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			Prelude To Comms
 
 Getting back to normal life was difficult. Everything paled in 
			comparison to this new world that had opened up in front of me.
 
			Since my third or fourth week of PPD school I had been dreaming 
			intuitively. It was the strangest kind of dreaming you could 
			imagine. In these dreams, my subconscious would create a traditional 
			dream where things would unfold in a typical disjointed dream-like 
			sequence, then mix it with my intuitive abilities which would be 
			grounded and very reality based. The IC part of my dreams would be 
			strangely realistic. I would wake up thinking I had just experienced 
			what I was dreaming of.
 
			  
			The dreams were so realistic that I was 
			constantly questioning whether I was actually awake while I was, 
			indeed, awake. The dreams subsided once I got back to my home base 
			and started my regular job up again. I was glad because I started to 
			question whether I was dreaming during the course of a regular day. 
			As you can imagine, it was disconcerting at best, frightening at 
			worst.  
			Things didn’t slow down much. Only a few months after I returned 
			from my school at NSA, I received relocation orders. I knew these 
			orders would take me to my first PPD related assignment. I wasn’t 
			disappointed. I was ready for a change.
 
			As I prepared for the move to another base, it occurred to me that 
			things had been happening in my career up to this moment that all of 
			sudden made sense. For instance, when I came into the USAF in 1982, 
			I enlisted originally as a security policeman. While I was stationed 
			in Korea, in 1984-1985, I met a man who was in the electronic 
			intelligence career field. He spoke so highly of it, he convinced me 
			that it was the field to be in. I always remembered something he 
			said to me; he told me that I needed to put in for a cross train to 
			be an ELINT specialist because my life would change forever.
 
			  
			Well, I 
			absolutely hated being in the security police field, so several 
			years later when I was eligible to apply for cross-training into 
			another career field, I applied. I made it well known that if I 
			wasn’t approved for cross-training into the electronic intelligence 
			career field, I was going to get out of the Air Force altogether. At 
			the time, approvals for cross-training had been denied left and 
			right. As a matter-of-fact, cross-training was closed off to the 
			security police career field just days after I turned in my 
			paperwork. Everyone told me that my chances of receiving approval 
			would be close to nil.  
			About a month later, my paperwork came back approved and I had a 
			school date in February of 1990. Everyone was astonished and teased 
			me that I must have known someone to get the approval through. 
			Knowing what I know now, I have absolutely no doubt that it was part 
			of their master plan for me. My friend in Korea had planted the seed 
			and I followed through with it. I still wonder what they would have 
			done if I hadn’t applied for the cross-training and proceeded to get 
			out.
 
			So I re-enlisted to give this new job a try. I went off to technical 
			training in San Angelo, Texas.
 
			After technical school I was sent to Offutt AFB, in 
			Nebraska. While 
			stationed there, as my most recent 4 year enlistment drew to a 
			close, I made it known once again that I was going to get out. I had 
			told my co-workers that the only way I would entertain thoughts of 
			re-enlisting was if I received orders to Korea. I had already been 
			stationed in Korea twice and I desperately wanted to go back. A 
			month later, I had orders to Korea. At the time, I just looked at it 
			as good fortune. Of course, I know now, there was probably a more 
			involved process going on.
 
			I never made it to Korea though, because it was only three or four 
			months later that I received orders to attend EA280 at 
			Fort Meade/NSA. 
			While I was going through PPD and ELINT school, I was told that my 
			orders to Korea had been canceled. Meanwhile, I had already 
			re-enlisted for another 6 years. (I re-enlisted for a full 6 years 
			because I was entitled to a larger bonus than if I had re-enlisted 
			for 4 years.) I was a bit upset by this new turn of events but I had
			PPD on my mind at the time. I knew I would most likely be going 
			somewhere else soon anyway.
 
			I see now that there was a lengthy history of people somewhere 
			pulling the strings of my career without me ever realizing it. 
			Amazing when I look back on it.
 
 Back to Table of Contents
 
 
			  
			  
			PPD Base #1
 
 My new Operations Officer and First Sergeant met me at the airport. 
			It was a long flight with a tedious layover, but I was finally at my 
			new base. I arrived at night so the drive to the base from the 
			airport was very unfamiliar.
			Foremost on my mind was the third party introduction. I was 
			perplexed as to how Captain White was going to notify me of my next PPD contact when he was thousands of miles away.
 
