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- From: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG (Sheldon Wernikoff)
- Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo
- Subject: Abduction Article, 1/7
- Message-ID: <5978.2C883EC1@paranet.FIDONET.ORG>
- Date: 2 Sep 93 06:42:00 GMT
- Sender: ufgate@paranet.FIDONET.ORG (newsout1.26)
- Organization: FidoNet node 9:1012/31.0 - ParaNet ALPHA, Lincoln NE
- Lines: 109
-
-
- * Originally By: John Powell
- * Originally To: All
- * Originally Re: Abduction Article, 1/7
- * Original Area: BAMA UFO (Fido)
- * Forwarded by : Blue Wave v2.12
-
-
- _Dark Side of the Unknown_ by Patrick Huyghe. (OMNI, ISSN 0149-8711,
- Copyright 1993 by Omni Publications International Ltd., 1965 Broadway,
- New York, NY 10023-5965. Published monthly with a subscription rate of
- $24/yr.)
-
- Psychiatrists and psychologists
- with advanced degrees are investigating the mysterious
- realm of kundalini, UFOs and ghosts.
-
- Tell us about it. Terrorized by little gray creatures with large black
- eyes who whisk you away from your bedroom at night? Plagued by
- poltergeists rattling the bookshelf and hurling pictures from the wall?
- Haunted by the ghost of a loved one, say, or precognitive dreams that
- turn suddenly real? Whatever the nature of your encounter with the
- unknown, you may have been left physically drained or emotionally
- scarred. Chances are, you've confided in no one, fearful friends and
- relatives would consider you insane. So where do you turn?
-
- Actually, you have some options. You might, for instance, place your
- trust in someone who makes a business out of the unknown. you saw the
- movie; you know the tune. Who you gonna call? Ghostbusters! If it's
- psychic troubles you've had, you call a parapsychologist. And when it
- comes to possessions and visions and such, there's always the minister,
- rabbi, or parish priest. On the plus side, you can be fairly confident
- these people will believe you. On the other hand, if your trouble is
- even partially psychological, how much help would they be?
-
- That's where mainstream psychologists and psychiatrists come in. If
- you're hallucinating, they might have a treatment or cure. But don't
- expect them to believe you. They'll dismiss your story as a raving
- fantasy, and if you can't shake the episode, you may end up diagnosed
- with schizophrenia and on antipsychotic drugs.
-
- Not what you had in mind? Then consider your third option: the new
- breed of mental-health professional now contending that such other
- worldly experiences are legitimate and commonplace among the sane.
- That's not to say they accept the reality of alien abductors or
- precognition or ghosts - though much to the horror of their colleagues,
- a few of them have. But what many of these therapists have come to
- believe over the past five years is that such experiences - regardless
- of their cause - are common among normal, healthy people, and that those
- who find themselves traumatized by such episodes are just as deserving
- of psychological ministrations as those who suffer anxiety, depression,
- or the trauma that follows a plane crash or a rape.
-
- To signal the birth of this new discipline, some dedicated
- professionals have even formed a group known as TREAT, for clinicians
- and physical and behavioral scientists interested in the Treatment and
- Research of Expe ienced Anomalous Trauma. TREAT, which holds a
- conference each spring, deals with everything from reports of UFO
- abduction and precognition to near-death episodes, satanic possession,
- and alleged contact with the dead. Another favorite TREAT area is
- kundalini - often perceived as a burning. vibrating, or electrifying
- sensation associated with meditation or any other heavy duty spiritual
- chore.
-
- By all indicators, TREAT is a movement whose time has come. Indeed,
- every national poll on the paranormal confirms just how widespread such
- experiences are. A 1992 survey by the Roper Organization, for instance,
- suggests that 2 percent of the population, or 1 of every 50 adult
- Americans, exhibits the symptoms that sometimes mask a UFO abduction
- experience. A 1987 study conducted by Andrew Greeley and colleagues at
- the University of Chicago showed that 42 percent of American adults
- reported contact with the dead, 67 percent claimed ESP experiences, and
- 31 percent reported clairvoyance. And a 1981 Gallup poll showed that an
- extraordinary 15 percent of all people revived from the cusp of death
- reported the spectacle of the near-death experience in which they
- glimpsed such generic signposts as beckoning loved ones or a tunnel of
- light.
-
- One must not, of course, mistake these experiences for proof of their
- reality. "Truth should not be defined by what people believe," warns
- Harold Goldstein, a psychologist in the division of epidemiology and
- services research branch of the National Institutes of Mental Health.
- "Facts are facts. Now it may turn out that there are aliens and such
- things, but there needs to be evidence for it, and belief is not
- evidence."
