Paranormal Old Pueblo -

El Chupacabra lives. The mythical monster has been spotted in Texas, Oklahoma, and even Connecticut in recent weeks.

El Chupacabra sightings hardly cause Tucsonans to bat an eyelash anymore. He’s old news to us.  One of the first U.S. encounters with the goat sucker occured right here in Tucson, 13 years ago. 

Or, did it?

The story goes that in the middle of the night on May 11, 1996, Billy Nubian awoke to the sound of panicked bleating from his two goats, Mattie and Delilah. While Nubian raced outside, El Chupacabra selected Mattie for dinner, and a life and death struggle between goat and creature ensued. Nubian startled the creature and reached Mattie in time. The creature shrieked at Nubian before he fled. Mattie was left unharmed.

A girl named Sarah (no last name) claimed to have encountered the creature in Tucson in 2003. The story goes that Sarah encountered El Chupacabra in her front yard. The creature leapt toward her and hissed before vacating the property. Sarah was left unharmed.

Yeah.

Has anyone bothered to study the name of the the first eyewitness? Billy…Nubian. Nubian is a goat breed. Yet, accounts still spread all over the world that Tucson resident “Billy Nubian” was one of the first to report a chupacabra. Billy…Goat.

People, please quit spreading that story. 

There have been no other pubilcized chupacabra sightings here in Tucson since 2003. Yet, encounters with El Chupacabra continue to spread across the United States.

An announcement was made in recent weeks that a dead “chupacabra” would be put on display at a creationist museum in Phoenix. That’s Phoenix, New York  –  NOT Phoenix, Arizona. Whew!

A real estate developer in the small New York town of Phoenix acquired the dead critter in Texas. He had it stuffed and placed on display. The creature’s carcass stands frozen in a menacing pose for the whole world to see.

It’s nothing we haven’t seen before.

It looks like a mangy coyote, like all the others found in recent years. It looks nothing like eyewitness accounts of the creature.  A tissue sample has been sent for testing. So, we shall wait and see what the experts have to say about this one.

Fox News discussed the creature on display recently. Who knew after all these years that the word “chupacabra” would be so hard to pronounce.

At least ”billy goat” is easier to say.

CREDIT: You Tube Video

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Alexandra Holzer: Woman in the Paranormal

Alexandra Holzer: Woman in the Paranormal

This is part 5 and the conclusion of my interview with Alexandra Holzer, daughter of Hans Holzer who was known as “Father of the Paranormal” and “Father of Ghost Hunting.”

Find out how you can chat with Alexandra LIVE during a ghost investation at The Shanley Hotel. Details following the conclusion of this interview.

________________________

Alexandra, I am attending the TusCon 36 Sci-Fi, Horror and Fantasy Literary Convention, November 13th through the 15th here in Tucson. Do you have any advice for aspiring Tucson writers in this genre?

Just write and write some more. Get it out and then go back to it with edits and don’t over work your work. If you find yourself doing too many rewrites you are doomed and will go mad.

Seriously, trust yourself, first and foremost, and trustthat your desire to write comes from within. The rest will happen. Writing is a slow, torturous process and you need to be strong to keep at it.

Your mind writes quicker than thy fingers to the keyboard. I remember watching my father type away on his Smith-Corona and using white-out and cursing a bit off and on as he smacked the carriage return lever to get to the next line. Ding. If you have distractions like children, chores, etc. in life, it takes longer but you’ll get there.

On publishing there are two routes you can go.  Back in the day all there was, was the traditional route in which the publisher did all the work from editing to promoting. They paid an advanced fee if what they felt the book would sell in a certain amount of time. The author would embark on speaking engagements and book signings at reputable stores.

Today, traditional still exists, but unless [the author is] well-known or up there in ranks, advances don’t exist and the author has to work very hard to tell the world about your new title. 

The second route is self-publishing like a Lulu.com or Amazon.com in which you pay to have your own work published, distributed and sold. It all depends on what you can afford and what option suits you best in. I have done both and I prefer traditional.

Question 7:  I married a skeptic. Is your husband a believer in the paranormal? 

He became more [of a believer] when I had my awakening over six-years ago. His uncle came through and I started rambling off to him about this gold cross that was from his confirmation and his uncle was yelling at me to him where he lost it and how reckless he was. Youth. What can you do? Many others for him and his friends started crowding my living room and it became a great big spirit party.

