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- From: dona@bilver.uucp (Don Allen)
- Newsgroups: alt.alien.visitors,alt.conspiracy
- Subject: INFO: Clinical Analysis of UFO Abductions
- Keywords: PTSD
- Message-ID: <1991Apr10.020245.24197@bilver.uucp>
- Date: 10 Apr 91 02:02:45 GMT
- Organization: W. J. Vermillion - Winter Park, FL
- Lines: 626
- Xref: ns-mx alt.alien.visitors:480 alt.conspiracy:4825
-
- What follows is a report given on the Psychiatry and evaluation of
- UFO abducted victims by RIMA E. LAIBOW, M.D. This report is not
- considered "light" reading.
-
- As usual, my *disclaimer* will be to read and make up your own mind :-)
-
- ------ Begin Included Text --------------------------------------------
-
- RIMA E. LAIBOW, M.D.
- Child and Adult Psychiatry
-
- Cerridwen
- 13 Summit Terrace
- Dobbs' Ferry, NY 10522
- (914)693-3081
-
- CLINICAL DISCREPANCIES BETWEEN EXPECTED AND OBSERVED DATA IN PATIENTS
- REPORTING UFO ABDUCTIONS: IMPLICATIONS FOR TREATMENT
-
- ABSTRACT: IT SHOULD BE NOTED THAT THIS PAPER MAKES NO ATTEMPT TO ASSIGN OR
- WITHHOLD EXTERNAL VALIDITY RELATIVE TO UFO ABDUCTION SCENARIOS.
-
- Patients who believe themselves to be UFO abductees are a
- heterogeneous group widely dispersed along demographic and cultural lines.
- Careful examination of these patients and their abduction reports presents
- four areas of significant discrepancy between expected and observed data.
-
- Implications for the treatment of patients presenting UFO abduction
- scenarios are discussed.
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- If a patient were to confide to a therapist that he had been abducted
- by aliens who took him aboard a UFO and performed a series of medical
- procedures and examinations on him it is not likely that the patient would
- find either a receptive ear or a respectful and non-judgemental response from
- the therapist. The material presented would lie so far outside the confines
- of our personal and cultural belief system that it would seem intolerably
- anomalous to most of us. We would probably dismiss or repudiate it using a
- few comfortable and familiar assumptions which hold so much obvious wisdom
- that they do not require specific examination.
-
- When events which are too anomalous to allow their incorporation
- into our world schema are presented to us, we are likely to dismiss them
- by using assumptions based in out currently operative world view. This
- effectively precludes the open evaluation of the anomaly. Hence, the
- "expressible" response of most clinical and lay individuals upon hearing a UFO
- abduction account would be an immediate dismissal of even the possibility that
- such an episode might occur. Close upon the heels of that determination the
- rapid and complete pathologization of the person offering such an account
- would follow. Dream states, suggestibility, poor reality testing, outright
- dissembling or frank psychosis are customarily offered and accepted as evident
- and reasonable organizing models by which the production of this material may
- be understood. These are typical maneuvers by which the presentation of
- information which challenges schematic assumptions is dismissed or screened
- out before the assumptions can be adequately tested for predictive reliability
- and accuracy. Such testing is highly desirable, however, because it offers
- us the opportunity to apply the scientific method to our current level of
- theorital sophistication and thereby refine our understanding of reality
- further still. Of course, this process is severely impeded when the new data
- is excluded from consideration strictly because it is too anomalous for
- assessment.
-
- Westrum has offered a model by which events become "hidden" and
- therefore remain anomalous to the perception of society in a circular
- process: the hidden event is disbelieved and its disbelief helps to keep it
- hidden. Citing the lengthy period during which battered children and their
- battering parents remained hidden, Westrum states:
-
- "An event is hidden if its occurrence is so implausible
- that those who observe it hesitate to report it because
- they do not expect to be believed. The implausibility
- may cause the observer to doubt his own perceptions,
- leading to the event's denial or mis identification.
