Doktor Snake | Edge Cult
Temporal Zone Transmissions
The Alien, the Void, and the Observer
0:00
-5:36

The Alien, the Void, and the Observer

Field notes on consciousness, the UFO phenomenon, and operating calmly at the edge of perception.

The alien has become the ultimate Other.

For some, it is a benevolent rescuer.
For others, a demonic invader.
For still others, an advanced nonhuman intelligence operating beyond our technological understanding.

But what if that division tells us more about human cognition than about extraterrestrials?

In Sekret Machines, Peter Levenda proposes something deceptively simple:
Sit in a darkened room. Remove every image you have of the alien. Deny each one reality. Wait.

Something will assume form.

Now describe it.

Now do you understand?

This is not mysticism.
It is perceptual reduction.

When we strip away projection, myth, UFO imagery, disclosure narratives, and cultural overlays — what remains?

In this episode of Temporal Zone Transmission, I explore:

  • The alien as psychological mirror

  • The limits of language in describing raw awareness

  • The relationship between silence, remote viewing protocols, and disciplined perception

  • Why the military studies anomalous phenomena as strategic uncertainty rather than spiritual revelation

  • And what happens when narrative collapses

Because when narrative drops, something remains.

In my own experience, that “something” is not emptiness.
It is awareness.

Neutral. Still. Observing.

Not personality. Not performance. Not identity maintenance.

Just the Witness.

If we cannot describe our own observing awareness without projecting onto it — calling it spirit, guide, alien, higher self — how would we describe something truly nonhuman?

The Phenomenon — whether understood through UFO research, anomalous aerial encounters, or consciousness studies — may not destabilise us technologically.

It may destabilise us perceptually.

The narrative is not the territory.

Often, it is not even a good map.

Listen to the full transmission below.

And if you try the experiment — reduce input, drop projection, sit in stillness — resist the urge to mythologise what appears.

Observe first.

Describe later.

Perhaps meeting ourselves is the ultimate shock.

Share

Leave a comment

Discussion about this episode

User's avatar

Ready for more?