T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1073.1 | | DICKNS::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Fri Jun 16 1989 15:12 | 6 |
| Ray, I know you don't want to hear this, but incidents like this
have been frequently reported to ufo investigators. I suggest
you contact Steve Firmani here at DEC. Steve is the MUFON state
director.
Mary
|
1073.3 | Look for lights in the darkness. | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Fri Jun 16 1989 15:51 | 11 |
| re: .0
Well, if it isn't too scary and you really want to get to
the bottom of it, have you considered past life regression or
hypnosis or similar altered meditative state? Perhaps you could
draw stuff out from within yourself. You might try looking at it
this way...even if it *was* really weird or gross or whatever, you're
here, you're okay, you are physically past it.
Frederick
|
1073.4 | | SHRFAC::ADAMS | | Fri Jun 16 1989 17:21 | 18 |
|
I can understand your reluctance to accept the UFO theory having
read Bud Hopkins myself. As I recall several of his subjects claim
repeated abductions, not a pleasant thought. I wasn't all that sold
on the credibility of his work either (very vague stuff).
I too had written in the UFO notesfile of an encounter my brother
claims to have had and the resonse was nil. It was like they thought
I was making it up. It should be retitled "the UFO_Skeptic" file.
Based on what you've said, I have no doubt (although I doubt little
anyway) that what occured was an encounter. My brother also noted
loss of time, disorientation, red marks on the forearms and nightmares.
It's a large world afterall.
-m
|
1073.5 | a mystery but not, I think, a *Mystery*. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Jun 16 1989 19:02 | 86 |
| If there is anything too wierd for DEJAVU, Ray, I've yet to encounter
it. This is far from the wierdest thing discussed here.
I do *not* think that you are lying, are crazy or are in any way a
crackpot. I think that you experienced something for which there is
no adequate complete explanation, and it seems to me that it is
very likely that if any of us had been in the same circumstances the
same would have occured to us -- or at least that if it would not have
it would have been because of normally meaningless differences.
I do not see, however, in your reports or similar ones any strong
reason to invoke the supernatual, the paranormal or the effects of
any non-human intellegent agency. I don't reject these explanations
out-of-hand, but simply find nothing to really support such an
idea.
"Missing time" (traditionally called, of course, "amnesia", but using that
term makes it seem too much like something basically understood for
the alien abduction adherents) is a common brain response to a lot of
different situations just like coughing is a common lung response to
a lot of different situations. Some *known* causes of amnesia (not
necessarily relevant to your situation) are: concussion, drugs
(including alchohol), epilepsy, migrain, micro-stroke, anoxia (lack
of oxygen), psychological trauma and hypoglycemia. That's off the
top of my head so shouldn't be taken as complete by any means, and
of course, does not include unknown causes, which almost certainly
exist. Many of these can be occasional or even a one-time event and
would leave no indication.
There are two aspects of your experience which leaves us with a
mystery. One is the bright lights, the other (more important) is that
it, whatever "it" is, occured to two of you simultaneously.
The lights can be accounted for in several ways. Looking at this as
an isolated case they might simply be coincidental (but this isn't
really an isolated case -- there have been other similar reports).
The lights -- e.g., a truck in the wrong lane -- might have produced
stress which triggered the real cause. The lights may have been
hallucinagenic -- migraine and epilepsy both frequently are preceded
with visual effects, including hallucinatory lights, and virtually
any of the other causes listed might have a similar "precursor".
So the real mystery is what could have caused the same effect to occur
to two people simultaneously. It just doesn't make sense that two
people, for example, would spontaneously, simultaneously develop a
tiny clot in their temporal lobe (micro-stroke). Here, I am basically
stumped. There are a number of possabilities, but all are rather
unlikely.
Psychoactive substances -- natural or artificial -- are effective in
incredibally small quantities. Some known or unknown such substance
could have been airborne and come in your open window. Possible but
unlikely.
Persinger has shown that the temporal lobe can be stimulated by
changing magnetic fields of frequency and other characteristics similar
to what he believes (one of his doctorates is geology) can be produced
under certain conditions by the earth. He also believes similar
conditions can produce ball-lightning like effects piezo-electrically.
It is his belief that the effect may occasionally be much more
pronounced naturally than he can produce in his lab, and that many
people are particularly susceptable to it. The result -- temporal
lobe epilepsy in individuals with no other experience of it, producing
amnesia and cuts and bruises inflicted during body spasms. Maybe so --
its a good theory, and explains the facts -- but there is a lot to
be proven in it yet.
So you have experienced a genuine mystery -- but not one so mysterious
that we need to invoke LGM ("little green men") or unknown dimensions
to approach it.
My advice is *not* to get hypnosis or regression. There is *no* well
documented case of hypnosis ever restoring accurate memories which
could be independently verified and which were not already consciously
known to the subject. There are many cases where hypnosis has produced
a sense of absolute conviction for memories of events which provably
never occured. If you want to know what happened during that missing
time, do *not* use hypnosis to try to remember it -- you will only get
a plausible fiction.
The only thing I can suggest is to go to a good neurologist and see
if (s)he can detect any indications of epilepsy or whatever. The
chances are against it, however, most epilepsy is completely
undetectable except during an actual seizure.
Topher
|
1073.6 | Just make sure the author is Catholic first... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Mon Jun 19 1989 11:40 | 28 |
| re: .5 (Topher)
Geez, Topher! That's some of the worst advice I've ever seen
you give. I was fine with everything you wrote up until the last
couple of paragraphs, too, by the way.
This person has a problem...he is experiencing self-doubt
and anxiety and unknown other stresses over something he can't
explain. You suggest he sees a "doctor" (Western-medicine type,
too, no doubt) so that he can find out "what's wrong with him."
No one ever said anything was wrong with him, Topher, and all you
and Western-medicine doctors will do is screw him up with expensive
bills to find a small contusion in some well-hidden part of the
body, or some such, and then say "Aha, there's your problem." BS!