- Should the observer nonetheless make a report, he/she
- can expect to be treated with incredulity or even
- ridicule. Since the existence of a hidden event is
- contrary to what science, society, and perhaps even
- the observer believes, the event remains hidden because
- of strong social forces which interfere with
- reporting. The actual degree of underreporting is
- sometimes difficult to believe, a skepticism which
- itself acts as a deterrent to taking seriously
- those reports which do surface." (1)
-
- But for the clinician who spends a moment before reaching these
- "obvious" and "intuitive" conclusions, several fascinating and potentially
- productive questions present themselves. If we refrain for a short period
- from dismissing this material out-of-hand, we find that there are at least
- four areas of puzzling and important discrepancy between our intuitive sense
- of order and the data presented by the patient. These discrepancies force us
- to re-examine our assumptions in light of a demonstrated failure of the theory
- to account for the observed phenomena. This process, while taxing and
- challenging, is nonetheless, the way we systemize our understanding of human
- health and pathology. Noting the previously un-noted and using it to refine
- our conceptual framework leads to better prediction and therefore to better
- treatment.
-
- It is not the purpose of this paper to ascribe relative reality to the
- experience of abduction reported by some patients. Rather, precisely because
- it lies outside the realm of clinical expertise to assess with certainty
- whether these events actually occurred or if they are mere fantasy, it is
- mandatory for the clinician to examine the impact of these experiences,
- whatever their source, upon the patient. This must be done in a clear sighted
- and open-minded fashion so that the impact of the experiences may be dealt
- with rather than made into hidden events.
-
- AREAS OF DISCREPANCY
-
- 1. ABSENCE OF MAJOR PSYCHOPATHOLOGY: It is intuitively
- seductive (and perhaps comfortable) for us to assume that psychotic-level
- functioning will necessarily be present in a person claiming to be a UFO
- abductee. If this level of distortion and delusion is present, a patient
- would be expected to demonstrate some other evidence of reality distortion.
- Pathology of this magnitude would not be predicted to be present in a well
- integrated, mature and non-psychotic individual. Instead, we would expect
- clinical and psychometric tools to reveal serious problems in numerous areas
- both inter- and interpersonally. It would be highly surprising if otherwise
- well-functioning persons were to demonstrate a single area of floridly
- psychotic distortion. Further, if this single idea fix were totally
- circumscribed, non-invasive and discrete, that in itself would be highly
- anomalous. Well-developed, fixed delusional states with numerous
- elaborated and sequential components are not seen in otherwise healthy
- individuals. Prominent evidence of deep dysfunction would be expected to
- pervade many areas of the patient's life. One would predict that if the
- abduction experience were the product of delusional or other psychotic states,
- it would be possible to detect such evidence through the clinical and
- psychometric tools available to us.
-
- This points to the first important discrepancy: individuals
- claiming alien abduction frequently show no evidence of past or present
- psychosis, delusional thinking, reality-testing deficits, hallucinations or
- other significant psychopathology despite extensive clinical evaluation.
- Instead, there is a conspicuous absence of psychopathology of the magnitude
- necessary to account for the production of floridly delusional and presumably
- psychotic material.(2)
-
- In order to test this startling and anomalous information, a group of
- subjects who believe they have been abducted by aliens (9, 5 male, 4 female)
- were asked to participate in a psychometric evaluation. An experienced
- clinical psychologist carried out an investigation using projection tests
- (Rorschach, TAT, Draw a Person and the MMPI) and the Wechler Adult
- Intelligence Scale. The examining clinician was told "the subjects were being
- evaluated to determine similarities and differences in personality structure,
- as well as psychological strengths and weaknesses". All of the subjects
- actively refrained from sharing UFO-related experiences with the examiner and
- she was unaware of this theme in their lives.
