
Science and the cosmic needn’t be binary forces. When talking with Kelly Robertson, spiritual healer and lifelong experiencer, it becomes clear that they intertwine.
“In the simplest of terms, when there’s a will, there’s a way,” Kelly says when it comes to the topic of harnessing her abduction experience into helping others heal from theirs.
When Cybernews sat down and video-called Kelly, who runs several online UAP groups and claims to have had a stable upbringing, she told me that “we are much more powerful than we think we are.”
The girl from elsewhere
It all started in a park in Arkansas when she was seven years old, when she saw a blonde girl named Alanis, whom Kelly describes as “absolute perfection.” Curiously, Alanis had her leg in plaster – but there were no signatures on the cast, which is unusual in that neck of the woods.
Kelly met Alanis’s stare as she said, in a melodic voice, that she was from “a long way from here.” Standing just behind her was a man with albinism, which is when fight-or-flight kicked in.
Kelly was told not to worry, and as she ran home, Alanis called out, “Oh, but you’ll see me again.” But that’s not where the story ends. Later, Kelly remembered being taken aboard a ship, with a being that was blue and had a giraffe-shaped head.
On the walls of the craft were bodies, including a blonde girl with dark Mediterranean skin, which Kelly believed was her body in stasis. Kelly maintains the alien race had, by whichever means, tapped into her mind, and that she’d voluntarily come here to Earth to give it a look.
Bodies on the walls
“When someone describes an abduction that feels completely real,” says Laura Merritt, a trauma therapist at Golden Path Therapy, “the body is responding to threat at a primitive level. The nervous system activates fight, flight, or freeze. In that frozen state, time slows down, the body feels paralyzed, and the person may feel they’ve left their body altogether.”
This directly correlates to Kelly’s memories of paralysis, which she calls “interface,” and a therapist would call “the freeze response.”
Notably, Kelly helps in the community, especially if people feel ostracized and alone during an abduction. She says there’s a lack of data to suggest how many humans have been abducted, but that it largely runs in families, claiming her grandpa saw a UFO “dumping out water and frogs” when he was younger.
And speaking of blood, as there is a unique and cosmic trope associated with the O-negative blood type, Kelly is a little cynical, stating that it might be a result of genetic engineering, given that, since the 1950s, more subgroups have appeared.
Fourteen worlds away
In terms of other cultures, Kelly cites India as an example of a place where it isn’t deemed weird to believe in other layers of reality. In Hinduism, for example, there are fourteen “lokas,” or planes of existence. Texts like the Mahabharata and Ramayana describe flying machines and luminous beings.
Aliens, according to Kelly, are more likely to gauge the collective consciousness of a country like the US, especially when opinions are still quite polarized.
Religion isn’t apart from science in this context:
I fully believe in the multiworld theory. There are nine dimensions in our realm – we can only perceive up to the fifth, the God one.
Kelly intimated.
Kelly describes the other ones as frequencies, not places. She mentioned that during one of her abductions, there was evidence of a multitude of timelines presented to her on a screen that funnelled to two eventual outcomes – the high road and the low road.
If collective consciousness allows us to take the high road, she says, we can avert disaster and circumvent being part of another layer of species that could be wiped out on Earth.
“We’re a much more advanced version of AI,” Kelly adds.
“A collective consciousness with the World Wide Web on steroids. It’s quantum entanglement – Tesla proved that. I’m just the conduit.” Though the inventor didn’t himself prove quantum entanglement, he often gets mentioned alongside Einstein when it comes to conversations about energy and radio waves.
Quantum ghosts and god
Merritt interprets this kind of connection a little differently, however.
“After a trauma, the brain looks for meaning,” she says. “For some, that meaning arrives as images of technology, light, or energy – metaphors that help the mind contain something too big to name.”
It appears that sometimes the sheer vicissitude of abduction can be troubling to talk about, even as Kelly experienced later with her future husband at 17. They were out driving a car, on an errand to pay a bill, when they saw a glaring light coming towards them, which eventually flooded the car.
Their radio stopped. They were both taken aboard a ship. Kelly saw a big machine with a multitude of instruments coming off it – advanced apparatus. Startled, she claimed her dad was gonna kick their asses. As a consequence, the alien beings backed away.
All these years later, Kelly now believes there was a sense of telekinesis going on, especially when she surrendered her will to fight. The leader subsequently inserted some instruments into her eye and nose, which explains her current bump on the bridge of her nose.
They got in the car and drove home. They never spoke of it again.
Unlock more exclusive Cybernews content on YouTube.
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are markedmarked