			I was there almost a full month before my clearances arrived. During 
			this time, I was driving myself crazy trying to second guess what 
			might happen next.
 
			After my clearances arrived, I went through the necessary briefings 
			and other things that were necessary for me to start my regular job.
 
			Still no introductions.
 
			I started to wonder if this was actually the place I would begin my 
			PPD duties when the introduction finally came.
			I was awakened from sleep in my dorm room by someone banging on my 
			door. It was one of the other dorm residents. After establishing who 
			I was, he told me there was someone on the phone for me.
 
			Our doors opened out onto an outdoor balcony, so I walked around the 
			balcony to the phone in the hallway on the other side of the dorm to 
			answer my call. On my way to the phone I was trying to figure out 
			who would be calling me since I didn’t know anyone on base yet and 
			no one from back home knew how to call me at the dorm. I had 
			concluded that it would probably be someone from my new work center 
			when I picked up the phone.
 
			It was Captain White.
 
			I wasn’t able to hide my surprise very well. I had just recently 
			convinced myself that I would, most likely, not be doing any PPD 
			work here.
 
			In our brief conversation, Captain White told me to expect someone 
			from my new unit to approach me regarding “the program,” as he 
			referred to it in our conversation. I was waiting for him to tell me 
			the “code” word that I would need to listen for in order to identify 
			my new PPD contact or some other mysterious type of identifying 
			remark. He told me that I would receive a call at this same phone 
			after we ended our conversation and I was to stay at the phone to 
			answer it. This person would not be identifying himself on the 
			phone, but will tell me where and when to meet him.
 
			That was it!
 
			After the captain hung up I waited by the phone for my next call. It 
			came about 30 seconds later. 
			The ring startled me. I quickly picked up the receiver and said, 
			“Hello.” 
			I was asked if I was Sergeant Sherman. After I replied that I indeed 
			was, he said to meet him at the gate to the site in 30 minutes. He 
			would be standing in front of the gate with his arms crossed waiting 
			for me.
 
			He hung up.
 
			 Manners surely weren’t mandatory in this program, I thought to 
			myself as I walked back to my room. 
			The site he was referring to was where my new unit was located. I 
			was assigned to a unit that conducted all their operations within a 
			fenced off compound, with its own security personnel and security 
			cameras. It had one security gate everyone entered and exited the 
			compound through, manned by security personnel.
 
			I quickly changed clothes putting on my uniform, not knowing the 
			appropriate dress for the occasion. I didn’t want to take the chance 
			of doing something I wasn’t supposed to do.
 
			The site was only a three or four minute bike ride from my dorm 
			room. As I was approaching, I could see my new PPD contact standing 
			in front of the gate to the site. I had already been introduced to 
			this person. When I met him for the first time, almost a month 
			prior, I had suspected that he may be my new PPD commander. I was 
			expecting a captain, and now my expectations were met.
 
			I dismounted from my bike and parked it near the fence. My new 
			PPD 
			contact introduced himself.
			It was Captain Stanley, the site operations officer. He was one of 
			the two unit personnel who picked me up at the airport almost a 
			month earlier.
 
			After we had our identification checked and our security badges 
			swapped out for our on-site security badges, Captain Stanley led me 
			through the gate and down the sidewalk towards the operations 
			building. I knew little of what lay ahead but I was certainly 
			excited at the prospect of finding out.
 
			The captain led me into the operations building which I had already 
			been in a few days earlier when my security clearances finally 
			arrived. We walked back to the conference room which was nestled in 
			the back of the small, main operations office. As we walked through 
			the main operations office, I could see filing cabinet type safes 
			lining almost every wall. All had magnetic signs hanging on the 
			front of them signifying whether the safe was “OPEN” or “CLOSED.” 
			Each filing cabinet had a built-in dial lock like the type normally 
			found on a heavy-duty safe. In essence, that’s what these were, only 
			in drawer form so as to allow for easy organization and storage of 
			classified materials.
 