-
- The investigator found that commonalties were not strongly present and
- that:
- "while the subjects are quite heterogeneous in their
- personality styles, there is a modicum of homogeneity
- in several respects: (1) relatively high intelligence
- with concomitant richness of inner life; (2) relative
- weakness in the sense of identity, especially sexual
- identity; (3) concomitant vulnerability in the inter-
- personal realm; (4) a certain orientation towards
- alertness which is manifest alternately in a certain
- perceptual sophistication and awareness or in inter-
- personal hyper-vigilance and caution.... Perhaps the
- most obvious and prominent impression left by the
- nine subjects is the range of personality styles
- the present.... There is little to unite them as a
- group from the standpoint of the overt manifestations
- of their personalities.... They [are] very distinctive
- unusual and interesting subjects. [But] "Along with
- above average intelligence, richness in mental life,
- and indications of narcissistic identity disturbance,
- the nine subjects also share some degree of impair-
- ment in personal relationships. For [some] subjects,
- problems in intimacy are manifest more in great
- sensitivity to injury and loss than in lack of
- intimacy and relatedness. [Ad] "...The last salient
- dimension of impairment in the interpersonal realm
- relates to a certain mildly paranoid and disturbing
- streak in many of the subjects, which renders them
- very wary and cautious about involving themselves
- with others. It is significant that all but one of
- the subjects had modest elevations on the MMPI paranoia
- scale relative to their other scores. Such modest
- elevations mean that we are not dealing with blatant
- paranoid symptomology but rather over-sensitivity,
- defensiveness and fear of criticism and susceptibility
- to feeling pressured. To summarize, while this is a
- heterogeneous group in terms of overt personality style,
- it can be said that most of its members share being
- rather unusual and very interesting. They also share
- brighter than average intelligence and a certain rich-
- ness of inner life that can operate favorably in terms
- of creativity or disadvantageously to the extent that
- it can be overwhelming. Shared underlying emotional
- factors include a degree of identity disturbance, some
- deficits in the interpersonal sphere, and generally
- mild paranoia phenomena (hypersensitivity, wariness,
- etc.)" (3)
-
- Her findings demonstrate a uniform lack of the significant
- psychopathology which would be necessary to account for these experiences if
- abduction experiences do represent the psychotic or delusional states
- predicted by current theory.
-
- When the examiner was informed of the true reason for the selection of
- the subjects for this evaluation (i.e., their shared belief that they had been
- exposed to alien abductions), she wrote an addendum to the original report re-
- examining the findings of the testing in the light of the new data. In it she
- states:
- "The first and most critical question is whether our
- subjects' reported experiences could be accounted
- for strictly on the basis of psychopathy, i.e., mental
- disorder. The answer is a firm no. In broad terms,
- if the reported abductions were confabulated fantasy
- productions, based on what we know about psychological
- disorders, they could only have come from pathological
- liars, paranoid schizophrenics, and severely disturbed
- and extraordinarily rare hysteroid characters subject
- to fugue states and/or multiple personality shifts...
- It is important to note that not one of the subjects,
- based on test data, falls into any of these categories.
- Therefore, while testing can do nothing to prove the
- veracity of the UFO abduction reports, one can conclude
- that the test findings are not inconsistent with the
- possibility that reported UFO abductions have, in fact,
- occurred. In other words, there is no apparent
- psychological explanation for their reports." (4)
-
- 2. CONCORDANCE OF REPORTED DATA: The second point of
- intriguing discrepancy follows from this surprising absence of evidence
- of a common thread of severe and reality-distorting psychopathology to
- account for the patient's bizarre assertions. They claim that they have
- been abducted, sometimes repeatedly over nearly the whole course of their
- lives, by aliens who have communicated with them and carried out procedures
- much like medical examinations. Persons reporting these experiences are seen
- to be psycho-dynamically varied. They are also demographically varied.
