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CIA RDP81R00560R000100010003 8
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Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010003-8
ABOARD
A FLYING |
SAUCER ©
The adventures of two “kidnapped” humans
Nightmares and crippling anxiety drove Betty and Barney Hill to the office of Dr.
Benjamin Simon, the distinguished Boston psychiatrist and neurologist. During
“World War II, Dr. Simon was Chief of Neuropsychiatry and Executive Officer
at Mason General Hospital, the Army’s chief psychiatric center. He had extensive
experience and remarkable success with hypnosis in the treatment of many psy-
“chiatric disorders among military personnel.
The Hills were deeply disturbed by the haunting memory of an incident that
occurred several years before, outside the village of Lancaster, N.H. They -were
plagued by a nagging feeling that “something-more” they could not recall had oc-
“cured: Fearing ridicule and scorn, they had kept their experience relatively secret
until the strain began to affect them physically and emotionally.
Dr. Simon accepted them as patients. During the months that followed, the
Hills began—under individual psychotherapy, including periods of time regression
under hypnosis—to relive their “adventure,”
which proved more terrifying than
either of them consciously recalled. Their words were recorded on tape, and their
words are transcribed here, with some of Dr. ‘Simon’s analysis and comment. —
; A Boston newspaper, in a series of articles, had
disclosed: Dr. Simon's participation in the Hills’
case. The doctor says, "I never saw the reporter,
refused tobe interviewed by him, or to discuss
the case with him, which he acknowledged in
‘the articles, Nevertheless, I felt that mentioning
. me in these articles could cause me to become
identified with certain: statements and conclu-
sions by the reporter about the Hills’ experi-
ences, with which I strongly disagree.” The
Hills, who had also refused to be interviewed,
were “considerably distressed by the articles”
.. and asked Dr. Simon to release the tapes to Jon.
G. Fuller so that an authentic: version of their-
Story might be told,
“I decided,” says Dr. Simon, “that the emo-
tional health of the Hills would best be served
by releasing the tapes, provided I would have
complete approval of their use and of any medi-
cal data: an insurance that the records would be
used accurately and not detrimentally to my
patients.”
. Some readers will find the Hills’ account
incredible. Others will find the story vivid and
persuasive. Neither Dr. Simon nor Mr.and Mrs.
Hill will scate that their ‘‘adventure’’ cannot be
A
challenged; but neither has Dr. Simon an incon:
trovertible assessment to discredit the Hills’ al-
leged “abduction.”
After seven months of psychotherapy and
hypnosis, Dr. Simon, who began by doubting
the possibility of their claims, now comments:
“Some aspects of the experience are unan-
swered, and, perhaps, unanswerable at this time.
Nothing is finally settled. Nothing is absolutely
proved to me regarding the alleged ‘abduction.’”
He also points out that “neither patient is psy-
chotic, and both consciously and under hypnosis
told what they believed to be absolute truth:
The charisma of hypnosis has tended to foster
the belief that it is the magical road to Truth.
In one sense, this is so, but it must be understood :
that hypnosis is a pathway to the truth as it is
felt and understood by the patient. The truth is
what he believes to be the truth, and this may
not be consonant with the ultimate and non-
personal truth. Most frequently it is.””
On the following pages, Loox presents a
condensation of John G. Fuller’s forthcoming
book The Interrupted Journey, an extraordinary
human document.
THE EDITORS
Barney pulled the binoculars from his ms, and ran screaming back across the field to Baty.
PAINTING BY THOMAS B. ALLEN.
|
1
ma
Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA. RDP81 R00560R000100010003- 8
BY JOHN G. FULLER
ON SEPTEMBER 19, 1961, Barney Hill and his
wife Betty began a night drive from the Canadian
‘ border down U.S. 3, through the White Moun-
tains, on their way home to Portsmouth, N.H.,
after'a short vacation.
Just after ten, their car was winding along
the flat ground of the upper Connecticut River
Valley. Betty enjoyed watching the brilliance of
the moon reflecting on the valley and the moun-
tains in the distance: To theleft of the moon, and a
slightly below it, she noticed a particularly bright os
star. Perhaps it was a planet, she thought, because”
of its steady glow. Just south of Lancaster, she be-
came intrigued by another star or planet, a bigger
one, which had suddenly risen above the other.
As she watched, the new celestial glow appeared
to be getting bigger:
Fora while, she said nothing to her husband.
Finally, when the strange light grew brighter,
- shenudged Barney, who slowed thecarandlooked °
out the right-hand side of the windshield.
“When I looked at it first,” Barney Hill later
said, ‘‘it didn’t seem anything particularly un-
usual, except that we were fortunate enough to see
_a satellite. It had no doubt gone: off its course, and
_ it seemed to be going along the curvature of the
earth. It was quite a distance out .. . it looked like
a star, in motion.
They drove on, glancing at the bright object
frequently, finding it difficult to tell if the light
itself were moving, or if the movement Of the car
were making it seem to move. It would disappear
behind trees, or a mountaintop, then reappear as
it cleared the obstruction.
Delsey, the Hills’ dachshund, became rest-
less, and Betty suggested they should walk her. At
the same time, they could get a better look at the
bright object. Barney pulled the car'to the side
of the road, where there was reasonably unob-
structed visibility.
Betty walked Delsey along the side of the
road. She was now sure that the star, or the light,
or whatever it-was, was definitely moving. When
Barney joined her, she handed Delsey’s leash to__
him, went back to the car and returned with a pair
ofbinoculars. Barney was still convinced that they
were observing a straying satellite.
After a few minutes, they resumed their
continued
COPYRIGHT © 1966 BY JOHN G FULLER
Loox 10-466 45
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