128 lines
7.3 KiB
Plaintext
128 lines
7.3 KiB
Plaintext
SUBJECT: Abduction Research FILE: UFO2273
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PART 3
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Having worked with so many decent, honest, positively oriented
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abductees, however, I believe this theory is wrong. It is worse than
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wrong--it is despicable, as despicable as blaming a rape victim for the
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violence committed against her. This attitude leaves many abductees
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feeling doubly violated, first by the aliens who took them and then by
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the UFO researchers to whom they turn for explanations and help.
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But it is easy to understand why such a theory would be so popular.
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Humans have a deep need to believe in the power of good. We need for
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the aliens to be a good force, since we feel so helpless in their
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presence. And we need for some superior force to offer us a hope of
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salvation, both personally and globally, when we consider the sorry
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state of the world.
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I think the aliens know this about us--they know that we want and
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hope for them to be benevolent creatures--and they use our desire for
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goodness to manipulate us. What better way to gain our cooperation than
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to tell us that the things they are doing are for our own good? But
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looking at the actions, the results of alien interference such as the
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long list above. There is a great discrepancy between what we desire
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from them and what they are doing to us.
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Not all abduction reports are filled with frightening or painful
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events, of course. Many people say that their alien encounters felt
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benevolent, that their abductors treated them kindly or at least with a
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scientific detachment. Some abductees recall being told that they were
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"special," that they were "chosen," and that they have an important task
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to perform for the benefit of humanity.
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Given such a positive message, the abductees may ignore the fear
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and the pain of their encounters and insist to themselves and to others
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that a higher motive underlies the abduction experience. And, in some
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cases, all that an abductee remembers is a benevolent encounter and so
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has no reason to assume any negative action has occurred.
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But intensive research shows that at the core of the human- alien
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interaction there is a clear pattern of deception. We know, for
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instance, that "screen memories" are often used to mask an alien
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abduction. Such accounts abound, in which a person sees a familiar yet
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out-of-place animal, like a deer or owl, a monkey or a rabbit, and then
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experiences a period of missing time. The person often awakens later to
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find a new, unexplained scar on his body.
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Uneasiness about the encounter will persist, however, and far
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different memories may start to surface in dreams or flashbacks, and
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then the person seeks help to explain the uneasiness. Quite often,
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hypnotic regression is used to uncover the events behind the "screen
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memory," and that is when a typical alien abduction surfaces.
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The most recent research in which I've been involved has turned up
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yet a second sort of screening process. If it turns out to be accurate,
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then thousands of abduction cases are in urgent need of re-examination.
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The typical scenario of undergoing the regressive hypnosis usually
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results in penetration of the initial blocked memories.
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The abductee then recalls an encounter, hitherto unremembered, such
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as undergoing a physical examination of some sort, perhaps having body
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tissues removed or having a gynecological exam. Other typical reports
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include the taking of sperm and ova, of being told of an important task
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to be carried out, or of receiving a warning of upcoming disaster.
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And in most cases, both the abductee and the investigator come away
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from the hypnosis session feeling that they have discovered the truth
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about the experience. Rationalization leads them to believe that the
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aliens' purposes must be scientifically objective or benevolent. The
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less threatening and more benevolent the hypnotically recalled event
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seems, the more satisfied are the investigator and the abductee. "That
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wasn't so bad, now, was it? These beings are our friends, or at least
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they are not our enemies." And everyone goes away with a sense of
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relief. I have yet to hear of a researcher who actually questions the
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uncovered scenario.
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But from several recent cases, it is apparent that these recovered
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memories may well also be yet another screen, masking events that are
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much more reprehensible. I will explain one such case, to make the
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point clear.
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A STRANGE REPORT.
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A man in his late 40's came to us to explore several alien- related
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events in his life, and in the interview he told of a strange, although
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not apparently alien-oriented, episode that had haunted him since
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childhood. When he was ten years old, his grandmother came to visit in
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his home, and since the house was small, she shared his bed on the first
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night of her visit.
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During the night, the boy was awakened by a loud male voice. He
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couldn't understand what the voice was saying, but it sounded angry and
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was addressing the grandmother lying beside him.
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The next morning, he asked his grandmother, "What was that voice in
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the bedroom last night?"
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His grandmother, with tears in her eyes, pulled him tightly to her
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and said, "That was the devil." She said nothing more about the
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episode, but she did insist that her son take her back to her own home
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immediately. It was an unreasonable request, and her son tried to talk
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her out of it. But the grandmother was adamant, and finally her son
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agreed to take her home the following day.
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The entire family made the trip of over a hundred miles back to the
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grandmother's farm, and within an hour of their arrival, the grandmother
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suffered a massive stroke and died. Ever since that event, the man had
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felt a heavy burden of guilt associated with his grandmother's death.
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Yet there was no conscious reason for him to have felt that way. The
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entire event was poignant and mystifying, but in all the alien
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encounters he had subsequently undergone, he had felt that the aliens
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were his friends and were helping him by expanding his psychic
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abilities.
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A regression session was arranged, and in the course of the
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hypnosis, he was asked to look at that childhood experience. What he
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recalled was an abduction in which he and his grandmother were taken to
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a spacecraft in the company of reptilian aliens. He remembered the
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aliens telling his grandmother that they were interested in learning
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about her knowledge of medicinal herbs.
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And they offered to exchange medical information of their own.
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They gave the boy and the grandmother a liquid to drink, explaining
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that it was beneficial and would make the grandmother feel young and
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attractive again. So both of them drank the liquid, and the man
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remembered seeing his grandmother indeed looking much younger. That was
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the extent of his recollection.
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Both he and Ms. Bartholic, who was conducting the regression, were
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puzzled by this, because there was nothing in the episode to account for
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the guilt he had felt about the grandmother's death. So Ms. Bartholic
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deepened the man's trance level and asked him to look at it again, with
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much clearer vision. And what he then recalled was much more
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disturbing.
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End of part 3.
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**********************************************
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* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
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