After reading David M. Jacobs' recent works, I've run across a couple of cases of people experiencing symptoms of the abduction phenomenon.
Night terrors. Monsters in the trees. Little people in the bedroom.
I'll ask, "Is there a history of this in your family?"
Yup. Oh yes.
The one telling the story takes on the look of a drowning person, simply because I'm listening. They're scared, either for themselves or for a family member. -What's a grandparent to do with a shrieking child begging, night after night, for the little people to go away. Who wakes up and remembers none of it? Who describes the monster in the backyard?
I don't know what to say. I don't say much at all. I don't want to speak my suspicions, because they're insane-sounding. -And possibly wrong.
Jacobs tells us that there's nothing you can do about it anyway.
There was one story he related about a woman who wound herself up in a ball of string just to make it hard for her abductors to untangle her on the other end. That actually worked for a short while, but she was warned to stop doing it, and it was agreed that "they" would, for their part, be less scary. They broke that promise.
On the other hand...
Laura describes resisting abduction attempts. The C's say the difference between her and Frank was that she did the required thing: "FIGHT!" I have had my own encounters with spirit beasties (infecting a friend) and there are ways to energetically fight them, mostly through expressions of will power, but in the end things escalated to the point where I needed to call for help from a shamanic type. -And that was 'easy' attachment stuff. Not this scenario where you get terrorized by alien assholes.
Anyway...
I write this now because it just happened again; I found myself listening in grim silence to another long story from another freaked out person.
What do you say? What do you recommend?
Night terrors. Monsters in the trees. Little people in the bedroom.
I'll ask, "Is there a history of this in your family?"
Yup. Oh yes.
The one telling the story takes on the look of a drowning person, simply because I'm listening. They're scared, either for themselves or for a family member. -What's a grandparent to do with a shrieking child begging, night after night, for the little people to go away. Who wakes up and remembers none of it? Who describes the monster in the backyard?
I don't know what to say. I don't say much at all. I don't want to speak my suspicions, because they're insane-sounding. -And possibly wrong.
Jacobs tells us that there's nothing you can do about it anyway.
There was one story he related about a woman who wound herself up in a ball of string just to make it hard for her abductors to untangle her on the other end. That actually worked for a short while, but she was warned to stop doing it, and it was agreed that "they" would, for their part, be less scary. They broke that promise.
On the other hand...
Laura describes resisting abduction attempts. The C's say the difference between her and Frank was that she did the required thing: "FIGHT!" I have had my own encounters with spirit beasties (infecting a friend) and there are ways to energetically fight them, mostly through expressions of will power, but in the end things escalated to the point where I needed to call for help from a shamanic type. -And that was 'easy' attachment stuff. Not this scenario where you get terrorized by alien assholes.
Anyway...
I write this now because it just happened again; I found myself listening in grim silence to another long story from another freaked out person.
What do you say? What do you recommend?