Keep your eyes on the skies over Colorado as you embark on a whirlwind tour of modern UFO phenomena occurring in eleven locations throughout the state. From the Rocky Mountains to the Denver International Airport to a lonely and isolated UFO watchtower in the San Luis Valley, join paranormal investigator Richard Estep and other leaders in the field of Colorado ufology to uncover some of the state's most harrowing stories. Are we alone in the universe, or is there something more to these stories from the Centennial State?
I'm a 48-year-old child who has no plans to ever actually grow up.
I make my living as a paramedic, clinical educator, for a busy hospital system and work as a street medic in a 911 system.
In my free time, I serve as the director of the Boulder County Paranormal Research Society, and investigate claims of haunted properties, people, and objects on both sides of the Atlantic. I love to read, particularly SF/Fantasy, history and historical fiction, the paranormal, and basically anything that piques my interest. I appear on the TV shows Haunted Hospitals, Paranormal 911, Paranormal Night Shift, Haunted Case Files, and several others.
I am an avid video gamer, table-top gamer, and love to build Lego. My wife and I are the proud humans of five adopted rescue cats and one smelly but adorable dog.
I would have given this book 5 stars, for it was truly thought provoking. I do however wonder at the conclusion’s statement of “we (humans and ETs) are fundamentally all one.” This was not elaborated on. I’ve heard the “we are all one” ideology from religion, spiritual gurus, now the paranormal community. Yet none of them elaborate on what they mean by this ideology. We are not the same. Physically we are all unique. Spiritually we are not alike. We have different preferences in both abstract and concrete things. Uniqueness is the true beauty of a thing. Individuality should be protected and guarded as something sacred for there is only one of it. You being you, and me being me. The ideology of oneness seeks to strip what is most sacred. The one-of-a-kind that each soul is on their own or must discover.
This is by no means a religious book. But it touched on something religious at the end without elaboration, so it felt out of place. Otherwise a great read that I highly recommend.