What Aliens Really Do, Part II, Prayer Repels Alien Abductions
"Oh, no, they were surely not benign. I had, of course, long ago
given up any idea of these trespassers being “friendly.” However, what the man
from Texas spoke about and drew for me during our regression session, almost
tore me apart. His testimony certainly ripped up many of my most cherished
notions of the alien intruders. When he made the drawing of a reptilian humanoid
alien, the drawing was so awful, the image the most frightening revelation I’ve
ever had. The drawing triggered fear and terror within me. It seemed too real.
"That was in 1988. For
the first time I was truly frightened of the aliens because the picture he
handed me brought into reality the fact that a species exists which in some
way, degrades every human being alive." Barbara Bartholic, with Peggy Fielding, in Barbara: The Story of a UFO
Investigator, 2004, p. 154. (Barbara worked with famed researcher Jacques Vallee. She regressed many abductees, including Ted Rice, whose story is told in Masquerade of Angels, 1994, by Karla Turner (died in 1996). Barbara's book is out of print and not always available. She had many first person encounters with the Visitors. She passed away in 2010.)
If any reader feels that they or their family
members are being abducted by aliens, haunted by ghosts, or harassed by demons,
please refer to my blog post called “Spiritual Protection in a Dangerous
Universe.” Another very good source of information is Ann Druffel’s book for Resisting Alien Abduction.
Ann’s approach in a nutshell
Ann has 7 specific techniques that she espoused both in her
book and in various magazine and/or journal articles. The first three have to
do with righteous anger and physical resistance. Ann says that righteous anger
is not based on terror and chaotic outrage. The successful victims knew that
what the aliens were doing is wrong and told them so. They refused to
cooperate. They didn’t believe the alien line that they (the aliens) have the
right to use humans like lab rats. Ann is right in that aliens want
compliant humans. At some point, they expect to be believed and to even elicit
awe and cooperation from the victim. Once the victim realizes that they will
probably not be killed, he often resigns himself to abuse and helplessness in
the vain hope that some greater good will come from it all. (Ann's book, How to Defend Yourself Against Alien Abduction, 2010, is available in Kindle on Amazon.)
Jim Sparks, as described in his book The
Keepers: An Alien Message for the Human Race, 2008 (available on amazon.com), was a strong-willed man with plenty of salty, angry expressions,
but in most cases, the entities just feed off the rage and strong emotions, so his rage at being abducted just energized them. Outrage didn’t slow the program down a bit. One problem is that unlike
Sparks, most abductees are not awake enough to express emotion and resistance. If
they recall their abduction under hypnosis, what they report is a paralyzing terror
and sedation. Telling the Grays and Reptilians to just go away may work on
occasion, but in most cases, that approach is a joke.
Physical resistance may be possible, but Betty Hill fought
so hard her dress got torn, yet she wound up on the craft anyway. It’s a little
scary to punch an entity that has the power to abduct you, float you through a
window, paralyze you on a metal table, and really hurt you. Jim Sparks claims that
he accidently kicked one of the abductors, who was disguised as a human scientist in a white coat. It caused the electronic screen to
falter so that the real appearance of the entity was revealed for just a brief
moment. Druffel describes an abductee who put a stop to things when she grabbed
a Gray by the neck and broke it. Later the woman added, “I have faith in God!”
Sparks tried noncomplance, but a system of pain and
reward was initiated from the start that was difficult to resist. The pain
became gradually unbearable. The reward was “Lust,” (any sexual fantasy
fulfilled cybernetically), or “Power” in the form of psychic and telekinetic
ability. He resisted the rewards at first, but in the end he began to enjoy it.
The feeling of being part of some cosmic, important, global mystery was also very
seductive.
In the end, he became what the UFO community designates as a
cooperative contactee rather than an abductee. As in the case of many
contactees, he was given an important “Mission.” He must warn earthlings that
the earth is overpopulated and the planet is dying. He must galvanize us to do
something about it. The logic and high-mindedness of the mission caused Sparks
and others to forget the abusiveness and low morality quotient of the Visitors.
I think that Ann would say that the flaw in Spark’s
resistance is that when they told him, “We have the right. Always have, always
will,” he didn’t argue. How many times have I read that statement in an
abductee report? The abductee who is able to ward off further incursions, Ann
would say, is the one who understands that inalienable rights come from the
Creator, not from some inter-dimensional civilization. (But that demonstrates belief in a power higher than the aliens.) They want us to think
that we are insects, not important. I agree with Ann that we must never
capitulate our sense of being important and unique sentient beings. We are all
special, and although we may not know it, we are all loved by the
representatives of goodness in the alter-dimensions (like angels). Absolutely
all of us.
