The White Mountain Abduction

We’ve just passed the 50th anniversary of the first known and widely publicized alien abduction case. The famed case of Betty and Barney Hill took place in rural New Hampshire on the night of September 20-21, 1961. No one can say that the Hills’ strange experience that night – much of it revealed under hypnosis – was related to something they had read about. There were no such known cases prior to this one.

So why Barney and Betty Hill? Could it be that there were other abductions previous to this one that received no publicity? Such an incident would be so bizarre that most people probably would prefer to keep it quiet. That would be especially true in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

But Betty and Barney Hill were already used to controversy. After all, they were a mixed race couple in an era marked by intolerance. In an interview, Barney noted that fact. For that reason, the couple was willing to come forward and bring light to another controversial matter.

The experience altered their lives forever. Barney’s behavior changed and has been compared to someone suffering from post traumatic stress syndrome. When we met Betty Hill 25 years after the event, she was obsessed by the experience and frequently went searching for UFOs late at night. She claimed to see them frequently in the skies in a remote area of New Hampshire.

The late Berthold Schwarz, a psychiatrist who explored the UFO phenomenon, joined Betty on a couple of occasions. When we asked him about his experience with her, he confided they saw moving objects in the sky, but he wouldn’t say they were unknown.  “Yes, we saw things. What they were is an open matter.” If that sounds somewhat obscure, there is good reason. By this time, Betty believed that alien vessels could disguise themselves as airplanes.  Right or wrong, that belief, of course, did not convince skeptics and  resulted in ridicule in a subject already strife with such reactions from disbelievers.

Here’s a well done documentary about the White Mountain case.  Enjoy…and wonder.

 

Posted in Betty and Barney Hill, synchronicity | 11 Comments

Capital Punishment

Before I go to bed most nights, I usually check Huffington Post or msnbc.com for news. Given the weirdness in the world, it’s probably not a smart thing to do for a peaceful night’s sleep. It saddened me to find this headline about Troy Davis, executed this evening in Georgia for allegedly shooting a police officer in 1989.

There was ample evidence for reasonable doubt in this case. Quoting from Huffington Post: “Though Davis’ attorneys said seven of nine key witnesses against him disputed all or parts of their testimony, state and federal judges repeatedly ruled against granting him a new trial. As the court losses piled up Wednesday, his offer to take a polygraph test was rejected and the pardons board refused to give him one more hearing.”

Excuse me, this is Georgia, the deep south, where racism is alive and well.  Troy Davis was a black man. That’s the smaller picture. The larger picture here is about capital punishment.  Currently, according to Wikipedia, “over 60% of the world’s population live in countries where executions take place” – China, India, Indonesia, and the U.S.

In 1976, I worked as a librarian at a minimal security prison for young men between the ages of 16-19. We had older guys, but the majority fell within that age group and were doing time for drug offenses. One of these guys, a black guy, Aiken, was older than the general population and had been sentenced to twenty years for killing a police officer.

I liked Ake. He was smart, was enrolled in college classes, and read voraciously. He claimed he was innocent, as so many do, but oddly, I believed Ake. I think he was at the wrong time and place and was a fall guy. He and I used to sit in my office for hours, talking about world events, about life. I used to bring him books from my personal library  and he always returned the books in pristine condition and we would talk about the ideas in the books. He was also in the Spanish class I taught at the prison twice a week, at night. He was motivated.

I was one of 15 women who worked on the compound. My library, a double wide trailer, was a sanctuary for inmates like Ake who sought to improve themselves. They knew they could come there for conversation, good coffee, pastries, anything I happened to bring to work with me. One day during an escape attempt, Ake and two of his buddies rushed into the library and stayed until the lockdown was lifted. I knew they were there to protect me in the event of an uprising on the compound.

I sat in on his parole hearing. I was in his court. I knew he was innocent.

