Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

We Are the Aliens: A Case of Alien-Human Integration
We Are the Aliens: A Case of Alien-Human Integration
We Are the Aliens: A Case of Alien-Human Integration
Ebook263 pages3 hours

We Are the Aliens: A Case of Alien-Human Integration

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

To find an alien, look no further than your own reflection in the bathroom mirror. Building his case from scientific theory, practical firsthand experiences, and guidance from a nonhuman intelligence (NHI) known as Anzar, Dr. Bruce Olav Solheim, a distinguished professor of history, and former Fulbright scholar, US Army aviator,

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 15, 2024
ISBN9798218409944
We Are the Aliens: A Case of Alien-Human Integration

Related to We Are the Aliens

Related ebooks

Biography & Memoir For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for We Are the Aliens

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    We Are the Aliens - Bruce Olav Solheim

    PREFACE

    This book endeavors to search for human identity; more specifically, for my identity. It’s a follow-up to Anzar the Progenitor (2021). We Are the Aliens: A Case of Alien-Human Integration continues the true story of my lifetime of experience with Anzar, an ancient alien mystic of my acquaintance, who turns out to be more than just a friend and advisor. But before we delve into that relationship, I need to address something. The cover of Anzar the Progenitor is a little scary. It was my fault, and no one else’s. It was a poor choice and doesn’t represent who or what or why Anzar is. Although he can appear in many guises, from protohuman to Native American to more traditional alien, Anzar isn’t scary. But first, let me address some of my critics on Amazon.com.

    One critic wrote: For being beyond space/time, the spirits know little about the future. As Anzar explained to me, the future is uncertain because one doesn’t know which future they will inhabit. There are many variables and many forks in the road of time. This critic went on to say: Talking to etheric spirits during daily walks. Uh huh. Believe me, I understand. I’m also naturally skeptical, until it happens to me. As my friend Gene always says: Experiencing is believing and believing is experiencing. Another critic asked: Why isn’t he with the angels? I assume the person thought that if Anzar is in another dimension, then why isn’t he an angel? This, of course, hints that he’s from the nether regions instead. Neither assumption is true, but more on that later. The last critic I’ll mention wrote: In fact, I’m suspicious Anzar is really just an exotic device to attract attention for Solheim to communicate his theories to a wider audience and sell books. My simple response to this criticism is that I don’t choose to write books, I’m compelled to write them. Also, if Anzar is just a device I invented, then how would one explain the synchronicity with my friend Luci (see chapter five in this book)? Lastly, about selling books, sure, it’s nice to sell some books, but I’m not making any money here. In fact, I’m in debt from writing my paranormal books. And that’s okay, because the main purpose is to share what I’m learning on this voyage, and hopefully it will help someone along the way.

    In the proceeding chapters in this book, we’ll discuss what it means to be an alien, and the difference between disclosure and revelation. We’ll also take a spirit walk, contemplate alien integration and hybridization, reunite with our star family, and finally, prepare for our future off planet. As a bonus, I’ve included a PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) survey I conducted for members of CERO in 2019 that you should find interesting. Also, I’ve added some wonderful illustrations by Gary Dumm and Julia Kazanowska. In this book, we’ll cover everything from anti-gravity to Zarathustra. For now, let’s begin with an analysis of the concept of Anzar being an alien lifeform, and the existence of aliens in general.

    CHAPTER ONE

    Who Wants to be an Alien?

    Aliens? Would you like to be called an alien? Does not sound very friendly. Look up the definition, said Anzar. Wow, I think I touched a nerve, but I did look it up.

    Alien [ey-lee-uhn, eyl-yuhn]

    noun

    —a creature from outer space; extraterrestrial. Often disparaging and offensive. 

    —a resident of one country who was born in or owes allegiance to another country and has not acquired citizenship by naturalization in the country of residence (distinguished from citizen). See also resident alien, illegal alien.

    adjective

    —unlike one’s own; strange; not belonging to one: In English class, our teacher treated all slang as alien speech.