I don't care if you believe in little green men or not, and it really
doesn't matter a flying fork whether or not I do...what is important
is that *HE* keeps an open mind and that *HE* finds an answer which
provides him with peace of mind. Your explanations, for what he
described, sound *at least* as obtuse as little green men theories
sound to me. I say he should explore all possibilities, if he wants
to, and not leave it to some physician who holds to a very limited
set of beliefs. There is no right or wrong, Topher, in his reality
it may very well have been little green men and there is no way you
could make him wrong with that experience. Reality is too expansive
to limit it's potential to something some clown who graduated 87 out
of 112 from medical school has to say.
Frederick
|
1073.7 | Truly a "MYSTERY" | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Mon Jun 19 1989 13:24 | 15 |
| Topher,
I am a little surprised to see you suggest that he be checked for
epilispsy...especially after you had just discounted physical illness
as a very likely cause. What are the odds that 2 people would both be
suffering from epilepsy and would have simultaneous siezures that would
last the same amount of time.
I am tending to lean toward abduction, possibly because of bias, but
also because I can't think of any other cause. However, I would extend
the possibilities to include government agency abduction. Considering
what the Pentagon has been discovered to have done to citizens and
other people (not to mention animals) over the past several decades,
abducting them and using them to test whatever wouldn't surprise me in
the least.
|
1073.8 | huh? | VIDEO::NIKOLOFF | Long ago is not far away | Mon Jun 19 1989 13:57 | 12 |
|
Topher,
I am certainly taken back afew, to see such a reply from you also.
I would expect that kind of reply in some *other* notesfile not this one.
I.M.H.O. life holds many more possiblities than that.
Meredith E.
|
1073.9 | | USAT05::KASPER | In the eye of a storm hope is born | Mon Jun 19 1989 13:57 | 19 |
| Topher,
The possibility of simultaneous siezures or whatever is remote, and
becomes even more remote when they end at the same time and both
individuals seem to have had the same experience. I can't begin to
say what it was, but it's easy (for me) to rule out any kind of
experience that was induced by illness, chemicals or any other
external event just on the basis of probability. A mystery to be sure.
I have a question about hypnosis. If an individual is genuinely
in a hypnotic state, is it possible that s/he could 'make up' a
story? I am under the impression that individuals subject to
suggestion under hypnosis will only relate things they have
experienced in some kind of way at some point in time. If this is
true, why would using hypnosis be potentially harmful and/or why
should someone be skeptical of what is uncovered?
Terry
|
1073.10 | Magnetically induced? | BTOVT::BEST_G | Nostradamus: Fault's Prophet | Mon Jun 19 1989 14:23 | 15 |
|
I must be weird - I liked what Topher had to say. I believe that the
incident did occur. I personally don't see any reason to believe that
it would be aliens. The only thing I don't understand is if Topher
meant that they had simultaneous epilepsy or what. I could see one
person having a "brain storm" and magnetically producing the same
effects in the other person (maybe). This same magnetic field idea
could also be what gives us gut feelings about someone when we meet
them.
Just a thought.
Guy
|
1073.11 | lots of alternatives | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Mon Jun 19 1989 15:09 | 33 |
| Re .last few:
Topher presented an alternative hypothesis. He explicitly said
he didn't rule out anything.
If you want to keep a truly open mind, here are alternatives:
a) abduction by UFOnauts or other high-tech culture (e.g., deros).
b) neurological glitch.
c) brush with time-stasis vortex.
d) inadvertent consumption of fairy food (which is supposed to cause
time dilation effects, accordint to tradition).
e) mental attack or probe via telepathy.
f) side effects of a magical attack.
g) slip through a time fault.
h) psychoactive substances inadvertently ingested (e.g., ergot).
i) Cerenkov wake of a superphotic black-holelike particle.
j) side-effects of telepathic positive feedback.
There are ten alternatives; three were mentioned previously. Keeping
an open mind means just that.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1073.12 | Who ya gonna call??? | USAT05::KASPER | In the eye of a storm hope is born | Mon Jun 19 1989 15:50 | 8 |
| re: .11 (Steve)
> i) Cerenkov wake of a superphotic black-holelike particle.
Sounds like an Akroyd line from GhostBusters II ;-)
Terry
|
1073.13 | If it's important, focus on it. | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Mon Jun 19 1989 15:52 | 16 |
| re: .11 (Steve)
:-)) I like that! I *know* it was partly tongue-in-cheek, but
at least it's in keeping with beliefs that go beyond consensus reality
thinking (and for me that's important.) All I know is that whenever
I have an experience of some type that I don't understand or don't
fully understand (whether it's sexual ;-) or a ufo--as I reported in
here almost 2 years ago) I don't want anyone laughing "at" me or
suggesting I'm crazy (not *that* crazy, anyway) and that they attempt
to force me into some tidy little package that is limited by their
tightly wound set of beliefs. Only the person having the experience
is able to say what is or isn't ruled out for him/her. People must
be free to belief as they will.
Frederick
|
1073.14 | well ... | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Mon Jun 19 1989 17:45 | 19 |
| Re .13 (Fredrick):
> .................. I *know* it was partly tongue-in-cheek, but
>at least it's in keeping with beliefs that go beyond consensus reality
>thinking (and for me that's important.)
If it were fully tongue-in-cheek, I would have put in a smiley-face
icon. My point is that within the discussion, there were basically
two views being expressed, and there really are several. Maybe
none of those suggested thus far (and that should have been " ...
a subatomic black-holelike particle") is the answer; and Occam's
Razor would cause folk to suggest some "answers" have a higher
probability than others (e.g., "little people" food is probably lower
on the scale of possibles than is ergot-contaminated food).
My concern has been that _all_ alternatives, even the mundane, ought
to be weighed.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1073.15 | My $.02 | BUOVAX::GAMA | | Mon Jun 19 1989 19:07 | 124 |
| RE :.0
Ray, as a regular UFOS conference reader, I followed your story.
One day all of your notes got deleted and you said you have been
harassed, your story was on the network. Everybody understood
your feelings. A few weeks later you post again the first note of
the story. Today a friend call me and told me I would be interested
in reading an UFO experience posted in this conference. Of course,
this is a big surprise. Aren't you being harassed anymore? Or in
DEJAVU the things are on the lighter side and nobody takes it serious?
<< deleted it. I would prefer if people will honor some bit of <<
<< being discreet and not pull off hardcopy sending it to UFOologists<<
Are you afraid of being investigated? If you want your case reported
you have to be subjected to a study, like it or not. If you think
your case is not on the UFOs category you shouldn't have posted it
their on the first place!
