Exploring the Shamanism - Alien Abduction Connection -
from New Dawn 189 (Nov-Dec 2021)
Folklorist Dr T.E. Bullard lists the following elements of UFO abduction narratives:
Michael Harner, Holger Kalweit and others list the following recurring elements of shamanic experiences:
Consider the following.
In the bizarre Apache Junction, Arizona case of 1971, the subject underwent a frightening examination in which he felt his chest opened and his heart briefly left his body.
Sandy Larson, another abductee, reported that her abductors even removed her brain from her skull!
Such experiences, on whatever level of reality or unreality they occur, are common fare in shamanic accounts.
surgically extracted by Dr Roger Leir,
author
of The Aliens and the Scalpel.
Celestial ascents are
common to both genres.
The rock opened, revealing a tunnel,
Even the extraordinary
Andreasson affair, the subject of books by UFO researcher Raymond
Fowler, featured a journey down a tunnel into a strange
subterranean realm.
Jean Achterberg, in Shirley Nicholson's Shamanism, states:
Harner describes how the
shaman utilizes deer, birds, fish, wolves, bears, and other animals.
In his book Missing Time, Budd Hopkins describes Virginia Horton's magical encounter in a French wood with a talking deer! In Whitley Strieber's books, owls and wolves are often referred to.
He also refers to the experience of Barry Maddock, who had,
It took Maddock into,
And again, in the Andreasson affair, Betty Andreasson encountered the Phoenix bird during one of her abduction experiences.
More recently, experiencer Mike Clelland has written,
Nevill Drury (1947-2013) explored the links between shamanism and contemporary Western occultism. In his book Vision Quest (1984), Drury gives a fascinating account of his introduction to shamanic tutelage under Dr Michael Harner at a transpersonal conference in Victoria in November 1980.
His shamanic journey was complete with tunnel imagery, a palace of crystal, Phoenix imagery, having a crystal placed in his chest, and seeing saint-like figures rimming the tunnel he journeyed through.
To him,
Note, however, that the Andreasson affair - an "otherworldly journey" told from the perspective of a UFO abduction narrative - also featured tunnel imagery, a large crystalline structure, a "vision" of the Phoenix, and encountering saint-like figures.
She also told of having an "implant" placed inside her, behind the eyes. The correspondences were fascinating!
The first of the
Andreasson series of books appeared in 1979 and 1982. Nevill Drury's
initial shamanic journey occurred in 1980. He had no awareness of
the Andreasson books.
Nevill Drury (1947–2013) explored the links between shamanism and contemporary Western occultism, primarily in his book Vision Quest (1984).
In shaman accounts, we even have stories of "spirit weddings" and "spirit children" off-spring - the results of liaisons between shamans and the "spirits."
Holger Kalweit gives a fascinating account of such a situation in his book Dreamtime and Inner Space.
The "shamaness" gave birth to a child by (a spirit) in the spirit world, and,
It is fascinating to compare that sort of story with the accounts Budd Hopkins describes in his book Intruders - tales of ova sampling, baby presentation and baby bonding!
Therapies have emerged with shamanic perspectives, including Stanislav Grof's "Holotropic Therapy" and Michael Harner's "Shamanic Counselling."
Many "close encounter"
therapies, some with questionable efficacy, have emerged, with
tenuous roots in early abduction experiences.
The complex abduction
story that emerged under hypnosis had a positive psychological and
cathartic effect on the couple. The psychotherapeutic benefits of
confronting the abduction story were obvious.
For example, Dr Rima Laibow, a New York psychiatrist, had been working with Budd Hopkins. More than half of the abductees she worked with were what she referred to as "dual victims."
They reported not only UFO abduction experiences but also child abuse. Some researchers suggest this aspect explains the origin of the abduction tales, i.e., the abduction story was a "screen memory" for child abuse.