You know he has such great respect for my late father and those two were history buffs. So every year my father would get excited in gifting these huge coffee table books on the Civil War, Presidents, Nostradamus, Dracula and Castles. It was a love affair for literature and history. The spirit side came from me once I awoke back to my roots and all my childhood experiences having to deal with all that I didn’t want to when young. The main reason of that awakening was to get me back into my first love, writing. It was a spirit push and today I look back and am amazed how it works over there. I am lucky because some people never awaken and finish out their life path missing out on so much life. That’s how I see it anyway.

 

Thank you, Alexandra for chatting with me.  I had so many more questions. Fortunately, there’s an opportunity for fans to ask more questions this weekend!

Chat with Alexandra during a LIVE broadcast this weekend during a live online ghost investigation at The Shanley Hotel!

WHEN? Friday, November 13th at 8:00 pm ET (Friday the 13th!) & Saturday November 14th at 10:00 pm ET. WHERE? Online on GTVFacebook users can also become a fan of GTV’s Facebook Page to receive reminders of the event.

After the LIVE event, stay up to date with Alexandra anytime, five different ways:

Facebook group for women in the paranormal field to interact with each other (and with Alexandra): Woman In The Paranormal

Facebook Fan Page for Alexandra Holzer

Facebook Group: In Memory of Dr. Hans Holzer

MySpace: Haunting Holzer

Or keep up with Alexandra Holzer, via her website.

Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5

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Alexandra Holzer: Woman in the Paranormal

Alexandra Holzer: Woman in the Paranormal

This is part 4 of my interview with Alexandra Holzer, daughter of Hans Holzer who was known as “Father of the Paranormal” and “Father of Ghost Hunting,” who is an accomplished paranormal authority herself. 
 
Question 5: What paranormal experience have you had that truly stands out in your memory? During your upbringing with the prevalence of ghosts, has anything surprised you?

 

One in particular was when I was with my Parisian grandmother, Rosine Claire. She is my mother’s mother and still of the living aged ninety-nine. I would frequent Long Island, New York often to visit her and in one place she resided had some activity that went unexplained.

I was around the age of eight, same as my second daughter and it would just be my Nana and I. Upon my visit, after we settled in and had a meal, it was very quiet. She lived in a gated community by the bay in a town called Patchogue. It was deafening, the silence, especially coming from the city with all the cars whizzing by below your window.

Suddenly, we both heard faint singing from downstairs. Nana had been anxiously awaiting my arrival to share this experience as she was like a kid in a para-candy shop.

Now, the way these apartments were set up, you either live on the upstairs part with a balcony or choose the downstairs walk in with patio. She was the upstairs apartment.

The faint female voice would stop, then as Nana and I held our breaths to hear again, she’d start up again. Nana’s eyes were wide and she told me this has been happening for some time.

I don’t know what ‘possessed’ me, ahem, but I threw myself down on the floor and placed my ear on her yellow shag carpeting to get a better listen. Burnt my face in the process. The sound vibrated into my ear and I heard a voice whisper my name. That was it. I jumped up and said, “Game over!” I was so scared yet excited at what I had just experienced.

Of course, the apartment below had been vacant for months as no-one had been renting for a while. The people next door were at work as Nana knew everyone and their schedules.

Nana is psychic and had so many stories she’d tell me growing up and she felt this was the spirit of a woman that was passing by. I couldn’t get to sleep that night. I wanted to know more. Also I wanted to stick around for her next show. She could certainly carry a tune.

Continue to the conclusion of this article: On writing, skeptics and your chance to interact with Alexandra.

Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5

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Alexandra Holzer: Woman in the Paranormal

Alexandra Holzer: Woman in the Paranormal

This is part 3 of my interview with Alexandra Holzer, daughter of Hans Holzer who was known as “Father of the Paranormal” and “Father of Ghost Hunting”, who is an accomplished paranormal authority herself.  

Question 4:  What challenges have you faced as a woman in the paranormal?

I am finding more and more that it looks more appealing to have men as the leaders versus woman. There’s nothing wrong with either but just seems from the up-springs of more paranormal cable television shows men seem to lead the pack. It feels a bit cavemanish to me. 

Now, interesting enough on major networks for the shows ‘Medium’ and ‘Ghost Whisperer’, they use a woman as the lead because the role is of being a medium. Funny. I feel like the perception perhaps could be women are only to be at the forefront and used as mediums and the men do the rest of the investigative work. I have had to and still am fighting tooth, nail and ghost to get my voice heard on many different levels. I bring a lot of different things to the table as a woman as a result of gender challenges. 
 
