New Information about Ted Rice, Part 1/5: Connecting the Dots
Update 5/15/2023: Ted Rice and his Irish friend Stuart Thomas had a podcast called Alien Talk. You can access it here. https://www.buzzsprout.com/1977704
Dr. Turner’s famous book, Masquerade of Angels, the story of Ted’s lifelong encounters with alien intruders, is out of print and is available on amazon.com, but you can buy an autographed copy from Ted himself for $75. You can email him at teddywayne789@yahoo.com or write him at 2513 Crossford Dr., Foley AL, 36535-1151.
Scripture quotes are from www.biblegateway.com
NKJV
In 2010, I read the late Dr. Karla Turner’s
book Masquerade of Angels, the story of Ted Rice, a gifted psychic and
alien abductee. Prompted by a recent interview with a family friend of Ted’s, I
recently reread it, and it was as riveting the second time as the first. I
blogged about it in 2010, but I have deleted those posts so I could rework them
in light of new information.
When someone who is the subject of a compelling and strange book disappears completely, or if the author has passed, it’s tempting to wonder if the person being written about was real or if their name in the book is a fictional replacement. I wondered, and so did many others, asking in UFO forums, “Where is Ted Rice?” Well, at that time, I didn’t know where he was, but thanks to his goddaughter, Bonnie (last name withheld), I can tell you that he is real, that Ted Rice is his real name, that he is still alive, that he was always a good and kind person, and that he is not contesting anything in the book. He told Bonnie why he fell off the grid, and I’ll tell you about it in Part 5.
But first, I want to deal with what we
have already learned from Masquerade, because it is one of the
most clarifying books connecting the dots between psychic gifts, New Age
religion, so-called space aliens, and demons. The many and varied levels of
deception revealed in Masquerade are astonishing. No spy agency anywhere
in the world can match the long game played with Ted Rice. The grooming,
manipulation, and exploitation were almost irresistible. Dr. Turner wrote that
Ted’s life was “designed” (p. viii). That makes this book a must read for anyone
interested in any of the topics listed above.
Because the story is so strange, it’s
important to note that Karla (Kandy) Turner and colleague Barbara Bartholic were two formidable and respected researchers in the UFO community. They interviewed around
30 of Ted Rice’s friends and associates. Ted’s goddaughter Bonnie, her mother Barbara, and Ted himself contributed information to this
article. Some of the stranger aspects of the story were told under hypnotic
regression. Of course, I can’t review a whole life in a series of blog posts.
My approach here is to pick a few of the more instructive events in Ted’s life
that lift the veil on an enduring interdimensional mystery.
One of the entities touched the chest of each young person and announced, “We have merged your souls” (p. 52). The next time Ted saw Jill, he was totally smitten. Jill didn’t return his advances for a few years until he found a job at Sun Valley Resort in Idaho.
Getting
the job at Sun Valley was a virtual impossibility, but that was another
experience that was “designed,” which would superficially indicate that
whatever was guiding Ted knew exactly what they were doing and could predict the
future. They appeared to have his best interests at heart. Jill surprised Ted by showing up
there, and for a while, they were a couple. It seemed as if all Ted’s dreams
and wishes would come to pass under the guiding hand of unseen
forces. What could possibly go wrong with a golden goose just because it was
invisible and could float through walls…a benefactor that gratuitously hands
out all that one could desire on earth?
But alas,
Jill quickly became enamored with the star-studded Sun Valley/Ketchum bar life among the
young employees, many of whom were away from home for the first time. Night
after night, she urged Ted to join her there, but Ted couldn’t share her
enthusiasm for the drunkenness that often resulted. It soured their
relationship to the point where she found her entertainment elsewhere,
including with Ted’s friend and roommate.
“Look,” she said, “we grew up
together, schooled together, churched together, so of course I love you, Ted.
How could I not love you, you’re my best friend? And I’ve tried to love you the
way you wanted. But all of this business with the angels and our souls being
merged, Ted, that’s your obsession. Those were your angels, not
mine!” (p. 71)
And
with that, the tie was severed. It was devastating for Ted. He withdrew from
friends and parties for a while, wondering how God’s angels could set them up
for such a failure that brought pain to them both. And this is a great
question. I’m going to insert my own judgment on this experience here, because
the reason I study UFOs, abductions, and paranormal is to compare the phenomena
to the Bible, hoping to come to some understanding of how it all fits together.
