Even the most boring person has ever looked up at the clear starry sky of the night and wondered what it’s all about and perhaps pondered his or her place in the scheme of things in the mind-bogglingly immense universe that surrounds our little planet in every respect. sides.
The same goes for time; we only live for a short period of time, during which our world revolves around the sun some seventy times, and then we are gone – but during our ‘orbits’ around the sun some of us can ponder the nature of the mind-boggling scale of time and the length of our infinitesimal (but oh so precious) lives in comparison.
The recently revised estimate of the age of the observable universe is that it is 26.7 billion years old; our lifespan is not even a short spark compared to that phenomenal spectrum of time and during our short stay on earth we learn so little.
Our knowledge of history is quite vague; we know that something catastrophic happened to these mysterious and strange aliens – the dinosaurs – 65 million years ago, but no one knows exactly what happened; an asteroid could have hit Earth or a nearby star could have gone supernova.
The subsequent emergence of man – according to the dogma of evolution – is still disputed. Nature never endows a species with more than the demands of its daily existence – and yet the human brain has a phenomenal cubic capacity (1400 cc) that is far out of proportion to our daily needs and goes directly against the evolutionary process.
When we look at our infinitesimal lives in such a way, against the cosmic backdrop of existence, we can realize that humans are not the only intelligent civilization in the universe and that we are most likely receiving visits from beings from other dimensions and also from beings from other dimensions. other parts of the cosmos, and the following alleged incident is an example of this.
On the damp night of Friday, June 4, 1993, around 10 p.m., a 23-year-old woman in Barnston, a village and civil parish in Essex, England, named Jenny, decided to take her Jack Russell Benji for a walk. he had been cooped up in the house all day while Jenny had enjoyed a birthday party at the nearby Devon Doorway with her family and friends.
As soon as Jenny grabbed the leash hanging in the hallway of her Milner Road home, Benji jumped at her with excitement.
So tonight, sweet Jack Russell was going to take a longer walk than usual, and Jenny, who was constantly counting her calories, thought she might take a long walk and eat some of those huge slices of birthday cake she ate at the Devon Doorway. to burn.
The young lady walked with Benji along Barnston Road and Storeton Lane, and there was a full moon in a cloudless sky to light the way on this warm night.
As Jenny walked down Storeton Lane she heard a loud rustling in a huge tree overhanging the road, and it sounded too loud to be a sleepless bird, and Benji barked furiously at the top of the tree, but Jenny could see nothing.
She walked a little faster and then a car passed her, and the driver was considerate enough to dim the vehicle’s headlights.
Seconds after the car passed, there was a screeching sound of tires and a crash, after which the car released the rubber and left the scene. Jenny turned around and saw what she initially saw as a large tree branch on the road, and her mind connected the dots incorrectly.
The sound she had heard earlier in the tree was the branch coming loose, and it was now on Storeton Lane, but why had the car taken off? Most drivers stopped, perhaps to see what damage the fallen branch had done to the car.
Jenny went to look at the branch, and Benji somehow slipped out of his leash and ran toward it with a whimper. That ‘branch’ came off the road surface and stood up; it was the stuff of nightmares – it was a humanoid figure in a black, skin-tight suit, and it had an elongated head with a single orange light where the eyes would be.
The height of this unearthly, spindly figure was about twenty feet, maybe more, and he turned to look down at Benji, who was standing at the thing’s feet, barking. Jenny felt a weakness in her legs as she was overcome with pure fear.
‘Benji! Come here! Benji!’ Jenny shouted, barely able to get her words out. The thing started walking towards her, and Jenny turned and knew she would never be able to run; she was out of shape and no matter how scared she was, she couldn’t leave her dog at the mercy of that thing.
She backed away, wondering what to do. There was a house about fifty meters away. Maybe she could call there and tell them to call the police.
The strange giant figure stopped and then walked into a field next to Storeton Lane. Benji ran after the entity, which Jenny suspected was an alien.
She started crying when a car drove into Storeton Lane and flashed its headlights at her. It turned out to be David, a former boyfriend of Jenny’s, and he asked her why she was crying and she couldn’t answer at first, and when David saw her holding the yellow dog leash, he asked her where Benji was.
Taking a deep breath, Jenny then talked about the extraordinary incident she had witnessed and expected David to doubt her story, but he grabbed her hand and squeezed it, then asked, “You say it was about this field. ?’ and nodded at the farmland turned silver by the full moon.
Jenny nodded and David walked back to his car and returned with a flashlight. He went into the field as Jenny walked behind him and said, “I wonder what it is?”
“I don’t know, I just want my dog back;” Jenny replied, starting to cry again, and then she added, “David, thank you for believing me – I wouldn’t have believed this if I hadn’t seen the thing with my own eyes.”
“We’ll find Benji, he’s a cunning dog,” said David, and he said he thought he could hear a dog barking in the distance, where a wood bordered the field.
“I hear that dog – it’s not Benji,” Jenny said with a very sad look on her face, her tears glistening in the moonlight.
The couple were walking around an old farmhouse and the beam of David’s torch picked up something huge heading north.
David said he wasn’t sure if it was a trick of the light, but it had looked like a giant figure and must have gone along an embankment to cross a railway line.
He and Jenny went up Station Road and then walked into a field again, eventually having to stop because the field ended at the M53 motorway, so they turned back, and Jenny burst into tears.
She told David she would never see Benji again and blamed herself for not buying a new belt; the old one was frayed, she remembered in a choked voice.
When the couple finally arrived back at Storeton Lane, they saw the giant silhouetted figure getting out of David’s car.
David seemed fascinated by the sight and he ran to his car and urged Jenny to hurry up because he was going to chase that thing, but when he opened the car door he got the shock of his life when Benji came out jumped and ran towards Jenny, his tail wagging furiously.
Jenny picked up her beloved dog and hugged him and David almost pushed Jenny and Benji into the car. He turned the vehicle around and drove after the towering figure, but it seemed to melt away in the moonlight.
No one believed Jenny and David’s story, but there were a few UFO reports around that part of Barnston and the Landican area at the time.
The amazing experience brought Jenny and David back together and they later got married.
What did Benji experience that night?
Whatever that entity was, it appears to have been an animal lover, who placed Benji in David’s car before returning from wherever he came from. If only dogs could talk.