- Reports of this basic scenario, numbering in the hundreds, have now been
- recorded. Even though the reporters range from individuals as diverse as a
- mestizo Brazilian farmer(5),an American corporate lawyer (6), and a Mid-
- Western minister(7), there is a perplexing and intriguing concordance of
- features in these reports. Certain details of the scenarios repeat themselves
- with disturbing regularity no matter what the educational, national, social,
- experiential or other demographic characteristics of the reporter. In the
- production of dreams, reveries, poetry, fantasies and psychotic states, while
- the general themes of concern may be identified easily between individuals,
- the specific symbolization, concretion, abstraction and representation of
- those themes is relatively indiosyncratic for each individual. This of course
- necessitates careful empathic and attentive listening on the clinician's part
- to gather both the general flavor and specific meaning of the elements of the
- fantasy state. This careful listening often means that a personal symbolic
- representational system can be unraveled and its contents can be rendered less
- mysterious to the patient. In the abduction scenarios however, both specific
- details and themes repeat themselves with surprising regularity: In general,
- the appearance and modus operandi of the aliens, their effect and procedures,
- their tools and interests, their crafts and physical features all tally from
- report to report with a high rate of concordance. (8,9,10) This intriguing
- fact seems impervious to the socio-economic, educational, national, or
- cultural background of the abductee. Similarly, whether the individual has
- had previous contact with the literature of abduction seems to make little
- difference in this vein since the reports of individuals who can be shown to
- have had no exposure to abduction literature also contains these common
- features. Skilled practitioners and investigators report in these cases that
- they are convinced that each of these subjects was being wholly truthful in
- his/her report.
-
- The concordance of both content and event in these reports makes
- them unlike any other fantasy-generated material with which I am familiar.
- Indeed, investigators like Hopkins and others claim they have intentionally
- withheld dissemination of certain important, frequently reported aspects of
- the abduction scenarios in order to provide a "check" on the material being
- presented to them by individuals who may have had access to this literature
- since abductees may have been influenced at either the conscious or the
- unconscious level by it. In these cases as well, the features which have
- previously been published as well as those withheld are both produced by the
- abductee (11). In instances in which the patient has read some of the
- abductee literature, this previously withheld material may be offered to the
- investigator with a sense of personal invalidation, apology and embarrassment.
- He often expresses concern that this information is less likely to be
- believed than the other material with which he is already familiar. (12)
-
- Jung and others have written widely about the use of archetypes
- and the collective awareness of themes and images which are asserted to
- present themselves in a world-wide and multi-personal way. The amount of
- individual variation and creative latitude demonstrated within the closed
- system of archetypes and collected creativity is vast. Those who pose such
- universals detect their presence in the complex and highly idiosyncratic
- presentations and guises which they are given by the unconscious mind of the
- patient and the artist. This disguise is idiosyncratic, they hold, precisely
- because a set of available images is being used to work and rework the
- personal realities of the individual against the background of the collective.
- But the abductee does not seem to be involved in the reworking of personal
- mythologies against the canvas of the race's mythology. The details and
- contents of the scenarios seem, upon extensive investigation, to bear little
- thematic relevance to the issues inherent in the life of the abductee.
- Intensive follow up investigation frequently yields no thematic, archetypical,
- primary process symbolic meaning to the shape or activities of the abductors
- and the scenario of the abduction itself. Instead, therapeutic work in these
- cases centers around the issues inherent in the powerlessness and
- vulnerability of the individual even is this were not a prominent theme in his
- life before the putative abduction. In other words, the customary richness of
- association and creativity found in the examination of dreams and other
- fantasy material is lacking with regard to the scenario and presentation of
- the aliens who abduct and manipulate the patient in the abduction story.
-
- If the abduction material is indeed archetypal or fantasy generated in
- nature, this is a new class of archetypes. These archetypes demand rather
- exact representation and mythic presentation since the activities and behavior
- of the aliens is rather invariant within a narrow latitude regardless of the
- other dream and fantasy themes of the patient.
-
- 3. ABDUCTION SCENARIOS AND HYPNOSIS. Members of both the lay and
- professional communities frequently assume that material referring to UFO
- abduction scenarios is retrieved under hypnosis. Since it is generally
- believed that people under hypnosis are open to the implantation of
- suggestions through the overt or covert influence of the hypnotist it is
- concluded that this material reproduces the hypnotists' expectations or
- interests. It is further concluded that since the hypnotist "put it there"
- the abduction could not be accounted for as material which emerges solely from
- the patient's end of dyad.