-
- Then again, say the professionals on the frontier of the new
- psychology, beliefs should not be dismissed. "Paranormal experiences
- are so common in the general population," psychiatrists Colin Ross of
- Dallas and Shaun Joshi of Winnipeg, Canada, said in a recent issue of
- the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, "that no theory of normal
- psychology or psychopathology which does not take them into account can
- be comprehensive." Such experiences, they say, could be studied
- scientifically, "in the same way as anxiety. depression, or any other
- set of experiences" without making "any decision as to whether some,
- all, or none of them are objectively real."
-
-
-
- -!- Blue Wave/QBBS v2.12 [NR]
- ! Origin: *** Odyssey Fringe Science Echo *** 1-205-739-1469 (1:3607/20.0)
- * Tossed by SFToss v1.02 on 93/09/01 02:53:28
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- --
- Sheldon Wernikoff - via ParaNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG
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- From: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG (Sheldon Wernikoff)
- Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo
- Subject: Abduction Article, 2/7
- Message-ID: <5979.2C883EC1@paranet.FIDONET.ORG>
- Date: 2 Sep 93 06:42:00 GMT
- Sender: ufgate@paranet.FIDONET.ORG (newsout1.26)
- Organization: FidoNet node 9:1012/31.0 - ParaNet ALPHA, Lincoln NE
- Lines: 112
-
-
- * Originally By: John Powell
- * Originally To: All
- * Originally Re: Abduction Article, 2/7
- * Original Area: BAMA UFO (Fido)
- * Forwarded by : Blue Wave v2.12
-
-
- That may sound good in theory, but some observers wonder whether it's
- really possible in practice. Therapists, it turns out, are no more
- immune to the potent lure of the unknown than any one else. Unwary
- specialists of the human mind may, in fact, be particularly prone to
- accepting the reality of their patient's fascinating tales. And
- enchantment can lead to obsession. The psychoanalyst Robert Lindner
- admitted as much in 1955 after coming under the spell of a patient who
- provided detailed accounts of visits into the future reality of another
- planet. To help the patient, Lindner studied the mass of written
- records Kirk had prepared, noted the inconsistencies, and confronted him
- with the errors. That effort forced cracks in the fantasy and led,
- eventually, to Kirk's recovery. But Lindner, meanwhile, become so
- absorbed in the story that he had difficulty extricating himself from
- its grip. In his classic book, The Fifty-Minute Hour, he admits to
- skirting "the edges of the abyss." Now, some 35 years later, the latest
- mental-health professionals to flirt with UFO abduction, the near-death
- experience, and psychic phenomena face this danger as well.
-
- One mental-health worker to dive headlong into the dark pit of the
- unknown in recent years is psychiatrist Rima Laibow. Her sprawling
- office in the upscale Westchester County town of Hastings-on-Hudson, New
- York, is ringed with the big fluffy pillows she uses in holding therapy,
- originally designed to repair early attachment deficits in autistic
- children but now used with other serious chikdhood and adult problems as
- well. Dressed in blue slacks and a blouse, her frizzy hair tossed to
- one side, Laibow recalls her first professional journey through the
- looking glass. "lt was 1988," she explains, "and a patient whom I had
- known for many years came to me in a state of anxiety and panic because,
- out of the corner of her eye, she had caught sight of the cover of
- Communion."
-
- The patient, a 43-year-old cardiologist, had never read this 1987
- best-seller by horror novelist Whitley Strieber, didn't know that it
- concerned alleged encounters with UFO entities, and had never been
- interested in the subject of alien abduction at all. Despite all this,
- after glimpsing the cover of Communion, she claimed terrifying memory
- fragments of encounters with creatures like those on the book's cover.
-
- "Such notions had always struck me as psychotic," Laibow explains,
- "but this patient taught me otherwise." Convinced that her patient
- showed no sign of major psychopathology, in fact, Laibow came up with a
- different diagnosis for the sudden breakdown the cardiologist
- experienced following recall of an alleged alien encounter:
- posttraumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.
-
- According to the most recent Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
- Mental Disorders, PTSD is a stress reaction triggered by various
- external events "outside the range of usual human experience."
- Triggering events, the American Psychiatric Association's manual goes on
- to say, include such atrocities as rape, war, and natural disasters like
- earthquakes or floods, which are "usually experienced with intense fear,
- terror, and helplessness." In fact, Laibow's patient met all the
- criteria for PTSD but one. "There had been no known trauma," recalls
- Laibow, "so I thought, how could she have PTSD when we all know there
- couldn't possibly be an external event like an alien abduction could
- there?"