The
way I see the saga with Jill is that it was not to bring them together for a wonderful,
abundant adult life, but to cause them to corrupt each other. Her friendship
with Ted brought Jill to Sun Valley in Colorado where she dove into a life of
drinking and parties. Had Ted succumbed to her pleas for him to join her there night
after night, the long-term result could have been two alcoholics who would
eventually marry, have children, live a miserable life, and ultimately divorce.
Do
you think the God of heaven would miss that Jill would not commit to Ted’s
strange revelations and he would not join her nightly bar life? Could it be
that the soul tie established when they were teenagers was a trap rather than
some weird kind of blessing? Furthermore, I’ve been hearing angel stories since
1965. There is an angel story in my own walk with God. You can read about it here. Angels can look exactly like
real humans, but they do not wear turbans and robes, and they don’t make
mistakes. Those familiar with literature about alien abductions know that
aliens often blunder, sometimes in goofy ways, sometimes causing harm. God does
not err. His plans for us are for wholeness and peace.
“For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the
LORD, thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give you a future and a hope,”
(Jeremiah 29:11 NKJV).
That
does not by any means suggest that He will give us all of our wants and
desires. He gives us what we need to get through life and come out stronger on
the other end. In God’s kingdom, pain is instructive. His desire is to get us
ready for heaven. The devil’s plan is to drag us to hell.
Jill
wasn’t the only female friend that Ted made in Sun Valley. Another beautiful
young woman kept appearing in the Lodge or on the mountain trail that Ted used
to hike. Oddly, Ted only ran into her when he was alone. She and Ted had wonderful chats about life and a host of other topics.
He was never able to tease out a last name or a particular place where she
lived. She would wave her hand in a general way and say that she and her people
lived up there in the mountains. After some weeks of seeing her and realizing
that only he and no one else knew anything about her, he pressed her about her
home. From Masquerade:
Taking another tack, Ted persisted,
this time with questions about her family. “If you don’t have telephones,” he
said, “and you don’t live in a town, and there aren’t any houses up there, you don't receive mail, just
where does your family live?” “We live in the mountains,” Maya answered
patiently. “In?” Ted echoed, trying to understand. “In the mountains? You mean,
actually inside them? Like in a cave?” “Yes,” she said, as if no further
explanation were required (p. 97).
That was the last time Ted saw Maya, but
she promised him that they would meet again. She was so real that Ted couldn’t
believe she was anything other than a gorgeous, sweet woman.
In their discussions she accomplished two
things. One was to help Ted realize that he was psychic, something that he had
not fully comprehended at that point, and the other was to plant the seed that
he needed to go home and get back into college.
So, what could go wrong with a beautiful,
mysterious woman opening the universe to him and setting him up for the next
manipulated phase of his life? Well, on the apparent surface, nothing, but if
you are a student of the abduction phenomenon, you will immediately be aware
that beautiful women often turn into ugly genderless reptilians. You can read about such a
case in Derril Sim’s book Alien Hunter: Evidence in Light, 2007. I blog about it here:
In the link above, Sims describes a case
where a reptilian alien came to a different abductee as a beautiful woman. She pressed
him to join Sim’s abduction support group, but when the man wouldn’t cooperate
with her plans, she got angrier and more aggressive. Finally, she touched an
old knee injury and caused him to scream with intense pain. When the charade
didn’t work, the screen dropped and it turned out that “she” was really a reptilian. Another interesting story in that post describes a woman who fended
off an alien attack by reciting the Apostle’s Creed and rebuking the aliens in
the name of Jesus.
When Ted realized that he wouldn’t see
Maya again, he did leave Sun Valley for home in Tuscaloosa, Alabama where he
enrolled in college. He hoped to settle down to a normal life full of friends
and normal rhythms, but that was not to be. In Part 2, Ted meets “Ralph” and
“Miss Flowers.” Bonnie knows who those characters are and the background of the
fascinating story that comes next.
This story can also be seen at New Information about Ted Rice, Part 1, Connecting the Dots – Medium
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