-
- Thus, the abduction scenarios are commonly dismissed as merely representing
- the production of desired material by compliant subjects. The abductees strong
- sense of personal conviction that this really happened to him during the
- session itself and upon recall of the session is similarly dismissed as an
- artifact of the process by which the fantasies were generated.
-
- Several compelling factors mitigate against the facile dismissal of
- data in this way. Firstly, about 20% of these highly concordant abduction
- scenarios are available spontaneously at the level of conscious awareness
- prior to hypnosis. (13,14) These accounts may be enhanced or subjected to
- further elaboration through the use of hypnosis or other recall enhancement
- techniques, but in a significant number of people producing abduction
- scenarios the recall is initially produced without recourse to such
- techniques. If their stories were substantially different from the concordant
- abduction scenarios produced under regressive hypnosis, a different phenomenon
- would be taking place.
-
- However, given the perplexing clinical presentation of similar stories
- from dissimilar people who are uninformed about one another's experience, this
- presents another highly interesting area of discrepancy.
-
- Hopkins has classified patterns of abduction recall into five
- categories:
-
- Type 1. patients consciously recall parts of the full abduction
- scenario without hypnotic or other techniques designed to aid recall. The
- emergence of this material may be delayed.
-
- Type 2. patients recall the UFO sighting, surrounding circumstances
- and/or aliens, but do not recall the abduction itself. Only a perceived gap in
- time indicates any anomalous occurrence.
-
- Type 3. patients recall a UFO and/or hominids but nothing else.
- There is no sense of time lapse or dislocation.
-
- Type 4. patients recall only a time lapse or dislocation. No UFO
- abduction scenario is recalled without the use of specific retrieval
- techniques.
-
- Type 5. patients recall noting relating to UFO or abduction
- scenarios. Instead they experience discrepant emotions ranging from uneasy
- suspicions that "something happened to me" to intense, ego-dystonic fears of
- specific locations, conditions or actions. They may also exhibit unexplained
- physical wounds and/or recurring dreams of abduction scenario content which
- are not fixed in their experience as to place and time. (15)
-
- Examination of the transcripts of hypnotic sessions which yield
- abduction material reveals that although subjects are sufficiently
- suggestible to enter the trance state as directed by the therapist, they
- resist having material "injected" into their account. They customarily
- refuse to be "lead" or distracted by the therapist's attempts to change
- either the focus or content of their report. The subject characteristically
- insists upon correcting errors or distortions suggested or implied by the
- hypnotist during the session. Hence it is difficult to account for the
- similarities and concordances of these scenarios through the mechanism of
- suggestibility when these subjects so steadfastly refuse to be lead by
- hypnotists.
-
- In fact, it is even more striking that while these patients feel the
- material which they are producing both in and out of hypnosis as
- experientially "real", nonetheless they frequently seek to discount or
- explain away this bizarre and frightening material. This remains true even
- though sharing it regularly results in a significant remission of anxiety-
- related symptoms and discomfort. These abduction scenarios are so ego-alien
- that they have frequently not shared the material with anyone at all or with
- only a highly select group of trusted intimates. In the vast preponderance of
- cases patients are reluctant to allow themselves to be publicly identified as
- having had these experiences since the perceive that the abduction scenario is
- so highly anomalous that they expect to experience ridicule and repudiation if
- they become associated with it publicly. It therefore functions like a guilty
- secret in the way that rape has (and, unfortunately still does in some cases).
-
- After the material is produced and explored, these subjects often
- experience a marked degree of relief. This is true with reference both to
- previously identified symptomatic behaviors and other anxiety manifestations
- not noted on initial assessment. These other symptoms may remit after
- enhanced recall of the scenario and its details takes place. It is
- interesting to note that while the scenarios may contain a good deal of highly
- traumatic material specifically related to reproductive functioning, these
- episodes are nearly uniformly free of subjective erotic charge when either the
- manifest or latent contents are examined.