			I sat in the conference room with another new person to the unit. It 
			was Don Thomas, a friend with whom I was stationed at my last base. 
			He and I had received orders to this new base at the same time. I 
			wondered why he was here because I thought I would be receiving my
			PPD briefing. It was obvious the briefing would have to wait.
			I had no idea if Don, or anyone else, was part of PPD. At the time, 
			there was no question in my mind that I was the only IC capable 
			person on site. Of course, this was only an egotistical assumption 
			on my part. Later, I found I was the only one but I shouldn’t have 
			been so sure at the time.
 
			Captain Stanley excused himself and went back into the operations 
			office and closed the door behind him. Don and I looked around the 
			room as we waited. The room was normal looking in every sense. I’m 
			not sure what I was expecting, but I looked around the room for 
			anything out of the ordinary. There were several posters hanging on 
			the wall, all with an Air Force theme. Amidst all the posters there 
			hung a solitary plaque. I was curious what the plaque said so I got 
			up to read it. It was from former President Reagan congratulating 
			our unit for outstanding performance.
 
			The captain came back into the room, this time with several people 
			behind him. Don and I were introduced to Sergeant Larsen, our 
			new 
			supervisor and Non Commissioned Officer in Charge of the mission 
			that we would be working with during our tour at this base. The 
			captain excused himself once again as Don, my new supervisor, and I 
			talked. We began to discuss our past assignments, who we mutually 
			knew...etc. This small talk went on for about an hour.
 
			I was getting anxious to find out more about PPD when Sergeant 
			Larsen started our indoctrination to the overall mission that Don 
			and I would be working with. He began the briefing by explaining the 
			onion effect. This was the same concept Captain White had explained 
			to me prior to starting PPD school, only this time Sergeant Larsen 
			stopped short of the “grey” mission.
 
			  
			It dawned on me that he was not 
			going to go any further because he was not part of PPD or, for that 
			matter, anything alien related. He didn’t even know the existence of 
			alien programs. It was a great feeling to know something he didn’t. 
			As he was explaining the classification level of the mission I would 
			be working with and how it related to other missions around the 
			globe, I remember thinking to myself, “Buddy, if you only knew what 
			I know.” 
			 
			  
			Of course, just like all things PPD related I had to keep 
			these types of comments to myself. It was unfortunate because I felt 
			I had such a great nugget of information, knowing aliens existed.
			 
			Sergeant Larsen had just finished our security briefing when 
			Captain 
			Stanley came back into the room.
 
				
				“Sergeant Larsen. Go ahead and take 
				Sergeant Thomas around the site for a mini tour and I’ll go 
				ahead and take Sergeant Sherman.” Don and Sergeant Larsen left the conference room. The captain 
				motioned for me to close the door. “This is it,” I said to 
				myself. “D-day has arrived.” I had waited for over 7 months, 
				from the time I left school to now, and the time was finally 
				here.
 “As you probably know by now, Sergeant Sherman,” the captain 
				began, “You are here to do more than one job.”
 “Yes, Sir,” I replied. I was so glad to find out more about the 
				actual duties, I was hanging on his every word.
 “In a moment we’ll be going over to your new work center. I want 
				to familiarize you with the computer terminal you’ll be working 
				from. It’s the same terminal you will be documenting your IC comms on. Before we do that though, I’d like to mention a few 
				words on security. You do realize you’re not to speak of this 
				project to anyone at any time besides me, right?”
 “Yes, Sir,” I replied again. I knew from what Captain White had 
				told me that I was not to speak to anyone unless I had a third 
				party introduction. Captain White had told me to speak to 
				Captain Stanley, and I presumed the next person I spoke to about 
				PPD would be introduced to me by one of them and so on.
 “Great,” the captain went on. “Due to the nature of your regular 
				job here, you will not be able to access the van you’ll be 
				working in without being accompanied by another cleared person. 
				This presents a problem when you are documenting your comms as 
				you will soon see. The van you and a partner will be working in 
				is extremely cramped, therefore any documentation of comms you 
				take down will be susceptible to being seen by your partner. 
				Because of that, we have taken the necessary steps to make sure 
				that does not happen. You’ll see what I mean when we tour the 
				van. Do you have any questions before we do that?”
 I knew exactly what he meant but evidently he didn’t know that I 
				knew. He was most likely talking about the blank reporting 
				screen. He was probably unaware that I was taught this in 
				school.
 But I did have a question. “How am I to know when to start 
				communications with my alien contact?” I asked.
 “Just for the record, Sergeant Sherman, never say that word. 
				It’s referred to as “grey.” Please get used to not referring to 
				it at all, but if it is unavoidable the word is “grey.” In 
				answer to your question though, I have no idea. You’re the 
				expert in that area, not me. You are the first IC that I have 
				ever worked with.”
 This revelation was a bit shocking. “How long have you been in 
				the program, Sir?” I asked, hoping I didn’t sound too 
				presumptuous or naive.
 “That is unimportant, but suffice to say that not many people 
				have worked with the actual IC personnel. I don’t know if you 
				know this but you and the other IC capable personnel represent 
				the culmination of 30 some years of ‘wait-and-see.’ It’s been a 
				long time coming and is very exciting to the people involved. 
				You are part of the first wave of what will be a small but 
				steady stream of IC capable and trained personnel. For most of 
				us this is all new territory we’re charting so if it seems like 
				something isn’t as organized as you would expect it’s because 
				we’re flying blind sometimes. Let’s make our way to the van and 
				I’ll show you your new computer terminal.”
 
