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    Home»Opinion & Blogs»New York Skies (Cheryl Costa)»Can You See the Alien Spacecraft in the Front Yard?
    New York Skies (Cheryl Costa)

    Can You See the Alien Spacecraft in the Front Yard?

    Cheryl CostaBy Cheryl CostaNovember 14, 2013No Comments6 Mins Read0 Views
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    Lenticular clouds are often mistaken for UFO's
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    I saw a movie a few years ago that related a story about when Columbus’ ships first arrived in the Americas. The natives couldn’t see the ships because they had never seen anything like them, not until the tribal shaman was able to perceive the waves lapping up on a hole in the water. Some people I know thought the notion was a bunch of hooey, but I knew there was some basis for this in scientific fact. We “see” not just with the eyes, but also with the mind.

    Ask any police detective about a crime committed in the midst of a lot of people. Either nobody saw anything,  or there are a half-dozen different descriptions of the perpetrator. This phenomenon is very real and is based in our own human visual processing.

    The thing to remember is: What our eyes see is processed and filtered by our brains, usually on an unconscious level.There is some great classic science to back this up. For example, Gorillas in Our Midst: Sustained Inattentional Blindness for Dynamic Events, a 1999 study by Daniel J. Simons and Christopher F.  Chabris, of the Harvard University Department of Psychology. In a now classic experiment related to human visual processing, people were asked to watch a video of six people passing a basketball. They were to press a button every time a certain team had possession of the ball.

    About half the people tested remember seeing a woman in a gorilla suit walking across the middle of the screen during the basketball game. They didn’t expect it, so they didn’t see it.

    How many of us have desperately looked for our car keys and were blind to them right in front of us, largely because we didn’t expect to see them there.

    In terms of UFOlogy, this is very important. Suppose we see an alien spacecraft. What if its shape and design is beyond any learned concept we know from nature or our technical experience. There’s a very real possibility our brains might simply filter out the object because we don’t understand it. In others words, we might not see it at all.

    There have been reports in which a small group of people experienced a sighting. One or two persons clearly reported a technical craft of some sort. Another saw something bizarre or even cartoonish, and yet another person might see absolutely nothing.

    In pre-colonial times, when natives who had never seen a horse first saw a man on a horse, they thought that it was one being. Many centuries later, when members of a Native American tribe first saw a Model A Ford, their comment was, “It stares…” in reference to the headlights that appeared to be eyes. Finally, how many of us as kids remember seeing something monstrous in the dim light of our bedrooms at night, only to discover it was just a chair with some clothing heaped upon it? I can’t stress this strongly enough: Our brain processes what our eyes see. What we see is purely a function of our brain’s interpretation.

    November 2013 has been strangely scant for UFO sightings in New York Skies. So this week I’ve decided to report to you some UFO sightings from Onondaga County from years past:

    • 19 October 1983, at about 4:20 a.m. in North Syracuse, some newspaper delivery guys were out doing their route when out of nowhere they witnessed a huge ball-of-fire descend slowly behind a house into an open field. The object hovered over the trees for perhaps 15 minutes then it slowly began moving straight up before taking off at incredible speed. Over the years, when the three witnesses bring the sighting up in conversation, they say people think they are crazy.
    • 23 October 1989, at about midnight, it was a clear night. A Syracuse resident was out walking the dog. Suddenly, something sounded like a washing machine and grew in volume. The dog became spooked and seemed to be looking up above them. The resident looked up to see silvery metallic disk in the eastern sky moving closer. The object stopped and hovered nearby about 500 feet in the air. The object seemed to cycle some sort flap-like objects on each side of the craft before leaving the area on its original course, moving at a leisurely speed. The observer has kept this to himself for years.
    • 15 June 1996, at about 8:35 p.m., a Syracuse resident was in his pickup truck with his wife. While driving on Fay Road towards Taunton, his wife saw a small, bright light in the clear blue northwest sky. They pulled the truck off the road and got out to watch the object. The very bright spherical object stopped and hovered motionless at about 1,500 feet. After about 30 seconds, the object began to silently accelerate toward the southwest before “streaking” off at tremendous speed. Later that evening, Channel 5 news reported it had numerous reports of the sighting in the western suburbs.
    • 15 September 2000, at about 9:30 p.m. at a family camp on the shores of Oneida Lake, a small group of people were having a small bonfire and roasting marshmallows. While looking up and enjoying the stars, the group witnessed a very large disc suddenly exit from a cloud. The object had lots of flashing lights. Everyone agreed that it certainly wasn’t an airplane. The disc made no noise and hovered over the lake for perhaps five minutes before vanishing.
    • 3 July 2003, at about 8:25 p.m., Manlius residents were on Broadfield Road and observed a wingless oval object traveling from east to west for about 15-20 seconds overhead before it went behind trees. The observers state that the relative size of the object was equal to the size of an aspirin tablet held at arm’s length. In addition, it appeared to be a metallic dark copper color and appeared to be reflecting the setting sun’s rays.

    If you would like to hear about the History of UFOs in New York, join me at the Onondaga Free Library on Sunday, Nov. 17, for a lively talk. All are welcome and admission is free. Visit our website for details.

    If you have a New York UFO story to tell, I’d love to hear about it. All respondents’ names will be kept confidential. Email me at [email protected]

     

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    Cheryl Costa
    Cheryl Costa

    Cheryl Costa is a native and resident of upstate New York who saw her first UFO at age 12. A military veteran, she’s a retired information security professional from the aerospace Industry. She’s been a speaker at the International UFO Congress and at the MUFON Symposium. Cheryl writes the UFO column “New York Skies” for SyracuseNewTimes.com. Besides being a journalist, she’s also a published playwright. She holds a bachelor of arts degree from the State University of New York at Empire State College in entertainment writing. For media queries, email [email protected] or call 315-263-2731

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