-
- 4. POST TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER (PTSD) IN THE ABSENCE OF
- EXTERNAL TRAUMA: PTSD was first described in the content of battle
- fatigue (16). Although it may present in a wide variety of clinical guises
- (17) PTSD is currently understood as a disorder which occurs in the context of
- intolerable externally induced trauma which floods the victim with anxiety
- and/or depression when his overwhelmed and paralyzed ego defenses prove
- inadequate to the task of organizing unbearably stressful events. In the
- service of the patient's urgent attempt to still the tides of disorganizing
- anxiety, fear or guilt<18> which accompany the emergence of cognitive, sensory
- or emotional recall of these traumatic events, the trauma itself may be
- either partly or completely unavailable to conscious recall. <19>...Both
- physical and psychological responses to the trauma are profound and pervasive.
- PTSD follows overwhelming real-life trauma and is not known to present as a
- sequel to internally generated fantasy states.<20>
-
- This fourth area of discrepancy between predicted and observed data is
- perhaps the most striking and challenging. Patients who produce alien
- abduction material in the absence of psycopathology severe enough to account
- for it often show the clinical picture of PTSD. This is remarkable when one
- considers that it is possible that no traumatic event occured except that
- rooted only in fantasy. These trauma are, in large measure, split off, denied
- and repressed as they are in other occurrences of PTSD.
-
- As discussed above, these scenarios frequently appear in individuals
- who are otherwise free of any indication of significant emotional and
- psychological instability or pre-existing severe psycopathology. On careful
- clinical assessment, these memories do not appear to fill the intrapsychic
- niches usually occupied by psychotic or psycho-neurotic formulations. The
- abduction scenarios do not encapsulate or ward off unacceptable impulses, they
- do not define <or defend against> split off affects, they are not used either
- to stabilize or to divert current or archaic patterns of behavior nor do they
- provide secondary gain or manipulative control for the individual.
-
- Instead, this material, experienced by the patient as unwelcome and
- totally ego-dystonic, seems quite consistently to be woven into the fabric of
- the patient's internal life only in terms of his reactive response to the
- stress inherent in these experiences and the contents of the repressed
- material related to the stressful memories. But the extent of this secondary
- response can be extensive. It should be noted that PTSD has not previously
- been thought to occur following trauma which has been generated solely by
- internally states. If abduction scenarios are in fact fantasies, then our
- understanding of PTSD need to be suitably broadened to account for this
- heretofore unexpected correlation.
-
- In addition, there are significant clinical implications to the
- finding of abduction scenario material in a patient who shows PTSD but is
- otherwise free of significant psychopathology. Since abduction scenario
- material presents several crucial areas of anomaly and discrepancy between
- what is known and that which is observed. It is very important for the
- therapist to refrain from the comfortable (for the therapist, at least)
- description of psychotic functioning to the patient who produces this material
- until such disturbance is, in fact, demonstrated and corroborated by the
- presence of other signs beside the UFO-related material. It is imperative for
- the therapist to adopt a non-judgemental stance. He can attend to the
- distress of the patient without attempting to confirm or deny possibilities
- which are outside the specific area of his expertise. The clinician should
- adopt as his therapeutic priority the alleviation of the PTSD symptomology
- through the use of appropriate and acceptable methods specific to the
- treatment of PTSD. In addition, the therapist must remember that while he may
- have strong convictions pro or con the abduction actually having occurred, it
- is not within either his capability or expertise to make such a judgement with
- total certainty. Furthermore, as the clinical psychologist who evaluated the
- nine abductees pointed out in her addendum, the sophistication of the
- psychotherapies has not advanced to the point at which this determination can
- be made on the basis of currently available information (21), although the
- treatment of post traumatic symptomology is currently understood. Hence, it
- is important for the therapist to retain the same non-judgemental and helpful
- stance necessary to the successful treatment of any other traumatic insult.