			We made our way through the operations 
			office and out the double security doors. In order to enter the 
			operations building we were in, you had to enter a code into a 
			cipher lock to get through the first door. A cipher lock is a 
			sequence of numbers you must push, which are printed on a row of 
			numbered levers. After pushing the correct sequence of numbers, the 
			door buzzes telling you that you have approximately 5 seconds to 
			pull the door open.  
			  
			The second door was a two foot thick vault door 
			with its own combination lock and a big wheel that required turning 
			like a bank vault door. Turning the wheel would slowly retract the 
			bolts that held the door in place. During normal duty hours this 
			vault door was open.  
			  
			After duty hours, the vault door was secured 
			and alarmed with signs posted saying: 
 
			AUTHORIZED ENTRY ONLY RESTRICTED AREA
 WARNING
 USE OF DEADLY FORCE AUTHORIZED
 
 
			As we walked to the van where I would be working, I attempted to 
			take in some details of the site. We walked by the shredding room 
			where all the paper waste from the site was shredded with a machine 
			bigger than a car. Every scrap of paper from the site had to be 
			shredded in case something classified had, for example, been written 
			on the margins of a newspaper; or the ink imprint from a classified 
			document somehow transferred inadvertently to an unclassified piece 
			of paper.  
			  
			All trash cans at the end of the day had to be physically 
			dumped out and gone through by a security monitor so that any paper 
			item was separated and thrown in the shred box. One incident that 
			happened to me after I had been there a few weeks effectively 
			demonstrated the tight security measures. I had punched holes in 
			some unclassified paper so that I could place it in a binder.  
			  
			The tray attached to the bottom of the 
			hole punch needed emptying, so I took it out to the trash can 
			located outside the operations door and discarded them there. I came 
			back in and my supervisor immediately asked what had I just done. 
			Recognizing instantly that I had committed a security violation, I 
			told him that I had dumped the little paper circles from the hole 
			puncher in the outside trash.  
			  
			I spent the next 2 hours in one of the 
			outside buildings with the trash can emptied out in front of me with 
			scotch tape wrapped around my hands (sticky part facing out) dabbing 
			at the paper dots until I had retrieved every one of them. When I 
			was finished, I had to get my supervisor to check it to make sure I 
			had retrieved every one, with no exception. This incident would 
			always stay with me and became the biggest lesson I ever learned 
			regarding the importance of adhering to proper security measures.
			
 
			We walked up to the C-Van that I would 
			be working in. “C-Van” stood for “Communication Van” but was only a 
			military term used to describe this type of van, regardless of 
			whether it would actually be used for communications or not.  
			 The site had several C-Vans with separate operations and missions. 
			All of them looked like a big metal box. None of them had any 
			wheels, resting on blocks instead. They’re designed to be 
			semi-portable and moved when necessary, but these particular ones 
			were set up for permanent operations. Each C-Van was approximately 
			15 feet long, 7 feet wide and 8 feet tall. The entrance of the one 
			we were approaching was at one end of the van. There was a 
			lever-like door handle about 12 inches long that was secured by a 
			heavy padlock.
 
