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American Cosmic

Page 12

by D W Pasulka


  mantis looking into his window at night. He actual y kept a

  praying mantis as a pet for a time.

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  These events faded in Scott’s memory as he grew older,

  until 1987, when they were revived by a series of disturbing

  experiences. Just after getting married and moving into a new

  apartment complex, Scott experienced a series of episodes of

  sleep paralysis. One night he sensed the presence of a being

  close by his bed. It was menacing, and as he tried to wake up,

  he found that he was completely paralyzed. The same thing

  happened to him again a few nights later. This time he told

  his wife.

  “I think our house is haunted.”

  She tried to reassure him that he had just had some bad

  dreams. Scott wasn’t buying it, however, as the feeling was

  too real to him. The disturbance to his normal y mellow at-

  titude lingered for days. During a visit to a bookstore, as he

  browsed the aisles, a book seemed to pop out at him. The

  title of the book was Out There: The Government’s Secret

  Quest for Extraterrestrials, by Howard Blum. There was one

  blurb on the book’s cover, written by Whitley Strieber. It

  said: “Absolutely essential reading.”

  “I read that book and others,” Scott said. “And it felt like,

  for the first time, I understood my past. The book is written

  by a serious journalist who reports that the topic is being

  studied by the government. It put all of the past events in

  context. I’m not saying that those things real y happened, but

  I’m not saying they didn’t either. Reading the book gave me

  the impetus to begin my work, that is, to record the objects

  I saw in the sky, and that is when I started this research.

  “In the beginning, I made a lot of mistakes. I just believed

  what I saw in the photos other people took. I didn’t think

  they would hoax the pictures. But I was gullible and naive.

  I was already a graphic designer, so it was real y easy for me

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  to spot a faked photograph. Unfortunately, I began to see that

  almost all the photos were Photoshopped or hoaxed.

  “Also, a lot of people I began to meet told me that I needed

  to be hypnotized to uncover what happened to me as a child.

  I did a little research on being hypnotized and regressed,

  and I realized that you can create false memories. I said ‘no

  thanks’ to that. I decided that it was better to not know than

  to know something that wasn’t true or never happened.”

  Scott’s desire to identify anomalous photographs and

  evidence motivated him to keep his online group free from

  hoaxers, and even free from parts of the ufology community

  that were not exactly hoaxers but could nevertheless do harm

  by harassing people who want to know the truth.

  “ V I S I TO R S

  F R O M S O M E W H E R E E L S E ”

  As In the Field became better known, it started to attract

  refugees from the internet—

  people who were actively

  pursuing UFOs by capturing videos of orbs, discs, and other

  aerial phenomena that couldn’t be identified as planes,

  drones, blimps, or other natural objects and events. One

  such refugee was a woman from Pennsylvania named Alison

  Kruse. I call her a refugee, and that is not an exaggeration.

  She sought refuge from harassment: she had been called a liar

  and a hoaxer, and her computer was targeted with viruses. In

  the Field was, for Alison and others, a refuge from the dark

  side of the virtual world of ufology, where the harassment

  and denigration of its own members are rife.

  Alison’s introduction to the phenomenon occurred in

  2008, when her daughter told her that she had seen a strange,

  I N T H E F I E L D | 93

  glowing red plane hovering around their house in the early

  hours of the morning. Alison asked her to draw a picture of

  the “plane” and saw that it was saucer shaped. Her daughter

  had never been a fan of Star Wars or Star Trek or any of the

  other television, movie, or internet media about space or

  extraterrestrials, and Alison was excited by her sighting, con-

  sidering it possibly a once- in- a- lifetime event. It wasn’t. A few

  months later, as the sky was getting dark, Alison looked up

  and saw what she thought were the planets Venus and Mars.

  Planets, unlike stars, do not twinkle. She continued to watch

  them and realized that they were twinkling brightly, and she

  wondered, Why would these planets be twinkling brightly

  like this, like stars? Then they moved and one just faded out.

  This struck her as something impossible. Perhaps, like her

  daughter, she had seen a once- in- a- lifetime phenomenon?

  “Then, one after another, it kept happening,” she said.

  “Soon after that I heard the kids banging on the windows and

  screaming bloody murder. While they were outside sledding

  in the snow they had seen a cigar- shaped object hovering in

  the sky. Then we kept seeing more objects, during the daytime

  and at night. Final y I realized that these once- in- a- lifetime

  events kept happening. Soon after that I met the researcher

  Bruce Cornett, and he said that the sightings would increase.

  Wel , they did.”

