1940-1949 Janet Kira Lessin Louise Ann Thompson (Sister) Ocean Overbeck Thompson (Paternal Grandmother)

Stranger in a Strange World by Janet Kira Lessin

My story began long before I was born.  I come from a family of alien Contactees. My grandmother told us, grandchildren, in the spring of 1964 that one day when she was cooking dinner in the kitchen of her second-floor apartment she felt drawn to go outside. Just a few feet above her head she saw a craft hovering over her at the same height as the treetops.  As she spoke to us, I grew more and more excited.  Suddenly I was back in time with her and felt her emotional state.  I saw through her eyes. I resonated with her as I have been inside the craft as well. While she did not openly state in words that she was taken into the ship, I knew and felt excited for her.  These people were our friends, our family. She experienced a homecoming.

I’ve always felt like a stranger in a strange land, that I had been left here on this alien world by my real family and that somewhere in time they would come to collect me and we’d return home to our real world.  While I was surrounded by my Earth family and I was loved, I never fully connected to them and I don’t think they fully understood or resonated with me as well.  I felt love, to a degree, but never felt the love to the degree I felt when I was back home on board ship. 

Frequently I’d return home, to recharge, so that I could bear living in human form.  The Earth is dense, thick. The feeling of separation is complete.  I often feel lonely, disconnected from this life for human beings come into these dense avatars with thick skins, and are separated more fully than anywhere else in existence. This planet is the grand experiment, located in the deepest, darkest, densest recesses of the continuum. 

The polarity is at its greatest distance here.  Here our skin encapsulated self-sense is so solid, it feels real and unlike anywhere else in the universe. Most species in the continuum are telepathic. Most Universal species know who they are and where they come from.  Only here, in this darkest of dark worlds, the Earth plane, do we experience total amnesia. That amnesia makes us suffer and feel separate, isolated, and alone.  For me, it was and is devastating. So in order to remain “human”, they come and recharge me with unconditional love so I can continue to inhabit a human form.

Grandma died on July 4, 1964.  My parents pulled up in front of the house on the far side of the street and parked. I threw open the screen door, anxious to hear how grandma was. Dad opened the door, so devastated, he announced she was dead to me and the whole world. I felt part of my soul leave my body. My heartbroken, I ran into the house and sobbed for hours.  While I was only 10, I knew death. I had pets die in my arms. Grandma was gone. I could no longer feel her thread connected to me. I sensed it when she passed but prayed I was mistaken. That was why I was at the door when Dad pulled up with Mom in the car. I’d always been psychic.

She was my human link to my contact with aliens. She validated my existence. While I never had a personal, one on one conversation with her about her alien contact as I was way too shy, I felt validated in her sharing with me and felt relief that others had experienced what I had.

My sister is five years older than I am, and she has even stronger remembrances of our grandma than I do. Grandma Thompson was very short. She stood about 4’9” and her husband, my paternal grandfather was about 6’4”.  He was very strong and powerful and everyone called him “Pop”.  I shook in my boots whenever I saw him.  I don’t have any conscious memories of him doing anything wrong with me. Maybe I was just feeling the intense respect everyone conveyed towards him.  He founded the film projectors union.  He was high up in the Pittsburgh Masons. Yet as strong and as powerful as he was, he deferred to my grandmother who was named Ocean after our ancestor who came over to America during the Mayflower period and another ancestor that was born during the early colonization of Virginia.

When investigating this story of ET contact that grandma told me and a couple of other grandchildren about back in ‘64, I asked my sister Louise if Grandma ever talked with her about her sighting. She said that grandma had a younger sister who died when she was in her late teens or early 20s and was only 21 inches tall. I reached for my ruler and tried to visualize someone who was only 21 inches tall!  Louise also said the sister was perfectly proportioned.  Her head was not large like regular dwarves and her legs and arms were of normal length relative to her body.  She said Ocean not only verified her sighting, but that her interest went even further back because her younger, half-brother was a fighter pilot in WWII in Europe and he engaged with the Foo Fighters!

My paternal grandparents were born around the turn of the century, late 1800s to early 1900s.  My paternal grandfather was born in 1871 and his wife was born in 1891. Grandpa Thompson fought in WWI.  So he was in his 20s.  Ocean’s younger brother may have been in his late 20s or early 30s when he was a pilot in WWII and saw the Foo fighters. I wish I could uncover more. But what we find in UFOlogy is that contact seems to be multi-generational. The ETS love our family.  They follow certain genetics.  My ancestors are mostly Northern European. 

