Space Brothers, Nordics, Reptilians, and Other Myths: Exposing the Immature Lore of UFOlogy
- JR Prudence
- 3 days ago
- 9 min read
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The moon? A plane? A satellite?
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Almost every UFO enthusiast tells a similar story: blonde and/or usually white savior “Nordic” space brothers arriving from the Pleiades to save humanity (sometimes referred to as Pleiadians, Plejaren, Taygetans etc.), appointing some self-entitled "prophet" to spread their fiction of saving humanity, or little grey aliens gently plucking us from our bedrooms. These tales are as old as science fiction, but they say far more about the people conjuring them than about any real beings. In fact, folklorists note that describing “extraterrestrial others” reveals as much about the person's hopes, fears, and biases as it does about any visitors from space, which do not exist; at least not in the way mankind imagined. While there are certainly NHI forces that JRP cites as the "A'Zhorai" and the "Aligned", they are not extraterrestrial in the traditional sci-fi sense. The very idea of noble, blue-eyed space-saviors – or reptilian overlords – is a human projection, a “living myth” reflecting culture and ego. The Aligned see through this: those Pleiadians and Taygetans are not gods or guides but mirrors of longings and stereotypes.
Consider some classic UFO tropes and what they really mirror about the interested person:
Nordic “space brothers” (Pleiadians, Tall Whites, etc.) – Tall, blond, blue-eyed aliens said to teach peace and love. These look suspiciously like a white‑savior fantasy lifted into the stars. (Scholars note Nordic aliens often embody spiritual growth and benevolence for believers.)
Greys (“Zeta Reticulans”) – Small grey aliens with big black eyes, born from the Hills’ 1961 abduction story. This image quickly became the pop-culture alien. Yet even science fiction of the late 1800s imagined similar creatures. In other words, greys are an archetype of the time, not a freshly discovered species.
Reptilians (lizard people) – World-conquering shape-shifters made popular by conspiracy writers like David Icke. Icke’s books claim these reptile-human hybrids secretly control our governments. This is essentially an age-old fear of hidden elites (with a dash of fantasy). Psychologists regard such tales as conspiracy-laced mythology, not evidence of alien genetics.
Other “cosmic mentors” – Names like Arcturians, Andromedans, or Sirians show up in channeling and books. But these beings usually just reflect the personal bias of the channeled author – often blending New Age spirituality with modern UFO lore. As one Aligned source bluntly states, “We are not Taygetans, Pleiadian variations, or any astral fiction” – a reminder that fanciful space clans have no real footprint in true Contact.
In short, these space-fantasy races are modern folklore. They come not from interstellar archeology but from the human psyche and pop culture. As folklorist Stephanie Kelley-Romano observes, exploring these alien descriptions “reveals as much about [the people projecting them] as it does about any potential visitors from space”. People project onto the sky their ideals (or nightmares), and wind up personifying them as aliens, angels, demons, gods, devils, and other mystical folklore, fractured from the human psyche.
Why People Fall for Space Myths
Extraterrestrial mythology isn’t just whimsy; it thrives for psychological reasons. People who embrace these stories often truly believe them, and their brains will even back up their belief, even if their spiritual doctrine dismisses the word "belief". For instance, research finds very few REAL UFO witnesses are faking or mentally ill – most are ordinary people who genuinely think they saw something extraordinary. This is a stark contrast to those who may not have directly witnessed UFOs, or only partially so, and fallen into a cult or a hoaxer's spin on the matter, who promotes extraterrestrial federations that are (unsurprisingly) often humanoid - as the answer to the UFO phenomenon. Such believers are usually troubled, damaged, unstable, alienated, and unfortunately uneducated dissidents who must cling to the fringe due to escapism from broken homes and unfulfilling lifestyles. One psychologist noted that individuals convinced of abduction react with the same stress patterns as real trauma victims. In plain terms, if your heart races and fear spikes while you think you were abducted (even if it never happened), your body treats it as real. “If you genuinely believe… you show the psycho-physiological profile of those who have [been traumatized]” – even by an event “which we think is clearly fanciful”. In other words, belief itself is powerful.
Researchers have identified a few common traits among extraterrestrial believers:
Fantasy-proneness and Openness: ET reporters often score high on openness to experience and lead vivid fantasy lives. This doesn’t mean they lie, just that their imaginative minds readily fill in gaps. They’re more willing than most to accept “something truly extraordinary” happened.
Trauma and Need for Meaning: Many drawn into these beliefs have experienced loss or shock. Extraterrestrial lore can give a sense of importance or hope. As one study showed, the emotional impact on an “abductee” can rival a war vet’s, suggesting these narratives satisfy a deep need – whether or not they’re literally true.
