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- Date: 10-26-91 02:36
- From: Dale Anderson
- Subj: UFO Research and Stress
-
-
- I thought this article would give a different perspective with regard to the
- word 'dedication', as practiced by many UFO researchers.
-
- The article comes from the November 1991 issue of OMNI magazine.
- 'Antimatter' section, page 105.
-
- OMNI subscription: $23.97/12 monthly issues
-
- Address: OMNI
- P.O. Box 3026
- Harlan, IA
- 51593-2087
-
- ===========================================================================
-
- UFO UPDATE:
-
- UFO researchers say their work involves endless stress
- and deprives their families of time, energy and love.
-
-
- To the typical UFO buff, the daily life of the UFO researcher seems
- romantic indeed. According to the common perception, this lucky individual
- spends days tracking down spectacular sightings and nights hypnotically
- probing the psyches of alleged UFO abductees. When the researcher comes up
- for air, moreover, he tweaks the nose of established science and jousts with
- the government for classified proof of UFOs. What a life!
-
- But the UFOlogists themselves say their profession is costly and stressful,
- exacting an enormous toll on earning capacity and family life. The pain and
- pressure of the work, they say, is rarely mentioned on the talk show circuit
- or in UFO magazines. Stressful career problems, for instance, have plagued
- investigator Richard Hall, who worked with the National Investigations
- Committee on Aerial Phenomena during the Sixties and Seventies and is now on
- the board of the Fund for UFO Research. Says Hall, "UFOs on my resume
- interfered with me getting straight jobs for years."
-
- UFOlogist David Jacobs, meanwhile, says his work takes so much time it
- seems "like a bottomless pit." As an abduction expert and a historian at
- Temple University in Philadelphia, he can't find enough hours in the day for
- either activity. When push came to shove, Jacobs says, he chose to study
- abductions. But a senior member of his department at Temple informed him
- that he would have to go back to regular historical scholarship if he "hoped
- to advance in his career." His abduction work has also strained his family
- life, though he feels guilty when he takes a break.
-
- Toronto psychotherapist David Gotlib reports similar strains. Gotlib
- spends hours providing therapy for abductees and also produces a newsletter
- for abduction researchers. Between the newsletter and UFO conferences,
- Gotlib says, he is "out thousands of dollars worth of time." He deals with
- the pressure by reassessing his commitment to UFOlogy every six months.
- "I'll close down the newsletter," Goblib says, "when I get a relationship or
- get married."
-
- Larry Bryant, head of the Washington, DC, office of Citizens Against UFO
- Secrecy, says he has literally given up on a social life for the sake of
- UFOs. Bryant, a Pentagon employee by day, comes home to a world of
- unanswered phone messages and UFO correspondence. "It's a full-time
- part-time job," he says. Bryant says he recently received a poor job rating
- at the Pentagon because of his UFO work. The rating was improved only after
- he paid a lawyer thousands of dollars and filed a lawsuit.
-
- Finally, artist and abduction expert Budd Hopkins claims the research has
- deprived his family of "time, energy and love." But even more disturbing, he
- says, is a frightening feeling he calls "terminal impotence." This
- oppressive sensation sets in, he notes, "because there is no way to stop the
- abductions or ultimately help the abductees."
-
- Given these drawbacks, why do the researchers persist? David Jacobs
- explains. The work, he insists, is critical because "the abduction
- phenomenon is the most important thing that has ever occurred."
-
- --PAUL McCARTHY
- ===========================================================================
-
- Regards,
- Dale