Genies: Dreams and Alien Abduction

Dirk Vander Ploeg
Last week, I watched the May 3, 2007 episode of the hit television show, "Supernatural." I was "blown away" by its premise. The scriptwriter, Raelle Tucker, took a totally new approach in retelling the story of the genie

This is not the genie from Scheherazade's One Thousand and One Arabian Nights!

We have all heard the legend of the genie. The genie is a sprit or demon imprisoned in an oil lamp, bottle or other container and that the finder of the vessel simply had to rub its exterior for the genie to appear and grant the discoverer three wishes.

Now, the genie or jinn are described as being spirits. They are very powerful and appear able to create matter out of nothing and to change time and space instantly.

Today, "genies" are so much a part of our everyday life that they are subject of jokes and television series, commercials and Hollywood movies. The lesson of the genie is well known to all: do not be fooled into wasting your three wishes!

But, back to Supernatural: one of the main characters, Dean, dismisses his brother's warning and searches an abandoned warehouse looking for the reason why several people have disappeared over a short period of time. He discovers the missing people hanging from hooks suspended from the ceilings by their wrists. Tubes are protruding from their necks and at least one of the victims appears to be alive.

Dean and his brother Sam Winchester are following in the footsteps of their dead father, who was a real-life ghost buster. They hunt down and destroy ghosts, demons and urban legends, savings damsels as they go.

After finding the victims, Dean is involved in hand-to-hand combat with an evil genie and collapses after being touched by the creature.

He awakens in bed with a woman who claims to be his wife. His dead mother is now alive and Sam is enrolled in law school and engaged to his girlfriend, Jessica. His chaotic life has been transformed. Everything he could have wished for has happened.

Dean has literally been granted his three wishes.

But, in the back of his mind he has the nagging doubt…things are all wrong.

But he likes the present situation - it is all he could have asked for - life is perfect.

He doesn't realize it but he too is hanging by his wrists as the genie literally sucks the Life Force from him. In his dream state, life is passing normally. Weeks follow days of endless bliss. A lifetime of tranquility will pass as the creature devours him.


If you missed the episode you can wait until repeats or watch it online at:

cwtv.com/shows/supernatural

But the premise of the show, the near-instant dream state brought on by the touching of hands is most extraordinary.

Based on legend or true accounts, it could explain the vast majority of cases involving mysterious phenomena and apparent paranormal events.

It could even explain alien abduction!

Imagine that the majority of (if not all) paranormal experiences may be caused, indeed induced by a chemical reaction caused directly by the excretion of a substance from "the genie" that immediately causes physical paralysis and the release of massive amounts of endorphins allowing the victim to enter an enlightened and perfect state of being, also know as "Universal Bliss" our "Cosmic Consciousness."

It may be that this state of "well being" is responsible for the belief that "the genie" has actually bestowed wishes. Once affected (though 'infected" may be more apropos), the victim receives extremely positive biofeedback. Unconsciously intoxicated (like a drug addict), the victim wants the experience to continue.

In the meantime, the victim is subjected to any tests, experiments, exploitation or aberrant behaviour "the genie" or genie-like creature desires.

The majority of alien abductees never realize that they have been taken or experimented upon, implanted or "operated." Those who remember regularly comment on their paralysis, temporal anomalies and the feeling of floating.

A genie is a spirit or demon that comes in any shape or form. It would not be a surprise to me that "genies" take the appearance of elves, dwarves or "Greys." I'm not sure if there is any leftover residue as a result of this possible chemical interaction with us.

But I believe it may well deserve serious study.

Many more illustrations available at ufodigest.com
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Dirk Vander Ploeg

Dirk Vander Ploeg is the editor and publisher of UFODigest.com and PsiTalk.com. He has worked as a publisher and writer for travel related and other magazines.

He has written the non-fiction book 'Quest for Middle-earth' which compares Tolkien's 'The Lord of the Rings' to ancient Earth history.

He graduated from Mohawk College majoring in Communications.

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