Dr Laibow rejected this
hypothesis, pointing out the consistency of the accounts, the
physical evidence in many cases, the emergence of many of the
abduction narratives under hypnosis ("an uncommon mode of
presentation for screen memories") and the presence of similar
abduction scenarios in the "unabused."
Elaboration of the abduction material often led to a reassessment of memories of abuse and a positive reintegration of the individual.
Physiological symptoms
were occasionally overcome, leading to a positive therapeutic
outcome.
Dr Laibow's involvement
tapered off with some controversy beyond the scope of this limited
review.
He stated:
Initially, very few of the people who allegedly experienced an abduction sought out publicity. Indeed, most were terrified of it.
They were more like the victims of assault than starry-eyed seekers of a new world reality.
They seemed to be haunted by their experiences, and most were seeking answers. Instead, they were confronted by shallow, ridiculing media reporting and a general public that had no awareness of the controversy.
The inevitable response from a position of ignorance was to either ridicule or reject - "They must all be nuts." Given the extent of the problem, this was a very unwise approach. Something was happening.
While some thought the issue might turn out to be a quantum leap in the field of anomalistic psychology, others felt otherwise.
Perhaps the reverse may have been more likely?
Shamanism involved individuals who seemed to have a strong measure of control over the set of realities they operated in.
In UFO abduction experiences, the generally helpless victims have no control over the bizarre 'reality' that overwhelms them. It appeared a phenomenon operating on two opposite ends of a control continuum.
Perhaps we, as a culture,
had lost an ability that other cultures and generations may have had
to some extent?
Some experiencers or abductees have in recent times collectively developed communities of support. Many have gone "underground" to avoid connections.
Others have become activists taking control of their experiences, resisting or avoiding those they did not see as understanding or embracing their realities.
What the future holds for
these changing dynamics remains to be seen.
This complexity demands we keep an open mind and keep the matter properly in question until we have enough information to determine what is going on.
The range of intelligent
and qualified people looking into the UFO abduction mystery grew
over the decades. People who have these experiences are also
contributing in substantial and fascinating ways to bringing
understanding to these strange realities.
Instead, they should be helped to confront the reality of their experiences, whether or not it is eventually found to be prosaic, profound, or extraordinary.
Only time will tell whether the search for answers will give us more insights into the human mind and the UFO phenomenon.
Could it be that it will do both?
Such intersections occur
in occasionally unusual ways that are controversial and yet potently
rich in potential meaning.
The Wandjina (or Wanjina) are beautifully evoked in such works as,
...and most strikingly to
a worldwide audience rising up from the floor of the Sydney Olympic
stadium in 2000 during the opening ceremony.
I was pleased I had met David Mowaljarlai in the company of John Mack and Stephen Larsen (the co-author of Joseph Campbell: A Fire in the Mind: The Authorized Biography) a year before his passing in 1997.
Donny Woolagoodja
continues the tradition in his biography Yornadaiyan Woolagoodja,
a wonderful exploration of his personal interaction and relationship
with the Wandjina images.
Donny Woolagoodja has a
direct linkage to the "retouching" tradition through his father,
Sam Woolagoodja.
Also:
Donny Woolagoodja and his biography Yornadaiyan Woolagoodja, which is subtitled 'Wandjina has no mouth because the sound of beginning cannot be heard by human ears'. A range of Donny's prints featuring the Wandjina are available from Mowanjum Arts at
Donny Woolagoodja was the traditional artist behind that extraordinary display. Most pivotal in the book, beyond the beautiful contemporary Wanjina artwork, is the "refreshing" tradition among chosen local people.
According to Donny, those aspects of recent paintings that appear to be 'new' are actually contemporary revelations of Lalai ("the primeval era of creation" or "the Dreaming" - an eternal sense of "living cosmology").
Donny explains:
Those tempted to speculate that the Wanjina (or Wandjinas - the original widespread spelling variant) are evidence of "extraterrestrials" visiting Earth should consider these works.
I have been a cautious traveler in this context.
