How To Defend Against Aliens and Demons
Posted: Sunday, October 18, 2009
by Paul Schroeder
alien / demonic attachment
Defense Against alien and Demonic Dream Manipulation
The only way to defend yourself during sleep against negative entity manipulation is to become as aware in the dream state as you are during waking hours.
This is called lucid dreaming. During sleep a white energy package some call "loosh", is garnered, collected from us and handed over by us on demand to sinister entities who milk us the way ants do to aphids.
One way to undo this farmer-livestock relationship that these entities impose upon us is to develop the skill of lucid dreaming.
Lucid dreaming is one of the best skills you can learn in life as it opens up a whole new world for you.
Lucid dreaming simply means knowing while dreaming that you are dreaming, and taking advantage of the fact.
At present, most lucid dreaming sites on the net focus on lucid dreaming only for its value as entertainment of personal growth and some of the more esoteric sites suggest its applicability for being a launch pad for astral projection, something I can confirm from personal experience.
But my main point here is that lucid dreaming can also be a defensive tool.
By being aware during the dream state that your dream might be a source of manipulation, you can emotionally disengage from imposed imagery from demonic greys and demons who use telepathic attack in creating artificially melodramatic scenes.
Also, since the dream is part projection of your own mind, you can learn to take control of it.
You're essentially wrestling away the remote control from the unseen demonic and choosing what you want to watch.
No more vivid nightmarish soap operas, which must carry on into an ending, if you choose so.
Learning to lucid dream, and using it as a defensive tool will allow you to get by with less sleep and without negative consequences.
There is only one caveat to all this: learning to lucid dream is not easy. The techniques are easy, but perseverance and patience is not.
There are many sites on the net giving tips on how to lucid dream, but I'll recap the basics here:
1) First you must be able to recall your dreams. If you don't dream, you're just not remembering it.
So keep a journal or tape recorder by your bed, and as soon as you wake from a dream, no matter how tired you are, you must write down keywords or phrases describing your dream.
Keep this up for a couple of days or weeks and you'll start remembering your dreams more easily.
2) Once you can recall your dreams, you must work on reminding yourself while dreaming to ask yourself if you are dreaming.
The only thing that usually survives the transition from waking to dreaming is your lower self, that ingrained with habit.
So you can build a habit of asking yourself throughout the day if you're dreaming or not, and it will filter down into your subconscious so that during the dream state you'll have a habit of asking yourself as well.
Other than habit, you can watch for common dream signs, meaning elements in your dreams that often appear in your dreams but not so much in waking reality.
This may be anything, like a person, an animal, color, element,or an object. Analyze and assess your dreams or your dream journal for common dream signs.
Then throughout the day, when you encounter such a sign in reality, ask yourself if you are dreaming.
Keep this up until it's automatic, and soon you'll do it in dreams. In addition to this, while going to sleep you can will yourself to become lucid later on, just like you would on an ordinary day where you can will yourself to remember to keep an appointment.
All these techniques take time to work, but usually no more than two weeks.
Doing reality checks throughout the day seems easy, but after a couple days it's easy to slack.
Don't allow this to happen, just keep it up and think of the rewards.
3) After asking yourself if you're dreaming, you must do a reality check.
No matter how real things look, it might all be a dream unless you check things with certain tests.
The best test is to look down at your hands and watch them.
Count your fingers, make sure they have the right number of joints, make sure they look normal.
Watch them, and if they change shape or have anything odd about them, then you're dreaming of course.
Another thing to do is read something in a dream, look away, and read it again.
If it changes or the characters look funny, then you're dreaming.
Be sure to read something long, because once I read a two word phrase, looked away, looked back and read the same thing and concluded that I wasn't dreaming even though I was.
4) Once realizing that you're dreaming, you'll probably get deliriously happy with the freedom, which will just as soon end your dream.
Staying calm is not easy, but take a breath calmly and start walking around, looking at things.
If your dream starts to fade, use the spin technique. Just spin around with your arms out three times, and tell yourself with each spin that when you stop spinning, you'll be in a dream.
You'll actually feel yourself spin and sometimes get the sensation of dizziness. Stop spinning after three times and look around.
You'll think you're awake in all likelihood, but do a reality check to prove to yourself that you're not.
Then enjoy your lucid dream.
5) In a lucid dream, you have control of characters and the environment, as well as control over the laws of physics in the dreams.Now, you'll encounter a curious phenomenon sometimes.