			The captain explained that the regular mission I would be working 
			with has certain hours and we were entering the van now during 
			non-duty hours, hence the van was locked. We went into a break room 
			located about 50 feet from the C-Van and used the phone to call the 
			front security gate to notify the security officer that we would be 
			entering the C-Van. In order to gain access to one of the C-Vans on 
			site you had to call the security gate and tell them you wanted 
			access to a particular “security zone.” After going through an 
			authentication process, you were given authorization to break the 
			security barrier. From that moment, you had 10 minutes to gain 
			access to the C-Van.
 
			We went back out to the van. The captain opened the padlock by 
			dialing in the proper combination which changed every week as part 
			of the elaborate security measures. He opened the first door and we 
			stepped into a vestibule. He turned and closed the outer door. The 
			inner door could not be opened until the outer door was secured. He 
			quickly opened the inner door and stepped through. I could hear a 
			high pitched beeping noise.
 
			  
			The captain stepped over to where the 
			noise seemed to be coming from and punched a code into a small box 
			hanging on the wall, the face of which was a numerical pad. The LED 
			readout above the numerical pad was flashing a warning that there 
			had been a breach in the security zone corresponding with the zone 
			we had just entered. After he punched a numerical code into the box 
			it became silent and the LED readout went blank.  
			The van was awfully cramped. There was just enough room for two 
			people because of all the electronic equipment. As you entered the 
			inner door, directly in front of you was a chair that faced a 
			console to the right. To the left side of this chair was another 
			chair also facing to the right towards the console. The console 
			contained some of the same equipment I was already familiar with 
			from my last base and some that was unfamiliar to me.
 
			  
			The captain 
			sat in the furthest chair away from the entrance to the van, giving 
			me room to sit in the other seat closest to the door.  
				
				“Along with your normal duties which 
				you’ll be trained on in time, you will also be documenting your 
				comms here at this terminal.” The captain pointed to the 
				terminal directly in front of me. It was a computer monitor 
				almost as big as the one I used in PPD school. “You will be assigned to the organization that sits what we call 
				‘right seat’ and you will have a partner that will sit ‘left 
				seat.’ In order to access this van you will always have to have 
				two people, you and your partner. We have a two person buddy 
				system because of the security requirements. You’ll learn more 
				about this later. However, this places a constraint on your 
				access to reporting comms in private. That is why your reporting 
				terminal will appear to be blank.”
 
			The captain began to power up the 
			computer terminal which had been off when we entered the van.  
			With the computer booted up, he proceeded to show me how to access 
			the screen I would be reporting comms through. He clicked the right 
			mouse button and hit the F10 key at the same time. A screen came up 
			with several options, including “Staunch-118.” I remembered this 
			from school. My instructor told me that it would always show my code 
			name when opening a comms window.
 
				
				The captain told me my password and 
				said, “If for some reason you feel it needs to be changed in the 
				future let me know and it’ll be changed.” He typed in the password and a blank screen immediately 
				appeared. It had a black background and the cursor was not 
				visible. It looked exactly like the screen I learned on at 
				school.
 “The screen is black to hide the information you’ll be typing 
				from anyone who may be looking on while you type.” The captain 
				went on. “It’s purely a security precaution. As soon as you’re 
				done with a comm, simply use the Alt/F10 combination. This will 
				exit you out of the comms window. If the window goes unused for 
				more than 1 minute, you’ll have to do the mouse/F10 combination 
				again. You’ll be able to continue where you left off at that 
				time. But if you Alt/F10 out of the window, the comm will be 
				sent. So if you start again, it’ll be a new comm.”
 
			I asked where the comms went after I 
			reported them. No answer as usual. I had learned by now that 
			questions such as that one would be ignored because I didn’t have a 
			need-to-know. I knew they were processed by NSA, but I didn’t know 
			where and by what organization. Just like many of my other questions 
			surrounding PPD, they would go unanswered.
			 
			 There was one question that was pertinent to my job so I asked it.
 