  Witnesses and researchers often report the strange feeling

  that once you become aware that there is a phenomenon, it

  becomes aware of you. They report that the first sighting

  is just that— a first— and then others follow. The uncanny

  feeling that the objects are aware, or watching those who

  are watching them, is common. The starlike objects began

  to appear more frequently to Alison and others near her.

  She decided to upgrade her camera and video equipment so

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  she could document the phenomenon more accurately. She

  spent thousands of dol ars on better equipment, including

  night- vision cameras. She also started to share her videos

  with the public on YouTube and other social media, as she

  thought that others would be interested in her findings. She

  wasn’t prepared for the vitriol and harassment, and she didn’t

  understand it at al .

  “I thought that people would be interested in seeing

  these strange objects. Other people, in other parts of the

  world, were posting about similar types of objects too, but

  they didn’t get harassed. I am not sure why I did.”

  Alison proceeded in a systematic fashion. The objects

  would fly around her house and over the forests near her

  home. She would video- record them and then call the Federal

  Aviation Administration (FAA) to find out if there were air-

  craft flying during the times she had recorded. Researchers

  of UFOs can and often do obtain these records.3 When she

  learned that there were not, she was excited. She invested

  even more money in better equipment and waited to see the

  objects. In November 2010, she filmed a starlike object over

  the forest and then called the FAA, as usual. They
confirmed

  that there were no aircraft in the sky when she recorded her

  object. She got a copy of the data disc that the FAA had put

  together of the event. It was titled “Murrysville UFO.”

  Because Alison was recording so many of the objects,

  she was able to determine their patterns and behaviors. Early

  on, she said, she noticed that they would mimic conventional

  airplane lights.

  “I thought to myself, They are copying our lighting

  arrangements so they can imitate us and not be recognized.”

  She also noticed that they seemed to be aware of her too.

  On her YouTube channel, she posted an open invitation to

  I N T H E F I E L D | 9 5

  others to come and watch the objects and video them. She

  said that when people took her up on her offer, they noticed

  that the objects seemed to disappear when Alison grabbed

  her video camera.

  “It was funny. They seemed to be shy or something.”

  Alison thought it was strange that people from all over

  the world were posting videos of aerial objects that behaved

  in ways that were similar to the ones she was observing.

  “To me, this counters the theory that these objects are se-

  cret military planes or craft or black operations. That theory

  might be true if they were being seen just here in the US,

  but they are coming in from everywhere— Australia, Europe,

  Pakistan, everywhere.”

  After many years of observing her “punks,” as she cal s

  the objects, she speculates about what they are and why they

  are here. Like Scott, and Tyler, and James, she admits that she

  ultimately doesn’t know.

  “It seems as though the starlike objects are actual y

  their vehicles, the things that they travel within. These

  sometimes open up, kind of like a zipper, and let other,

  smaller objects come out of them. Neither me nor anyone

  who has observed them with me has seen a being emerge,

  nor has a being or anything from them ever communicated

  with me. Maybe there are no beings associated with them,

  and they are purely remote- controlled. Maybe they are like

  our Mars rovers: they are sent here to gather information

  for beings who live somewhere else. I don’t know. Maybe

  they are from our future and are our future selves, and that

  is why they can’t communicate with us, because they would

  change our present and their own history if they actual y

  did make contact. Maybe that is why they don’t communi-

  cate with us.”

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  For Alison, one thing is clear. Her life took a dramatic

  turn when she discovered that her house and the forest near

  her house lay under a very busy sky. She felt a duty to doc-

  ument the objects that flew in and around her neighbor-

  hood. The once- in- a- lifetime opportunity that had one day

  presented itself became an almost daily occurrence, and it

  also became her passion.

  “I had to document and record this. This is history. We

  are being visited by visitors from somewhere else.”

  U F O S A R E P H O TO G E N I C

  Scott reached into his bag, pulled out a folder, and placed it

  on the table between us.

  “These are my best captures,” he said.

  There were two photographs of an aerial object, partly

  hidden within clouds. He had blown up the capture by

  several degrees, each displayed in a separate box for me

  to view. I studied the images. I saw a metallic- looking,

  somewhat round object that looked like a classic UFO

  (Figure 3.1).

  I recalled Carl Jung’s remark that flying saucers are not

  “photogenic.” Jung was responding to an encounter much

  like mine with Scott; he was confronted with the testimony

  of a worthy and honest man and it made him wonder about

  the topic. He went on to write his book about flying saucers.

  For him, they were not just a rumor or just a myth, but a

  living myth. He also called it a universal mass rumor, which,

  he said, was “reserved for our enlightened, rationalist age.”