One of her more effective suggestions is to exert enough
will power to wiggle a toe or a finger to break the paralysis. Some of her
clients reported that breaking the paralysis brought the abduction to a halt. It
may not stop all further attempts at abduction, but it apparently made things
difficult for the Visitors. It’s also difficult for the abductee and requires a
strong mental determination.
Calling on a divine power
Even more effective than that was her suggestion of calling
upon divine personalities like Jesus Christ, Michael the Archangel, some saint,
spirit guide, or a guardian angel. She encourages her clients to pray. I
couldn’t agree more. One of the best examples of using divine protection is
found in Derrell Sim’s book Alien Hunter: The Evidence in Light, 2006.
His co-author and research partner Patricia Gray describes an abduction attempt
that she was able to resist.
Gray reports of a 1998 incident, “They are there to
‘instruct’ me. I must look at the wall where there are symbols they insist I
see. I sense that if I look at the symbols, they will change me forever. I must
get away.” She began to recite the Apostle’s Creed, at first slowly, then
stronger and stronger. She broke the paralysis and ran away. She felt that the
entities gave up.
In 2003, she kicked some alien butt. Two of them came
through the wall. She jumped out of bed, raised her hand like a traffic cop,
and said forcefully, “‘In Jesus’ name, you will leave now!’ There was a pause
of about two seconds…an eternity. Suddenly they leave. I go back to bed
shaking, but a winner,” (p. 263).
Suggestions from Barbara Bartholic
In fact, Bartholic reports one of the most horrific haunting
that I’ve ever heard of (pp. 119-125). It involved poltergeist events, telekinesis,
and objects appearing out of nowhere. It involved Native Americans and a
possible vengeful curse from a tribal shaman. A mother and daughter couldn’t
stand it anymore. They took a Bible and some crucifixes and did their own
little exorcism ritual. Although they were not over religious or devout or
experienced in exorcism, they managed to banish the malevolent spirit.
In Karla Turner’s Into
the Fringe, there is scant prayer and no relief from the torments of
repeated abductions and hauntings. Only the support of family and friends
(another good Druffel recommendation) saved their sanity. There is, however,
one instance when she reports praying:
"I was lying down with Casey (her
husband whose real name is Elton) when I felt the whole bed start to shake, and
when I tried to move, I found I was paralyzed. I couldn't even speak, but
somehow I finally managed to whisper a prayer, asking the god of truth and love
to make this frightening force go away. I repeated the prayer again and again,
until the paralysis broke, but the bed shook even more violently as my strength
increased. At last I was able to sit up and pound my fists on the bed,
demanding out loud that the force must leave me alone, and then the shaking
stopped. I tried to rouse Casey and tell him what had happened, but he rolled
over sleepily without responding. At that point, three women came in and
approached me. They held me comfortingly and told me, 'You did the right
thing. You passed the test.'"
Prayer works…however….
If you pray to Jesus, it has to be the right Jesus. The
Biblical Jesus, the Son of God Jesus. The New Age Christforce will not be there
for you. If you just can’t bring yourself to address Jesus Christ, try the
Heavenly Father and his host of angels. And don’t think that just throwing
their name out there like a magic charm will be helpful. If God delivers you,
you need to honor that and give Him the credit and appreciation. You need to
live the teachings, develop a healthy spiritual foundation. Have you noticed
that in books about alien abductions, mention of God, Jesus, or prayer is rare?
And when abductees do turn to the church, alas, the church
is often useless to give any aid. Yes, the church has the key, but most
ministers will not touch the topic of the paranormal, because it’s dark and
spooky and they think it’s not spiritual to learn about it. When an abductee
comes to the average Christian minister, the minister has no clue what they are
talking about.
You have to understand that aliens, just like the devil,
lie, morph, and create false realities. They are master deceivers and manipulators.
Banish the symbols that attract them. No paranormal
dabbling. No Ouija boards, dragon pendants, crystals, medicine bundles, or
shaman tools. “Choose ye this day who you will serve.” If you do not hook up
with a genuinely compassionate higher power, you are back in the soup pot.
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