Folklore and modern UFO phenomena tie together in more ways than you might originally think. We haven't talked about anything weird & wonderful in a while, so let's scratch the surface 🛸⤵️
Jacques Vallée, John Keel, J. Allen Hynek and more are known for their work regarding the ties between Ultraterrestrials and folklore, Vallée especially, but what are the commonalities between fairy rings and crop circles?
Crop circles are a phenomena that can be found all over the world, especially in Britain (and especially, especially in Southern England), but records of these peculiar patterns only really date to the early 1900s.
But what if their origins date further back than that? 🛸
It has been proposed by the likes of Vallée and others that crop circles are modern depictions of fairy rings.
Fairy rings come in the form of mushroom circles, dead rings of grass and other related things, and they get their names from their ties to the fairy folk of Celtic and European folklore 🧚🏻♀️
It is believed that humans who are lured into fairy rings can lose all sense of time, encounter otherworldly beings, and in some cases they disappear completely 👀✨
🌛 Suggested by Vallée and others of his calibre, crop circles are a modern interpretation of these fairy rings.
As times change and beliefs evolve, the Ultraterrestrials and fairy folk create more modern manifestations of their appearance to still interact with humans.
After watching the latest video from @mystermythos a couple days ago, I am fascinated by the connection fairy rings and crop circles have.
What do you think of this proposed idea/theory in the Ultraterrestrial hypothesis? 🧚🏻♀️👀🛸
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#fairyfolk #fae #faerie #UFO #ultraterrestrial #jacquesvallee #ufology #uaps #cropcircles #fairyrings #celticfolklore #folklore #britishfolklore #welshfolklore #welshwitch #witchcraft #innerearth #cryptid #magick #forestwitch #hedgewitch
@shamr0xx
1 year ago
I’m not sure. 🤔
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