Exclusive | 3I/ATLAS phenomenon brings UFO…
It’s almost 7 p.m. on the second Tuesday of the month, and Catherine Chapey is sitting at home in Holtsville, Long Island, making preparations for a social spotlight of her week — a digital assembly with a group of people who declare to have skilled close encounters with extraterrestrial life.
Chapey, a former electrician and an ordained “interspiritual minister,” discovered herself in the position of den mom to the eclectic and growing gathering after having her own brush with the otherworldly — subsequently reaching out to discover out if there have been more like her.
Starting with a small, in-person gathering at her local public library, she now has a mailing record of 1000’s — some beaming in from as far as Japan and New Zealand.
Long Islander Catherine Chapey is the unofficial den mom for a worldwide gathering of ET ‘experiencers’ — who collect month-to-month via Zoom to focus on their encounters. LP Media
One by one, Chapey’s fellow “Experiencers” pop into the Zoom assembly, billed as a protected space for attendees to recount their abductions, telepathic visions from past and other celestial come-to-Jesus moments. What the average observer would possibly discover arduous to imagine, Chapey likes to assume of as “spiritually transformative experiences.”
Today’s scorching subject — 3I/Atlas, the interstellar object that’s streaking through our ambiance, igniting hypothesis that it may very well be extraterrestrial and propelling the dialog around aliens more into the mainstream than it’s been in many years.
There’s Kevin, 71, a Realtor in Florida and a “lifelong contactee” whose cosmic rendezvous started at 8, he said, when he was visited by two unknown beings while in the lavatory. At 14, the beings launched him to their council of eight — with whom he works carefully to this day. He thinks that 3I/Atlas is a rock that’s “being programmed with consciousness.”
Funda, a medical employee from Colorado, is a self-described “ET-human hybrid” — she willingly opened herself up to extraterrestrial contact in 2017, and was subsequently whisked up to Uranus and probed by two humanoid aliens with grey pores and skin and black eyes, in order that she would possibly turn into a conduit between the 2 worlds.
Dialing in from Chicago is IT employee Nick, who’s sure he’s been used as “a guinea pig” by varied malevolent entities over a period of years. Attending the conferences has helped him exorcise those demons. He believes that our interstellar interloper may use “reverse biology” to devise cures for Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s.
People from all walks of life be a part of Chapey’s conferences to share their experiences.
There’s Terry, too, a retiree from Seattle who’s pretty assured that 3I/Atlas is an alien spacecraft. “I’ve been aboard a couple of spacecraft and maybe 3I/Atlas is one of the ones that I was actually on,” she explained to the room.
Mel, a mental health employee from Canada, is aware of why Atlas has taken so long to reveal itself. “My sense is that they (3I/Atlas) come closer incrementally because they’re upgrading our consciousness. So they cannot download all at once because people are not ready. Their brains would split.”
One by one, over a period of two hours, the attendees converse their piece, after which they’re affirmed and thanked for sharing. This is group therapy, but of a third form.
“This isn’t something you talk about with your family,” explained Mary, a participant from New York’s Finger Lakes area, after telling her own story about how, when she talked about to her oldest pals about somebody she knew having had ET contact, their response was, “What type of medication is that person taking?”
Unbeknownst to them, that “someone” she was speaking about was herself.
“When you go through something like [this], people drop out of your life,” Chapey explained. “They assume you’re loopy, you’ve misplaced it — people can lose their household, they will lose their children. [Others] can’t actually relate to you anymore because they’re residing in the 3D world in the world of matter. It’s arduous, because you’re feeling like, ‘Oh, wow, you can’t actually speak about one thing that was so profound.’ “
Sharing ET experiences with pals and family members can often create points, Chapey explained — which is one cause why her protected space group has grown so considerably since she began.
But while the standard chatter in these conferences would possibly fall on deaf ears elsewhere, tonight, the distinctive tribe of astral aircraft aspirers is much from alone in their assessments of the latest so-called customer from past.
