“Gistmass rhymes with Christmas, which embodies the same memes. The name Gistmass combines two words. Gist is the essence of a matter, and matter has mass. Hence, the meaning of Gistmass is gift culture emerges from practice of gift principles.” – UV Faust, Gistmass Story
The case of Travis Walton was made into the movie “Fire in the Sky.” Walton was one of seven witnesses in a forest setting. Walton approached alone beneath a hovering, glowing, metallic object that both reflected and gave off light, a description which is consistent with antigravity antimatter surrounded by a reflective electron±positron bubble and ionizing aurora effects.
Gamma radiation from matter-antimatter annihilations is not directly visible to the human eye, but it is ionizing radiation, which strips electrons from atoms and molecules that causes localized aurora effects. When Walton rose up from a crouched position to turn and leave, he felt an electric shock and became unconscious. His companions described an energy beam that hit Walton and lit up the whole area, lifted him a foot into the air, and knocked him back about ten feet, where he fell crumpled to the ground. His companions thought Walton was dead and drove away in panic. Up to this point all witnesses corroborate each other.
Annihilated electrons in air leave behind positive ions of atmospheric molecules. Electrons from the ground took the path of least resistance to neutralize the electric charge potential, directly through Walton’s body. Walton was caught in a path of lightning. The lightning momentarily paralyzed him and disrupted his ability to store long term memory for days. A search party failed to find Walton, however in his disturbed mental state he probably avoided the search party. After recovering his mental faculties he would have no way of recalling what happened during this gap in his memory, which finally normalized five days later and thirty miles away.
The book and the movie about Walton’s lost time embellish it as an extraterrestrial encounter. An egg shaped AMMO will orient itself with the large end on top. Looking at the electron±positron bubble will reflect a distorted image of the observer and give the impression of a small nose, mouth, and ears, with a hairless large domed head. The staring eyes come from the fact that when Walton blinks he cannot see his own reflection do the same. I am Caucasian as is Walton. In looking at the back of a soup spoon, my eye sockets and eyebrows blend into two dark pits. The apparent color of these AMMO is grey. All this is consistent with the description of the Greys, a race of extraterrestrials.
Walton cites orange as the color of the outfits worn by the three Greys surrounding him, when he regained consciousness. The clothes could have been Walton’s own reflection, or a mixture of the primary colors of auroras: red and green. Red and green in equal proportions makes yellow, but with more red it makes orange. Walton picked up something, perhaps a branch, and swung it at the Greys.
The AMMO must have fragmented as annihilations progressed, since Walton saw three objects that he anthropomorphized, but the Greys never communicated with him. The three objects left him or disappeared via annihilations. The tall human like beings could have been his reflection is a larger AMMO, or the searchers looking for him. A puncture found in Walton’s arm could have been caused by a stray grain of antimatter. The rest of the extraterrestrial encounter is the mind of Walton filling in the blanks and trying to make sense of what happened to him, while being predisposed to the idea of flying saucers. His brain was scrambled by the electrostatic discharge, electromagnetic fields, and gamma radiation of the AMMO.
Walton did have a close encounter with extraterrestrials; however the extraterrestrials were inanimate antimatter meteors. Encounters of this sort tell us more about the subject, the observer, than the object. However, more information helps piece together the properties of AMMO from all the different accounts. From Walton’s description we get a glimpse into what he imagined the inside of a flying saucer would look like, just as Daniel W. Fry, Antonio Villas Boas, and Betty Hill gave us a glimpse into their imaginations. A Lie Detector could never detect that these confabulations are false memories struggling to reconcile unusual experiences with everyday reality.
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