It’s not just the fact of my father’s legacy which in itself is a huge torch to carry on and still too close to my heart. I am still grieving and have yet to place his ashes properly, as there have been family issues. But, I have them with me and I’ll leave it at that. 

I am also a mother, nurturer, caregiver, writer, conceptual thinker, radio persona, and on it goes. I am not just focused on one particular area for the field. I am just too darn curious to learn about more than spirit activity and demons. I am looking for the meat, you know? I always can do what’s right for me as a woman and human being, and whatever work I do and associations I keep reflect upon my family; so I need to choose wisely and cautiously as the field itself has become quite a danger zone at times. I am referring to the human kind rather than the unknown.

Continue to Part 4: Woman in the Paranormal, True Ghost Story, Part 4 of 5

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This Wednesday, another spin off of Ghost Hunters will make its debut on the SyFy Channel. Premiering on Veterans Day, millions will watch Ghost Hunters “veterans” Steve Gonsalves and Dave Tango train new recruits.

Ghost Hunters Academy is a “college edition” of Ghost Hunters, which takes five college aged “recruits” through ghost hunting training. It is interesting to note that one Ghost Hunters Academy team member has Arizona ties: Heathyr Hoffman.

Heathyr attends Arizona State University where she is currently a graduate student, studying Counseling. She completed her undergraduate studies in Psychology at Northern Arizona University. She has a sense of humor, apparently, because her MySpace page  lists her undergraduate minor area of study as: stress.

Heathyr also founded and directs Arizona Research & Mediumship Society (ARMS), a paranormal research and investigation team. A very attractive girl, she is also a model.

Earlier this year, Ghost Hunters International added Arizona’s Paul Bradford to their team. Bradford, who originally hails from Britain but calls Arizona home, will be in Tucson for the TusCon Sci-Fi Convention on the weekend of the 13th – which is just around the corner.

What’s this recent surge in Arizona ghost hunting television personalities all about? Maybe Arizonans just have a knack for ghost hunting and the paranormal.

Ghost Hunters Academy premiers on Syfy, Wednesday, November 11, 2009, at 10:00 pm (9pm Central Time). Check area listings.

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Alexandra Holzer: Woman in the Paranormal

Alexandra Holzer: Woman in the Paranormal

This is part 2 of my interview with Alexandra Holzer, daughter of Hans Holzer who was known as “Father of the Paranormal” and ”Father of Ghost Hunting,” who is an accomplished paranormal authority herself. 

To read  part 1, click here.

 Question 3: Fathers and daughters don’t always agree about everything. Do you have specific views and beliefs about the paranormal that don’t align with your father’s? If so, what are they?

 No they do not. The only ones I feel to mention are on the topic of orbs and demons. On orbs, he felt they had many explanations to them and not a strong argument for spirit appearing whereas I feel the opposite. In many of my photos over the decades I have gone back and have found apparitions, orbs and strings of electrical light varying in size, color and shape for no apparent reason. That was when I was not aware of my abilities and didn’t really care. I thought it would be interesting to go back and see if ‘they’ had been there all along.

Second area of disagreement is on demons. He felt that there were no angels or demons and that we had negatives and positives. The negative is attracted to the negative souls therefore producing an evil atmosphere and environment for that person. Like attracts like. I feel that as I see all these books coming out as of late on the topics of shadow people, demonic possessions growing again and so forth am not quite sold on it, as well. However, as I have not had a bad experience with such an entity it is not fair for me to say. But, I do believe there are bad souls that linger festering and can act like a demon. They are also called in-laws. JUST kidding. Seriously though, I have yet to encounter such claims and that’s what they are for me right now, claims. I hear the stories and read them which are quite frightening and so perhaps I am not too interested in bumping into one would you?

No, I am not interested in bumping into one either!

Continue to Part 3: Is there a paranormal glass ceiling? Part 3 of 5 

Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 |Part 5

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Alexandra Holzer: Woman in the Paranormal

Alexandra Holzer: Woman in the Paranormal

In April of this year, the paranormal community received the news that the Father of Paranormal Research, Hans Holzer, passed away. Holzer earned other monikers during his lifetime, like “Father of the Paranormal” and “Father of Ghost Hunting.” Holzer wrote more than 140 books on the paranormal. He served as a consultant to the 1970’s hit show “In Search of…”, hosted by Leonard Nimoy. He even had his own television show called “Ghost Hunter.” In the paranormal world, the news of the passing of Hans Holzer gave cause for everyone to pause for a moment, and reflect on his accomplishments. Dan Aykroyd communicated it best, when he said recently that Hans Holzer was “probably the world’s most credible and respected ghostbuster.”

