Anne Strieber continues her enormously popular and important series of interviews with Unknowncountry.com subscribers who have had close encounter experiences. This week, Darin describes his powerful and dramatic experiences.

Here is what he says about what happened to him:

"On Sept. 15, 2009 my wife and I witnessed a UFO and believe we had contact with the occupants. Our lives have changed dramatically and we have had a profound shift of consciousness since then. We were not spiritual then nor were we seeking anything when this occurred.
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Mind reading: ETs can do it and it turns out humans can too. Scientists have found that some couples are so in tune that their brains begin to work in sync. Perhaps we will communicate by simply reading each other’s minds in the future.

Researchers have discovered identical patterns of brain activity in volunteers who became so close they were “physiologically aligned.” This has long been observed in young women who live together, in apartments and dorms: Soon they all have their menstrual periods at the same time. And psychologists have long known that some couples seem to “know” what their partner is thinking or about to say.
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We all wonder what the future will bring. Right now, Contactees are finding that they put out streetlights and disrupting electrical appliances, such as TVs and computers. Now a young girl in Serbia has been discovered to have magnetic hands.

We don’t know if ten-year-old Jelena Momcilov has had Visitor experiences, but her hands can pick up metal objects as if they are imbued with magnets. The Dateline Zero website quotes local university researcher Pavle Premovic as saying, “I’d say this is a kind of unknown bio-magnetism.”
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What happens afterwards? – There’s evolution at work when she wants to cuddle after sex (and he, well, doesn’t).

That’s the conclusion of a new study, anyway. Psychologist Susan Hughes says, “The vast majority of the research on the evolutionary psychology of human reproduction focuses on what’s before and leading up to sexual intercourse, but reproductive strategies don’t end with intercourse–they may influence specific behaviors directly following sex. We predicted that post-coital considerations are experienced quite differently by men and women due to divergent adaptive reproductive strategies.”
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