-
- Over the weeks that followed, Laibow worked to quell her patient's
- anxiety and panic. But the doctor herself remained genuinely puzzled.
- In search of answers, she read all the literature she could find on
- reported alien abductions and spoke to the primary investigators in the
- field: New York artist Budd Hopkins, who had written two books on the
- topic, and Temple University historian David Jacobs, who, like Hopkins,
- had become a kind of folk guru and de-facto therapist for UFO abduction
- victims.
-
- "What I found," Laibow states, "left me both impressed and appalled."
- She was impressed, she says, because "there's a substantial body of data
- suggesting that under some circumstances, at some times, for some
- reason, there are things in the atmosphere we call UFOs that appear to
- have external physical reality." But she was appalled because from her
- "sad and shocking experience, UFOlogy as it exists today is little more
- than a collection of belief systems vying for dominance. The field is
- plagued by the notion that just collecting neat stuff is the same as
- doing research. If I were the National Science Foundation, I wouldn't
- fund this research, either."
-
- Hoping to change all that, Laibow began by giving UFO abduction and
- the whole gamut of experience with unexplained phenomena a new, more
- respectable name. "Experienced anomalous trauma," she called it, so
- that "professionals, who would otherwise stop listening because you've
- mentioned UFOs, parapsychology, and other weird things would now stop
- and process those three words in relation to each other and ask, 'Like
- what?' "
-
- The strategy worked. In fact, with the name experienced anomalous
- trauma as a draw, Laibow found dozens of psychiatrists and Ph.D.
- psychologists intrigued by her ideas. To take advantage of the
- momentum, she formed an umbrella organization for the Treatment and
- Research of Experienced Anomalous Trauma, or TREAT, and held the group's
- first meeting in May 1989.
-
-
-
- -!- Blue Wave/QBBS v2.12 [NR]
- ! Origin: *** Odyssey Fringe Science Echo *** 1-205-739-1469 (1:3607/20.0)
- * Tossed by SFToss v1.02 on 93/09/01 02:53:29
- ___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.12
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-
- --
- Sheldon Wernikoff - via ParaNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG
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- From: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG (Sheldon Wernikoff)
- Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo
- Subject: Abduction Article, 3/7
- Message-ID: <5980.2C883EC1@paranet.FIDONET.ORG>
- Date: 2 Sep 93 06:43:00 GMT
- Sender: ufgate@paranet.FIDONET.ORG (newsout1.26)
- Organization: FidoNet node 9:1012/31.0 - ParaNet ALPHA, Lincoln NE
- Lines: 113
-
-
- * Originally By: John Powell
- * Originally To: All
- * Originally Re: Abduction Article, 3/7
- * Original Area: BAMA UFO (Fido)
- * Forwarded by : Blue Wave v2.12
-
-
- TREAT quickly attracted some big guns in the mental-health community.
- One was John Wilson. A professor of psychology at Cleveland State
- University, Wilson is one of the pioneers in the field of posttraumatic
- stress disorder. He helped both to coin the term and to formulate a
- definition of the disorder as far back as 1980. In the past two
- decades, Wilson has listened patiently to more than 10,000 people
- traumatized by somc major life event and has conducted major studies of
- PTSD in Vietnam combat veterans and victims of toxic exposure.
-
- Wilson's own curiosity with the unknown dates back to childhood, when
- a neighbor of his worked for Project Blue Book, the notorious Air Force
- effort responsible for investigating UFOs. When the abduction
- phenomenon emerged, he began to wonder what symptoms the alleged victims
- would report. "The most obvious answer," he says, "is that they would
- have PTSD."
-
- According to Wilson, in fact, those who report memories of UFO
- abduction find themselves in the same sort of psychologically stressful
- dilemma as those who have been exposed to invisible toxic contaminants
- such as hydrogen sulfide. "They aren't sure about it," he explains,
- "not sure anybody is going to believe them, don't know how to stop it,
- and don't know how long it has gone on. But the big difference is that
- those claiming a UFO abduction don't even know if it occurred for sure.
- If you've been exposed to a toxic chemical, you can usually have a
- toxicologist come and study your house, and they'll say, yeah, it's
- there, or it's not. But someone who's had a UFO abduction experience
- can't point to the flying saucer or the little gray guy with the
- almond-shaped eyes. That puts them in a really psychologically
- ensnaring position." In fact, Wilson places UFO abductions and exposure
- to invisible toxic contaminants in the same general category of
- traumatic experiences as childhood sexual abuse and psychological
- torture, calling them examples of "hidden events" that may lead to PTSD
- but which often can't be proven real.