<< etc. If I get any negative flack, I'll be forced to delete my ><
<< notes. I decided to post here since there's a larger readership <>
That is nothing new on that. If you have the courage to come outside
and tell your story (as was told to you on the UFOs conference, it
takes a lot of courage to do so), you should expect negative reactions,
but also positive words.
RE: .4 (Adams)
<> I too had written in the UFO notesfile of an encounter my brother <>
<> claims to have had and the resonse was nil. It was like they thought <>
<> I was making it up. It should be retitled "the UFO_Skeptic" file. <>
Your brother episode was only more to the record. You share with all
noters your brother's experience. Your note has 13 reply's.
RE: .5 (Thopher)
Science is not your everyday common sense. You maybe right when
you said Ray may suffer from epilepsy, but you are saying that
just because every single theory you tested during your explanation
failed to be consistent with the facts. When you use to access the
UFOs conference, you did that a lot of times.
<< crackpot. I think that you experienced something for which there is >>
<< no adequate complete explanation, and it seems to me that it is >>
If you have no adequate complete (do you have a partial ???) explanation
don't rule out UFOS! And by the way, every explanation is complete just
until a new one arrives!
<< "Missing time" (traditionally called, of course, "amnesia", but using >>
Is amnesia when watches stop? Or how do you think UFOs investigators
would accept that as an UFO phenomenon? If you are trying to make a
scientific approach, don't forget to look into every single variable
involved, otherwise your approach will not be scientific!
>> The lights can be accounted for in several ways. Looking at this as <<
You are forgetting the weather balloon!
<< Persinger has shown that the temporal lobe can be stimulated by <<
<< changing magnetic fields of frequency and other characteristics similar <<
You are absolutely right with it! Experiences have been conducted in
Canada using mouses. The electromagnetic field maybe changed to
change human beaver. This maybe a cause for losting time. But the
question is still there: Who changed the electromagnetic field?
<< never occured. If you want to know what happened during that missing >>
<< time, do *not* use hypnosis to try to remember it -- you will only get >>
<< a plausible fiction. >>
Are there other ways to do so?
<< The only thing I can suggest is to go to a good neurologist and see >>
<< if (s)he can detect any indications of epilepsy or whatever. The >>
<< chances are against it, however, most epilepsy is completely >>
<< undetectable except during an actual seizure. >>
Group epilepsy, this is new Topher! :-)
RE: .11 (Steve)
<< Topher presented an alternative hypothesis. He explicitly said <<
<< he didn't rule out anything. <<
That's not what I read!
RE: .13 (Frederick)
<< tightly wound set of beliefs. Only the person having the experience <<
<< is able to say what is or isn't ruled out for him/her. People must <<
<< be free to belief as they will. <<
I agree with you. And if you choose to share that experience, you
should not expect answers you already know no one has.
-----
I don't rule out any explanation. I only know this has been with us
since the beginning of times. I believe you had an UFO experience,
like thousands of others. You are the (un)lucky one! I just don't
understand what you are looking for, or what you looked for! :-)
Rui
|
1073.17 | maybe it's in the way you look at it .... | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Tue Jun 20 1989 09:32 | 19 |
| Re .15 (Rui):
><< Topher presented an alternative hypothesis. He explicitly said <<
><< he didn't rule out anything. <<
>
> That's not what I read!
Topher said:
.5>.......................... I don't reject these explanations
.5>out-of-hand, but simply find nothing to really support such an
.5>idea.
I take that to mean that he didn't/doesn't rule out anything, though
he presented another hypothesis to account for what might have taken
place.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1073.18 | Phenomena exists! | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Tue Jun 20 1989 10:23 | 9 |
| re: .15 (Rui)
"...change human beaver."
Sounds like an interesting situation, can I be of service?
Frederick
;-)
|
1073.19 | ... twist and shout ...? | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Tue Jun 20 1989 10:43 | 8 |
| Re .18 (Fredrick):
>Sounds like an interesting situation, can I be of service?
Depends, I guess. Do you have a good electromagnetic field source?
:-D
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1073.21 | One (of several) alternative possibility | LESCOM::KALLIS | I'm the OPA. | Tue Jun 20 1989 11:35 | 52 |
| Re .20 (Ray):
Without doubting your story a minute, let me take up Topher's cudgel
for a moment to make a point.
>..................... After the episode in 74 I confided
>in one friend [a fellow college student] who told me "Keep a lid
>on this". When I asked why he replied, "Ya don't want to attract
>any flack". When I asked from who, he replied, "The feds".......
>now why would he be so explicit in warning me about government
>interest in my missing two hours.[?]
In .0, you noted the following --
>...........................Paul also got violently ill and was
>running a fever and puking his guts out all weekend. At the time
>he figured he had a stomach bug. The bruises faded in a few days
>and disappeared in a week or so.
>When Paul took his watch to a jeweler to be fixed he was told
>it was beyond repair, that the circuitry that drove the little
>tuning forks had been cooked.
These data suggest _an_ alternate explanation. This might _not_
be the correct one, but I present it to show other possibilities.
On the cape is (or was; I haven't been following that closely)
a PAVE PAWS radar facility that put out a lot of solid electromagnetic
energy. Suppose someone was running a test on the unit (or on
something associated with the unit) at that time of night and either
there was spillover or you happened into a test area by accident?
Then whatever test was being run could have resulted in the symptoms
described (nausea after a period of unconsciousness in the case
of your friend; involuntary bruising on your part). If the two
of you were rendered unconscious by such a test, you might have
been found by, say, Air Police, and put back into your car (with
one of the APs putting your car keys in your pocket). An energy
pulse could have fried your friend's Accutron, FWIW.
Under that scenario, the feds would have been interested in your
story, not because they were looking for UFOs, but because of the
security aspects of what was involved.
> One thing I forgot to post in the base note was a cnoversation
>I had with a year round Provincetown resident. She basically told
>me that my story was the 3rd or 4th she had heard on the lower Cape
>that year, this was Sunday of the weekend in question.
That tracks with the hypothesis I've just forwarded.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1073.22 | I doubt the police found them | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Tue Jun 20 1989 13:27 | 17 |
| re: -.1
It seems to me that if the Air Police found them either unconscious or
very confused, they would have taken them to the nearest hospital.
