Now New Zealander Alec Newwald is 70 years old, and 30 years ago in 1989 he was abducted by aliens and held captive at his base for 10 days.
It is reported by news.com.au.
Newwald told his story on the radio show "As You Wish".
He talked about his experiences in earlier years, and also wrote the book "Co-Evolution", which details his unusual case (published in 1999).
It was a normal Monday morning in February 1989 when Alec Neuwald drove to Auckland from the Rotorua area along the mountain road. The journey was supposed to take no more than three hours, but when the man arrived in Oakland, he suddenly learned that a whole 10 days had passed since his departure.
At first, he did not remember anything that happened to him, he only had a feeling of clouded consciousness and a feeling of extreme fatigue. His family and friends had already decided that he had fallen from a mountain path into an abyss.
But then the memory began to return. Alex remembered that he was taken by aliens and kept all these 10 days at his base, telling different things about his super-developed universe.
Alien base. Drawing by Alec Neewald.
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Then an unusual thin creature appeared in front of the man, which he at first took for a ghost. Then the man suddenly realized that he could maneuver his consciousness "by placing it in front or on the side of his body." Then other "spiritual forms" surrounded him.
Then the aliens took Alec somewhere and he saw many buildings of different shapes, and then he was ordered to enter a certain machine that created a special physical body for him. Aliens also use these machines to create physical bodies in which they can be present on our planet, according to Neewald.
Alien structures and transport. Drawing by Alec Neewald.
When the aliens brought the man back to Earth 10 days later and he remembered everything and began to talk about it, he began to receive messages from various "officials" who wanted to know about his paranormal experience and especially about the capabilities of the alien race.
In the years that followed, Alec Neewald found it very difficult to continue living as if nothing had happened to him. And the more he told people about what happened to him, the more difficult his life became.