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Illustration combining a UFO, Bigfoot, ghost, and pyramids — early Fortean Winds Fortean phenomena thumbnail

The Shape of the Phenomenon

To be a Fortean, all you need is curiosity and an open mind. The phenomenon doesn’t distinguish between true believers and dedicated skeptics. It appears on its own terms.

The shape of the phenomenon is best understood not by cataloging individual cases, but by examining the patterns across them. Here is what the data shows.

The Phenomenon Is Not New

Reports consistent with what we now call UAP appear in records going back millennia — in religious texts, colonial newspapers, military dispatches, and scientific journals. Whatever this is, it has been here a very long time. If it arrived after humanity, we have no idea when. If it arrived before, it has been watching us develop from the start.

The Phenomenon Is Not Random

Sightings cluster around specific locations, specific times, and specific types of people. Nuclear facilities attract disproportionate UAP attention. Certain ranches — most famously Skinwalker Ranch in Utah and Bradshaw Ranch in Sedona, Arizona — produce decades of consistent, multi-witness, multi-type anomalous activity. The Uintah Basin, the Sedona corridor, Point Pleasant — these are not random choices by random witnesses.

The Phenomenon Interacts

It responds to observation. It evades recording equipment. It breaks sensors while permitting visual contact. It performs in front of some witnesses while remaining invisible to others standing feet away. This is the core of what we call the Trickster Phenomenon — the documented pattern in which UAP and associated intelligences appear to play games with investigators, set terms for contact, and refuse to be captured on demand.

The Phenomenon Follows

One of the most significant and least discussed findings from Skinwalker Ranch research is that contact doesn’t end when you leave the property. Researchers, investigators, and family members all report anomalous activity continuing at home, spreading to people who were never at the site. This is called the Hitchhiker Effect, and it changes every calculation about how the phenomenon should be studied and what precautions researchers should take.

The Phenomenon Has an Interest in Human Biology

Abduction research across independent investigators — Mack, Jacobs, Hopkins — consistently documents physical evidence and a pattern of intergenerational contact. The phenomenon appears interested in human biology in ways we don’t fully understand and haven’t honestly confronted as a society.

The Phenomenon Does Not Fit Any Single Framework

It is not consistently extraterrestrial in behavior. It is not consistently interdimensional. It is not consistently psychological. It is all of these things at different times to different witnesses. Jacques Vallee’s control system hypothesis — that the phenomenon functions as a feedback mechanism on human consciousness rather than as a visitation — remains the most coherent single framework, but it too is incomplete.

What we can say with confidence: whatever it is, it is aware of us. It is not indifferent. And it has been operating here, under our noses, for longer than recorded history.

That seems worth investigating.

11 responses to “The Shape of the Phenomenon”

  1. Maybe the government is leaking all this reverse engineering information on purpose in light of all the Russian, Chinese, Iranian, North Korean aggression. Here we have the most powerful and dominant military force on the planet and now that forced is enhanced with extraterrestrial technology. Our enemies might just be pooping in their collective galoshes.

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  2. […] The Nazis also showed an interest in UAP phenomena, with various projects and research initiatives aimed at understanding and potentially harnessing these unexplained occurrences. This included investigating ancient sites with historical UAP sightings and studying contemporary reports of UAP activity. […]

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  3. The idea that UAP might not fit neatly into “craft” or “natural phenomenon” categories really resonates—it forces us to reconsider our own assumptions about perception and reality. Personally, I’ve wondered if the phenomenon’s resistance to categorization points to something more like a cognitive or environmental filter rather than a physical object. Either way, that framing opens up more useful questions than most hardware-focused theories do.

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  4. One point that stood out is how the article frames UAP as potentially defying easy categorization, much like the “shape of the phenomenon” idea. My own research into historical sightings suggests that labels like “craft” or “orb” often break down when you dig into witness reports. That ambiguity might be the most telling detail of all.

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  5. The idea that UAP might be crossing over from another planet forces us to reconsider the Fermi Paradox in a new light—maybe they aren’t visiting at all, but rather their reality occasionally bleeds into ours. It reminds me of how some indigenous traditions describe sky beings not as travelers through space, but as neighbors in a different layer of the world.

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