Ray, you may want to consider some kind of therapy, not because you're
loony (you're not), not to try to find out what did or didn't happen to
you (I'm finding one of the hardest things in life to accept is that
sometimes life insists on remaining a mystery--at least until its ready
to reveal itself), but to help you come to terms with the experience so
you can be freed from the emotional after effects.
Personally, I would be very interested in some kind of _quality_
hypnosis or regression therapy, but that's because I get horribly
curious and once I latch onto a mystery in my life I have a hard time
letting go, until I've unraveled it to my satisfaction.
|
1073.23 | Another $.02 = $.04 | BUOVAX::GAMA | | Tue Jun 20 1989 14:01 | 35 |
|
Last Wednesday (6/14) the program "Misteries....?" on the Boston
Ch. 4, was about missing time. The case presented happened on the
Cape in late 60's. Maybe somebody would care to describe it better,
because I didn't watch all program.
About the electromagnetic fields, I may add that an official study
has been conducted in Canada, sponsored by some US government
agency (ABC/Good Morning America/6.19.1989). Looks like it can be
used (at least in mouses) to control violent beavers. We are for
the neurologic as the 30's were for the nuclear. Maybe the lost
time is created by changes on the electromagnetic field. If is this
what real happen (no matter who's the source), 4th dimension, spirits,
and other sort of simple explanations to complex subjects, are on
the way to where they came from - the human mind.
--
The UFO comunity has to study the cases that are presented to them.
I don't have numbers, but some of them are explained. When an UFO
interest group accepts a case as a true UFO sight, has to be sure
that is an unknowm fenomenon. And the letters UFO don't stand for
alien. Maybe some of the sights will be explained in the future
as an Earth fenomenon. Who knows?
--
I have a lot of respect for Ray. If what he needs is understanding
for what happen maybe he should say that. We all agree that go through
an experience like that should be tough. But don't blame UFO's
conference.
Rui
(Yes, my name is Rui [Rue])
|
1073.24 | Interesting show | RAINBW::CATALANO | Its the Power of....... | Tue Jun 20 1989 15:23 | 10 |
| Re: 23
I saw that show and it is just what Ray is talking about. Infact
very very much so. Ray, there is a good chance you might be able
to get a transcript of the show. There were names of people who
are following this, working on it, trying to find the same answers
you are.
Good Luck
HC
|
1073.25 | I agree with Mary Mistovich | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Tue Jun 20 1989 16:02 | 8 |
| re: Rui (and Steve)
I have always known man has been trying to control violent
beavers, but I guess I've never tried electromagnetics before.
Is this different than using conventional arms?
Frederick
;-)
|
1073.26 | PAVE PAWS Rathole... | CIMNET::PIERSON | Milwaukee Road Track Inspector | Tue Jun 20 1989 19:21 | 17 |
| re .21
Steve:
> ....Solid Electromagnetic Energy...
Can I assume you are being figurative?
Was Pave Paws operational or testing that early?
Without checking (where?) I would have thought it was later than
Ray's time frame.
Ray: Thanks for sharing your story...
thanks
dwp
|
1073.27 | | USACSB::CBROWN | did you think you were pure? | Wed Jun 21 1989 03:21 | 6 |
|
No wonder we have violent beavers!! You would be mad too if the
government was trying to PAVE your PAWS!!
How do they keep those critters still?
|
1073.28 | unsure where to check, but ... | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Wed Jun 21 1989 09:30 | 12 |
| Re .26 (Dave):
>Can I assume you are being figurative?
Yes. "Solid" as in "a good lot of."
>Was Pave Paws operational or testing that early?
I thought early testing started about the time frame involved.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1073.29 | More than just lost time... | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Wed Jun 21 1989 13:19 | 35 |
| One thing to remember is that the missing time was not the only odd
thing that happened that night. As I recall, there were several
unexplained events, which could have been unrelated and coincidental,
or related and integral to a whole experience. So even if the lost
time is explained, there were events that need explaining.
The unexplained events were:
1. two people simultaneously lose approximately 2 hours & 15 minutes
2. On regaining everyday consciousness, both people feel like they've
been "slipped a mickey" (question: does this mean groggy?
headaches?)
3. On regaining everyday consciousness, car keys have moved or been
moved from ignition to driver's pocket
4. On regaining consciousness, it is discovered that passenger's
electronic watch has stopped within a few minutes of the appearance
of the headlights that mark the beginning of the experience. It is
later learned that the interior of the watch was "cooked."
5. 3 Dark red, pencil-eraser sized bruises appear on Driver's chest
3 similar bruises appear just below Passenger's naval
6. Passenger becomes violently ill that weekend (is it coincidence
or significance that a major symptom of the illness was severe
vomiting and the bruises were on the abdomen?)
7. Both start having recurring nightmares related to oncoming
headlights that last for some time after the experience (suggests
that whatever happened was very traumatic)
8. Passenger has similar experience on opposite side of country 9
years later
|
1073.31 | various coments | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Jun 21 1989 15:42 | 164 |
| Boy did I pick the wrong time to be out with a cold for a couple of
days!! ;-)
I won't attempt to reply to everything one note at a time, but to deal
instead with topics --
Hypnosis -- The major effect of hypnosis is a reduction of what
psychologists call "reality testing" -- the ability to distinguish
fantasy from reality. The much vaunted increase in "suggestibility"
(at least as psychologists use the word) is so small as to be hard to
measure. In actuality our natural levels of suggestibility are held
in restraint by reality testing -- our tendency to doubt what we are
told (alternately you might say, using the term "suggestibility" a
little less narrowly than psychologists do that almost all the increase
in suggestibility is due to the reduction of reality testing).
Much of what we "remember" is fantasy filling in the gaps between
details which we actually do remember, and reality testing keeps that
filling in within bounds -- both of "rationality" and not straying to
far from the actually remembered "facts". A hypnotized person will,
quite unknowingly, fantasize freely -- independently of the skill of
the hypnotist. This has to do with what is happening within the
hypnotized person not what is happening between the hypnotized person
and the hypnotist. Once established those memories will seem as real
as any other memories. The best a good hypnotist can do is a) not
believe that what is produced is anything but fantasy and b) minimize
the "cues delivered" so that the fantasy is purely the hypnotized
persons not the hypnotists (it is humanly impossible, however, to avoid
this completely, so there will always be a bit of the hypnotist woven
into the "fabric" of the fantasy).