  Jung wrote:

  I N T H E F I E L D | 9 7

  Figure 3.1. Scott Browne’s picture of unidentified aerial phenomenon.

  Considering the notorious camera- mindedness of Americans,

  it is surprising how few “authentic” photos of UFOs seem to

  exist, especial y as many of them are said to have been observed

  for several hours at relatively close quarters. I myself happen

  to know someone who saw a UFO with hundreds of other

  people in Guatemala. He had his camera with him, but in the

  excitement he completely forgot to take a photo, although it

  was daytime and the UFO remained visible for an hour. I have

  no reason to doubt the honesty of his report. He has merely

  strengthened my impression that UFOs are somehow not

  photogenic.4

  Almost seventy years have passed since Jung wrote this.

  He was correct about the American propensity to document

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  and record events with their cameras (today, their cell

  phones). Since the 1950s, UFOs have become photogenic, a

  fact to which the work of Scott and the members of his group

  attest. Jung did, however, offer a valuable methodological

  approach that addresses photographic evidence of UFOs, its

  dissemination, and its link to the formation of mass belief.

  He was writing in the 1950s and the internet had not yet been

  invented, but this new form of information dissemination

  became the key that would unlock and help us understand

  Jung’s prescient speculations.

  Jung was apparently ill at ease, if also excited, about

  the prospect of studying the UFO. “Every man who prides

  himself on his sound common sense will feel distinctly

  affronted” by reports of UFOs, he wrote. This, however,

  would be a mistake. “Psychologists who are conscious of

  their responsibilities should not be dissuaded from critical y

  examining a mass phenomenon like UFOs.” He proceeded

  to carve out a method for studying the phenomenon. That

  method was predicated on first denying that there was a

  real UFO. “The apparent impossibility of the UFO report

  suggests to common sense that the most likely explanation

  lies in a psychic disturbance.”5 The site for the proper study

  of the UFO was thus within the human psyche.

  At this point Jung introduced his concept of “amplificatory

  interpretation.” By this he meant a process that an individual

  or a group engages in when confronted by an unknown ob-

  ject, in this case an aerial object. This also applies to objects

  in dreams or visions. According to Jung, the meaning of the

  object “has to be completed,” because at first it is confusing—

  like the confusion Alison felt on that night in 2008 when she

  thought she was looking at the planet Venus. After it blinked

  I N T H E F I E L D | 9 9

  and faded out, she said to herself, “What the hell was that?”

  She was confused.

  Jung wrote that the UFO was app
arently impossible. He

  didn’t say it was impossible. His point was not necessarily

  to dismiss its objective reality, but to move the study of it

  into the realm of the psyche, his field of expertise. It was a

  methodological strategy. Jung missed an opportunity to

  note that it is the potential physical reality of the UFO that

  causes it to be a living myth and a universal mass rumor.

  It is both a myth and a potential future reality. He nods in

  this direction, noting that contemporary physics has re-

  vealed so many scientific truths that appear miraculous that

  “UFOs can easily be regarded and believed in as a physicists’

  miracle.”6 Its realism is what gives it its bite. It is also what

  makes it religious. Religions work because practitioners be-

  lieve in their truth or truths, even without overt evidence to

  support them. Religious truth, practitioners point out, exists

  independent of belief or disbelief. This is just what billion-

  aire Robert Bigelow said when asked if he was afraid that

  people might think he was crazy because he admitted that he

  believed in extraterrestrials: “I don’t care. It’s not gonna make

  a difference. It’s not gonna change the reality of what I know.”

  Jung’s choice of the word “apparently” is echoed by con-

  temporary media about UFOs. The soundbites for The X-

  Files convey a similar attitude toward the potential reality of

  the UFO. The meme “I want to believe” does not express be-

  lief, but the desire to believe. Belief is postponed. “The truth

  is out there” performs the very same function. The truth is

  somewhere, but not here, not now. It will be here someday.

  That the truth is postponed does not make it false; it makes it

  future- real. Thus, the first takeaway from Jung’s speculations

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  (of which he was guilty!) was the proposition, if only as a

  figure of speech, that the phenomenon was potential y real.

  The other takeaway has to do with the notion of

  amplificatory interpretation, or the creation of the meaning

  of the UFO after the initial confusion of seeing one (as well

  as before seeing one). The people I have interviewed have

  resisted it in every way they could, but it is impossible to re-

  sist entirely. Seventy years after Jung’s analysis— well before

  Scott, Alison, James, Tyler, or I was born— everyone has

 

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