    —residing under a government or in a country other than that of one’s birth without having or obtaining the status of citizenship there.

    —belonging or relating to noncitizens: Under certain conditions, seizure of alien property is authorized.

    —opposed; adverse; hostile (usually followed by to or from): Their manifesto is full of ideas alien to modern thinking.

    —not native; introduced from a different environment: The bullfrog is native to some Canadian provinces but is an alien species in British Columbia.

    It’s not good, I get it, no one wants to be called an alien. So, what do you prefer to be called? I asked.

    Star family, he said. His response warmed the cockles of my heart. I’d known Anzar since I was a little boy. If you read my previous paranormal books (especially Anzar the Progenitor), you’ll discover that he rescued me more than a few times, and he is an alien (sorry Anzar). But, as fate would have it, so am I, and so are we all. I’ve been told by Anzar and my childhood friend Gene Thorkildsen, who left this world in September 2016, that we are aliens, all of us. We are indeed, as Anzar pointed out, a star family. Let’s explore that proposition.

    My friend, Michael P. Masters, who teaches biological anthropology at Montana Technological University in Butte, Montana (where I went to engineering school in 1982), published a book entitled Identified Flying Objects: A Multidisciplinary Scientific Approach to the UFO Phenomenon in 2019. Michael contends that UFOs (what is now called UAP or unidentified anomalous phenomena) and their pilots are human time travelers from the future whose advanced technology allows them to navigate the time barrier. He suggests that Albert Einstein’s special theory of relativity allows for time dilation, meaning that time passes at a slower rate for travelers at or near light speed than for stationary observers on Earth. Masters believes that time traveling future humans are interested in our time period for observation and learning or maybe even small corrections. UFO encounters are where we catch glimpses of our descendants, and he believes that they look like us because they’re future humans. Of course, Masters’ theory challenges the longstanding assumption that UFOs are extraterrestrial in origin. American quantum physicist Jack Sarfatti agrees.

    Sarfatti theorizes that the principles of modern physics, according to Einstein’s theory of relativity and quantum mechanics, allow for time travel. As a time traveler approaches the speed of light, time dilation occurs, which causes time to pass more slowly for the traveler than for those external to the journey. He contends that this would allow for both past and future time travel. Sarfatti holds that future humans have been able to manipulate space-time and travel back in time to us, making them look like aliens in UFOs. He argues that these future humans adhere to strict rules about altering their own history to avoid the grandfather paradox and causing major disruptions to the timeline. Sarfatti’s contentions are based on the theoretical equation: ER=EPR. ER refers to the Einstein-Rosen bridge, also known as wormholes, and EPR refers to Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen quantum entanglement. These two concepts were both conceived as scientific papers in 1935.

    Einstein-Rosen bridges or wormholes are hypothetical structures in space-time that are often depicted as tunnels or bridges connecting two separate points in space-time. In quantum mechanics, Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) quantum entanglement is a phenomenon where two or more particles are connected and interdependent, regardless of the distance that separates them. A change in one instantly affects the other, even if they are light-years apart. The ER=EPR equation suggests that the two separate concepts are equivalent. In other words, the non-local effects observed in quantum entanglement might be connected to the non-locality of wormholes, where two distant points in space-time are connected. If this equation holds, then two fundamental theories of physics that describe the universe in large and tiny scales (general relativity in the form of wormholes and quantum mechanics in the form of entanglement, respectively) will be united into one single theory.

    My own experience with ER=EPR is captured by two stories I published in my Timeless trilogy. The story Pleiku on the Line in my book Timeless: A Paranormal Personal History (2017), explains my experience with quantum entanglement (EPR) in 1971. The story Red Light in my book Timeless Deja Vu (2019), tells the story of my own wormhole experience (ER).