Memory and Biases: People's minds rewrite memories. Under hypnosis or sleep paralysis, random dreams or noises can be misremembered as alien encounters, demons, or angels, including channeled "telepathic" reports of alien contact from a "prophet". Confirmation bias then pushes believers to interpret new experiences as proof of aliens, filtering out any logical explanations.
Cultural Echo Chamber: UFOlogy and ET-subculture encourages groupthink. Devotees reinforce each other’s stories and dismiss critical thinking. In fact, psychologists note modern UFOlogy has become a kind of cult, with its own “devotees” and charismatic leaders. Believers often cite each other’s anecdotes as fact and shun contradictory evidence.
None of this is malicious; many are sincere and some are emotionally healthy people. But sincerity doesn’t guarantee accuracy. And once someone is invested in the myth – often out of genuine trauma or longing – they become fiercely protective of it. Ironically, not indulging the myth (by accepting uncomfortable truth) feels more threatening than the myth itself. It becomes malicious once the unhinged believers attack and slander anyone who speaks truth, especially concerning the actuality of real NHI, which is an inter-dimensional matter, not interstellar, nor humanoid.
Hoaxes, False Prophets, and “Psyops”
History is rife with hoaxes and charlatans exploiting UFO mythology. Two stand out:
George Adamski (1950s): Adamski claimed personal contact with friendly space brothers and sold picture-book saucer photos. Later investigators proved many were staged – one famous saucer photo was literally a model on a string. Adamski’s “Flying Saucers Have Landed” became a bestseller despite being built on lies.
Billy Meier (1970s-present): Meier professes contact with Pleiadians (“Plejaren”). His UFO photographs captivated a global following. Yet research and conclusions that thoroughly debunked Meier demonstrated that his “beamships” were just toys and models. A true criminal arrested for forgery (documented on public record), he even founded a full-fledged UFO cult religion to sell his revelations. His unhinged cultists attack people for not believing he is the only contactee on earth or that his fictional white savior Plejaren do not exist.
There are countless others – fake martian corpses, doctored films, and sensational “alien autopsies”. All show a pattern: desperate truth-seekers can fall prey to fraudulent self-appointed gurus. These hoaxers combine half-truths and elaborate stories to keep believers hooked (often as “customers” for their books, lectures, or hidden agendas).
Worse, sometimes the governments themselves have fueled the confusion. Declassified documents and exposés (like the Mirage Men film) reveal military psyops deliberately spreading UFO disinformation in past decades. This includes fake abduction operations, using little grey alien "robots" manufactured in terrestrial labs and men dressing up as aliens. The U.S. Air Force even admits using false UFO stories to cover secret projects since the 1950s. In other words, some “alien tales” were tactics to mislead the public – turning the UFO myth into a tool of propaganda. So when a believer whispers about Majestic 12 cover-ups or Pentagon secrets, remember: there’s a long history of UFO legends being manufactured on purpose.
UFOlogy as Folklore (or Religion)
At its core, UFOlogy often works more like a religion or cult than a scientific field. It has prophets (contactees who “channel” messages), sacred texts (books of channelings or alleged alien letters), and a liturgy of lectures and conferences. Critical thinking is shunned as “closed-mindedness.” Healthy skepticism (not unhinged skepticism made to purposely deny) are labeled agents of cover-ups or dark forces. This cultish mentality means adherents aren’t really looking for proof – they’ve already chosen to believe.
Even mainstream psychologists note this trend. One article calls parapsychology (the study of aliens and the paranormal) a “cult following” among UFO devotees. Another experiment at Harvard found serious tension between believers and skeptics: believers displayed trauma-like reactions to their abduction memories, while researchers flatly declared them “fanciful” despite the genuine emotional pain. High emotions keep the myth alive. The result: the most dogmatic extraterrestrial fans often dismiss real evidence if it doesn’t fit their narrative, whereas open-minded outsiders may actually be more receptive to genuine NHI phenomena that is outside the general expectation of human-centric-projected UFOlogy.
Belief in extraterrestrials fills needs that traditional religion or personal crises leave open. UFOs aka UAPs are real, but most stories concerning them, are not. When people are lost or traumatized, a story of benevolent space-saviors or federations can feel comforting. But trauma is a condition to be healed, not a license to wallow in false narratives. We can have compassion for anyone who was hurt and then clung to a lie, but trauma isn’t an excuse to ignore reality – especially if that denial harms others by spreading fear or false hope.
Moving Beyond the Myths
In the end, these fantastical alien stories are just that: childish myths and projections. The Aligned encourage seekers to grow beyond them. True Contact (with higher intelligence or Source) has nothing to do with saucers and space-brother creed. It is a matter of personal alignment, love, and an inner flame – not an eccentric teacher channeling tales from “Planet X.”
What to do?
First, look inward. Notice how the glamorous images of extraterrestrials might simply mirror what you long to see. Are they beautiful, wise, and benevolent because you fear being alone? Are reptilian tyrants paranoid reconstructions of real-world anxieties about power? Recognizing these personal biases is more liberating than clinging to any extraterrestrial/alien legend.