A hypnotized person is as capable of lying if they want to than an
unhypnotized person is (they are somewhat but not overwhelmingly less
likely to want to), and is much, much more capable of fantasizing.
Hypnosis may be used in a number of ways to help amnesia victims come
to terms with their memory loss and other aspects of situations such as
Ray describes -- including by creating false memories. But it is not
the right tool for discovering a forgotten set of events directly.
Pushing my ideas on Ray -- I don't believe I did that. Ray asked for
comment -- with an implication that he was looking for alternatives to
UFO abduction explanations. I presented some of my thoughts on the
matter, without intending any criticism of people who think otherwise.
Frederick, within my reality, I too had an experience. My experience
was Ray's recounting of *his* experience. Within my reality that
experience has an explanation (although I don't know what it is). I
shared -- within my reality -- some thoughts about that explanation
with others in hope that some might find those musings useful either by
accepting, rejecting or just jumping off from them. However, this took
place entirely within *my* reality. You are responsible for creating
whatever it is you perceived as my note within your reality.
Do I believe the preceding paragraph? No. Within my reality I don't
create my reality -- I only edit it a bit. But I'm quite willing to
deal in "what ifs", and I think that within the CYOR philosophy my
reality is just as good as anyone else's. Or is there a requirement
that a creation has to be similar to yours or it isn't as real?
Recommending seeing a neurologist -- In my view doctors come somewhere between
the extremes of being demons and being gods. This view puts them a bit
lower on the scale than some doctors would put themselves. Dr.
Persinger, contrary to the medical establishment, sees epilepsy
(specifically temporal lobe epilepsy) as being the result of a
continuum of sensitivities. Various internal and external influences
can change the level of sensitivity of an individual. If the
sensitivity is pushed past a certain point than the temporal lobe goes
into a sort of neuroelectric spasm, which results in the symptoms of
an epileptic seizure. A given stimulus is more likely to push someone
who is on the "more sensitive" side of the continuum across that
threshold than someone who is on the "less sensitive" side.
Whether or not Dr. Persinger is correct about geomagnetic fields being
likely triggers for this phenomenon, it seems to me this sensitivity
scale is quite plausible. It seemed to me worthwhile to recommend that
Ray see a neurologist to see if he showed signs of "epilepsy" (which,
within Persinger's model just means someone who is frequently near the
"sensitive" side of the continuum). It was up to him to decide whether
or not he would actually feel better knowing the medical evidence about
this (particularly since many people who are clear, severe epileptics
show know EEG signs of this between seizures -- even though they may
suffer several a day, and also since showing signs of epilepsy would
not show that he had suffered a seizure during this incident).
Frederick, I would be *very* careful, if I were you in recommending
that people with possible medical conditions not seek medical advice.
Doctors have their limitations but they also have their uses.
Explanations -- I don't know what could have caused simultaneous amnesia in
two people. As far as I know there is no "standard" explanation which
fits very well. I think that we will need something new to explain it.
But there is "new" and there is "new". Lots of things are unexplained
and eventually require new discoveries to understand them. Most
require, however, only a small bit of new knowledge or a minor revision
of the old rather than a major revamping of what we know.
I am quite willing to accept that this may be a case where such
revamping may be needed. As many of you know, I have committed much of
my life to work in an area where I believe the evidence is very strong
that such radical revamping *is* needed (parapsychology) -- I am not
afraid of such ideas. But I do believe that it is fruitful to look at
evolutionary ideas for explaining this before expending too much effort
on revolutionary ideas.
Simultaneous epilepsy *is* a "new" idea (not new from me, but not part
of accepted theory), but epileptic seizures explains all the events --
lights, memory loss, apparent unremembered purposive behavior, bruises,
broken machinery, immediate aftereffects and long term aftereffects
(talk to any epileptic about aftereffects). Simultaneity implies either
an outside influence or one epileptic attack somehow triggering the
other. For various reasons I find the former more plausible than the
latter.
Of the possible external triggers, two seem to me to have *some*
plausibility: chemical and electromagnetic. So I mentioned them.
What do I believe? I don't know. No single theory stands out to me as
individually likely, and even the generic theory of "simultaneous
epilepsy triggered by something unknown" does not seem to me to be a
clear winning bet. I do *not* reject alien abduction as an
explanation. But if I could think of some plausible, only minorly
radical, explanations, then I'm willing to bet that there are others
which I lack the imagination or the knowledge to come up with.
I do not, therefore, see this incident as a reason to believe in the
radical incorrectness of the conventional view of things in this area.
It may, of course, be due to that -- just as the many walking down the
street with his shoes on the wrong feet may be an alien who never
learned how shoes are worn properly -- but I'll need a better reason
than that to believe it likely.
Watches, amnesia and missing time -- a timepiece which is slow by an amount
roughly equivalent to the gap in someone's memory might be taken as
evidence of an externally valid "missing time" (or at least an external
influence which caused both the amnesia and the "freezing" of the
timepiece). A watch which has stopped is simply a piece of broken
machinery -- however subtle the breakage. This could be caused, for
example, by a powerful electromagnetic field or by a physical shock.
If someone does not remember something which they experienced and would
not normally have forgotten this is called amnesia. Amnesia just means
"not remembering". It is amnesia whatever the cause -- sleep,
concussion drugs, or whatever -- including extraterrestrial "amnesia
rays".
That changes in the experiants' bodies took place -- bruises and the
keys placed in the pocket -- indicated that they didn't just physically
jump ahead in time. Therefore they experienced amnesia about what took
place during that time period.
One specific reply -- .13 (Frederick)
> I don't want anyone laughing "at" me or suggesting I'm crazy.
Just to be sure that this is clear -- I am in no way laughing at
anybody nor am I suggesting that anyone is crazy. I think Ray had a
very real experience and I see no reason to suppose that the reason he
had that experience or remembers what he does is because he is in any
sense crazy or "abnormal". I think that it is very likely that any one
or all of us, including myself, would have had much the same experience
if we had been there.