    In April 1971, my brother Alf was stationed at Firebase 6, just southwest of Pleiku Airbase in the Central Highlands of South Vietnam. The primary mission of Pleiku Air Base was forward air controller missions coordinated with the South Vietnamese. It also served as a base for US Special Operations Forces (formerly called, Air Commando units) in the Central Highlands. It was a joint-service base operated by the U.S. Air Force with units from the Army, Navy, and Marines stationed there. My brother was a mobile radio operator and often worked with South Vietnamese Army (ARVN), and South Korean Marines (ROK Marines), in addition to our American forces. In a letter home, my brother wrote that he and the others at his air base in Pleiku were using an old artillery shell as a urinal and it was facing north, so they could piss towards Hanoi.

    On April 21, 1971, Firebase 6 came under heavy rocket and mortar attack. Alf said that it was the most frightening experience he had in Vietnam. He didn’t think he was going to survive. One rocket hit his jeep and destroyed it just a few minutes after he had stepped away to get something to eat. A close call.

    The day after this intense attack, two U.S. Air Force majors crashed their OV-10 Bronco on the runway. Alf had worked with one of them and was having difficulty dealing with their deaths. The most remarkable thing that happened during the attack was that my mom sensed what was going on. At around 2 o’clock in the morning on April 21, 1971, Mom woke up screaming and crying. Dad was trying to comfort her. My room was right next to theirs, and I knew something terrible had happened. I entered Mom and Dad’s bedroom and saw both sitting on the side of the bed.

    What’s wrong, Mom? I asked.

    Your mother had a bad dream, said Dad.

    No! It wasn’t a dream! Mom shouted.

    Olaug, it had to be a dream, Dad said assuredly.

    No! I heard explosions, and then I heard Alf’s voice. He said: ‘Help Mom, help.’ Then I saw him standing here in his uniform in our bedroom; he was crying, she explained before she broke down and started crying softly. I rarely saw my mother cry. My parents were not emotional people, at least not outwardly. I was worried; we were all worried. Was my brother okay? Had he been killed? These were worries shared by millions of American families during the Vietnam War.

    One week later, my brother called home on a MARS line. We were so relieved that he was alive, Mom was almost speechless. The Military Auxiliary Radio System (MARS) was a U.S. Department of Defense sponsored program, managed, and operated by the US Army and the US Air Force. The program was a civilian auxiliary made up of licensed amateur radio operators who are interested in assisting the military with communications, especially with military families. My brother told my mother about how frightened he was the week before when Firebase 6 was attacked. Mom almost dropped the phone. The attack took place at approximately 5 o’clock in the afternoon in Pleiku, South Vietnam. That would be 2 o’clock in the morning in Seattle, and Mom had somehow connected psychically to my brother at the same time he thought he was going to die and called out to her. I understand that this wasn’t uncommon in the Vietnam War experience.

    Quantum entanglement (EPR) explains how my mom and my brother connected at that moment in space-time. In another story, I experienced a worm hole (ER) along with my son while driving near our home.

    On June 29, 2018, I was driving on Arrow Highway in Glendora, California, with my youngest son, Leif. It was a bright, sunny day and all seemed right with the world. I was in no way expecting something terrible to happen. We were looking for an address as I approached a traffic light at the intersection of Arrow Highway and Sunflower. One second the light was green, the next second it was red. I was barreling through the middle of the intersection as a car on the left accelerated from the south toward us, and a car on the right approached from the north. We were about to be struck broadside by both cars when time slowed down. I was able to swerve and maneuver between the two cars like I was threading the eye of a needle with inches to spare. How could I have done that? I see it as a miracle that I could act so quickly. I believe it was yet another fork in the road of time. How can this be explained?

    The problem with many of the scientific experiments dealing with the idea of time slowing down is that they are looking at this phenomenon from the standpoint of classical physics and not quantum physics. These experiments utilize the classic arrow of time that is straight, goes only in one direction, and is constant in terms of speed. However, Albert Einstein’s special theory of relativity (based on the Lorentz factor and expressed as the Greek letter gamma in equations) showed that as a person traveling through space approaches the speed of light, time does slow down for the traveler relative to the observer back on Earth. Could it be that the dangerous situation opens a time warp or worm hole momentarily? I believe so, and a quantum explanation is needed. The person in danger enters a quantum state where all matter, from the subatomic to the macro world we usually see, is connected. This connection allows instantaneous effects across all dimensions of time and space. In that quantum state, the person in danger is no longer experiencing the normal space-time they encounter under non-life-threatening situations. Therefore, time does slow down for them relative to the observer.

