came along, there wasn't enough credibility for this
|
|
subject to support a methodological investigation,'' says Caroline McLeod,
|
|
Mack's research chief. ''Until now, if you decided to research alien
|
|
abductions, you risked being pigeonholed as a lunatic.''
|
|
|
|
Psychologists and ethicists do not question Mack's sanity so much as his
|
|
motives and methodology. They charge that he is misusing the techniques of
|
|
hypnosis, trying to shape the ''memories'' of his subjects to suit his vision
|
|
of an intergalactic future, and very possibly endangering the emotional
|
|
health of his patients in the process. ''If this were just an example of some
|
|
zany new outer limit of how foolish psychology and psychiatry can be in the
|
|
wrong hands, we'd look at it, roll our eyes and walk away,'' says University
|
|
of California, Berkeley, psychologist Richard Ofshe. ''But the use of his
|
|
techniques in counseling is substantially harming lots of people.''
|
|
|
|
The scientific skepticism is bolstered by some unusual firsthand evidence.
|
|
One of Mack's ''experiencers'' has revealed to TIME that she was actually an
|
|
undercover debunker who worked her way into Mack's confidence and rose high
|
|
in the ranks of his subjects. She found that Mack's work was riddled with
|
|
scientific irregularities; it lacked a formal research protocol as well as
|
|
legally required consent forms that advise research subjects of potential
|
|
risks. She also discovered that Mack billed the insurance companies of at
|
|
least some patient-subjects for what he described as therapy sessions.
|
|
|
|
Mack says he expected the disbelief that has greeted the bizarre tales
|
|
recounted in his book. ''This isn't supposed to be,'' he explained to TIME.
|
|
''You aren't supposed to have little guys with big black eyes taking men,
|
|
women and children against their wills on beams of light through walls and
|
|
windows into strange craft and have this going on all over the country.'' But
|
|
after hearing dozens of such stories, Mack concluded that the abductions were
|
|
real. Moreover, he discerned a motive behind them: the abductors, it seems,
|
|
were implanting mind-to-mind messages urging better care of the planet. The
|
|
aliens' apparent objective was an intergalactic breeding program combined
|
|
with a brotherly warning of impending doom if the earth doesn't change its
|
|
warlike and ecologically wasteful ways.
|
|
|
|
Mack's studies are largely funded by a tax-exempt, nonprofit research
|
|
organization that he founded in 1983, now called the Center for Psychology
|
|
and Social Change. With headquarters in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the center
|
|
was started as an attempt to study the nuclear arms race in psychological
|
|
terms. After the cold war ended, the organization started raising money for
|
|
scholars who want to combine psychology with such topics as ecology and
|
|
ethnic conflicts. Explains the center's executive director, Vivienne Simon:
|
|
''One of our main goals is to challenge current scientific method, which is
|
|
to deny all things you cannot reduce to statistics.''
|
|
|
|
Donna Bassett's story seemed to fit right in with that goal. Bassett, 37,
|
|
then a Boston-based writer and researcher, became interested in Mack's
|
|
studies after hearing complaints that he was ''strip mining'' the stories of
|
|
emotionally distraught people and failing to help them with follow-up
|
|
therapy. After reading stacks of books and articles on UFO abductions,
|
|
Bassett made up an elaborate story of otherworldly encounters involving her
|
|
family, going back to the 11th century. Her great-grandmother, she said, saw
|
|
''little people,'' whom she called angels from God. Bassett herself saw
|
|
''balls of light'' around her house at age five. She also said that as a
|
|
child she had a space-alien friend named Jane, who healed her hands after a
|
|
neighbor stuck them in boiling fudge to punish her for snooping.
|
|
|
|
Bassett participated in three hypnotic-regression sessions (she says she
|
|
used method-acting techniques to fake her way through them) and eventually
|
|
served as treasurer of an abductee support group that Mack organized and ran.
|
|
''I've never seen a UFO in my life,'' Bassett says, ''and I certainly haven't
|
|
been inside one.''
