A book on aliens by professional psychic Ruth Montgomery told otf the encounter of psychic Shirley Teabo (www.shirleeteabo.com) in Aberdeen, Washington, on Summer 1959, on a Friday afternoon.
She was driving home in the suburbs of Seattle, when she barely noticed a tall, angular man hunched at the shoulder of a curving stretch of highway. She had never before picked up a hitchhiker yet for some reason she felt an inner compulsion to offer this man a lift. Almost without volition, she backed her car along the freeway, but began to tremble with fright when he slid into the seat beside her. But he said "Don't be afraid, Shirlee," and she wondered how he knew her name. She noted other odd things about her new companion. Although it was a steaming summer day, he wore a heavy pinstriped suit with wide out of date lapels, and a wide brimmed black hat pulled low over his eyes.
Suddenly, he was telling her things about herself that she had never told anyone, and she had the weird sensation that she had known him all her life. Increasingly suspicious, she pulled into a roadside restaurant area, hoping that the hitchhiker would look for another ride. But he followed her inside, and sat quietly while she ordered coffee and an ice-cream cone, declining anything for himself. She offered the stranger ice cream and he appeared to study the cone for a long time before tasting it.
They returned to the car, and were cruising through Tacoma before she realized that she had no idea of her passenger's destination. "Oh, this will be fine," he said vaguely. She stopped the car, and he smiled and called good-bye. As she pulled back onto the roadway she glanced in the rearview mirror for a last glimpse of the stranger. But he was gone. She pulled off the road, looking frantically up and down the highway. There was nowhere for him to hide, yet he was nowhere to be seen. He had vanished.
|
|
[Ref. ar1:] ALBERT ROSALES:
Albert Rosales indicates in his catalogue that in Aberdeen, Washington, on Summer 1959, on a Friday afternoon Shirlee Teabo was driving to her home in the suburbs of Seattle when she barely noticed a tall, angular man hunched at the shoulder of a curving stretch of highway, she had never before picked up a hitchhiker yet for some reason she felt an inner compulsion to offer this man a lift. Almost without volition she backed her car along the shoulder of the freeway, but began to tremble with fright when he slid into the seat beside her. "Don't be afraid, Shirlee," she reports that he said. She wondered how he knew her name. She noted other odd things about her new companion. Although it was a steaming summer day, he wore a heavy pinstriped suit with wide out of date lapels, and a wide brimmed black hat pulled low over his eyes. Suddenly he was telling her things about herself that she had never told anyone, and she had the weird sensation that she had known him all her life. Increasingly suspicious, she pulled into a roadside restaurant area, hoping that the hitchhiker would look for another ride. But he followed her inside, and sat quietly while she ordered coffee and an ice-cream cone, declining anything for himself. She offered the stranger ice cream and he appeared to study the cone for a long time before tasting it. They returned to the car, and were cruising through Tacoma before Shirlee realized that she had no idea of her passenger's destination. "Oh, this will be fine," he said vaguely. She stopped the car, and he smiled and called good-bye. As she pulled back onto the roadway she glanced in the rearview mirror for a last glimpse of the stranger. But he was gone. She pulled off the road, looking frantically up and down the highway. There was nowhere for him to hide, yet he was nowhere to be seen. He had vanished. Another man, a neighbor known as Everett reported a very similar encounter with an equally described and garbed man who also mysteriously disappeared after a short car ride.
Albert Rosales indicates that the source is Ruth Montgomery, Aliens Among Us.
Ruth Montgomery (1913 - 2001), claimed that she discovered that she had the gift of "automatic writing" by which she could communicate with various deceased personalities. She wrote many books about alleged psychic powers, alleged "out of body experiences" and alleged communication with the dead, and one book in which she introduced the story by Joyce Updike, "Aliens Among Us."
Shirley Teabo is herself a professional psychic, her website is at www.shirleeteabo.com as of 2008.
Id: | Topic: | Severity: | Date noted: | Raised by: | Noted by: | Description: | Proposal: | Status: |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ufology | Severe | March 16, 2008 | Patrick Gross | Patrick Gross | Not related to the matter of UFO occupants. | Help needed. | Opened. |
Not related to the matter of UFO occupants.
* = Source I checked.
? = Source I am told about but could not check yet. Help appreciated.
Main Author: | Patrick Gross |
---|---|
Contributors: | None |
Reviewers: | None |
Editor: | Patrick Gross |
Version: | Created/Changed By: | Date: | Change Description: |
---|---|---|---|
0.1 | Patrick Gross | March 16, 2008 | Creation, [ar1]. |
1.0 | Patrick Gross | March 16, 2008 | First published. |