				
				“Will I only receive comms during my 
				normal duty hours or will I have to come in during my off duty 
				hours?” The captain replied, “Again, Sergeant Sherman, you’re the first 
				IC capable person I have worked with, so I can’t answer that 
				question. I can say that you will not be able to get into this 
				van without your crew partner because of the buddy system. So 
				that would tell me that you will be unable to do any comm 
				reporting until your shift starts. I would imagine you’ll have 
				to tell them to put it off until your shift. Cross that bridge 
				when you come to it.”
 
			I thought it was odd that he didn’t know 
			as much as I would expect. Every time I talked with Captain White 
			and now Captain Stanley, I got the feeling they didn’t know quite 
			what was going on, but they knew enough to get through to me which 
			direction to take next. It was as if someone were telling them 
			things only five minutes before I got wind of it. It was quite 
			frustrating because I never really had total confidence in the 
			information I received, but had no other choice because they were my 
			only authority.  
			While we were in the van I started to ask about all of the other 
			equipment. The captain told me that I would learn about my other job 
			soon enough. His job was to brief me on my PPD duties and to make 
			sure I was clear on how to access my comm window and support my 
			IC 
			mission. All other duties would be trained and supported by the 
			on-site personnel.
 
			We backed out of the C-Van in the same way we entered, only in 
			reverse, with all the security zones requiring re-establishing.
 
			With all this new stuff to learn, I could tell I had some 
			interesting days ahead of me.
 
			 
 
 
			  
			  
			I started training for my normal duties the very next day. As was 
			typical Air Force style, vast amounts of information were being 
			shoved into my brain in a very short period of time. I was being 
			inundated with knowledge pertaining to my new job and at the same 
			time wondering when I was going to receive my first comm.  
			A week passed without receiving anything. I was beginning to wonder 
			if I had lost my abilities since I hadn’t practiced them for almost 
			9 months. Every time I passed Captain Stanley he would nod a silent 
			hello or give an audible one but nothing about PPD and what to 
			expect. I felt very isolated and out of the loop. Of course, this 
			would be a constant feeling and one that would never leave me as an 
			Intuitive Communicator.
 
			I also began to worry why I hadn’t been told to take, or been given 
			any, pills like I was taking at the school. Before leaving my 
			training at NSA, Captain White had told me that I would not need the 
			pills anymore until I was told to start taking them later. Maybe 
			this was why I was not receiving any comms yet.
 
			  
			Regardless of the 
			reason, I was becoming anxious to use this ability I had worked so 
			hard to discover and strengthen. 
 Back to Table of Contents
 
			 
			  
			  
			Enter Spock
 
 Time marched on and still no comms. Within six weeks of beginning my 
			training for my normal duties I was officially certified to operate 
			my station without the presence of my trainer. It wasn’t long after 
			that that I finally received my first operational comm.
 
			I’m not sure if it was intentional or not, but I received my first 
			comm the night of my first shift as a newly certified crew member.
 
			I got to the site a bit early since this was my first night without 
			someone supervising me. I wanted to make sure I did everything 
			correctly. My crew partner showed up and we authenticated properly 
			with security personnel in order to open the C-Van for the 12 hour 
			shift ahead of us. As we made our way into the C-Van, I had just 
			silenced the alarm box and started to power up my equipment when I 
			intuitively received the message, “prepare for information string.”
 
			
			I was so startled I uttered some unintelligible noise, then followed 
			that with an audible “wait!” My crew partner asked me what he was to 
			wait for.
 
			“Oh, sorry, just talking to myself,” I said automatically, not 
			wanting him to think I was crazy.
 
			I wasn’t quite sure what to do about the impending comm since my 
			computer was not up and running yet. It took a certain amount of 
			time for the computer to boot and I had at least 2 or 3 minutes to 
			wait still. At the same time I had audibly said “wait”, I had also 
			sent back a comm saying “wait.” I realized this only after I 
			mentally replayed the situation later. I had never vocalized any 
			comm before. I never did it again either, but the comm took me by 
			such surprise that my auditory facilities were effected along with 
			my intuitive abilities.
 
			I felt so out of sorts. Even though the act of intuitively 
			communicating was something I could do, the psychological 
			ramifications of realizing you’re communicating with a non-human 
			entity takes a little getting used to as you might imagine.
 