-
- Wilson isn't surprised by his colleagues' slow reception to anomalous
- trauma. "Fifty years ago, mental-health professionals didn't believe in
- childhood abuse," Wilson notes. "When kids or adults would report
- incest experiences, sexual molestation, or rape and went to see a
- mental-health professional, they were told, 'That's a fantasy; that
- doesn't happen; it can't be real.' It wasn't until the Sixties that the
- American College of Pediatrics even did a study to find out what was
- going on. And then, voila, it was out of the closet, and today we have
- hard data on childhood sexual abuse. There is a parallel here to
- anomalous experience; whether it's UFO abduction or demon possession,
- our culture says no."
-
- But as far as Wilson is concerned, the cultural disbelief system will
- change as anomalous trauma becomes a diagnostic subcategory of PTSD.
- "American culture is on the leading edge of this material," he says,
- "and my prediction is that within five to ten years, the idea of
- experienced anomalous trauma will get the serious consideration it
- deserves."
-
- Indeed, with Wilson's stamp of approval and Laibow's promotional
- drive, other psychiatrists and psychologists have begun to come around.
- One already going that route is kundalini expert Bonnie Greenwell, a
- California-based psychotherapist and author of Energies of
- Transformation. This "energy phenomenon," as Greenwell calls it, has
- been described by Hindu mystics and practitioners of Yoga as an
- "awakening" of spiritual energy that supposedly "sleeps" at the base of
- the spine. But kundalini awakenings, considered the beginning of the
- process of enlightment by masters of the technique, can result in
- serious psychological disturbance as well.
-
- And that's where Creenwell comes in. Even those seeking the kundalini
- experience can find it painful, she explains, and for those not
- expecting it, the experience can be a nightmare. Indeed, those
- undergoing the kundalini experience don't seem to know what hit them
- because they are unaware that it might be triggered by anything from a
- physical trauma or emotional shock to a long-term spiritual practice or
- dose of LSD. What's more, says Greenwell, the experience may be
- accompanied by visions and trances, the sensation of leaving the body,
- and alternating periods of ecstasy and despair, symptoms that could lead
- to pathological diagnoses by conventional shrinks.
-
- But Western medicine is not alone in its ignorance of kundalini,
- according to Greenwell. Many spiritual teachers don't have a clue what
- to do with it, either. "Some teachers will tell them it can't be
- kundalini or it would feel good," she says. "Others tell these people
- they're having a breakdown. There are even cases in Buddhist retreats
- where people have been taken to psychiatric hospitals when they had a
- kundalini opening. Many people who teach yoga or meditation are not
- developed to the extent that they have gone through this process
- themselves. It's very unfortunate, and it's one of the major reasons I
- started doing what I do."
-
- Greenwell's craft includes helping those troubled by kundalini tap the
- positive aspects of the phenomenon while discarding the negative as
- quickly as they can. "Once they understand the process as essentially
- positive in the long run," Greenwell says, "they are no longer afraid of
- it and can often work it out quite effectively on their own."
-
-
-
-
- -!- Blue Wave/QBBS v2.12 [NR]
- ! Origin: *** Odyssey Fringe Science Echo *** 1-205-739-1469 (1:3607/20.0)
- * Tossed by SFToss v1.02 on 93/09/01 02:53:29
- ___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.12
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-
- --
- Sheldon Wernikoff - via ParaNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG
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- From: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG (Sheldon Wernikoff)
- Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo
- Subject: Abduction Article, 4/7
- Message-ID: <5981.2C883EC2@paranet.FIDONET.ORG>
- Date: 2 Sep 93 06:43:00 GMT
- Sender: ufgate@paranet.FIDONET.ORG (newsout1.26)
- Organization: FidoNet node 9:1012/31.0 - ParaNet ALPHA, Lincoln NE
- Lines: 112
-
-
- * Originally By: John Powell
- * Originally To: All
- * Originally Re: Abduction Article, 4/7
- * Original Area: BAMA UFO (Fido)
- * Forwarded by : Blue Wave v2.12
-
-
- One person Greenwell saw over come the problems of kundalini was
- Sarah, born after her father's death in 1918. During childhood, Sarah
- spent numerous hours communing with her deceased father and as an adult
- used that same impulse to meditate. Listening to high-frequency sound
- and visualizing the inside of her body, Sarah began feeling waves of
- kundalini along with terrifying visions: In one, she was cut up piece
- by piece, and in another, her body was invaded by swords. In the end,
- Sarah managed to control her terrors by expressing the creative energy
- of kundalini in the form of dreams, dance, movement, and art.