Some years later, long after I’d left the prison system, I was in a grocery story and heard someone shout, “Ms. Trish!” I turned and saw Ake rushing toward me. He was out, he was free. We rushed toward each other and hugged. “You saved my ass,” he said.

We talked for a while in the parking lot, catching up on each other’s lives. I’ve never seen him since. But when I saw that Huffington Post headline tonight, I thought of Ake, a  black man far more fortunate than Troy Davis.

In 1979, I was feeling like an inmate myself and knew I needed a change. The supervisor of the prison where I worked arranged an interview for me at Huntsville State prison in Texas. It wasn’t exactly the change I had in mind,  but  I was flown out to Dallas, then transported to the prison for an interview, and toured their Death Row.

Up until this point, I was ambivalent about the death penalty. That’s a horrible thing to admit. But honestly, I just hadn’t thought about it that much. I was in my twenties, I was naive.   The prison where I worked was minimum security, which meant none of these inmates would be hitting death row. But my tour of Death Row at Huntsville changed all that in a instant. It was the most desperate, depressing, and despicable place I’ve ever been.

Imagine: men languishing in solitary for years, released for just an hour a day for exercise or a shower, no contact with anyone else. The cells were impossibly small, just a toilet and a sink and a cot. The entire cell block stank of terror, a very real and tangible smell.

“So when do you think you can start?” the prison supervisor asked me afterward. “Our library really needs someone like you.”

Never, I thought, and flew back to Florida and ended up leaving my job not long afterward.

Yes, heinous crimes are committed. Yes, lives are shattered. Yes, some part of us screams for retribution.  But capital punishment is like war. The executioner, like the invading country, is a murderer. And there’s this religious thing, an eye for an eye, that has been twisted  and perverted so that we actually accept lethal injections, that we actually accept invading sovereign countries. What the hell is wrong with this picture?

Every time a person is executed, a country is invaded, every time an eye for an eye is implemented, we are diminished as a people, a  society, a country, a planet. You lose a child, a spouse, your life is violated. But an eye for eye just doesn’t set things right.

Ake, I hope you’re reading this. I hope you’re flourishing. And always, I wish you well and thank you for what you taught me.

Posted in capital punishment, prisons, synchronicity | 18 Comments

Nicholas Cage – Time Traveler?

Apparently the image on the right is an authentic Civil War era photo of a man who bears an uncanny resemblance to actor Nicholas Cage. The comparison of photos has sparked Internet rumors than he’s a vampire. I’m not sure why anyone would jump to that particular conclusion. When Rob and I first saw it, our first thought was, ‘ Hey, Nicholas Cage, time traveler!’

How about a distant relative? But maybe an immortal with hidden fangs fits better with pop culture in cyberspace. Now if we hear Cage has a new movie coming out in which he plays a Civil War era vampire, then we know where that photo came from! – the hype-sters from La La Land.

Posted in actors, synchronicity | 14 Comments

A Couple of Synchros

Katniss from Catching Fire, the movie

Sometimes synchronicities can serve as reminders, or as clues to future events. Here are two that do just that. I think these incidents are commonplace, but we often overlook them.

One recent morning I was reading a novel, Catching Fire, the second in the Hunger Games series. I’d only read a page or two when I came to a passage in which a character named Finnick saves the life of Peeta – Katniss’ love interest and fighting partner – who has collided with an invisible force field. He’s knocked unconscious and his heart stops. Finnick saves him by using CPR.

As soon as I read that, I looked up at the clock. At noon, I had a CPR training session scheduled at the gym. A nice reminder not only of the CPR, but also that there’s an underlying connection of all things and synchronicities offer us a peek at that deeper level of reality. (I also noticed that the CPR wasn’t quite done properly, but who cares. The guy was saved!)

That synchro reminded me of one from the previous evening.  I was heading to a yoga studio that I visit only a few times a year because it’s a 50-minute drive. A French woman I’ve known for years through yoga needed a ride so she joined me.