There’s much to ponder.  More will be revealed in following posts.

Foo fighters

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. This article is about the aerial phenomenon. For the rock band, see Foo Fighters. For the homebuilt aircraft, see Stewart Foo Fighter.A representation of a German Foo fighter in a diorama exhibited at the International UFO Museum in Roswell, New Mexico

The term foo fighter was used by Allied aircraft pilots during World War II to describe various UFOs or mysterious aerial phenomena seen in the skies over both the European and Pacific theaters of operations.

Though “foo fighter” initially described a type of UFO reported and named by the U.S. 415th Night Fighter Squadron, the term was also commonly used to mean any UFO sighting from that period.[1] Formally reported from November 1944 onwards, witnesses often assumed that the foo fighters were secret weapons employed by the enemy.

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The Robertson Panel explored possible explanations, for instance that they were electrostatic phenomena similar to St. Elmo’s fireelectromagnetic phenomena, or simply reflections of light from ice crystals.[2]

Etymology

The nonsense word “foo” emerged in popular culture during the early 1930s, first being used by cartoonist Bill Holman, who peppered his Smokey Stover[3] fireman cartoon strips with “foo” signs and puns.[4][5][6]

The term “foo” was borrowed from Smokey Stover by a radar operator in the 415th Night Fighter Squadron, Donald J. Meiers, who (it is agreed by most 415th members) gave the foo fighters their name. Meiers was from Chicago and was an avid reader of Holman’s strip, which was run daily in the Chicago Tribune. Smokey Stover’s catch-phrase was “where there’s foo, there’s fire”. In a mission debriefing on the evening of November 27, 1944, Fritz Ringwald, the unit’s S-2 Intelligence Officer, stated that Meiers and Ed Schleuter had sighted a red ball of fire that appeared to chase them through a variety of high-speed maneuvers. Fritz said that Meiers was extremely agitated and had a copy of the comic strip tucked in his back pocket. He pulled it out and slammed it down on Fritz’s desk and said, “[I]t was another one of those fuckin’ foo fighters!” and stormed out of the debriefing room.[7]

According to Ringwald, because of the lack of a better name, it stuck. And this was originally what the men of the 415th started calling these incidents: “fuckin’ foo fighters”. In December 1944, a press correspondent from the Associated Press in Paris, Bob Wilson, was sent to the 415th at their base outside of Dijon, France, to investigate this story.[8] It was at this time that the term was cleaned up to just “foo fighters”. The squadron commander, Capt. Harold Augsperger, also decided to sanitize the term to “foo fighters” in the historical data of the squadron.[7]

History

The first sightings occurred in November 1944, when pilots flying over Western Europe by night reported seeing fast-moving round glowing objects following their aircraft. The objects were variously described as fiery, and glowing red, white, or orange. Some pilots described them as resembling Christmas-tree lights and reported that they seemed to toy with the aircraft, making wild turns before simply vanishing. Pilots and aircrew reported that the objects flew formation with their aircraft and behaved as if they were under intelligent control, but never displayed hostile behavior. However, they could not be outmaneuvered or shot down. The phenomenon was so widespread that the lights earned a name – in the European Theater of Operations they were often called “Kraut fireballs”, but for the most part called “foo fighters”. The military took the sightings seriously, suspecting that the mysterious sightings might be secret German weapons, but further investigation revealed that German and Japanese pilots had reported similar sightings.[9]

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On 13 December 1944, the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force in Paris issued a press release, which was featured in the New York Times the next day, officially describing the phenomenon as a “new German weapon”. Follow-up stories, using the term “Foo Fighters”, appeared in the New York Herald Tribune and the British Daily Telegraph.[10]

In its 15 January 1945 edition, Time magazine carried a story entitled “Foo-Fighter”, in which it reported that the “balls of fire” had been following USAAF nightfighters for over a month, and that the pilots had named it the “foo-fighter”. According to Time, descriptions of the phenomena varied, but the pilots agreed that the mysterious lights followed their aircraft closely at high speed.[11]

The “balls of fire” phenomenon reported from the Pacific Theater of Operations differed somewhat from the foo fighters reported from Europe; the “ball of fire” resembled a large burning sphere which “just hung in the sky”, though it was reported to sometimes follow aircraft. There was speculation that the phenomena could be related to the Japanese fire balloon campaign. As with the European foo fighters, no aircraft were reported as having been attacked by a “ball of fire”.[12]

The postwar Robertson Panel cited foo fighter reports, noting that their behavior did not appear to be threatening, and mentioned possible explanations, for instance that they were electrostatic phenomena similar to St. Elmo’s fireelectromagnetic phenomena, or simply reflections of light from ice crystals. The Panel’s report suggested that “If the term ‘flying saucers’ had been popular in 1943–1945, these objects would have been so labeled.”[2]

Sightings

Foo fighters were reported on many occasions from around the world; a few examples are noted below.

