What happens when you refuse to deny what you've seen? For over sixty years, retired IT programmer Bill Berrigan has carried secrets that defies everything his culture tells him should be possible. Not a conspiracy theory, not a fantasy but a lived reality so persistent, so detailed, so undeniable it demands to be witnessed if not believed. In 2025 Bill recounted UFO sightings with striking precision and detail.
This is yet not another UFO book trying to convince you of something extraordinary. Instead, it's the engineer-like account of what alien contact actually looks and feels like when woven into an ordinary life. Its from a man driving to the grocery store, taking out the trash on a Thursday morning, riding his bicycle, and walking home from the park at sunset. Without warning, without permission, the extraordinary interrupts.
What makes this book different from typical UFO experiences is what happens after each sighting. The book doesn't end with "I saw a UFO", it begins there. It examines what these encounters mean, how they connect to one another, whether the aliens are aware of Bill's thoughts - what it reveals about consciousness, free will, and the nature of reality itself. Bill is not a career UFOlogist nor a professional researcher seeking attention.
His ordinariness is precisely what makes his testimony credible. He has nothing to gain and everything to lose by speaking honestly about this life. Over Connecticut, over Baltimore and over St. Louis - six distinct sightings in 2025 of twelve UFOs, each personally meaningful over weeks if not months of contemplation. Bill considers the statistical improbability of repeated encounters, along with the mental discipline required to accept what conventional explanations cannot identify.
It's the account of someone who has questioned himself relentlessly, who's considered reasonable explanations, who's even attempted to live as if this part of his life weren't real. If you wonder what authentic alien contactee experience looks and feels like - stripped of sensationalism, presented with precision, grounded in the mundane details of daily life - this book answers that. If you doubt aliens are real, this book offers something more valuable than proof, it offers testimony.
When received with an open mind, it could change your perspective of UFO and paranormal phenomena. For readers willing to set aside what they've been told is possible and simply receive what one person has lived in witness, this book is essential. If you're skeptical, but curious about what a credible firsthand account sounds like, this book will challenge your assumptions. If you believe aliens are real and want to understand what contact actually looks like from someone living it, this book is for you.
What happens when you refuse to deny what you've seen? For over sixty years, retired IT programmer Bill Berrigan has carried secrets that defies everything his culture tells him should be possible. Not a conspiracy theory, not a fantasy but a lived reality so persistent, so detailed, so undeniable it demands to be witnessed if not believed. In 2025 Bill recounted UFO sightings with striking precision and detail.
This is yet not another UFO book trying to convince you of something extraordinary. Instead, it's the engineer-like account of what alien contact actually looks and feels like when woven into an ordinary life. Its from a man driving to the grocery store, taking out the trash on a Thursday morning, riding his bicycle, and walking home from the park at sunset. Without warning, without permission, the extraordinary interrupts.
What makes this book different from typical UFO experiences is what happens after each sighting. The book doesn't end with "I saw a UFO", it begins there. It examines what these encounters mean, how they connect to one another, whether the aliens are aware of Bill's thoughts - what it reveals about consciousness, free will, and the nature of reality itself. Bill is not a career UFOlogist nor a professional researcher seeking attention.
His ordinariness is precisely what makes his testimony credible. He has nothing to gain and everything to lose by speaking honestly about this life. Over Connecticut, over Baltimore and over St. Louis - six distinct sightings in 2025 of twelve UFOs, each personally meaningful over weeks if not months of contemplation. Bill considers the statistical improbability of repeated encounters, along with the mental discipline required to accept what conventional explanations cannot identify.
It's the account of someone who has questioned himself relentlessly, who's considered reasonable explanations, who's even attempted to live as if this part of his life weren't real. If you wonder what authentic alien contactee experience looks and feels like - stripped of sensationalism, presented with precision, grounded in the mundane details of daily life - this book answers that. If you doubt aliens are real, this book offers something more valuable than proof, it offers testimony.
When received with an open mind, it could change your perspective of UFO and paranormal phenomena. For readers willing to set aside what they've been told is possible and simply receive what one person has lived in witness, this book is essential. If you're skeptical, but curious about what a credible firsthand account sounds like, this book will challenge your assumptions. If you believe aliens are real and want to understand what contact actually looks like from someone living it, this book is for you.