Atlas’ non-gravitational acceleration, anti-tail (pointing toward the solar instead of away, as is typical), and weird path toward Jupiter, Venus and Mars, have led major minds, such as Harvard scientist Avi Loeb, to theorize that this is an alien probe.
The look of the Manhattan-sized 31/Atlas celestial form in space has turn into a mainstream subject of dialogue in latest weeks.
This contrasts sharply with NASA’s official place — that 3I/Atlas is a comet as its “characteristics, color, speed and direction are all consistent with what we expect.”
The charming, ongoing event comes at a time when it’s never been cooler to be an alien contactee. According to a YouGov ballot, perception in UFO sightings skyrocketed from 20% in 1996 to a stratospheric 34% in 2022, with 24% of Americans reporting they’d seen a UFO, Newsweek reported.
The 3I/Atlas phenomenon coincides with an uptick in openness among the American public to the idea of alien contact.
Chapey credit the latest mainstream coverage of UAPs, just like the Department of Defense’s 2020 release of footage depicting the fast-flying “tic tac” objects that had been noticed in 2004 during a Navy flight off the California coast — a craze that has crested with the looks of 3I/Atlas.
Her personal out-of-this-world experiences, she said, have ranged from seeing “feline faces” in a yard shed to a home call from an inter-dimensional “Sasquatch” that teleported through a portal in a close by tree to remedy a notably painful headache.
Chapey said that the curiosity has been building over time, with the 3I/Atlas episode bringing issues to a head. LP Media
“I had a big awakening in 2008 where [celestial beings] were preparing me for my work in the world,” she told The Post. “I knew the answers to everything at one point. I was in the cosmos. I was being taken places with my guides and they told me I was going to be working with groups and helping people that are going through spiritual awakenings. They were saying many people are going to be waking up to who they truly are.”
In 2019, Chapey made it official — she was ordained following an intensive two-and-a-half yr seminary class at the Gathering of Light, a multi-faith worship group in Melville, NY.
31/Atlas had some uncommon maneuvering lately, inflicting it to fly suspiciously close to Jupiter, Venus and Mars. NASA/JPL
Its philosophy: to “teach that each human being is an individual expression of Divinity in physical form, and as such, we are all One.”
From then on, Chapey made it her mission to “help spiritual experiencers” know they’re “not alone” or “crazy.”
“This is what I’m supposed to be doing. So all of the things that I’ve been through in my life were purposeful. It was for a reason,” she said.
Contrary to in style perception, the UFO group shouldn’t be a monolith — Dennis Anderson, a former member of the Center for UFO Studies, isn’t almost as eager on the extraterrestrial hype.
He notably investigated the “Arthur eliminate Lights” of 2001 — where between 5 and 16 brilliant orange “ovals” had been noticed flying in a V formation over the waterway between New Jersey and Staten Island.
“They were big and they were only about 1,000 feet up,” the previous Wagner Planetarium head told The Post of the phenomenon, which, to this day, he’s not sure what it represents.
But the comet? The UFO hunter is definite. “Every picture I’ve seen, it’s [3I/Atlas] got a coma and a tail, which means, you know, it is a comet,” said Anderson. “I don’t believe it’s anything else.”
And, after 63 years on the UAP scene, Anderson has a warning about so-called ”specialists” who profess to know about, say, “57 civilizations of people coming from this planet.” “When you read that, the first thing you do is stop reading it and run the opposite direction.”
Chapey simply shrugs off the skeptics — she’s assured that when 3I/Atlas does arrive, it’ll validate the encounters she and every other ET experiencer has had throughout their lives.
“The fact that there’s this thing in space that could be some kind of a craft doesn’t shock me at all because I’ve seen what they do,” she said. “Within the next couple years, people are going to be very aware that we are not the only ones. And there is absolutely nothing to fear.”
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