On my website (www.theozfiles.com) and in my earlier book The OZ Files: The Australian UFO Story, I stated:
Such speculations need to have their anchor points in the living and preserved traditions of the people who view the Wanjinas as their primary "religious" focus.
To not do so is to ignore a primary and fascinating source of oral and pictorial knowledge about these extraordinary beings and risks disrespecting an extraordinary age-old and living tradition.
Treading Lightly: The Hidden Wisdom of the World's Oldest People by Professor Karl-Erik Sveiby (a specialist in Knowledge Management) and Tex Skuthorpe (an aboriginal Nhunggabarra cultural custodian) described,
In 2004, Professor Sveiby approached researcher Steve Walters and me to get our opinions on a strange photographic anomaly - a possible aerial anomaly - he had recorded during April 2004 at Mount Oxley near Bourke, New South Wales, while in the company of Tex Skuthorpe and his partner.
Karl-Erik presents the unusual photo in the book as a possible manifestation of the Fourth Level of meaning in aboriginal stories - the spiritual realm.
Through the fascinating aboriginal story of How the Nhunggabarra got flowers, Mount Oxley (or Wubi-Wubi) was a focus of shamanic contact between aboriginal men of high degree (or wiringins) and the ancestral being Baiame (Baayami).
near
Bourke, New South Wales
I visited it back in September 2003, exploring its fascinating sense of presence and its enigmatic lore of strange phenomena. I was already aware of the legend of the flowers through the renderings of K. Langloh Parker of local aboriginal tales she collected in the late 1890s.
It was fascinating to see
the story retold through the words of local custodian Tex
Skuthorpe and its "Fourth Level" of meaning and beautiful
evocation through Tex's great paintings.
I certainly did not want
to detract from the central message of Treading Lightly, given its
significance as a potent intersection between a unique ancient
culture and modern knowledge management theory.
Treading Lightly describes powerful and important matters that need to be focused upon by our modern culture.
Encounters Throughout
Asia
I focused on genetic connections at a very specific and detailed level because of the unusual nature of the rare Asian mongoloid sequence, revealed in the Khoury sample described in my book Hair of the Alien.
They occurred in the DNA signatures of an isolated group of people, the Lahu, who were limited to the region of the southern Chinese province of Yunnan, and the immediate region bordering that locality - northern Thailand, Myanmar (Burma), and Laos.
The areas of Yunnan and northern Thailand yielded considerable data and research, particularly with fascinating UFO and unusual light phenomena connections in both regions.
with a Lisu (Lahu) village member in the foothills north of Chang Mai,
Thailand, in 2006.
Dr Anthony Walker's 907 page Lahu study Merit and the Millennium - Routine and Crisis in the Ritual Lives of the Lahu People revealsone of the more fascinating Lahu shaman-like contact experiences involving a leading Lahu figure, Ca Nu, who claimed,
He also reported seeing strange "hole" shapes crossing the sun, along with anomalous "stars."
Ca Nu connects his
experiences with spiritual prophecy, a dynamic revealed on numerous
occasions in not only shaman lore but in many contact and abduction
situations.
Suddenly,
He described the encounter in his book Red Dust.
I met Ma Jian during the 2003 Sydney Writers Festival. He confirmed that his account was not a literary metaphor for his sense of alienation with contemporary China. Instead, it was a real experience with a ball of light about the size of a rockmelon.
This Lahu region phenomena near the Lancang (the Mekong) River echoes the intriguing Naga light phenomena that most prominently plays out near Nong Khai, on the Mekong, as the mighty river enters Thailand.
I witnessed and filmed
the Naga light balls coming out of the Mekong in 2006. My
investigations resisted the straightforward explanation of hoaxing
for tourism purposes.
The objects appeared to keep changing shape.
As it was a small village, word soon spread and many villagers arrived to witness the sighting. They started pursuing the objects, but the UFOs disappeared.
I had been in the Lahu
territory only a few weeks earlier.
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