Holzer’s lifelong work in the paranormal cemented a foundation on which future generations could build. The research in the paranormal continues worldwide. The Holzer torch has been passed to his daughter, and she is off and running with it.

Alexandra Holzer, 38, hails from a family of paranormal royalty in more ways than one. Holzer’s mother is Countess Catherine Buxhoeveden, Countess to the Baron side of the Royal Russian Family. The lineage includes Catherine the Great. Holzer’s 2008 memoir Growing Up Haunted: A Ghostly Memoir tells what it was like to grow up as a “haunted” Holzer. The book also provides details of her family lineage, including the collision between the paranormal and royalty, when her father met her mother.

Holzer does not live the life of a princess. In fact, her daily life is busy and hectic. She is married with four children under the age of 11. She writes sci-fi fantasy novels, horror thrillers, children’s short stories, poetry, and screenplays. She regularly guests on the paranormal talk radio circuit. She has a growing list of projects including reality television shows in development, as well as a movie.

Between all of this, she made time to chat with Paranormal Old Pueblo.

Question 1: I read that you have four children who keep you very busy and close to home. Can you already sense that one of them might follow in the Holzer footsteps?

I most certainly do. The eldest is only ten but is quite aware of her grandfather’s books and mine. She would more than likely follow as already an avid reader and writer who has the creative side in the arts for music, art and literature. She likes ghosts and witches, and making up fantasy lands. “Twilight” is her new thing now. Oy vey.

Question 2: What upcoming shows or projects would you like to share?

I am working on a new screenplay, as one is already in the process as we speak of ‘interest’ as I can’t say much more about that. But my producer and I are very excited and hopeful.

I began two new books and am looking to get back on air with a partner friend of mine who’s a veteran DJ of twenty-five years. I created a show for a station in Berks County, Pennsylvania for Y102 Rock FM where he works. We’re working on doing that again.

I get invitations for many lectures at many venues. However, as you know, I rarely venture away from New York. But, as we move along, coping with the obstacles and learning to live with Type 1 diabetes for our six-year old daughter, now on the insulin pump. We need to live and accept nothing is perfect. So, I am slowly taking on some venues and we’ll see how it goes.

I am not big on these conferences, you know, as the few I have done didn’t do much for me. I like talking to people but the book selling/vendor part isn’t for me. I am not a salesman and cannot lie. I ended up giving away more books then I sold one year. I have to work on that. I am also in talks for my TV shows I have written and continue to write as I work with my agent and management team.

A lot is happening, slowly at times, but it is moving. I am able to connect with some good souls and industry professionals who believe in me and respect my back story and life. The rest will flow. And who knows what will come down the pike for me as I work very hard to let others know I exist and have something positive to say. Period. I won’t give up and I don’t mind who thinks what as long as I help and make a difference.

I am also active in helping some local animal rescue services that have given us two of our own; and as a Vegan now, feel even more ’spirited’, if you will, to lead that pack and promote adoption and rescue versus breeding and selling.

Of course the nearest and dearest to my heart is the JDRF (Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation) for children’s diabetes, and we’re hoping and praying they find a cure to revive the pancreas. There are talks about using the thirty-year old TB vaccine as it has many uses so we’re hopeful.

 Continue to Part 2: Woman in the Paranormal Interview, Orbs and Demons Part 2 of 5

Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5

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I have always attributed my interest in the paranormal to Scooby Doo. Those meddling kids (Fred, Daphne, Shaggy, and Velma) were the original Ghost Hunters for me. They debunked all the paranormal cases. I always hoped they wouldn’t. Then, this morning, I said, “Ruh-Roh Raggy!” The Scooby Doo gang wasn’t solely responsible for my paranormal interest. I forgot about Sesame Street.

I learned to count from The Count, a vampire with an affinity for numbers. Cookie Monster drew attention to the alphabet as he munched away at letters. I was a Sesame Street kid. This morning, I awoke to a glorious sight. A Google Doodle that incorporates Cookie Monster to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of Sesame Street.