Topher
|
1073.32 | Close Encounters | SALEM::CATANIA | Stranger than fiction | Wed Jun 21 1989 16:29 | 39 |
| Hey Ray......check this out!!!
I'm a musician. About two years ago I played - for a time - with
a guitarist that haled from Newport News, Virginia; he was level-
headed, educated, sincere, and an all around nice guy. One day we
began talking about unexplainable phenomena and he told me a story
that is quite similar to what I read in your note. Before telling
the story he made mention of the fact that this experience that
he and his brother shared was something that neither one of them
up to this time, were willing to tell to just anyone, and, for the
first year or two after the experience, told absolutely no one.
Their parents owned a cottage on an island off of the Virginia
coast that was environmentally much the same as the area you had
your experience. One night - a very clear night with excellent
visability - they were hiking along the ridges of these huge sand
dunes. Out in the distance, not too high in the sky and over the
ocean they suddenly noticed these three, brilliant orbs of light
heading toward them. The last thing they remembered was standing
there in mute bewilderment, wondering what it was they were seeing.
The source of the lights made absolutely no sound. The next thing
they knew, both of them were in a prone position, lying on their
bellys side by side, paralyzed and in silence. Suddenly, after lying
there for a short period of time, both of them exclaimed simultaneously:
"Goddamn"!!!, and jumped up together.
At the time they were in their mid-teens and not under the influence
of either booze or drugs. The most disturbing thing about this is,
not only how they got from a standing position to a prone one without
knowing it, but also the apparent absence of time; they had no way
of clocking how long they were out or when they went out at the
time; and, also, that while lying on the ground, they were for a
time, completely speechless and paralyzed. When they broke out of
this condition they were in, the lights were gone.
Hope this helps....Paul.
|
1073.33 | Try entertaining this possibility | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | I'll pick a white rose with Plantagenet. | Fri Jun 23 1989 14:02 | 11 |
| I've very surprised that no one has mentioned a *known* method
which could be used to trigger simultaneous epileptic bouts:
Flashing lights.
We've known for decades that a light flashing at four times per
second will do the trick, and we've known for just as long that
some people who design flashing lights (like the cursor on a video)
are pig-ignorant of this and continue to produce lights that
flash at "bad" rates.
Ann B.
|
1073.34 | The Flashing Light Theory.... | WITNES::FUNK | Correspondence to XIBITA::MM_TEMP | Fri Jun 23 1989 14:24 | 11 |
|
Re: .33
Ann B., I'll buy that.
But that still doesn't explain the burnt-out watch, or bodily
sores. The sores could have been self-afflicted (somehow), but
how easy is it to fry a watch?
/Greg Aharonian
|
1073.35 | At least Disco is dead. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Jun 23 1989 14:32 | 17 |
| RE: .33
Quit true, Ann, and I should have thought to mention it.
However, ...
Someone who is likely to be triggered by this kind of stimulus is
someone who is likely to be triggered more or less frequently -- i.e.,
someone who is likely to have been identified as an epileptic (we
are not, after all, talking about any of the more subtle manifestations
of epilepsy). Two people being that sensitive but remaining unaware
of it and undetected seems *very* unlikly. A flashing light may have
been a final trigger but if so, there would have to be some other --
relatively unusual -- environmental situation which would have
sensitized them to it.
Topher
|
1073.36 | Just part of a picture | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | I'll pick a white rose with Plantagenet. | Fri Jun 23 1989 18:20 | 6 |
| Oh, yes, of course.
But I was thinking of it in conjunction with Steve's PAVE PAWS
theory....
Ann B.
|
1073.37 | | STRATA::RUDMAN | Raise the Bismarck! | Fri Jun 23 1989 18:28 | 23 |
| 1. I, too, saw that Unsolved Mysteries episode. It was intriguing.
I can't say yea or nay, but I do know UM checks their stories
six ways 'til Sunday so no-one can run up yelling "Hoax!" 2
days later. With luck, that episode will be included in their
summer re-runs.
2. I assume the watch in question is long gone? Physical evidence
always seems to be lacking or disappearing in these matters.
I wonder why that is?
3. Ray, I feel for you. I know if it happened to me I'd be constantly
looking over my shoulder. Did you say you'd had a complete physical
afterwards?
No doubt about it; you gotta go see *somebody*. Good luck.
Don
P.S. Nothing remotely considered as a paranormal event has ever
happened to me. It not only appears I have a negative effect
on such occurances, but also manage to "just miss it". Maybe
this is why this stuff is so intriguing.
|
1073.38 | Anyone read "Communion" by Whitley Streber | OZROCK::GIBBONS | Clear day, some icebergs sighted, maintaining speed
| Mon Jun 26 1989 02:07 | 10 |
|
These experiences sound very similar to those documented in the book
"Communion" by Whitley Streber. From memory Streber also describes a
type of self help group of people who had shared the same experience.
It might be worthwhile contacting this group.
|
1073.39 | | VCSESU::COOK | Leon has arrived! | Mon Jun 26 1989 11:34 | 30 |
|
re .38
> Whitley Streiber
I would suggest NOT reading anything by Streiber. Let me tell you
a story about a man named Whitley.
He came to Hopkins with his story, and Hopkins sort of took him
under his wing. Hopkins then brought him into his counseling group
for abductees. In these sessions the group found Streiber to be
extremely irratating, and arrogant, it came to a point where they
could not stand him at all.
To top it off, Streiber pulled strings in the publishing industry
so that Communion would be released before "Intruders", virtually
stabbing Hopkins in the back after all he had done for Whitley.
Whitley Steiber is a fake, making Von Daniken look like a Rhodes
Scholar. What's more, the man can hardly even be called a decent
human being.
His books are strictly conjecture, and do not present one ounce
of fact, no case studies other than his own, and does not back
anything up at all, no lab reports, no nothing.
Stay away from Streiber.
/prc
|
1073.40 | Other side of the coin | VAXRT::CANNOY | despair of the dragons, dreaming | Mon Jun 26 1989 16:36 | 14 |
| On the other hand to defend Whitley a bit: I've met him and talked
several times, quite some time before Communion came out. Certainly
none of what you have described, was present in the person I met.
