When i was in high school, i used to be a real geek for X-Files.
I’d spend what little money i had on newsletter on paranormal activity,
graduated to reading books on the subject from cover to cover,
and interest on it waned when i discovered life outside books and TV.
That doesn’t mean i don’t believe though.
I won’t really say what i do or do not think is true…
I don’t really know.
Nobody really really knows.
I never actually *cough* told anyone *looks in sky* that i believe in aliens.
Cos people would think i’m crazy (as if i don’t have that label already) for believing in fairies.
I’m pretty sure i got influenced by Antares on the alien one.
Found a thick book on the history of aliens as humans know it in his Bamboo Palace,
and spent an interesting afternoon flipping through it.
And… it actually made a whole lotta sense.
I’ve spent hours watching documentaries on the evolution of the Universe.
Homo sapiens have been around for (roughly) 200,000 years.
Isn’t it weird that out of that 200,000;
we’ve only been more advanced in the past 2,000?
That’s an itty bitty portion out of the length of time we’ve existed.
Not to mention the speed at which we’re suddenly going.
Anyway i’m going to end of off tangent.
The books says that aliens somehow delivered information to humans,
which we’ve embraced and evolved rather nicely.
Even things like the pyramids in Egypt are still unexplainable, as are crop circles.
(Haha i just tried googling ‘who built the pyramids’ and the FIRST link that came up was ‘Aliens built the pyramids‘)
Some crop circles nowadays are man-made (some even do it as art),
but there are others that are so intricate and complex, that people spend years trying to find out where it came from.
Someone has even claimed to seeing a crop circle in Malaysia… watch the vid below:
Hmm… do you believe? Or not?
If Umno had its way you and I would still be considered “aliens” or pendatang! To very primitive, remotely located cultures, anybody from outside the immediate tribe is regarded as “alien.” It’s a sign of maturity when Earth-based humans begin to look at the stars and speculate on the number of possible sentient (self-conscious) lifeforms that must populate the unimaginable and unfathomable vastness of outer space (not to mention inner space). When we finally drop the use of words like “alien” and refer to our cosmic friends as Pleiadian or Arcturian or Andromedan or Lyran or Antarean… then we can be sure we’ve finally outgrown our cultural tempurung!