As we were leaving, an odd thought came to mind. Anne is hanging around with Arabs. Where did that come from? I wondered. I didn’t say anything about it and when it came to mind again before we arrived at the studio, it occurred to me that she rides Arabian horses owned by a Saudi family. So maybe that factoid trickled into my awareness.

As I pulled into the parking lot, I asked if she had been riding lately. Not since breaking a finger several months, she said, but wanted to get back into it. We walked inside and quickly found out that the teacher we both expected had opted out and was replaced by someone we didn’t know.

Anne started acting very much like the Cancer she is,  lifted her chin, and refused to take the class. “Okay, be that way,” I said.  “But I’m taking the class.”

“I’ll wait out here,” she said.

“For an hour and a half?”

“Sure. I have things to do,” she said, patting her large purse.

I shrugged and walked into the studio. I was thinking that I would leave early to accommodate her, especially if the class wasn’t very good. But it turned out to be quite challenging with variations I’d never tried, and I wanted to see it through to the end.

When it was over, I wasn’t particularly looking forward to the drive back. However, I was surprised when Anne didn’t seem a bit peeved. “I had a very interesting time. I spent the entire time talking to Jamal,” she said somewhat smugly. Jamal’s an old friend who works at the studio, checking people into class and usually takes the class after everyone has arrived. Apparently, like Anne, he decided to skip it.

“Did you know that his family is from Morocco and he speaks French?” she asked.

“I’m glad you weren’t bored,” I responded, and I couldn’t help thinking that she’d spent the entire class hanging out with an Arab. Hmm, guess I saw that one coming.

 

 

Posted in synchronicity, yoga | 17 Comments

Reno Air Crash

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zejdh6Ab478&feature=player_embedded

Earlier this week, I spoke to our friend Lynn Gernon, who is married to Bruce Gernon, Rob’s co-author of The Fog. She said that she and Bruce were headed out to Reno for the airshow over the weekend.  So Friday I checked one of my online news sites and saw that a WWII, P-51 fighter plane had crashed into the grandstands at the Reno airshow.

I immediately thought of Lynn and Bruce. I scrolled through my cell numbers, couldn’t find Lynn’s number, and ran to the back of the house to get the number from Megan. She is working part-time at a business their daughter owns and had the number. I texted Lynn and was relieved to find out they hadn’t attended the air show today.

Here are the details. Around 4:30 PM Reno time,  the P-51 Mustang crashed into a box-seat area in front of the grandstand. It appeared that the pilot, 74-year-old Jimmy Leeward of Ocala, Florida, a veteran air man and stunt pilot, had lost control of the plane. Leeward was a stunt pilot for the movies Amelia and Cloud Dancer.

According to the Huffington Post, “the competition is like a car race in the sky, with planes flying wingtip-to-wingtip as low as 50 feet off the sagebrush at speeds sometimes surpassing 500 mph. Pilots follow an oval path around pylons, with distances and speeds depending on the class of aircraft.”

While reading about the disaster, I was struck by the name of Leeward’s plane, which may push this story into the realm of a global synchro: Galloping Ghost.

Why that name? If you’re  a stunt pilot, flying in risky air shows, why would you even dare to call your plane anything related to ghosts? Isn’t that like, well, tempting fate? Or did Leeward have some inking  of the future?

 

Posted in airplanes, synchronicity | 16 Comments

An upside down synchro

 

This synchro appeared as a comment by Jeff D’Antonio,   under a post about the nature of consciousness.   In case anyone missed it, we’re bringing it forward. It’s simple and to the point and may have an element of the trickster.

+++

Last night I was awakened in the middle of the night by a loud thunderstorm, as the remnants of Tropical Storm “Lee” made its way up into New England. Still half asleep, I looked at the clock, but because I was lying in bed at a weird angle, I saw the clock upside-down.

It was 3:37 AM. If you look at 3:37 on a digital clock upside-down, it looks just like…”LEE”. I chuckled, and thought of you guys.

