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This episode marks the beginning of a L O N G series about the history of the alien abduction phenomenon. 

Our premise, in part, can be summarized by Thomas Bullard, “UFO abductions in the strict sense of the term usually include a visible UFO and require involuntary capture or coercion to get witnesses on board. Once they are inside the crew examines them and turns them out after about two hours, and during that time the witnesses usually suffer some impairment of memory, consciousness or ability to act. Failure to remember the encounter often persists long after the abduction is over. The earliest case of this general description occurred as early as 1929 (see Table I-1) and a few others date prior to 1947, but abductions begin to roll only in 1949. A low incidence persists until 1967, but the high rate of that year did not survive the decline in UFO activity or interest current around 1970. The number leaps to new highs during the flap year of 1973 and this time the level holds, with 1979 topping the chart with two dozen cases. A drop-off in the 1980s may follow the general decline in UFO activity during this decade, but delays in reporting, investigation and publication may be responsible. Time will tell whether the poor turnout applies to actual abductions or abduction reports.

“At this point a word of caution is necessary: Many witnesses claim abductions back into the 1940s and 1950s, but a glance at the upper half of Table I-1 shows that no one reported an abduction before 1957. Abductions as a matter of record are 20 years old at best (for the listener, this volume was published in 1987), and most only half that age with 1980 being the peak year with 42 reports.”

With Rich Hatem along for the ride we dive into the earliest modern abduction case in print, the accounts that The Interrupted Journey brought out, the stories of Flora Evans and Gerry Irwin, and strange cases of spontaneous teleportation.

Sources:

UFO Abductions: The Measure of a Mystery, Vol. 1 by Thomas E. Bullard

“Fantasy or Truth? A new look at an old contact claim” by Charles Bowen Flying Saucer Review 1967 V 13 N 4

“Captives in Space” Canadian UFO Report 1975 V 3 N 6

“The Fifth Horseman of the Apocalypse, UFOs: A History, 1958: January-February by Loren E. Gross

The Unspeakable and Others by Dan Clore

The Terror Above Us by Malcolm Kent

“Teleportations” by Gordon Creighton, Flying Saucer Review, V 11, N 2 March-April 1965

“The Italian Scene - Part 4” by Gordon W. Creighton, Flying Saucer Review V 9 N 4 July-August 1963

“Teleportations” by Gordon Creighton, Flying Saucer Review, V 11, N 2 March-April 1965

“Attempted Abduction by UFO Entity?” by Gordon Creighton, Flying Saucer Review, V 13 N 2 March-April 1967

 “Teleportation from Chascomús to Mexico” By Oscar A. Galíndez, Flying Saucer Review, V 14 N 5 September-October 1968

“More Teleportations” by Gordon Creighton, Flying Saucer Review V 16 N 5 September-October 1970  

“Another Teleportation And Its Sequel” by Gordon Creighton, Flying Saucer Review V 17 N 5 September-October 1971

“Too Close for Condon: Close Encounters of the 4th Kind” by Michael D Swords 

Theme song:

"Ufo" by Floats, available on Soundcloud, iTunes and Spotify

Logo designed by Megan Lagerberg

T-Shirt Designs by The Great Desdymona

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Comments

Anonymous

A thought on hypnosis as a general therapy. It can be very useful, but it is really easy to abuse. A family member was hypnotized as part of a depression treatment some years back, and was convinced via the sessions that his mother had abused and abandoned him. Please note, his two older sisters were present during the entire sequence of events that this "therapist" recreated, and none of the abuse happened. The transcripts of the sessions were the therapist asking leading questions, and I believe the sisters ended up suing to get those and to prove to their brother that the whole thing was made up. It still took YEARS to fix the damage. I do not trust any hypnosis testimony without a complete transcript/recording that shows the hypnotherapist isn't asking leading questions. Done right, hypnosis simply relaxes a person enough to get past mental blocks. Done wrong, it's a violation and can be a form of mental torture.

Anonymous

Excellent episode! Enjoyed listening to your guest host chime in to provide realistic and analyst input...keep on doing what you do!

Anonymous

During my undergraduate study of psychology we learned that hypnosis was unreliable because it taps into the creative aspects of the brain more than the memory. So,my b.s. detector always starts to go off when the abductee story inevitably reaches the "went to Budd Hopkins (or someone like him) and got hypnotized" stage. That said, I can't dismiss it outright. If these abduction experiences are, in some sense, "co-created" by the experiencer, then playing with the experiences in a creative space may reveal something meaningful. It's all a bit of a maze.

Anonymous

Any time Rich Hatem is on the show it's a plus! Y'all have good podcasting chemistry. I recently read a biography of Charles Fort (written by Jim Steinmeyer). To the best of my recollection, he never recorded accounts of alien abduction. However, he did have a theory that "Martians" were somehow messing with us. In a September 5, 1926 letter published in The New York Times under the title "Have Martians Visited Us?", Fort wrote the following: "Why have they not landed, say, in Central Park, and had a big time of it--monstrous parade down Broadway, historic turn-out, eruptions of confetti from skyscrapers? (paragraph break) I can think of reasons, and one of them is that for ages Martians may have been in communication with this earth and have, in some occult way, been in control of its inhabitants, or have been exploiting them. They have not disclosed themselves except in openly patrolling the sky." Note that by "occult" I assume Fort means "hidden" (rather than "esoteric" or "magickal"). Still, the tantalizing insinuation is there. Fort seems to have intuited that ufonauts may have been "exploiting" humans.

yerufoguy

Damn. I'm so sorry that they went through that. That's so awful. I do believe there are therapeutic aspects to hypnosis, and one thing I wished I'd had the insight to talk about when I recorded was Dr. Benjamin Simon, his work with World War II soldiers, treating PTSD with hypnosis. He was the first to use hypnosis in connection with an alien abduction case, and set the standard. One thing we plan to cover is how damaging that subject can be. It's going to make some people angry, because Budd Hopkins/David Jacobs are so heavily revered, but they also did some bad stuff. Whenever I receive negative criticism, it's usually about this.