CASE FILE: #0453 SUBJECT NAME: Dewey J. (Last name withheld for privacy) DOB: June 3, 1978 Session Date: May 17, 2025 Clinician: Dr. XXXXXXXXX, Certified Regression Hypnotherapist Location: Private Practice, Patchogue, NY Condition: Regressive Hypnosis – Session 3 of 4 Presenting Concern: Persistent recurring dreams, missing time episodes, and unexplained childhood memories suggestive of non-human contact.
SESSION SUMMARY – TRANSCRIPT EXCERPT AND OBSERVATIONAL NOTES: Subject entered a receptive trance state within 7 minutes. Responsive, calm, and highly visual in recall. Tone remained cooperative and grounded throughout. As in prior sessions, subject displays emotionally rich and unusually precise descriptions once regressed to early childhood state (~age 6–7). A subtle tapping of my pen appears to function as an effective inductive cue, guiding the subject rapidly into a somnambulistic state. Within this depth of trance, he exhibits a pronounced capacity to embody suggested roles or identities—often with striking immediacy and emotional fidelity. Notably, he does not merely comply with verbal prompts; he appears to inhabit them, as though drawing from an internal archive of impressions or symbolic memory. Visual stimuli or even loosely defined scenarios are sufficient to evoke complex behavioral and vocal shifts, suggesting an unusually permeable boundary between imagination, memory, and identity under hypnosis. Upon reorientation, the subject retains little to no conscious recollection of the trance period, including the content of what was expressed or enacted—further indicating the depth of the somnambulistic state and the unconscious nature of the material accessed.
MEMORY RECALL UNDER HYPNOSIS: Clinician Prompt (CP): “What do you see, Dewey?” Subject (DJ): “A round room with no shadows. The light comes from everywhere, not the ceiling or the walls. The floor is smooth and cold but it hums inside my feet like bees buzzing gentle. There’s a tall chair with arms like wings. I sit in it. My chest feels tight but not scared. Just full.” He describes three entities—thin-limbed, large-headed beings with black, almond eyes. He adds a key observation: “They liked that I’m quiet inside. They don’t like loud minds. Mine is soft and easy for them.”
SHIP PILOTING MEMORY: DJ recalls being placed in a control room. “They showed me stars I never saw before. But I knew where we were going. It was like remembering, not learning. I didn’t steer it with hands. I steered it with feelings. When I got calm, it moved easy. When I got nervous, it jittered like a bug on water. They told me to think smooth.”
TELEPATHIC COMMUNICATION: Describes the beings as “pressing thoughts into my mind.” No audible speech. Says: “It’s like they put whole pictures and feelings in your head at once. Like dreaming awake.”
PHYSICAL AND EMOTIONAL REACTIONS: Deep sighing and muscle tension when recalling "the chair" Tearfulness during return scene: “They touched my head and said, We will remember you. Then I woke up in my bed, but the chickens were already fed.” Reported tingling and heat in the back of neck when mentioning a “memory seed” implanted behind his left ear.
DRAWINGS BY SUBJECT: After the trance, Dewey was invited to sketch what he remembered. Though his fine motor skills are limited, his recall was exceptionally accurate and visually consistent over multiple sketches. Drawings include: Interior of the ship – Round room with glowing floor, curved surfaces, and a control panel without buttons (described as “just lights that knew what you wanted”). Entities – Uniformly shaped humanoids with elongated fingers and large eyes. All depicted without mouths. Star map – A cluster of stars connected by arcs. Subject insisted, “This is where they come from, but also where they go after.” Map bears resemblance to speculative "Zeta Reticuli" diagrams drawn by Betty Hill (unprompted). Control chair – Elevated and organic-looking. Dewey repeatedly said, “It held me like it was part of me.” Clinician note: Dewey used crayons and charcoal with unexpected confidence. He completed the floor layout of the ship in under ten minutes, including perspective and symmetrical geometry—abilities not typical in his documented cognitive profile.
POST-SESSION OBSERVATION: Dewey exhibits no signs of distress or fantasy-proneness. His story remains consistent across sessions, and his emotional responses appear authentic and embodied. His drawings, though childlike, are unusually intentional and symbolically complex.
CLINICIAN COMMENTARY : “Dewey may be considered developmentally impaired by formal testing, but his inner world—particularly under trance—reveals a kind of structured intelligence and clarity that defies easy categorization. His drawings are not random, and his language, though simple, conveys layered meaning. I have no doubt that Dewey experienced something profoundly real to him—something that continues to live in his body and memory. Whether this was an abduction, a visionary state, or something beyond our framework entirely, Dewey’s testimony deserves serious consideration. As one of the entities reportedly told him: ‘The simple ones hear best.’ I’m beginning to believe they were right.”