-
- Other clients, Greenwell adds, have been far more distressed by
- kundalini energy than Sarah. In these severe cases, she notes, "the
- person struggles to get control of a body which involuntarily forces
- them into motions or freezes them in action, locks pain into the back
- and shoulders or into the site of any preexisting injury, and flushes
- them with intense heat and cold. Such subjects occasionally fall into
- trance or report that they are leaving their body. They may be blinded
- by lights upon entering a dark room or feel they're being electrocuted
- in bed."
-
- Depending upon who these people consult, says Greenwell, they may be
- diagnosed with any number of disturbances from schizophrenia to grand
- mal epilepsy. That's just what happened to Cathy, who experienced
- periods of intense, trancelike states, extreme sensations of cold, and
- "unusual energy flows" moving upward from her feet to her hands. Given
- medication for everything from psychosis to seizures, Cathy finally
- decided to abandon all conventional treatment and accept her symptoms as
- "spiritual" in nature, coming from energies beyond. It was this
- acceptance, Greenwell claims, that resulted in an immediate improvement
- in Cathy's health and enabled her to give up antiseizure drugs and
- integrate her experiences in a positive way into her life.
-
- Greenwell probably sees more patients with kundalini problems than
- therapists on the East coast, perhaps because kundalini is largely a
- California phenomenon. The high percentage of meditators out West, she
- concedes, means "you have a lot of people primed for the experiences."
-
- Those who suffer from spiritual traumas, kundalini or otherwise, can
- also access another West Coast resource the Soquel, California-based
- Spiritual Emergence Network, or SEN, a telephone referral service
- (408-464-8261) founded by Christina Grof, who with her husband,
- Stanislav, pioneered research on the altered state. "We get about 150
- calls a month" says Deane Brown, a therapist and the Network's program
- director. "People call us when something is happening that they don't
- understand. The volunteers who answer the phone come from a variety of
- backgrounds and many of them have experienced some critical or
- frightening period of spiritual emergence of their own. So they can
- truthfully say to the caller, 'I know what you're going through; I've
- been there.' What we do, essentially, is listen. That's the greatest
- gift that we can give to a caller. We don't judge the content of what
- they say. We respond to the feeling rather than the content. We never
- diagnose."
-
- After talking to the caller for a while, SEN volunteers provide the
- name and number of one of the 500 people in the SEN database. These
- people range from psychiatrists and psychologists who are familiar with
- the SEN philosophy of "spiritual emergence" to shamans, psychics,
- healers, or clergy in the troubled caller's area.
-
- "The types of calls seem to go in cycles," notes Brown. "We will
- often get a lot of the same calls at about the same time from all over.
- For a while we may get a lot of kundalini calls. Then we may get a lot
- of psychic opening, including out-of-body experiences, telepathy, and
- uncanny coincidences. Other callers report possession, psychic attack
- by demons, and the like."
-
- Despite the common goals of workers like Greenwell and Laibow,
- however, the TREAT movement has run into some trouble of its own. The
- reason: Laibow's strong resistance to the pioneering group of workers
- without professional credentials who aided the spiritually traumatized
- in the first place, years before it became fashionable for those with
- degrees. The biggest rift was caused by her refusal to accept artist
- Budd Hopkins, author of the classic volumes Missing Time and Intruders,
- and the individual who brought the plight of UFO abductees to the
- attention of physicians and the general public when everyone else was
- ignoring them or calling them insane. Laibow's beef: Hopkins and others
- had been hypnotizing the alleged abductees to elicit their tales, and
- they had no business doing so "since their formal training amounted to
- just about nil." Such "wannabe clinicians," she believes, can be very
- dangerous, indeed.
-
- Says Laibow, "There's a huge difference in being able to induce a
- hypnotic trance and being a clinician who knows what to do when you've
- got a trance, who knows how to not contaminate the material, and who
- knows how to facilitate recovery rather than cause retraumatization
- because people can be retraumatized by the unconscious repetition of
- their material. And what do you do if a UFO investigator does you
- clinical harm by taking on clinical responsibilities? Where is his
- malpractice liability, and how are you going to be protected? People
- who are not willing to take the time and the effort to become clinicians
- should not be stomping around in the unconscious."