This is hands-down, the BEST EVER Google Doodle. I love how his “googly” eyes make the Google “O”s.

cookiemonster

 

 Sesame Street celebrates 40 years, and with a Tucson connection, of course! My fellow University of Arizona Alum, Joan Ganz Cooney, is a founder of The Children’s Television Workshop. Without Joan Ganz Cooney, there would be no Cookie Monster, no Big Bird, no Count, no Elmo…no puppets at all. She stated during pre-production of the show in 1968, ”if we can’t get Jim Henson, we won’t use any puppets at all.”  I’m really glad they got Jim Henson. The late puppeteer provided entertainment and education throughout my childhood. Henson made the best paranormal puppets.

I learned how to spell via Sesame Street. My love of letters and words can be traced back to Cookie Monster. I had to learn to read fast. I had to read words and letters before he would eat them!

Happy 40th Anniversary Sesame Street!

cookie2

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Tucson is in for a real treat on this upcoming Friday the 13th!
 
On this day, the 36th Annual TusCon Science-Fiction Convention (TusCon 36) will kick off events with a jam-packed weekend of sci-fi, fantasy and horror. After all, this is “the best little sci-fi, fantasy and horror convention in Arizona.” It is also the longest running sci-fi convention in Arizona. This weekend event, scheduled to take place in less than two weeks at the Inn Suites downtown, has something for everyone.
 
Of course, I am going to take advantage of the chance to get some ghost hunting tips from Paul Bradford, who is currently the newest team member on Ghost Hunters International (GHI). If the name sounds familar, Paul is the co-founder of Arizona’s own Sonoran Paranormal Investigations (SPI). SPI is a proud member of the “TAPS Family.” If you watch Ghost Hunters or GHI, you know what I am talking about.
 
Bradford will hold a session on ghost hunting equipment that should prove to be very informative. Paul will also co-host a “Ghost Stories FAQ” session with “Tucson Ghost Girl” Rebecca Petithory-Hayes. 
 
I caught up with Petithory-Hayes this evening. I asked her if she has slowed down since Halloween. She hasn’t slowed down because she’s preparing for the upcoming TusCon event. If you haven’t participated in a “Tucson Ghost Girl” downtown tour, you will have the chance on the evening of Saturday the 14th. A downtown ghost tour led by Petithory-Hayes is on the convention agenda. If you wish to take part in this particular 2.5 hour session, remember to bring your walking shoes.
 
Petithory-Hayes has been involved with this conference since 1988. She’s even on the conference committee. The Tucson Ghost Girl is always on the go.
 
If writing sci-fi, fantasy or horror is your thing, published authors will lead writing and publishing sessions. Weston Osche is the Guest of Honor at this year’s event. Osche is a Bram Stoker Award Winning Author (Scarecrow Gods, 2005. Delerium Books). 
 
Baja Arizona Science Fiction Assosciation (BASFA)  is the organization behind the convention. You can view the convention agenda on their website. There could be some additions to the agenda as the date approaches. Believe me, this conference has something for everyone: art, literature, videos, anime, ghosts, and computer gaming. You can view the convention agenda on BAFSA’s website.
 
Oh, and about that computer gaming, TusCon partners with TusLAN.  TusLAN is comprised of some serious gamers. The Tucson Citizen’s own Thomas Hruska has mentioned the conference in recent days in his Gamerz blog. There’s space for 50 gamers and you can BYOC (Bring Your Own Computer) with prior registration. Extreme Mobile Gaming will also have their mobile gaming center on-site. There will be some serious tournament action downtown on that weekend.
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When: November 13 - 15, 2009  (YEAH! Starts on Friday the 13th!)
Where: Inn Suites Hotel, 475 N. Granada Ave, Tucson, AZ  85701
Cost:Membership is $45 at the door, but discounted rates are available if only attending a portion of the event: $20 (Fri), $35 (Sat) or $15 (Sun) 
 
The Tucson Ghost Girl tour is not included in the membership price. Bring an extra $5 per person for this event, if planning to participate.   
tuscon
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TucsonHistory

More than half a century before the “Balloon Boy” family hoax in Colorado, another eccentric family was involved with weather experimentation. This family resided for a while in Tucson. Last month, we were temporarily tricked into believing that a runaway weather balloon that bore a strange resemblance to a UFO, contained a trapped little Colarado boy. In the 1950s, Tucson was home base for a series of weather experiments conducted by a family. These experiments were not conducted for publicity. They were conducted in the name of science, though the science behind them was anything but mainstream.