If you ever encounter a situation where neither the world nor the characters respond to your attempts to change it, then you're probably out of your body and in an astral world.
Be quiet and respectful of the entities or people. If you don't want to engage in their interactions, then just leave.
After becoming lucid, you might realize that you knew it all along, that it was a dream but that you simply didn't want to admit it to yourself.
This, however, is deception. There is an external force, an entity, trying to keep you from admitting and realizing that you're dreaming.
This force is demonic or alien mind control, or even a part of your mind that as Carlos Castaneda describes in his books, is a predator which may or may not be synonymous with the imposers of bad dreams .
It is this "predator" in the mind that keeps your reality switch turned off during the dream state.
Learning to lucid dream means overcoming the will of the predator, and if you don't succeed in lucid dreaming after trying for a couple weeks, don't despair. Give it a rest and try it again the next week.
Perseverance is all you need.
Conclusion
In any case, lucid dreaming can be used as a defensive tool against the demonic as well as sinister aliens who are intrusive nighttime visitors who garner energy from us either by creating angst in nightmares and in our lives or as psychic vampires, collecting a whitish energy package, "loosh".
This tool, along with being lucid while awake, as well, is a guard against emotional manipulation in physical reality and will prevent much of your "loosh" supply from being drained away by malevolent sources.
There is still a problem of "loosh" leakage and soul loss caused by emotional traumas experienced during the course of one's life, which only shamanism soul retrieval, self-hypnotic soul retrieval, or shamanism recapitulation can thoroughly heal.
Nevertheless, one must start somewhere.
Sleep is the fountain of youth, but this fountain has been dried by the voracious suckling of a race of "loosh"-hungry aliens and sinister demonic astral wildlife that act as psychic vampires.

Lucid dreaming is the only way known that helps to prevent sinister matrix dream manipulation.
By insulating our dreams against manipulation, we gain energy and require less sleep, allowing us to accomplish our goals more efficiently, quickly, effectively, and with more lucidity and become protected from negative thought entities.
Director of CIA, Admiral R.H. Hillenkoetter: "It is time for the truth to be brought out in open Congressional hearings. Behind the scenes, high-ranking Air Force officers are soberly concerned about UFOs. But through official secrecy and ridicule, citizens are led to believe the unknown flying objects are nonsense. To hide the facts, the Air Force has silenced its personnel." p. 58, quoted from New York Times, February 28, 1960, p. L30
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Top-level comments on this article: (5 total)Wow, I had no idea about the "milking" thing. Does one still get rested with "Lucid Dreaming?"Please log in to respond to this comment.There is much more 'restedness' than with "milking";with "milking" one awakens more tired than one was before going to bed:PaulPlease log in to respond to this comment.
Hi Paul, another interesting and well written article. There are several things, I don't think I agree with though I don't know how to prove them. I rarely ever dream (or remember doing so) and I prefer it that way. When I go to bed (about 7:00-7:30 P.M.), I normally know nothing until about 2:30 and then I may wake up a time or two for a few seconds, until 4:00 A.M. and I then get up.I have seen many more dawns in my lifetime than I have missed and I regretted each of those missed. Thanks for sharing the article with us.Please log in to respond to this comment.
Joel,you dream every ninety minutes;every hour and a half,you are the both the actor on stage AND you are the audience;you simply don't recall your dreams.Before going to sleep 'tell' yourself that you WILL recall your dreams and by virtue of a simple self-hypnosis auto suggestion, you will then begin to remember them:PaulPlease log in to respond to this comment.
Paul, I loved this article. I found it very inspiring, relating to my own Qualiadelic forays into great ideas. Thank you. One interesting parallel -- I have always predicted that in a few years we will all sleep while being plugged into a great computer, which will use our brain chemicals/energy as the most powerful computer chip. Who knows, maybe we'll get paid for it and we won't have to work while we're awake...nonetheless the thought has a sinister cast, just like the entities who milk our dreams already. Viva la resistance!Please log in to respond to this comment.bless you,tony:paulPlease log in to respond to this comment.
"When you walk in a dream, and you know you're not dreaming seniora-'scusa me, but you see down in old Napoli that's amore." Sorry, guess I'm getting tired- This is interesting tho Paul, I'd like to look into it.Please log in to respond to this comment.Sometimes, I feel the desire to,"look into you'......Please log in to respond to this comment.
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