-
-
-
- -!- Blue Wave/QBBS v2.12 [NR]
- ! Origin: *** Odyssey Fringe Science Echo *** 1-205-739-1469 (1:3607/20.0)
- * Tossed by SFToss v1.02 on 93/09/01 02:53:30
- ___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.12
- - JetMail v1.14a3 - Unregistered QWK Mail Door for Spitfire
-
- --
- Sheldon Wernikoff - via ParaNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG
-
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- From: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG (Sheldon Wernikoff)
- Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo
- Subject: Abduction Article, 5/7
- Message-ID: <5982.2C883EC2@paranet.FIDONET.ORG>
- Date: 2 Sep 93 06:43:00 GMT
- Sender: ufgate@paranet.FIDONET.ORG (newsout1.26)
- Organization: FidoNet node 9:1012/31.0 - ParaNet ALPHA, Lincoln NE
- Lines: 107
-
-
- * Originally By: John Powell
- * Originally To: All
- * Originally Re: Abduction Article, 5/7
- * Original Area: BAMA UFO (Fido)
- * Forwarded by : Blue Wave v2.12
-
-
- Though many professionals agreed with Laibow's argument, others felt
- it was unjust to throw out those who had brought the phenomenon to their
- attention in the first place. As Hopkins himself said, "Where have all
- the mental-health professionals been all these years while these people
- were clamoring for help." In fact, the dispute has done little to
- diminish Hopkins' influence, who continues to bring mental-health
- professionals into the fold.
-
- One of Hopkins' recruits is Harvard Medical School psychiatrist John
- Mack, author of the 1977 Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of Lawrence of
- Arabia. Though he is the most prominent and respected member of the
- mental-health profession to take an interest in anomalous experiences in
- recent years, Mack is not a pretentious man. The photo from a Boston
- Globe profile shows him standing in a field wearing corduroy slacks and
- a plaid shirt, his soft gray-green eyes staring calmly at the camera.
- Unlike most therapists who take an interest in these matters, Mack makes
- no attempt to hide the fact that he is "open to what these people are
- telling us."
-
- Mack met Budd Hopkins in January 1990, and was impressed both by the
- man and the case histories of alleged UFO abductions he had collected
- over the years. "The stories didn't sound at all like dreams or
- fantasies to me," says Mack, his voice resonant with authority. "It
- sounded like something real was happening. And I thought, well, if this
- is real, what is it? Then Budd asked if I wanted to see some of these
- people, and I realized I was crossing some kind of line, but I said
- yes."
-
- Since then, Mack has heard abduction stories from people of all walks
- of life. "Forty years of psychiatry," he says, "has given me no way to
- explain what I'm encountering in my interviews and hypnosis sessions of
- these individuals. Something is going on; something is happening to
- these people. I'm convinced of it."
-
- In fact, Mack has done as much as TREAT to bring anomalous trauma to
- center stage in the professional domain. He has spoken freely with the
- media about his interest and has given talks and participated in private
- conferences on the subject. Colleagues who hear him speak often raise
- the issue of whether UFO abduction stories might not be covers for
- episodes of sexual abuse and incest in childhood. But according to
- Mack, the reverse has been the case. "There is not a single known case
- of the thousands that have been investigated where exploring or looking
- into the abduction story revealed behind it an incest or sexual-abuse
- history," he says, "but therapists looking for incest stories have come
- up with UFO abduction memories instead."
-
- Mack understands his colleagues' reluctance to delve into the subject.
- "It's so shocking to the paradigm of psychology and psychiatry, which
- tend to look for the source of the experience in the psyches of the
- people who are affected rather than to acknowledge that something
- mysterious is happening to these people. The phenomenon is not simply a
- product of their mental condition but has some kind of objective
- reality. Whether you call it extraterrestrial or other-dimensional,
- what it really means is that we may live in a rather different universe
- from the one Western science has told us we live in.
-
- Mack speaks of vast philosophical implications for this phenomenon and
- human identity in the cosmos. "There's really a great fear of opening
- up our world beyond what we know," he says. "But we need to get out of
- the box we're in and see ourselves in relationship to the universe, and
- I think this phenomenon could be very important in expanding our sense
- of ourselves."
-
- Mack's daring views are not shared by all therapists involved in the
- dark side of the unknown. "If aliens are coming and invading us and
- abusing us in a very literal sense," argues Toronto psychotherapist
- David Gotlib, "then it's difficult for me to understand how a
- significant portion of those who are taken could find it curious or
- enlightening. If you compare it to the Holocaust or the Vietnam War or
- any kind of traumatic event, then sure you can learn to grow through it,
- but only after a lot of pain and soul searching, and not right away. So
- it discourages me from subscribing to a literal explanation. It also
- suggests to me that the phenomenon may be dependent on who's
- experiencing it as well as on what's happening.
-
- Gotlib has thought a lot about UFOs since 1988 when he began treating
- a woman who had been turned down by other therapists because she claimed
- her anxiety was due to an alien abduction. He has now seen 40 such
- patients and publishes the Bulletin of Anomalous Experience so that his
- 150 subscribers in the mental-health professions can network and
- exchange ideas on UFO abduction reports and related phenomena. "I don't
- expect to solve the puzzle or have the puzzle solved in my lifetime,"
- notes Gotlib. "These kinds of things have been going on for hundreds of
- years. I think if we start trying to solve the question definitively,
- then we're chasing our tail. What I'm most concerned about is, how can
- we help these people?"