According to the man who headed these experiments, his research culminated into a battle with UFOs in Tucson. This is a fairly long post that brings to light some pretty strange history in Southern Arizona.

Primarily, it focuses on a couple of well-known residents who had a connection with each other in a fairly odd way. These men left a lasting legacy in the world, even though their views were far from mainstream. This post does not advocate sexual or occult practices. It simply touches briefly on their lives and their connection to eachother, as well as their connection to Arizona.

It’s a slight deviation from the “normal” paranormal topics normally contained in these pages.

A battle with UFOs in Tucson

In 1954, Tucson was experiencing growing pains. World War II directly influenced a surge in population with troop deployments to Davis Monthan Air Force Base in the 1940’s. The population kept growing after that. Tucson’s boundaries were expanding. Tucson was in the midst of a severe drought. However, in 1954, a world famous scientist relocated to Tucson to battle the drought. This man not only took credit for bringing that rain during his five month residency, but he also claimed he was engaged in a battle with UFOs during his stay.

This man’s name was Wilhelm Reich.

Wilhelm Reich was an Austrian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who trained under Sigmund Freud in Vienna. He was known for forging ahead with work for which the world wasn’t quite ready. He was labeled as a “quack” by the FDA and deemed mentally ill. However, Wilhelm Reich was once connected to the Old Pueblo and this connection is an interesting one. It might be a bit bizarre.

Reich experimented with a biological energy he called “orgone energy.” Reich claimed to have found a way to harness this energy. The energy was to be used for a variety of purposes from cancer treatment to weather experimentation. The weather experimentation brought him to Tucson all the way from Portland, Maine.

This concept of Orgone was derived from Freud’s concept of libido, while Carl Jung identified the libido as psychic energy. Wilhelm Reich expanded on these concepts with his theories about orgasmic energy. We will return to this idea of Orgone and delve deeper into it later. However, you get the idea. This was biological energy that Reich claimed to have harnessed for the greater good of mankind.

At about the same time in 1954, the world was fascinated with UFOs, and so was William Reich. In fact, much of what was wrong with the world, according to Wilhelm Reich, was due to repressed sexuality and UFO invaders. The term UFO was relatively new at the time. In 1947, a pilot by the name of Kenneth Arnold reported seeing an object that was shaped like a saucer while he flew over Mountain Rainier, Washington. His report gave rise to the terms “flying saucer” or “flying disc” to describe these alien crafts. That same year, 1947, was the Roswell incident. By the early 1950’s the United States Air Force coined the term UFO, or Unidentifiable Flying Object. Popular movies from the 50’s closet of UFO fears include War of the Worlds, Devil Girl from Mars, It Came from Outer Space and The Day the Earth Stood Still. These films thrilled the general population and caused many to look toward the sky. Wilhelm Reich’s eyes tended to be already fixed on the sky.

When Reich relocated his family to Tucson in 1954, he drove through Roswell, NM, on his way to Arizona, feeding his fascination with UFOs. Though Reich called the otherworldly life forms EAs (”E” for Energy and “A” for Alpha). EAs impacted the weather, according to Reich. Reich enrolled his son, Peter, in Wetmore Elementary School, located on Wetmore Road just west of Oracle. The family took up residence near the school. Peter would later pen a memoir about his father in a book published in 1973, called “A Book of Dreams”, where he recounted his memories of living in Tucson with his father. In that book, Peter recalled receiving queries from classmates about his dad’s scientific equipment – specifically about a large contraption that his dad called the Cloudbuster. The Cloudbuster functioned as a rainmaker. According to Peter, the contraption could also disable EAs. In Peter’s memoir, he recalls a UFO/EA battle that took place in Tucson on May 12, 1954 where the Reich family managed to make the EAs disappear from the sky. Peter Reich recalled this incident as fondly as the time he went to Jacome’s Department store downtown to buy a “real Stetson hat for $12.”

During Wilhelm Reich’s stay in Tucson, he deduced that a mountain range prevented rain from reaching Tucson. So for the next several months, Reich would travel further west with his cloudbuster until it rained in March 1955. Reich packed up and returned to Maine. In August of that very year, Tucson experienced the wettest month on record. No one can really say that Reich was responsible for clearing the way for the record rainfall. It rained in August 1955 like it hasn’t rained since, as documented on the National Weather Service website.  

