G
Gil Bavel
Guest
Karla Turner, in her books Into the Fringe, and especially, Taken, before she died from an extremely rare and fast-acting cancer, submitted her strong conclusion that "abductees report alien-controlled information", and that most of what we see is what they want us to see.
Her friend and co-abductee, Katharina Wilson (The Alien Jigsaw) documented several (I think dozens) of different races of ETs. She devoted most of her lecture and several chapters of her book to describing the different flavors of ETs.
I myself had a bizarre experience one night in which I experienced what Karla called a "Holographic projection" in which a person (usually an abductee) sees an image in their mind. I had several bizarre experiences on this given night, but this one stands out:
With my eyes closed, I saw a typical Gray, rotating around in a 360-degree spin, slowly allowing me to see its entire head and face. My initial thought was, "Bullshit, that's not what you really look like".
Then, the image changed. Instead, what I saw was a similar face, but this time not the Communion-cover, smooth-skinned Gray of the movies. This time, the head was less pronounced, the eyes were still big, but not all-consuming, and the skin, I noticed in particular, was different. It was wrinkly and elephantine. This, to me, looked real. It looked very old, not at all the same as the right-off-the-production-line model we're familiar with.
I couldn't be sure I wasn't being shown some other fiction (or that the experience wasn't something I dreamed up on my own, but given the other events of the night, I doubt it), but since this is the only such "holographic projection" I've ever seen, I don't have anything else to compare it to.
Karla mentioned in her lectures and in her books several "virtual reality scenarios" in which people thought they were on a spaceship being abducted--but in one particular case, friends of an unnamed abductee had come to visit, and saw their friend in her bedroom, standing on her bed, enveloped in a blue sphere of light.
She was talking to something above the ceiling that they couldn't see. They tried to get her attention, to scream and yell at her, but to no avail. They sat down and quietly waited for the experience to be over. About 45 minutes later, the lady came out of it, and was disoriented. When she realized her friends were there, she started telling them that she was on board a UFO, and described a classic abduction experience. Her friends told her that no, she was in her bedroom the whole time, but was experiencing what Karla called the "virtual reality scenario".
I don't know if this is true at all, true in some cases, true in all cases, or what--but there does seem to be an element of deception involved with nearly all abduction cases.
I have to point out here that Karla Turner always believed abduction experiences were REAL, not fantasies of the mind or hypnogogia. She knew about the hard evidence, like scoop marks, abductees returning to bed with mud on their feet, or their nightgowns on inside-out, or even waking up with other people's clothes on.
But her main focus always seemed to be that the Grays were playing mind games with us, and that they were nearly totally inscrutable. There was no way for us to be sure what their aims were, and she adopted a very negative outlook toward them, and was especially cautious of the type that said they were here to help us or to evolve us spiritually and give us psychic powers to help heal the planet. And she repeated like a mantra, "abductees report alien-controlled information".
We don't report anything they don't want us to report. Even the times when things seem to go wrong and an abductee gets free and can move about or ask questions, this, too, is part of the control, she thought.
Karla's book Taken is one of the best and most revealing books on this subject, and I highly recommend it to anyone curious to learn more about this aspect of the abduction phenomenon.
Unfortunately, it was published by her own publishing company, and is hard to come by these days, but I think there are e-book versions of it you can pick up on the web.
Her friend and co-abductee, Katharina Wilson (The Alien Jigsaw) documented several (I think dozens) of different races of ETs. She devoted most of her lecture and several chapters of her book to describing the different flavors of ETs.
I myself had a bizarre experience one night in which I experienced what Karla called a "Holographic projection" in which a person (usually an abductee) sees an image in their mind. I had several bizarre experiences on this given night, but this one stands out:
With my eyes closed, I saw a typical Gray, rotating around in a 360-degree spin, slowly allowing me to see its entire head and face. My initial thought was, "Bullshit, that's not what you really look like".
Then, the image changed. Instead, what I saw was a similar face, but this time not the Communion-cover, smooth-skinned Gray of the movies. This time, the head was less pronounced, the eyes were still big, but not all-consuming, and the skin, I noticed in particular, was different. It was wrinkly and elephantine. This, to me, looked real. It looked very old, not at all the same as the right-off-the-production-line model we're familiar with.
I couldn't be sure I wasn't being shown some other fiction (or that the experience wasn't something I dreamed up on my own, but given the other events of the night, I doubt it), but since this is the only such "holographic projection" I've ever seen, I don't have anything else to compare it to.
Karla mentioned in her lectures and in her books several "virtual reality scenarios" in which people thought they were on a spaceship being abducted--but in one particular case, friends of an unnamed abductee had come to visit, and saw their friend in her bedroom, standing on her bed, enveloped in a blue sphere of light.
She was talking to something above the ceiling that they couldn't see. They tried to get her attention, to scream and yell at her, but to no avail. They sat down and quietly waited for the experience to be over. About 45 minutes later, the lady came out of it, and was disoriented. When she realized her friends were there, she started telling them that she was on board a UFO, and described a classic abduction experience. Her friends told her that no, she was in her bedroom the whole time, but was experiencing what Karla called the "virtual reality scenario".
I don't know if this is true at all, true in some cases, true in all cases, or what--but there does seem to be an element of deception involved with nearly all abduction cases.
I have to point out here that Karla Turner always believed abduction experiences were REAL, not fantasies of the mind or hypnogogia. She knew about the hard evidence, like scoop marks, abductees returning to bed with mud on their feet, or their nightgowns on inside-out, or even waking up with other people's clothes on.
But her main focus always seemed to be that the Grays were playing mind games with us, and that they were nearly totally inscrutable. There was no way for us to be sure what their aims were, and she adopted a very negative outlook toward them, and was especially cautious of the type that said they were here to help us or to evolve us spiritually and give us psychic powers to help heal the planet. And she repeated like a mantra, "abductees report alien-controlled information".
We don't report anything they don't want us to report. Even the times when things seem to go wrong and an abductee gets free and can move about or ask questions, this, too, is part of the control, she thought.
Karla's book Taken is one of the best and most revealing books on this subject, and I highly recommend it to anyone curious to learn more about this aspect of the abduction phenomenon.
Unfortunately, it was published by her own publishing company, and is hard to come by these days, but I think there are e-book versions of it you can pick up on the web.