    In my case, the crisis point where I ran the red light opened a time warp or worm hole (ER) where I was able to remove my son and me from danger. This incident reminded me of how fast things can go wrong with absolutely no warning. Even a momentary distraction can prove to be disastrous, or the traffic lights can malfunction. Luckily, my son and I are okay, in this dimension. Although I do believe that we’re all timeless, I can’t be reckless with the life I have now. How many forks in the road will I have? Is it an infinite number? If it’s a finite number and I exceed that, what would happen? No one knows.

    In my view, these two experiences show the connection between wormholes and quantum entanglement. I believe both theories are involved in both instances. Wormholes aren’t just out in space somewhere, they’re all around us, all the time, just waiting for that fork in the road of time and the red light. If we return to Michael Masters and his theory that UFOs are just time machines, or more properly, space-time machines, then we solve the problem of covering vast distances of space. For that is the argument most skeptics have when disputing the existence of extraterrestrials and UFOs: How can they get here from so far away? However, if they are us and far away is here, then there is no dilemma, and the problem is solved. We’ll address the issue of different alien species later in the book, but for now, my conclusion is that Anzar, the ancient alien mystic, is indeed just me connected through space-time. Or, more precisely, as he tells me: An aspect of you is an aspect of me. I’m reminded of a passage in Vietnam War helicopter pilot and best-selling author Robert Mason’s book, Chickenhawk: Back in the World. There’s an ancient idea that when a man travels, he doesn’t go anywhere. Instead, he performs a series of actions that, if done in the proper sequence, will bring his destination to him. That ancient idea explains a lot and may provide insight into the unifying theory for physics. Why reach for the stars when they’re already within our grasp through ER=EPR.

    CHAPTER TWO

    Disclosure vs. Revelation

    Biologics came with some of these recoveries, said former intelligence official David Grusch in a July 2023 UAP congressional hearing. When asked if they were human or non-human, he responded, non-human. US Representative Nancy Mace (R-SC) previously asked Grusch: Do you believe our government has made contact with intelligent extraterrestrials? Grusch responded: Something I can’t discuss in a public setting. This is the crux of the hearings. The argument over whether UFOs or UAPs are of human origin becomes moot when you can produce evidence of an extraterrestrial. Grusch also used the term biologics, which would seem to rule out any type of robotic pilot but could include a pilot who was part machine. It’s curious that Grusch preferred to use the term non-human rather than extraterrestrial. That is worth exploring.

    From my understanding, ET (extraterrestrial) means not from Earth, same as the term alien. NHI (non-human intelligence) is sentient, but obviously not human. And interdimensional, a term thrown around by David Grusch and members of Congress, is an entity that transcends (and can bend) space-time. A biological sentient being is alive, can feel different sensory sensations, can communicate, has independent thought, and some type of consciousness, and a will to live. So, would a lion or a chimpanzee be a biologic? Yes, of course. Sentient? Yes, more than likely. Could the NHIs Grusch refers to be more animal than human? Or something else? Perhaps. That brings up childhood memories of watching Planet of the Apes at the Kenmore Drive-In theater in 1968. I’m still frightened by the scene with the giant ape scarecrows on top of the ridge as the crash-landed astronauts ventured out. And then when the astronauts were captured, we caught our first glimpse of the non-human intelligences, the apes who had taken over the Earth. The same scenario is true in the 1970s comic book series Kamandi by artist-writer Jack Kirby. In that comic book, all animals had taken over the Earth and replaced humans. Based on how we have treated animals, that is a frightening thought. If we entertain the theory that UAPs are from the future, could the pilots be future humans? They could be, but that would not

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1