 

 

Posted in names, Numbers, synchronicity | 11 Comments

Nica, Nika

On Labor Day, our daughter Megan and I  visited three local animals shelters in search of border collies, retrievers, or Australian shepherds who needed a home. She has been talking for some time about getting a dog of her own and Rob and I urged her to search the shelters first.

Our first stop was Animal Care and Control, the county shelter, a truly depressing place. The dog area isn’t air conditioned, although there are window fans that circulate the air. Many of the dogs didn’t have bedding, some didn’t have food or water in their bowls. Nearly every other dog was a pit bull – no puppies, just adult pit bulls whose sad eyes tell you a great deal more than you want to know about their lives.  Here, we spent some time in a greeting area with a pretty white dog that was part retriever.

We both felt bummed out when we left the shelter and drove out to a place called Peggy Adams, a private shelter that was the complete antithesis of the county shelter. Here, all the animals are kept in air conditioned quarters, a necessity with summer temps reaching into the high 90s. The dogs have ample room in their cages and are walked by volunteers. They all had fresh water and food in their bowls. They even had toys and beds to sleep in.

Megan had her eye on an Australian shepherd who was listed on the shelter’s website. She was gorgeous, just a year old, with the most beautiful blue eyes, a shiny multicolored coat and a sweet temperament. But she had been adopted already and her new owner was to pick her up in a few days.

From here, we moved on to another private dog rescue center. The facility sits on 28 acres and used to be a wildlife center where Megan had volunteered in high school. When we walked in the front door, there were five or six dogs lounging in the air conditioned lobby, all comfortably ensconced in doggie beds or on quilts/bedspreads. But the area where most of the dogs were kept was hot, crowded, and many of the cages had signs written in angry red letters: heartworms; aggressive; issues with children. I felt nauseated in here, just as I had in the county shelter. Megan asked about the border collie puppies  the center had posted on their website.

Since the place is staffed  by mostly volunteers, there had been a snafu in the record-keeping. It turned out that a black and white pup had been brought in with some German shepherd pups and was listed as male – but was a female. And she looked nothing like the shepherds. The volunteer said she was a border collie. We played with her outside, a rambunctious little thing and said we wanted to think about it. We took pictures. That night at the dog park, we showed the pictures to a woman who owns a border collie. Her take? Definitely a border collie.  “That white ring at the tip of the tail and those ears are the things to look for.”

The next day, we took Rob over for a look. Two days later, we brought her home.  Megan was juggling two names – Niki and Nica. “I’m leaning toward Nica,” she said.

Here’s the synchro: Nica is the nickname of my antagonist  in Esperanza, a book Megan hasn’t read. Yes, it’s possible she heard me toss that name around during random discussions and that it stuck in the back of her mind. But  I probably would have referred to this character by her full name, Dominica. She’s not a nice person. Well, she’s not even a person. She’s a ghost that has evolved over the centuries so that she’s able to seize living people in order to experience the full physical pleasures of being human. She commands the largest tribe of such ghosts in South America and she and her tribe have terrorized Esperanza for decades.

I cautioned Megan about naming her dog Nica. But Nica she is, although megan changed the spelling of her name to  NIKA. She’s a little lover, friendly to everyone, and a huge admirer of Noah, who steals her toys.  He’s a gentle 95-pound Golden Retriever and to her, must look like an Olympian god. The three cats are defining their borders with Nica. Here she is with Powder, who is bigger than she is.  Already Nica’s person is definitely Megan.

The difference in size is clearly depicted in the first picture, where Nika is curled up asleep against Noah. To give you some idea of how large Noah is, here he is chasing a squirrel and apparently figuring he can climb a tree.

Posted in creativity, names, synchronicity | 23 Comments

NASA Admits…

NASA admits they don’t know what these “things” are. But it’s interesting that they admit there are “things” out there!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ynDQDhtmoTs

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in NASA, synchronicity, UFOs | 3 Comments

Saying Goodbye

I was at the kitchen table early one morning with the newspaper and a cup of coffee when Megan walked in and sat down. She started talking about her on-again, off-again relationship with her boyfriend. One day they’re great together; the next day it’s all over. He can’t talk about his feelings. She pushes too hard and he backs away. She ignores him and he comes chasing her. On and on.

