Since the dawn of humanity, we’ve cast our eyes upon the twinkling cloak that envelopes Earth and contemplated, are we alone? Will any of these lights sparkling in the distance traverse across the galaxy, descend upon us, and hold us captive as they subject us to painful medical experimentation? Let's investigate the bizarre stories of several unfortunate souls who answer this question with a resounding yes.
Amy Rylance
In the early 90’s, Amy Rylance, a teenager from down under, claimed that something from up above had used a tractor beam to extract her from her house. Rylance and her friend Petra, who said she witnessed the abduction, stated that after she flew out the window, she was taken aboard a spacecraft, where DNA samples were taken from her.
The Gundiah Mackay Alien Abduction - Australian UFO Case [QUFOSR] by QUFOSR Though Rylance denied that the tests were in any way painful, she admitted that they had left marks all over her body. Most puzzling about the case was that she was found 800 kilometers away from her home, a mere 3 hours after she was snatched from her house. So, did this really happen? The physical evidence available is pretty underwhelming. The only marks of the spacecraft's supposed presence was a torn curtain and some scorched bushes, which Amy claims were burnt by the tractor beam. Of course, this raises the obvious question of, “How did the tractor beam burn the bush, but not cook her?”
Jesse Long
A supposed “Frequent Flier” of some planet’s “Earthling Studies and Abductions” department, Jesse Long claims aliens have been abducting him since childhood. According to Long, he and his brother were playing in the woods when they saw a “round structure that paralyzed them” before a tall, slender creature emerged.
Apparently, the aliens have kept on returning for Long. On some notable occasions, he alleges, they even took some of his sperm and used it to create human-alien hybrid babies. What stands out as confusing about this case is: why did they need to extract sperm from him multiple times?
According to his account, the aliens used his seed to create a total of nine kids. Yet, a tablespoon of semen usually contains over 100,000 sperm, meaning that they extracted far more than they needed. Unless the extra extractions were meant to make Long enjoy his abductions, most would have a hard time conceiving that E.T’s would spend light years in transit to continue gratuitously milking one man.
Antonio Vila Boas
Hailing from what must have been the red-light district of the galaxy, an ominous red star lit up the sky above Brazilian farmer, Antonio Vila Boas’ house. Assuming that it must have been a fallen, floating traffic light for airplanes, Boas went out to investigate, but as he drew closer, the vermilion-hued object snatched him up.
Once inside the craft, he was forced fornicate with what he described as “a red-haired alien” with whom he sired several kids. The most perplexing part of Boas’ tale however, was that after he returned from his extraterrestrial tryst, doctors on Earth diagnosed him with radiation poisoning. Aside from being the strangest STD of which I've ever heard, it's difficult to imagine a scenario in which a farmer would normally run into radioactive waste. Equally difficult to comprehend is what was the aliens’ game plan for that night? Did they plan on landing their craft in a field and simply mating with the first creature that came to investigate? The world may never know.
Travis Walton
On November 5th, 1975, Travis Walton was riding in a truck through Apache-Sitgrieves National Forest with 6 coworkers when they saw a low-flying UFO hovering at a low altitude. Walton stopped the car, and got out to investigate. As he approached the unknown craft, however, a powerful force overtook him, and he blacked out, though his friends were frightened and drove away.
When he woke up, he found himself in a Steven Segal-styled brawl, exchanging punches and blows against a group of extraterrestrials. Walton stated he only stopped fighting after an unknown human wearing a black hat gassed him by putting a plastic mask over his face. The next thing he remembers is the UFO flying off into the night after depositing him along a lonely highway. Following his claim, he allegedly passed lie detector tests
confirming the story, along will all but one of his co-workers. Still, skeptics are convinced this story is a hoax because of a number of "discrepancies" in the accounts of Walton and his workers. Even so, it's hard to understand how aliens seem to always understand how our system of borders work. It's peculiar that people are always abducted, and then left in a relatively convenient place, like a highway, in their own country. You'd think that at least once, the aliens would mess up, and a person would land in another country.
Colonel H.G Shaw
Colonel H.G Shaw skyrocketed to national prominence in 1896 with his account of a buggy ride gone bizarre. According to Colonel Shaw, while riding near Stockton, he came upon a downed, metallic craft. Almost immediately, three, seven-foot-tall extraterrestrial creatures stepped out of the vehicle, making a warbling sound as they walked.
Either the tractor beam had yet to be invented, or these spacemen had bought the budget-bracket model of their spaceship company's product line, because
Shaw reported that they tried to manually carry him into their craft. When they saw he was too heavy, they gave up and flew off in chagrin. Regardless of whether this is true or not, If your weight is interfering even with the ability of aliens to abduct you, you might want to hit the gym.
Colonel Shaw, however, was not the only one around that year to report seeing a space vehicle. In what was coined, “
The Great Airship Wave of 1896,” over 1500 sightings of UFO's were documented that year. However, subsequent investigations revealed most were either planets, hoaxes, or practical jokes. Some commentators at the time also believe Thomas Edison might have been behind experimenting with new, beta-phase vehicles. It's far more likely that lack of public familiarity with blimps and balloons was responsible for the influx of mistaken accounts.