|
|
|
|
Bassett, who made extensive tapes and notes of her life in the UFO cult,
|
|
says Mack provided her with UFO literature to read prior to her sessions -- a
|
|
practice that medical hypnotists say will almost surely influence hypnotic
|
|
revelations. During the sessions, which Mack held in a darkened bedroom in
|
|
his house rather than in a neutral office, he asked leading questions that
|
|
reflected his biases. ''John made it obvious what he wanted to hear,'' says
|
|
Bassett. ''I provided the answers.'' Among other recollections, she told of
|
|
an encounter with John F. Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev on board a spaceship
|
|
during the Cuban missile crisis. Bassett said Khrushchev was crying and that
|
|
''I sat in his lap, and I put my arms around his neck, and I told him it
|
|
would be O.K.'' Hearing her tale, Mack became so excited that he leaned on
|
|
the bed too heavily, and it collapsed.
|
|
|
|
Later, at a support-group session, Bassett confronted Mack about mixing
|
|
research and therapy. According to Bassett, Mack billed insurance companies
|
|
for some support-group sessions, claiming they were ''therapeutic'' rather
|
|
than ''research.'' Yet some members of the support group complained about the
|
|
lack of therapy following their traumatic hypnosis sessions. ''That I can't
|
|
do everything that each person needs does not mean that what I'm doing is not
|
|
therapeutic,'' Mack said. ''There are too many of you, and I'm also doing
|
|
research.''
|
|
|
|
Bassett's account is supported by others who had close encounters with Mack.
|
|
''He had a hidden agenda,'' says Dave Duclos, who left the experiment when he
|
|
became disenchanted. ''He was against anybody who said anything negative
|
|
about the aliens. Once he said to me, 'If you think the aliens are bad, Mr.
|
|
Duclos, keep thinking about it until you realize they are good.' ''
|
|
|
|
But what of the surprising consistency of the stories Mack elicited? ''Dr.
|
|
Mack is ignoring the high level of suggestion and imagery that surrounds the
|
|
way in which he deals with these people,'' says Fred Frankel, 70, a Harvard
|
|
Medical School professor and psychiatrist in chief at Boston's Beth Israel
|
|
hospital. ''Hypnosis helps you regain memories that you would not have
|
|
otherwise recalled . . . But some will be true, and some will be false. The
|
|
expectation of the hypnotist and the expectation of the person who is going
|
|
to be hypnotized can influence the result.''
|
|
|
|
To many experts, the abduction scenarios bear a striking resemblance to
|
|
stories of satanic rituals and child abuse -- stories that can be shaped by
|
|
all sorts of outside influences, from movies and TV shows to the suggestive
|
|
questioning of a therapist. Says Ofshe, who is an expert in hypnosis: ''If
|
|
you convince someone they've been brutalized and raped, and you encourage
|
|
them to fully experience the emotions appropriate for this event -- and the
|
|
event never happened -- you've led them through an experience of pain that is
|
|
utterly gratuitous.''
|
|
|
|
Confronted by TIME with the news that Bassett had faked her abduction
|
|
experience, Mack declined to discuss her case, though he hinted that he had
|
|
doubts about her reliability. (Hers is not among the 13 case histories
|
|
recounted in his book, but tapes of her sessions leave little doubt that Mack
|
|
took her seriously.) In general, he insists, there is no evidence that the
|
|
core memories he elicited are distorted. ''When ((the subjects)) talk about
|
|
this -- and other people in the room with me have witnessed this, including
|
|
several psychiatrists -- the experience is that of a person who has been
|
|
through something deeply disturbing.'' While acknowledging that he is not
|
|
''an expert on hypnosis,'' Mack scoffs at the debunkers. ''The attacks on
|
|
hypnosis didn't begin until it began to reveal information that the culture
|
|
didn't want to hear.''
|
|
|
|
Mack's view of the UFO phenomenon reflects a larger philosophical stance
|
|
that rejects ''rational'' scientific explanations and embraces a hazier New
|
|
Age reality. ''I don't know why there's such a zeal to find a conventional
|
|
physical explanation,'' he says. ''I don't know why people have such trouble
|
|
simply accepting the fact that something unusual is going on here . . . We
|
|
have lost the faculties to know other realities that other cultures still can
|
|
know. The world no longer has spirit, has soul, is sacred. We've lost all
|
|
that ability to know a world beyond the physical . . . I am a bridge between
|
|
those two worlds.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
Copyright 1994 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
**********************************************
|
|
* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
|
|
********************************************** |