-
-
-
- -!- Blue Wave/QBBS v2.12 [NR]
- ! Origin: *** Odyssey Fringe Science Echo *** 1-205-739-1469 (1:3607/20.0)
- * Tossed by SFToss v1.02 on 93/09/01 02:53:30
- ___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.12
- - JetMail v1.14a3 - Unregistered QWK Mail Door for Spitfire
-
- --
- Sheldon Wernikoff - via ParaNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG
-
- Path: demon!zaphod.axion.bt.co.uk!uknet!pipex!uunet!spool.mu.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!news.bu.edu!att!csn!csn!scicom!paranet!p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG!Sheldon.Wernikoff
- From: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG (Sheldon Wernikoff)
- Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo
- Subject: Abduction Article, 6/7
- Message-ID: <5983.2C883EC2@paranet.FIDONET.ORG>
- Date: 2 Sep 93 06:43:00 GMT
- Sender: ufgate@paranet.FIDONET.ORG (newsout1.26)
- Organization: FidoNet node 9:1012/31.0 - ParaNet ALPHA, Lincoln NE
- Lines: 110
-
-
- * Originally By: John Powell
- * Originally To: All
- * Originally Re: Abduction Article, 6/7
- * Original Area: BAMA UFO (Fido)
- * Forwarded by : Blue Wave v2.12
-
-
- Gotlib sees his next patient and 50 minutes later calls back to answer
- his own questions. "Basically, what we have to do is listen to them
- without judgement. You let them know that there are a lot of other
- people who have had these kinds of experiences, that they are not crazy,
- they are not psychotic, they are not mentally ill, they aren't losing
- their minds, and this has the effect of empowering them. You talk about
- the different ways that people understand this experience, and you
- explore it with them. One patient left saying that his fear had been
- transformed into curiosity. If I can do that, then I think I've met my
- therapeutic objective."
-
- It's not a surprise, of course, that Mack, Laibow, and other
- mental-health professionals championing the anomalous have faced a
- growing barrage of criticism both from colleagues and outsiders. Are
- these therapists, critics wonder, clinging to the myth of their own
- mental impregnability and being drawn into the abyss by the magnetic
- pull of their patients' experiences?
-
- "One needs to monitor one's own reaction to what it is that goes on,"
- cautions NIMH psychologist Harold Goldstein. "You can be sympathetic,
- you can be empathic, you can be understanding, but your goal as a
- therapist is not to leap into the same pit as the patient, but to be
- there to help pull someone out. I think that when physicians or
- psychologists endorse these things, or appear to endorse them, we do
- real damage to issues of rationality and realistic evidence. When we
- reach a point that what's true is what people believe, then we've sunk
- to a very dangerous situation. "
-
- Bill Ellis, a researcher in contemporary legends at Pennsylvania State
- University in Hazleton applauds mental-health professionals for coming
- to grips with anomalous experiences, but, like Goldstein, thinks a
- little more objectivity is in order. "I think we forget therapists can
- communicate through body language what they want from their patients,"
- he says. "It's the clever Hans phenomenon. It's like the horse that
- could come up with the square root of 360, but what it had really
- learned to do was keep pawing the ground until its trainer relaxed. The
- trainer was not doing it deliberately. The trainer was convinced that
- the horse could add and subtract and do square roots. But eventually,
- somebody who was smart enough to figure out what was going on stopped
- watching the horse and started watching the trainer. I think we should
- have more people watching the therapists."
-
- Doing just that is Robert Baker, a retired professor of psychology who
- taught at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University
- of Kentucky. And Baker doesn't like what he sees. "I hope we can do
- something about this nonsense, because it's getting to the point where
- it's almost a national panic disorder," he says. "We have to do
- something about therapists who really don't know what they're doing. The
- therapists who commit themselves to this nonsense are not aware of major
- areas of human behavior and just do not understand the way the human
- nervous system works."
-
- One thing that fools therapists, says Baker, is cryptoamnesia, a
- series of false memories that form a fantasy with a few minor elements
- of truth thrown in. "The fact is, we do not remember things exactly,"
- he explains. "We change, arrange, and distort the memories we have
- stored to better serve our needs and desires. We fill the gaps in
- memory with events that never happened or with events that did not
- happen the way we imagine, and the results can be bizarre."
