When I was reading the account of airman Charles Hall one thing that struck me was how the tall white aliens communicated with him. While they knew English they also spoke to him using a headset that allowed for telepathic communication. In the not-best invasion of privacy, they were able to invade his dreams at night and talk with him during the day without speaking a single word of the same language. Thankfully the Tall Whites meant him no serious harm, but for those that did what would happen? A similar account is relayed in The White Sands Incident by Daniel Fry.
“There isn’t time to give you a complete understanding of all the things which you would like to know about this craft and about us, but perhaps I can explain a few of the basic principles about which you seem to be curious,” the voice said — or rather my voice said — for I was just beginning to realize that the words which I had been hearing were not coming to my ears as sound waves at all but rather were originating directly in my brain. — The White Sands Incident
This originating in the “brain” is the source of telepathic communication. Mind to mind, directly without sound waves as an intermediary. This is a common trope among ET contactees and abductees, the notion that they can invade our minds and plant ideas in them. Most ideas of contact are focused solely on radio signals or obscure mathematical constructs but what if the most direct way of communication is the most common?
Airman Dan Sherman in Above Black communicated with multiple ETs in a long telepathic exchange over months in his intelligence work. The work was arduous and took a toll on him, eventually causing him to resign.
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