Post-Tucson Years

The next two years were not happy ones for the Reich family. The federal government was not keen about these weather experiments and other strange research conducted by a man considered too radical in his thoughts and actions. The Food and Drug Administration filed a complaint against Reich, in which they declared that orgone energy did not exist.  In June of 1956, Reich’s works were burned at his Maine estate by the federal government. Reich was arrested. He was examined and deemed paranoid with delusions of grandiosity.

Wilhelm Reich died of a heart attack in prison on November 3, 1957. He was 60 years old.

Almost three years after this death, in March of 1960, the FDA incinerated several tons of Reich’s books, journals and papers in New York. Whether or not Reich brought rain to Tucson, his surviving works are still referenced by those outside mainstream science. This post only touches on a small part of a man, whose life was complicated, controversial and disturbing. To read more about him and his other research and experiments, visit Wikipedia or the Wilhelm Reich Museum websites.

Cloudbusting

Cloudbusting

Wilhelm Reich lives on in music and literature. Bob Dylan, Kate Bush, Patti Smith, and other songwriters have written and recorded songs about Wilhelm Reich. Jack Kerouac referenced Reich’s work in his book On the Road, as did William Burroughs through his own works. The idea of orgasmic energy didn’t die either. In fact, the idea of orgasmic energy was studied before and after Wilhelm Reich. Before Wilhelm Reich, there was Aleister Crowley, and there were others before him. There are many after him, as well. In fact, much of Reich’s unpublished papers were stored at Harvard Medical School. A stipulation in Reich’s last will and testament ordered that his works remain unopened until 50 years after his death. The anniversary of his death was in November of 2007, as anticipated back then via an AP news article

Wilhelm Reich believed that pent up orgasmic energy manifested bad energy. He believed that the process of building up and releasing this energy was so strong that it could cure cancer. It could even manipulate the atmosphere to bring rain. Reich asserted that the ability to love was dependent on a person’s ability to make love with “orgastic potency.” This hypothetical form of energy was dubbed “orgone energy” by Wilhelm Reich. Orgone energy, if harnessed, could change the world according to Reich.

Suppressed sexual energies at “the root of all evil”

Before Wilhelm Reich, an occultist from England named Aleister Crowley also dabbled in the powers of orgasmic energy. Crowley called it “Sex Magick.”

Both Wilhelm Reich and Aleister Crowley believed that suppression of sex was at the root of all evil and violence in the world.

“Each individual has an absolute right to satisfy his sexual instinct as is physiologically proper for him. The one injunction is to treat all such acts as sacraments. One should not eat as the brutes, but in order to enable one to do one’s will. The same applies to sex. We must use every faculty to further the one object of our existence.” – Aleister Crowley in “The Book of the Law”

Crowley believed that the energies built up and released during the sex act was capable of being used for magic. Crowley emphasized sex as a supreme magical power. There was more than this belief in the application of sexual energies that bound these men together. Their link came in the form of a man named Israel Regardie.

Regardie took an interest in Aleister Crowley’s published works in the late 1920’s. After corresponding with Crowley, Regardie received an invitation to become Crowley’s secretary in the United Kingdom. Regardie served Crowley for four years before relocating to the United States to become a chiropractor. He studied psychoanalysis at the same time, and he would eventually teach Freudian, Jungian and Reichian psychiatry. Regardie took an interest in Wilhelm Reich’s orgone energy theory. However, after studying both Crowley’s and Reich’s theories of the powers of orgasmic energy, Regardie adopted alternate views. Among them, Regardie believed that these energies were indeed powerful. Those energies could manifest greatly by applying them toward one’s own spiritual and creative endeavors. Regardie’s writings and viewpoints provide much of the foundation for modern Western occultism. He wrote volumes of books before retiring to Sedona, Arizona.

Donald Michael Kraig of the Llewellyn Journal states that four of Regardie’s books put together provide a comprehensive course in magick. There is much more to tell about the lives of Regardie and Reich, but the resulting documentation would produce volumes. The idea was to touch on their connection to each other, as well as their connection to southern Arizona.

Wilhelm Reich and Israel Regardie came to Arizona for vastly different reasons. Wilhelm Reich left Arizona after his work was completed. Israel Regardie retired to Arizona in 1981 after many of his lifelong works were published. Regardie would live the remainder of his life in the desert southwest.

Regardie died of a heart attack in a Sedona restaurant while dining with friends on March 10, 1985. He was 77 years old.

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