  • Sighting from September 1941 in the Indian Ocean was similar to some later foo fighter reports. From the deck of the S.S. Pułaski (a Polish merchant vessel transporting British troops), two sailors reported a “strange globe glowing with greenish light, about half the size of the full moon as it appears to us.”[13] They alerted a British officer, who watched the movements of the object with them for over an hour.
  • Charles R. Bastien of the US Eighth Air Force reported one of the first encounters with foo fighters over the Belgium/Netherlands area; he described them as “two fog lights flying at high rates of speed that could change direction rapidly”. During debriefing, his intelligence officer told him that two RAF nightfighters had reported the same thing, and it was later reported in British newspapers.[14]
  • Career U.S. Air Force pilot Duane Adams often related that he had witnessed two occurrences of a bright light which paced his aircraft for about half an hour and then rapidly ascended into the sky. Both incidents occurred at night, both over the South Pacific, and both were witnessed by the entire aircraft crew. The first sighting occurred shortly after the end of World War II while Adams piloted a B-25 bomber. The second sighting occurred in the early 1960s when Adams was piloting a KC-135 tanker.

Explanations and theories[edit]

The author Renato Vesco revived the wartime theory that the foo fighters were a Nazi secret weapon in his work Intercept UFO, reprinted in a revised English edition as Man-Made UFOs: 50 Years of Suppression in 1994. Vesco claims that the foo fighters were in fact a form of ground-launched, automatically guided, jet-propelled flak mine called the Feuerball (Fireball). This device, supposedly operated by special SS units, resembled a tortoise shell in shape, and it flew by means of gas jets that spun like a Catherine wheel around the fuselage. Miniature klystron tubes inside the device, in combination with the gas jets, created the characteristic glowing spheroid appearance of the foo fighters.

A crude form of collision avoidance radar ensured the craft would not crash into another airborne object, and an onboard sensor mechanism would even instruct the machine to depart swiftly if it was fired upon. The purpose of the Feuerball, according to Vesco, was twofold. The appearance of this weird device inside a bomber stream would (and indeed did) have a distracting and disruptive effect on the bomber pilots. Also, Vesco alleges that the devices were also intended to have an “offensive” capability. Electrostatic discharges from the klystron tubes would, he stated, interfere with the ignition systems of the engines of the bombers, causing the planes to crash. Although there is no hard evidence to support the reality of the Feuerball drone, this theory has been taken up by other aviation/ufology authors, and it has even been cited by some as the most likely explanation for the phenomena — in at least one recent TV “documentary” on Nazi Secret Weapons.[15][16] Although others cite the single sourced nature of the claims, the complete lack of evidence supporting them, and the implausible capabilities of the supposed device as nonsense. [17]

Any type of electrical discharge from the wings of airplanes (see St. Elmo’s Fire) has been suggested as an explanation, since it has been known to appear at the wingtips of aircraft.[11] It has also been pointed out that some of the descriptions of foo fighters closely resemble those of ball lightning.[18]

During April 1945, the U.S. Navy began to experiment on visual illusions as experienced by nighttime aviators. This work began the U.S. Navy’s Bureau of Medicine (BUMED) project X-148-AV-4-3. This project pioneered the study of aviators’ vertigo and was initiated because a wide variety of anomalous events were being reported by nighttime aviators.[19] Dr. Edgar Vinacke, who was the prime flight psychologist on this project, summarized the need for a cohesive and systemic outline of the epidemiology of aviators’ vertigo:

Pilots do not have sufficient information about phenomena of disorientation, and, as a corollary, are given considerable disorganized, incomplete, and inaccurate information. They are largely dependent upon their own experience, which must supplement and interpret the traditions about “Vertigo” which are passed on to them. When a concept thus grows out of anecdotes cemented together with practical necessity, it is bound to acquire elements of mystery. So far as “vertigo” is concerned, no one really knows more than a small part of the facts, but a great deal of the peril. Since aviators are not skilled observers of human behavior, they usually have only the vaguest understanding of their own feelings. Like other naive persons, therefore, they have simply adopted a term to cover a multitude of otherwise inexplicable events.— Edgar Vinacke, The Concept of Aviator’s “Vertigo”[20]

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