A dear friend of mine used Whitley's cabin in the period 1981-1984 to
finish up a couple of novels at various times. (This was well before
Whitely started talking about this. I forget if it's before the events
in Communion, I don't recall the dates of those events.) He didn't like
going there much but it was away from everything and he could get a lot
of work done. He told me it felt "funny" there. His girlfriend went with
him once and swore she would never go back. I asked her why and she
wasn't really able to tell me, except she felt watched and
uncomfortable and had nightmares there. She said it was a bad place.
FWIW.
|
1073.41 | | VCSESU::COOK | Leon has arrived! | Tue Jun 27 1989 09:45 | 5 |
|
I'm not doubting Whitley's encounters, just his ethics.
/prc
|
1073.43 | | VCSESU::COOK | Leon, the unseen force. | Wed Jul 05 1989 16:54 | 7 |
|
re .42
Another classic case. Sounds like he had an implant put in his ear. Too
bad I wasn't there to talk with him also.
/prc
|
1073.44 | THE DREAMS WERE QUITE SUGGESTIVE | WMOIS::REINKE | S/W Manufacturing Technologies | Fri Jul 14 1989 10:52 | 5 |
| Re: .30
What's the protocol for UFO investigations? Do dreams count?
DR
|
1073.45 | ? | BTOVT::BEST_G | Food is Not a Toy | Fri Jul 14 1989 12:31 | 8 |
|
re:.44
huh?
What do you mean suggestive? Symbolic?
Guy
|
1073.46 | They Seem to Support the Abduction Scenario | WMOIS::REINKE | S/W Manufacturing Technologies | Fri Jul 14 1989 15:09 | 16 |
| re: .45
My wording was on the tentative side, because *I* didn't dream the
nightmares, and I believe only the dreamer can discern the true meaning
of a dream.
re: .30
>> In the nightmares, I'm aware of wherever I am is moving very fast.
>> I feel someone touching me and wake up screaming.
If dreams count in UFO investigation, these would tend to support
the abduction scenario, be it little green men or big ones with
green uniforms (i.e., government).
Donald Reinke
|
1073.47 | Atlanteans Arise!! | SALEM::CATANIA | Stranger than fiction | Wed Jul 19 1989 17:01 | 50 |
| .32.....
That's wild!! Isn't it great to have your own experience
cooroborated like that? You may find it interesting to know that,
for hundreds of years, men at sea have witnessed and reported a
great deal of u.f.o. phenomena. I once had a book in my possession
entitled "Is There Intelligent Life Beneath the Ocean? : A study
of u.a.o.'s - or, unidentified aquatic objects.
The book was full of intriguing accounts reported by men
at sea throughout history. Several of these accounts stand out in
my mind:
While mapping the ocean floor sonorgraphically somewhere
near the mid-Atlantic Ridge - the greatest mountain range on the
face of the earth that traverses the entire Atlantic basin - a
research team was dumbfounded when, after sending a sonorgraphic
signal down to the ocean floor, it returned to them not once -
which a signal like this should do under any condition - but twice,
then followed by a signal that their computers couldn't decipher,
almost as if the signal was at first mocked and then followed up
with one of their own........
and.....The navy, while out on maneuvers tracking a new sub
on radar, picked up an object moving at an unheard of rate of speed
underwater - I forget the exact figures - and moving down to depths
that no man-made could object could plummet - 20,000 ft.?
Reports of huge luminescent objects rising out of the sea and
shooting into the sky from 19th century sailors. Sometimes these
things would appear beneath the ships and track them for a distance.
Several years ago, a neighbor of mine who is as pragmatic as
he is rational, told me one day that he had seen something that
he could not quite explain. He was with his girl one night at a
beach in Manchester, Mass., when they spotted a wierd light way
out and hovering low to the ocean. While watching this light flitter
about erratically, suddenly a brilliant splashing of light erupted
from what appeared to be the underside of this object. He told me
that this eruption of light reminded him of the power and size of
one entire tier of lights at a sports stadium going on simultaneously.
The object then continued moving erratically - this time zig-zagging
- and then shot of into the distance at a speed that left him with
an awestruck, otherworldly feeling.
I have also witnessed several things that are worth mentioning............
Some other time.
Paul.
|
1073.48 | Sonar reliability. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Jul 19 1989 17:49 | 27 |
| RE: .47 (Paul)
Sorry, Paul, but this book doesn't sound very reliable.
If you do not get your signals back from sonar than you are wasting
your time.
And sonar is really rather unreliable all-in-all. It is *very* subject
to effects similar to what would be called mirages if it were light
and on the surface. They are *much* more common than mirages, however,
you can't do sonar in deep water without getting a lot of clutter of
various sorts. Most important is refraction and reflection caused by
masses of water with different salinity or temperature. Such
thermoclines very commonly create double images.
Also you cannot use radar underwater, except for very short distances,
especially salt water. Water is a conductor and shorts out the
microwaves used by radar. What would have been used is sonar and the
same comments as mentioned above apply. Its very hard to take truly
anomalous results from sonar as anything but interesting noise.
This doesn't mean, of course, that the book may not contain lots of
interesting and accurate information, only that I would take it with
a grain of salt -- if you've reported it accurate the author was
insufficiently critical.
Topher
|
1073.49 | | CSC32::MORGAN | Celebrating the Cybernetic Age. | Wed Jul 19 1989 18:09 | 24 |
| Reply to .48,
I'd like to echo Tophers statements. I worked with sophisticated
passive and active submarine sonars (BQS 13) and under ice sonars on
two nuclear attack boats, USS Pogy and USS Tautog.
Sound travels through water anywhere between 4800 and 5100 feet per
sec. Layers of cool water are denser, turning back sound over larger
distances. Thermal layers and sound channels make active sonar use
unreliable.
Under ice sonar is higher freq. These are in the 100k range, (per
dusty memory) I've seen dolphins attempt to talk to under ice sonars.
General rule--the higher the freq the greater the resolution and the
less distance, the lower freq. the greater the distance and lesser
reliability.
Radar is ineffective as an underwater detection tool. Infrared seems
better from high in the sky.
This is not to say that our 'spooks' don't have new toys to play with.