- When a therapist labels material as either unacceptable or insane, the
- burden of the patient is increased. If the therapist is reacting out of
- prejudices which reflect his own closely-held beliefs rather than his
- complete certainty, he unfairly increases the distress of the patient.
-
- SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS: Although it has long been the
- "common wisdom" of both the professional and lay communities that anyone
- claiming to be the victim of abduction by UFO occupants must be seriously
- disturbed, thoroughly deluded or a liar, careful examination of both the
- reports and their reports calls this assumption into question. Clinical and
- psychometric investigation of abductees reveals four areas of discrepancy
- between the expected data and the observable phenomena and suggests further
- investigation. These discrepant areas are:
-
- 1. ABSENCE OF PSYCHOPATHOLOGY An unexpected absence of severe
- psychopathology coupled with the high level of functioning found in many
- abductees is a perplexing and surprising finding. Psychometric evaluation
- of nine abductees revealed a notable heterogeneity of psychological and
- psychometric characteristics. The major area of homogeneity was in the
- absence of significant psychopathology. Rather than consulting a subset
- of the severely disturbed and psychotic population, there is clinical
- evidence that at least some abductees are high functioning, healthy
- individuals. This interesting discrepancy requires further investigation.
-
- 2. CONCORDANCE OF REPORTS Highly dissimilar people produce
- strikingly similar accounts of abductions by UFO occupants. The basic
- scenarios are highly concordant in detail and events. This is surprising in
- light of the widely divergent cultural, socio-economic, educational,
- occupational, intellectual and emotional status of abductees. Further, the
- scenarios themselves do not seem to show the same layering of affect and
- symbolic richness present in other fantasy endowed material. Instead,
- symbolic and conceptual complexity centers around the meaning of the
- experience for the individual, not around the shape, form, activity, intent,
- etc., of the aliens and their environment. This is in stark contrast to the
- expected complexity and diversity of thematic and symbolic elaboration found
- in our fantasy material.
-
- 3. RESISTANCE TO SUGGESTION UNDER HYPNOSIS Abduction scenario
- concordance is frequently attributed to the introduction of material into the
- suggestible mind of a hypnotized patient. Examination of abduction reports
- indicates that a significant percentage of these reports emerge into conscious
- awareness prior to the use of hypnosis or other techniques employed to
- stimulate recall. Furthermore abductees resist being lead or diverted during
- hypnosis and regularly insist on correcting the hypnotist so that their report
- remains accurate according to their own perceptions.
-
- 4. PTSD IN THE ABSENCE OF TRAUMA Post Traumatic Stress
- Disorder (PTSD) has not been previously reported in patients experiencing
- overwhelming stress predicted only in internally generated states such as
- psychotic delusional systems or phobias. But patients reporting abduction
- frequently show classic signs and symptoms of PTSD. Like other kinds of PTSD
- it is subject to clinical intervention which frequently leads to substantial
- clinical improvement. But in order for this improvement to occur, the patient
- must be treated for the PTSD he exhibits rather than the psychotic state he is
- presumed to display by virtue of his abduction report. If the abduction
- scenarios represent only a fantasy state, then it is worth investigating why
- (and how) this particular highly concordant and deeply disturbing fantasy is
- involved in the pathogenesis of a condition otherwise seen only following
- externally induced trauma. Further, if this is found to be the case, the
- nature of PTSD itself should be re-examined in light of this finding.
- Alternatively, it may be that the trauma is, in fact, an external one which
- has taken place and the post traumatic state represents an expected response
- on the part of a traumatized patient.
-
- It is not within the area of expertise of the clinician to make an
- accurate determination about the objective validity of UFO abduction events.