I was just finishing the crytoquote of the day and had one word to go. I was staring at the paper as she talked. For some reason, I was blocked. I’d already told Megan a number of times that she should just cut him off and move on. The guy lives three hours away and doesn’t like to drive. He can’t seem to make up his mind about what he wants, except he doesn’t want her to join him and he doesn’t want to move here. What kind of relationship is that? So she knows what I think.

Megan was saying, “Things are different now. I’m more independent.” When I didn’t respond, she said: “Dad, what’re you doing?” I showed her the final word. It read: _ood_ye. Two letters missing. I just couldn’t see it.

She glanced at it and said, ‘Goodbye.’ Of course. How easy.  Why couldn’t I see it? Then I read the entire quote and was startled and so was Megan when she read it.

Here it is: A man never knows how to say goodbye; a woman never knows when to say it. – Helen Rowland

Megan nodded. “Yeah, I guess that’s true.”

And an early morning synchronicity, I thought.

Posted in synchronicity | 18 Comments

Whatever Happened to Empathy?

One thing about election season in the U.S. is that it provides an inside look at what’s brewing in the darker pockets of America’s collective unconscious. And those dark pockets are profoundly troubling.

During the Republican debate on September 7, NBC host Brian Williams was addressing Governor Rick Perry about the number of executions in Texas: “Your state has executed 234 death row inmates, more than any other governor in modern times. Have you struggled to sleep at night with the idea that any one of those might have been innocent?”

The audience exploded with applause at the mention of the number of executions and again following Perry’s unabashed support for executing people.

“No, sir, I’ve never struggled with that at all. In the state of Texas, if you come into our state and you kill one of our children, you kill a police officer, you’re involved with another crime and you kill one of our citizens, you will face the ultimate justice in the state of Texas, and that is you will be executed.”

That phrase, ultimate justice, got the loudest ovation of the evening. Rob and I just looked at each other in disbelief. Gov.Perry, you might recall, preceded his campaign by sponsoring and leading a Christian prayer vigil in Houston’s Reliant Stadium. Hypocrisy anyone?

On September 12, during the CNN-hosted tea party debate, Wolf Blitzer posed a hypothetical situation to Ron Paul. You have a 30-year-old man who has a good job, but doesn’t have health insurance. He doesn’t want to pay the $200-$300 a month for major medical insurance. He gets sick, goes into coma, and needs extensive care. Who pays for his coverage?  “Are you saying society should just let him die?” Blitzer asked.

People in the audience shouted, “Yeah!”

Whatever happened to empathy and compassion? When did the hearts of Americans turn to stone?  How did a faction of this society become so cold-hearted that these questions  drew cheers?

Right now, fifty million Americans lacks health insurance and  1 in 6 Americans  – or 46 million – live in poverty.  And that lasts figure is undoubtedly much higher since the figures are based on the same standards used in the 1960s. According to the Census Bureau, the government safety-net programs – that the Republicans and tea party candidates hope to dismantle –  lifted nearly 25 million Americans out of poverty. Unemployment compensation put food on the table for 3.2 million Americans and Social Security kept 20.3 million out of poverty. Then there are Medicare and Medicaid, the medical insurance programs for the elderly and the poor that the Republicans hope to rip apart.

The real tragedy is that Perry, who is considered the GOP front runner, is actually too liberal for many of the tea party hard core believers. Can you just imagine this country if that group selects the Republican candidate and that person goes on to become president? Costa Rica, the country which has more American in residence than another other – except the U.S. of course – might get a new surge of ex-patriots.

And, hey Wolf Blitzer, where can you get major medical insurance for $200-$300 a month?

 

 

Posted in synchronicity | 21 Comments