B^) New radars can do some pretty neat stuff but I doubt they could
penetrate over 50 feet of water.
|
1073.50 | Barnum and Bailey? | SALEM::CATANIA | Stranger than fiction | Thu Jul 20 1989 10:58 | 55 |
|
re: 48 and 49......
You guys are probably right. To tell you the truth, although
I find the notion or possibility of our planet having been visited
by beings from another world fascinating, disproving these stories
would suit me just as well proving them to be true.
P.T. Barnum once said "there's a sucker born every minute"
and when it comes to perusing the many, many books written on the sub-
ject of u.f.o. phenomena I think his advice should be seriously
heeded. As an example, it has been reported in a number of books
and in a film, "U.F.O.S Are Real", that a number of astronauts on
both the Apollo and Gemini projects have seen, reported, and even
photographed u.f.o's in space; but I cannot remember one of these
men giving their testimony in person in a real interview. In fact,
I think it was on a "Nova" special on u.f.o.'s that Pete Conrad,
mission commander of one of the later Apollo expeditions, talked
about these reputed sightings in space and put them off as nonsense.
There is a photograph, supposedly taken by the crew of Apollo
11, of this massive, wierd thing that looks like a hydra hovering
over the rim of the earth. There are many standard u.f.o. photos
that we see all the time, but I've only seen this one two or three
times and in u.f.o. documentaries on t.v.; never in a book. You
would think that such a clear, dramatic, and haunting image would
warrant more exposure - especially among u.f.o. buffs. Judging
from the tone and content of interviews held with the crew of Apollo
11, those three men are either under wraps by the government not
to say anything - which, at this point in time, I tend to doubt
- or the photo is nothing more than another fabrication.
In the mid-sixties, my mother and I - I was either 7 or 8 at
the time - were watching a late night simulation of one of the
Surveyor projects on its way to the moon. Across the the bottom
of the screen in teletype ran a message that read somthing like:
unidentified object has been picked up pacing along side of surveyor.
Those aren't the exact words but you get the idea. Nothing more
on that on that intriguing and mystifying statement was ever mentioned
later on; it was if the the subject had been squelched.
On the other hand though, if experiences such as what happened
to Ray and the person he met in P-town (as well as the my friend
from Virginia) are true, something strange is indeed going on.
I find it interesting that all three of the missing time
experiences reported in this note occured in and around sand dunes.
Two, at different times on the Cape, and the one I know of in Virginia.
That is why I brought up the book on unidentified aquatic objects
in my previous note. But then, most of that book is probably nothing
more than a collection of embellished half-truths.
Paul......
|
1073.51 | Just another face | USAT05::KASPER | If not now, when? | Thu Jul 20 1989 15:27 | 16 |
| re: .50
I don't mean to wander off this topic, but your reply reminded me
of something interesting I read (can't remember where). It was
about 'The Face from Mars' photo that Voyager took. If you haven't
seen it, it is a striking image of a face. When it was first
received by NASA they immediately classified it. It wasn't
published for several years. The author found this peculiar but
more so was that there was a Japanese scupltor who, just after the
second World War, decided to create a huge sculpture of a face in
Japan. The drawings of his work are identical to the photo taken
by Voyager. Even more remarkable was the title of the work,
"The Face That Can Be Seen From Mars"...
Terry
|
1073.52 | Classified directory? | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Jul 20 1989 15:38 | 8 |
| RE: .51
It was *not* classified. It was available to anyone who wanted to
get it out of the picture archives. It was not *noticed* for several
years. However striking it is after zooming and digital enhancement
its just an irregular blob among many others in the raw data.
Topher
|
1073.53 | keep the groans down out there....:-) | BTOVT::BEST_G | Communion with the Sun | Thu Jul 20 1989 16:39 | 13 |
|
re: .51
I believe I saw a book on this somewhere, but I don't remember the
title. The book claimed that there are other nearby remnants of an
ancient civilization - all laid out in some significant pattern or
something. It is interesting, but I'd only believe it if a probe could
bring back some ancient tools or, say, photos of some prehistoric
water closet.
;-)
Guy
|
1073.54 | pointer to the UFOS note conference | TADSKI::WAINE | Linda | Thu Jul 20 1989 17:15 | 12 |
|
There is a note regarding the face on Mars in the UFOS note conference.
Re: .52
Topher, There are many highly-qualified scientists who believe
that it is NOT just a blob...... (and yes, there are many highly-
qualified scientists who would agree with you....)
Time will tell....
Linda
|
1073.55 | Keeping the growns to a maximum... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Thu Jul 20 1989 17:19 | 8 |
| re: last couple
...And if Woosh Bush keeps to his script, he'll
be announcing planned manned missions to Mars, so maybe
the time will be sooner than later.
Frederick
|
1073.56 | Not what I was saying. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Jul 20 1989 17:44 | 27 |
| RE: .54 (Linda)
First off, I was not commenting, pro or con, on the status of the
feature as artifact. I was simply commenting that until you get a
close-up and clean up the noise a bit, it only looks a bit like a face.
There are many, many pictures and it took a while before anyone
investigated that particular, vaguely face-like (in the available
"zoomed out") blob. It was *not* classified. Any attempt to classify
it would have been immediately obvious to planetary scientists (there
would have been some frames either missing or marked as classified in
the index) and it would have resulted *instantly* in a gigantic outcry
from the scientific community -- who don't like classification of
public, non-military research, and who would not agree that there was
*anything* on Mars which needed classification.
Second, there are a *few* scientists and/or engineers who believe that
there is significant evidence that it is an artifact. By what
criterion have you determined that they are highly-qualified in the
specific task of recognizing the artifactual nature of a terrain
photo from orbital photographs of a an alien landscape? (Not denying
their qualifications, mind you, only asking how one determines them).
And yes, time will, hopefully tell. It is a foregone conclusion,
however, that whatever negative evidence is found, the face will
continue to be paraded as an "unexplained mystery" by some.
Topher
|
1073.57 | | CSC32::MORGAN | Celebrating the Cybernetic Age. | Thu Jul 20 1989 19:32 | 8 |
| Re: Face on Mars...
So what's the big deal??
Hundreds of rock formations in Colorado look like faces. Big ones,
small ones, we even gottem lookin' like upheld hands and teeth. Ya'
don't need a telescope or go to Mars to find a rocky face lookin'
thingie. They're all in my back yard.
|