Barney and Betty Hill
Barney and Betty Hill were driving home one night after a road trip to the Niagara Falls when they saw a glowing orb skirting the face of the moon. At first, they assumed it was a shooting star, but quickly changed their minds when they saw it was moving upwards, so they decided to give chase to the orb in their 1957 Chevy Bel Air.
Eventually, the chasers became the chased, as the object closed in on them. It hovered over their car, and enveloped it in a beam that made them feel a tingling sensation. Hours later, they found themselves 35 miles away, driving down the highway without the faintest of an idea as to how they'd arrived there.
Over the next several weeks, the couple began having vivid dreams of being abducted, and they developed strange, idiosyncratic phobias. Most confounding of all was a pink powder found on one of Betty’s dresses that chemical analyses were never able to identify. Of course, this is far from conclusive of anything, given that forensic technology in the fifties was still in its infancy. The powder's inability to be identified probably spoke more to the failings of the instruments identifying it than to an otherworldly nature. As for their development of strange phobias, that could attributed to undetected spikes in their house's
carbon monoxide levels. This odorless gas released by faulty stoves, grills, and other household appliances replaces oxygen in the air, which when inhaled can cause feelings of anxiety and fear at mid-range levels.
Peter Khoury
For whatever reason, when aliens abduct people, they tend to leave nary a trace of forensic evidence, as if they were trying to shake intergalactic Interpol off their trail. However, in the case of Peter Khoury, it seems they got sloppy. In 1992, Khoury made Australian headlines when he announced that two alien females, one appearing Scandinavian and the other Asian, materialized in his bedroom and forced him to have an "intimate interaction" with them.
UNUSUAL DNA RESULTS Following Alien Encounter (S7) | Ancient Aliens | The UnXplained Zone by The UnXplained Zone Following his extremely close encounter of the threesome kind, Khoury stated he could substantiate his claims with a blond hair the Australian had found, well, down under.
Subsequent DNA tests revealed the hair came from someone with a very rare form of Chinese DNA, indicating that while the intercourse he had may have been out of his marriage, it certainly was not out of this world.
Frederick Valentich
Frederick Valentich was a flight student with ambitions of becoming a commercial pilot. But before he could take to the skies, the skies took him!
While on a training flight in October of 1978, Valentich radioed into Melbourne air traffic control asking about a craft that was approaching him from the east at 4500 feet. ATC responded that there were no registered flights occupying that space, and that no vehicles were appearing on their radar screens. The craft continued to orbit above Valentich, and he reported that he felt it was toying with him. Moments later, he gave his final transmission, in which he said he was experiencing engine troubles. When asked on what type of machine the aircraft above him was, he simply responded, “It's not an aircraft…” before sounds of metal crashing overtook his words.
There are many explanations as to
what may have happened to Valentich. One scenario is that he faked his disappearance. According to air traffic control records, his airplane never showed up on radar at the location where he claimed to be, and witnesses in a nearby town reported an unauthorized landing at around the time of his distress call.
Why would he fake his death at the hands, or tractor beam, of a UFO? Despite the case's superficial appearance as a preemptive attempt to ruin human-alien relations, the answer is probably much simpler: after having failed all five components of his commercial aviation tests multiple times, he might have needed a way to falsely reincarnate and try again.
Carol and Helen Thomas
A British mother and daughter named Carol and Helen Thomas saw a blinding light emanating from the alleys through which they walked on their way to work. Accompanying the light was a humming sound, but, never ones to fear a sound track, they marched on. Suddenly, they felt nauseous, and woke up disoriented and confused.
Despite the walkway being completely dry, Helen’s jacket was soaked in an unknown liquid. Even stranger, when they arrived to work, they were duly notified that they were hours late, despite neither one having a recollection of what had transpired over the period of unaccounted time. For months after, the pair experienced unexplained pains and blisters, as well as feelings of fear and anxiety. Under hypnosis,
both gave a nearly-identical account of being examined by white creatures with wet skin.
Mother Carol and daughter Helen Thomas talk about their alien abduction experience, Birmingham, 1988 by Eyes On Cinema @RealEOC presents: Eyes On UFOs Though recalling similar events under hypnosis might indicate to some a shared experience, it's possible that it speaks more to the possibility that the hypnotist suggested the same narrative to both. In their altered state, this induced a false memory in the women that showed them being abducted by aliens, rather than tricked by hypnotizing, snake oil salesmen.
Betty Andreasson Lucas
While sitting in her Massachusetts home, Betty Lucas felt an indescribable force wash over her and her family. As her loved ones watched in paralyzed horror, she was pulled from her window and taken aboard a space craft. There, Betty had an unknown object inserted into her cranium and was told that eventually, she would receive a planetary revelation. She described the feeling throughout the ordeal as peaceful, despite the high foreign-objects-to-nose ratio.
Another note Betty made about her abductors was that they wore boots, and appeared to float. It make me wonder: Why would they need to protect feet that don't touch the ground? Strange inconsistencies in her descriptions, however, are not the only red flags in her story: In 2007, her son revealed that at the time she when came forward with her account, she had been suffering from intense psychological distress resulting from the recent deaths of her two sons. He also issued a scathing indictment against her claims, calling them “hoaxes intended to steal money from the UFO community.”
If you are amazed at alien mysteries, you might want to read about the best evidence proving
aliens exist. Thanks for reading.