Entities: Being

  • Symbolic Mental Display of Alien Purpose

    Symbolic Mental Display of Alien Purpose

    Jacobs notes that abductees often receive symbolic mental displays from the beings. One experiencer reports seeing images of fetuses, containers, and reproductive diagrams that appear directly in her mind. The scene unfolds like a visual dream shown for instructional purposes.

    She senses the beings want her to understand their purpose, though she cannot interpret the symbols fully. The imagery is vivid and emotionally charged, producing both fear and curiosity.

    Jacobs interprets these mental displays as ancillary experiences that use dreamlike symbolism to convey meaning.

  • Machine Examination Visualization

    Machine Examination Visualization

    Jacobs recounts an abductee describing a mechanical examination in which lights, panels, and geometric shapes shift around her body. The movement feels surreal, as though she is immersed in a dream generated by unknown technology. She cannot determine whether the machine touches her or simply observes.

    The scene includes rhythmic vibrations and synchronized humming that feel symbolic rather than physical. She senses communication through the pattern of the machine’s movement.

    Jacobs sees such mechanical examinations as secondary phenomena with strong dreamlike qualities.

  • Visualization of Planetary Destruction

    Visualization of Planetary Destruction

    Jacobs notes that experiencers sometimes witness powerful visualizations presented by the beings. One witness describes seeing imagery of planetary destruction, environmental collapse, and fire spreading across continents. The vision arrives fully formed, as if projected into her mind.

    She experiences the scene with the emotional weight of a nightmare, yet understands it symbolically. The beings appear to be conveying meaning through imagery rather than speech.

    Jacobs interprets these visions as secondary events within the abduction sequence, carrying dreamlike symbolic messages about global threat.

  • Betty’s Missing-Time Dream of Return

    Betty’s Missing-Time Dream of Return

    One of Betty’s final dreams depicts her being guided back to the car. Time feels compressed, and she is unable to tell how long the dream lasted. She senses that something important happened but cannot articulate it. The forest seems strangely quiet.

    She dreams of re-entering the car with Barney unaware of what occurred. The dream’s atmosphere resembles a false awakening—familiar surroundings layered with strangeness.

    Fuller presents this dream as the symbolic closure of the sequence, echoing themes later uncovered in regression.

  • Walton’s Bright Room and Unsteady Vision

    Walton’s Bright Room and Unsteady Vision

    Marden reports Travis Walton’s memory of awakening in a bright room following the beam incident. His vision is blurry and shifting, as though viewing the scene through dream distortion. Figures appear around him but remain vague.

    He tries to move but feels weak and detached from his body. The environment seems hyperreal yet unreal, with light overpowering depth cues.

    Marden presents this as an example of dreamlike sensory alteration common in intense encounter scenarios.

  • The Dome-Room Dream Encounter

    The Dome-Room Dream Encounter

    In another regression, a subject finds herself in a dome-shaped structure with a translucent ceiling. Beings project holographic scenes around her: landscapes, star systems, and symbolic visions. The room feels like a dream chamber designed for orientation.

    The images shift in response to her emotions, reflecting a deep connection between thought and environment. She senses that the beings are preparing her for a deeper understanding of her role.

    Cannon interprets this as a symbolic encounter in a nonphysical teaching environment.