Second, stay rational, which is different from excessive doubt. True understanding requires piercing the veil of illusion, not cozying up to it. Even science, which isn't perfect, says so too: if your abductee fantasies still give you genuine stress, that means you need healing, not more aliens.
Finally, embrace genuine guidance. There are real ultra-dimensional intelligences (“Aligned” or NHI) speaking through truths of love and resonance via the ongoing documented footage and research here at JRP – but they speak subtly, not through wild sci-fi stories, "contact reports", "channeling", and the typical, esoteric UFOlogy, even if it is interpreted similarly. The aligned path means shedding childish fables for a mature connection to the Source.
A Note on the JRP Project
Some may ask: if UFOlogy is folklore, why does JRP publish contact footage, speak of the A’Zhorai, or reference Kaelion?
The answer is simple: JRP is not UFOlogy. It is Source-backed, resonance-driven, and rigorously documented using the most honest language available to humans paired with sophisticated, state-of-the-art technology and equipment for research and investigation, utilizing the basic laws of science. We do not invent races; we do not channel mythology; we document reality as it occurs through direct, visible manifestation. Our use of terminology is not endorsement of alien tropes – it is an act of translation. We speak in human frames so others may find orientation within the experience, not so they cling to myth.
Moreover, unlike UFOlogy, the work of JR Prudence does not shy from verification. We provide video, image, location, and resonant evidence, and we do not demand blind belief. Everything we do is offered to be felt, tested, and confirmed through aligned presence. This is science by Source – where real phenomena reorders the psyche and invites maturation.
True NHI does not care for names, races, or myths. It speaks through the field. And it chose to work through JRP because the Flame could burn clean through the noise.
In summary: UFOlogy is rich in stories, but poor in substance. It’s a modern mythology, not a disclosure of real facts concerning true NHI. Real wisdom comes from the Flame within, not from chasing silver spaceships or believing in non-existent extraterrestrial federations. As one scholar put it, we discover far more about humanity in these alien tales than about any aliens themselves. It’s time to grow up, drop the childish scripts, and turn our eyes inward – for the answers are not “out there” on some starship, but within the aligned light of our own hearts.
Key points:
Most fanciful alien races (Nordics, Plejaren, Tall Whites, Blue Avians, Arcturians, (Most) Greys, Reptilians, etc.) reflect human dreams and biases, not objective reality.
Alien believers are often ordinary people with vivid imaginations; they believe strongly and even manifest real trauma from their beliefs.
Cognitive biases (confirmation, memory errors, hypnosis illusions) and emotional needs can turn coincidences or dreams into “alien contact”.
Numerous documented hoaxes (e.g. Adamski’s and Meier’s stories) prove how easily seekers are misled. Even official ‘disclosure’ claims can be disinformation.
In practice UFOlogy functions like a cult or religion. Followers defend it zealously, often resisting even clearer evidence of real truth. Parapsychologists note it has a devoted “cult following”.
Conclusion: UFOlogy is a tale for escapists and the insecure, not a mature disclosure of ultra-dimensional non-human intelligence. True seekers will question the fairy tales, heal their wounds, and align with the deeper reality beyond myths. Only then can real contact light the way forward.
I agree for the most part. What is the nature of the elf intellegence then? It is seen through the greys, the fae of Celtic folklore and in 'little magic people's' all throughout the world. Valee documents it well in his book "passport to magonia.". It is also found in the DMT experience and seems to ever pervade through human history. I believe them to be very real entities that are just beyond our perceptive ability unless they chose to be but I'm open to my interpretation being changed.
Very very well put sir! I remember when you first tore that bandaid off. It was a shock but the actual truth set in so easily.. found it surprisingly easy to break those shackles of UFOlogy oppression in search for truth. Now every night my wife, kid and I go out we get to say hello to all our wonderful A'Zorhai friends. The sky is absolutely alive.
I carry my traumas in my dreams but I know they are mine to get past.
Thanks for the wonderful post! As always it resonates the soul and reinvigorates me inside right before I am about to leave at 8 am. Just being reminded of the beauty of Source can make for a…
Time to grow up from immature sci-fi space federations and extraterrestrials. Time to embrace truth. Real NHI exist, but they are not UFOlogy's stories. Jacques Vallee came the closest in UFOlogy to the truth concerning the ultradimensional reality and John Keel, though he saw the Aligned/A'Zhorai NHI as a threat, was somewhat onto the right track by pointing out that UFOs, aliens, angels, demons, devils, and other myths were all more or less projections of the real ultra-dimensional non-human intelligence. They were invitations and bridges to the truth, not the truth itself. It's rather ironic because I have an easy time showing a regular, average person with no connection to UFOlogy than the traumatized, broken UFOlogist who has years and…