-
- The other major cause of the wild stories people tell, according to
- Baker, is sleep paralysis, a sleep disorder accompanied by
- hallucinations that affects about 5 percent of the population. In sleep
- paralysis, Baker explains, "people wake up in the middle of the night
- and can't move. They feel like they're wide awake, but they continue
- dreaming and in the dreams often see such things as demons, aliens, or
- ghosts. Since they're partly awake, however, they may think the dream
- really happened when, in fact, it didn't. It's no wonder that people
- find this terrifying, and that's what's responsible for the
- posttraumatic stress disorder that therapists are talking about."
-
- But Baker has no explanation for the wild stories told by the
- therapists themselves, unless, he notes, they're "simply seeking
- attention." Laibow, for instance, claims to have personally experienced
- anomalous "healing," an event she says cannot be explained by
- conventional medical science. As Laibow recalls, it was a muggy day in
- August 1991 when she "trucked on down to Brooklyn to an unairconditioned
- high-school auditorium filled with lots of Polish and Russian emigres.
- "She sat for three hours, she says, watching Kiev-based psychiatrist and
- self-proclaimed healer Anatoly Kashperovsky dance to New Age Gypsy music
- and thought, "What's a nice girl like me doing in a place like this?"
-
- Anyway, there was Laibow, watching Kashperovsky's performance,
- impatient and skeptical and thinking, "This wouldn't work well at the
- AMA," when suddenly," she says, "this Caesarean scar that I had, which
- was thick and ropey and very prominent because I'd gotten an infection
- immediately after the delivery of my son, began to tingle." As soon as
- she could decorously take a peek, she hiked up her skirt and found to
- her surprise that the scar was gone.
-
-
-
- -!- Blue Wave/QBBS v2.12 [NR]
- ! Origin: *** Odyssey Fringe Science Echo *** 1-205-739-1469 (1:3607/20.0)
- * Tossed by SFToss v1.02 on 93/09/01 02:53:30
- ___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.12
- - JetMail v1.14a3 - Unregistered QWK Mail Door for Spitfire
-
- --
- Sheldon Wernikoff - via ParaNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG
-
- Path: demon!zaphod.axion.bt.co.uk!uknet!pipex!uunet!spool.mu.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!news.bu.edu!att!csn!csn!scicom!paranet!p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG!Sheldon.Wernikoff
- From: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG (Sheldon Wernikoff)
- Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo
- Subject: Abduction Article, 7/7
- Message-ID: <5984.2C883EC2@paranet.FIDONET.ORG>
- Date: 2 Sep 93 06:44:00 GMT
- Sender: ufgate@paranet.FIDONET.ORG (newsout1.26)
- Organization: FidoNet node 9:1012/31.0 - ParaNet ALPHA, Lincoln NE
- Lines: 44
-
-
- * Originally By: John Powell
- * Originally To: All
- * Originally Re: Abduction Article, 7/7
- * Original Area: BAMA UFO (Fido)
- * Forwarded by : Blue Wave v2.12
-
-
- She immediately made an appointment with her gynecologist, "the head
- of reproductive medicine at a major university," who, Laibow claims, was
- shocked when all he could find was a very fine hairline scar. The
- gynecologist, whom she will not name, was excited by her story. "Imagine
- if we could do that," Laibow says he exclaimed. Laibow adds that the
- gynecologist may be interested in collaborating on a future study of
- healing. One possible subject: a Japanese healer who Laibow says "seems
- to have some very substantial powers."
-
- As founder of TREAT and raconteur of stories both marvelous and
- strange, Laibow is controversial to say the least. But are the doctor
- and her colleagues merely misguided, marrying their fortunes to the
- winds of culture, much like those who touted fairies and dragons in eras
- past? Or are they onto something new? Will their quest lead more
- people to come forward with anomalous experiences and encounters,
- providing the data necessary for proper scrutiny - perhaps even
- authentication - by the scientific and medical communities at large? In
- short, are these mental-health professionals fooling themselves, or are
- they forging extraordinary paths through the byways of consciousness and
- the murky outback of the unknown? To answer these questions, of course,
- is to know the nature of the unknown, and that is something we humans
- have ceaselessly attempted for thousands of years - so far, with out
- much success.
-
-
-
- -!- Blue Wave/QBBS v2.12 [NR]
- ! Origin: *** Odyssey Fringe Science Echo *** 1-205-739-1469 (1:3607/20.0)
- * Tossed by SFToss v1.02 on 93/09/01 02:53:31
- ___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.12
- - JetMail v1.14a3 - Unregistered QWK Mail Door for Spitfire
-
- --
- Sheldon Wernikoff - via ParaNet node 1:104/422
- UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
- INTERNET: Sheldon.Wernikoff@p0.f31.n1012.z9.FIDONET.ORG
-
-