- But it is certainly within his purview to assist the patient in regaining a
- sense of appropriate mastery, anxiety reduction and the alleviation of the
- clinical symptomalogy as efficiently and effectively as possible. This is
- best accomplished through an assessment the patient's *actual* state of
- psycho-dynamic organization, not his *presumed* state. In other words, in
- order to make the diagnosis of a psychotic or delusional state, findings other
- than the presence of a belief in UFO abduction must be present. In the
- absence of other indications of severe psychopathology, it is inappropriate to
- treat the patient as if he were afflicted with such psychopathology. It lies
- outside the realm of clinical expertise to determine with absolute certainty
- whether or not a UFO abduction has indeed taken place. Patients should not be
- viewed as demonstrating prima facie evidence of pervasive psychotic
- dysfunction because of the abduction material alone nor should they be
- hospitalized or treated with anti-psychotic medication based solely on the
- presence of UFO abduction scenarios. Instead, they should be assessed on the
- basis of their overall psychologic state. Unless otherwise indicated,
- treatment should be focused on the PTSD symptomatology and its repair.
-
- The areas of discrepancy which arise from the examination of UFO
- abductees between the expected clinical finding and the observed ones
- highlight interesting questions which require further investigation into
- the nature and impact of fantasy on psycho-dynamic states and symptom
- formation.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- (1)Westrum, R., Social Intelligence About Hidden Events,
- Knowledge:Creation, Diffusion, Utilization, Vol 3 No 3,
- March 1982, p.382
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- (2)Hopkins, B. Missing Time: A Documented Study of UFO Abductions.
- New York, Richard Marek 1981.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- (3)Slater, E., Ph.D. "Conclusions on Nine Psychologicals" in
- Final Report on the Psychological Testing of UFO Abductees"
- Mt Ranier, MD, 1985
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- (4)Slater, E., Ph.D. Addendum to "Conclusions on Nine Psychological"
- in Final Report on the Psychological Testing of UFO "Abductees", op.cit.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- (5)Creighton, G. "The Amazing Case of Antonio Villas Boas" in
- Rogo, D>S>, ed., Alien Abductions. New York, New American
- Library, pp. 51-83, 1980.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- (6)Hopkins,B. Missing Time: A Documented Study of UFO Abductions. op.cit.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- (7)Druffel,A. "Harrison Bailey and the 'Flying Saucer Disease'" in
- Rogo, S.D., ed., op.cit. pp. 122-137
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- (8)Strieber, W. Communion. New York, Avon, 1987
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- (9)Fowler, R. The Andreasson Affair. New York, Bantam Books, 1979
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- (10)Fuller, J. The Interrupted Journey. New York, Dell, 1966
- ---------------------------------------
- (11)Hopkins, B. Intruders: The Incredible Visitation at Copley Woods.
- New York, Random House, 1987
- --------------------------------------
- (12)Hopkins, B. Personal communications with the author about the more
- than 200 abductees whom Mr. Hopkins has investigated both with and
- without the use of hypnosis.
- ---------------------------------------
- (13)Westrum, R. personal communication with the author.
- ---------------------------------------
- (14)Hopkins, B. personal communication with the author.
- ---------------------------------------
- (15)Hopkins, B. "The Investigation of UFO Reports" in The Spectrum
- of UFO Research. Proceedings of the Second CUFOS Conference
- (September 25-27, 1981), Hynek, M. ed., pp 171-2, Chicago,
- J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies, 1988.
- ---------------------------------------
- (16)Kardiner, A., The Traumatic Neuroses of War. New York,
- P. Hoeber, 1941
- ---------------------------------------
- (17)van Der Kolk, B.A., Psychological Trauma. Washington, DC, American
- Psychiatric Press, 1987
- ---------------------------------------
- (18)Horowitz,M.J., Stress Response Syndromes. New York, Jason Aronson,1976
- ---------------------------------------
- (19)van Der Kolk, op.cit.
- ---------------------------------------
- (20)American Psychiatric Association: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
- of Mental Disorders, 3rd ed. Washington, DC,
- American Psychiatric Association, 1980
- ---------------------------------------
- (21)Slater, op.cit.
- ---------------------------------------
-
- EOF
-
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