In the 17th century text by the Rosicrucian Cabalist he was attempting to temp the other fellow with a “Sylph wife who would keep him happier than any mortal woman.” The fellow had to take a vow of chastity to the guest in order to be allowed to pursue the grand knowledge. This may be the first time it was written of any idea that people would be “married to” or “conceive with” the fairy world. Around the same time, the belief in changelings was spreading because the church kept people stupid and couples didn’t understand the source or cause of miscarriage. People were convinced that devils stole their children and replaced them with sickly looking ones, not because it happened to people necessarily, mind you, but because they were told that witches and devils did this. This was a direct attack on the female and the work of midwives. So, I believe that the church, denouncing midwifery, attached the idea of changelings to midwives and therefore caused midwives to appear to be the witches who stole the babies for the devils. I’m not so sure there is a real alien hybrid program at all. It seems more likely that intelligence agencies use this method of abducting people in order to gain their own private genetic information and use it for their own monetary gain and selfish agendas. Maybe I’m paranoid but its far more paranoid I think, to believe that ETs need our cooperation for anything whatsoever, especially birthing a hybrid race of “physical beings.” We will return to this subject when I reveal my totality theory in the last chapter and weave everything together. People disappear though, it seems. David Paulides, who wrote several books titled Missing 411 has extensively documented the cases of thousands of people who go missing each year in national forests. One moment they will be with a group of ten or twenty people, and the last person will not come around the corner of a bush or tree. The person right in front of them turns around and they are “missing.” Dogs are called in, search teams deployed, and occasionally they will be found, as in one case, 1500 feet up a cliff, unconscious, with one shoe missing and their shirt on backwards. In another case, a child who was taken will report that they spent the last few days with a big hairy man who kept watch over them and took care of them. But most of the time, they are never seen again, and the forest service is involved allegedly in the coverup because they are aware of this and stall all the investigations to look deeper into this mystery. David has documented hundreds of cases over the years and is probably the most requested guest on George Noory’s Coast to Coast A.M. Something is obviously happening and humans are only slightly aware of it and certainly not in control of it, it seems. |
DMT and DNA Alexander Shulgin (June 17, 1925 – June 2, 2014), was responsible for introducing “ecstasy” to psychologists in the late 1970’s and did a bioassay on over 230 psychoactive compounds for their psychedelic and entactogenic potential. DMT is common to every living organism on earth, Shulgin found. Shulgin writes: “DMT is, most simply, almost everywhere you choose to look. It is in this flower here, in that tree over there, and in yonder animal.” (156) Rick Strassman writes that DMT is “part of the normal makeup of humans and other mammals; marine animals; grasses and peas; toads and frogs; mushrooms and molds; and barks, flowers and roots.” (157) Rick Strassman is a clinical associate professor of psychiatry at the University of New Mexico, School of Medicine, who performed clinical studies with DMT on dozens of patients. Rick’s background consisted of clinical research investigating the role of the pineal gland and Strassman’s group first documented the role of melatonin in humans. Strassman’s research into melatonin was to see if it had psychoactive capabilities and when the data failed to support the notion the focus shifted to DMT. From 1990 to 1995, Strassman led a U.S. Government-approved and funded clinical research team at the University of New Mexico and studied dozens of patients and their reaction, both physiologically and psychologically. Strassman’s research was the first legal psychedelic research in the United States in twenty years and led to a huge acceptance and change in cultural awareness concerning DMT and psychedelics in general. The results of his studies were published in his book DMT: The Sprit Molecule. Strassman administered over 400 doses of DMT intravenously and many of those experiences resulted in strange and unusual concepts of “contact” with higher or otherworldly intelligences, which leads me to wonder whether or not this was the actual objective of the study in the first place. I am going to give just a few examples from Strassman’s research and book. I do not recommend the reader “believe” anything in these passages. These are experiences which are being conveyed from a perspective (subjective) and they may or may not be real, regardless of how real they appear to be for the person experiencing them. The one thing I feel should be avoided, is the accidental promotion of further “mythmaking.” There is no absolute guarantee that the testimony is completely unbiased. Nick Sand, the chemist who first discovered DMT could be smoked, did not believe these experiences were to be trusted at face value. |