			They seemed to have listened since I didn’t receive anything until 
			my computer was up. Waiting for my computer to boot was the absolute 
			longest 3 minutes of my entire life. I was about to have a two-way 
			communication with an alien. Up until this moment it had all been 
			motions I was going through because someone told me I had to. Now, 
			all the training, the nights laying in bed awake wondering what it 
			would be like to actually communicate, all of it was coming 
			together. It was actually happening. This wasn’t a spectator sport 
			anymore. I was the quarterback, receiver and the fan in the 
			bleacher, all rolled into one.
 
			After the computer finished booting, I started to get butterflies in 
			my stomach and I began to wonder if my abilities were good enough to 
			do the job correctly. A hundred things were going through my mind 
			when I hit the right mouse button and the F10 key as I had been 
			instructed many times to do. After I opened the window and typed in 
			my password I intuitively sent a ready message and waited to receive 
			the first of what would be hundreds of comms.
 
			I began to type in the blank window that I had just opened. My crew 
			member was doing his own tasks on his computer so I didn’t have to 
			be concerned about whether he was going to start asking questions. I 
			was thankful for that. 
			During this first assignment as a mission ready IC, my comms were 
			very uneventful and mundane. I had no idea the meaning of what I was 
			typing. After the first month of receiving comms, it became very 
			routine and no longer held the level of mystique to me that it did 
			during that first month.
 
			A comm would begin with what I called the “preamble.” The preamble 
			consisted of the same sequence of numbers that differentiated very 
			little. I would always receive a three digit number first, which was 
			the number that identified me to whoever the information was going 
			to when I sent out my report. This number was 118. There would be 
			timed pauses between each phrase or expression. The pause was always 
			the same. I never got the stop watch out but the rhythm of it was 
			constant so it was evident it was the same all the time. The pause 
			was probably about 3 seconds. (Except for the pause between the 
			comm 
			that would tell me to “prepare for information string” and the time 
			the information string would begin. This pause would be as long as 
			it would take me to prepare to receive the comm.)
 
			After the number “118” would be passed, another string of numbers 
			would usually follow. This string would be a 5 digit number that 
			varied but often was repeated in other messages. I called this the 
			zip code. (Because it had five digits, not because it related to a 
			location necessarily.)
 
			After these eight numbers however, there was no rhyme or reason to 
			the comms most of the time. A sample comm at this point would have 
			looked similar to this:
 
				
					
						
						
						118/67555/995500400043/47477899055/9400///  
			The comms would simply be a series of 
			numbers separated by a “/” character. This was the way I was taught 
			to separate comm sections while in school. Anytime there was a 
			pause, I would place the “/” character in between phrases. Sometimes 
			I could pick out obvious things like latitude and longitude. When I 
			first noticed lat/longs being communicated, I wanted to look them up 
			on a map but we didn’t have detailed maps in our C-Van and I was 
			terrified of writing anything down and taking it with me. I soon 
			lost motivation to look up the locations.  
			I got to the point, finally, of taking most things for granted. It 
			became a very boring task to receive these comms and type them in 
			this blank window. It certainly wasn’t very challenging and I lost 
			all interest in it simply because it was only a one way 
			communication for all intents and purposes. Once in awhile I would 
			send back a comm saying “repeat last phrase” or something like that. 
			But most of the time, it was a one-way street and not an exciting 
			job.
 
			After some time had passed since that first comm, I took the liberty 
			of naming the grey contact I communicated with “Spock.” My best 
			friend had always been a big Star Trek fan and it seemed a befitting 
			name. It was also because I perceived a great deal of logical 
			structure in his communications.
 
			  
			It felt a bit sad to come up with 
			such a deliciously ironic name as Spock and have no opportunity to 
			share the humor of it with anyone.  
			 
 
 
			  
			  
			My suspicions about the pills I had been taking at the
			PPD school 
			proved justified midway through my tour at this new assignment. 
			Around April of 1993, about five months after I had arrived this new 
			base, Captain Stanley came into the C-Van while I was on duty and 
			asked my crew member to step out for a moment. 
			 
			  
			I began to get 
			nervous since the captain had not said one word to me in private 
			since our first PPD meeting. Was I doing something wrong in my
			comms? 
			Were they correct? These were the types of questions running through 
			my mind as I waited for my crew partner to step out of the van.
			 
			The captain sat down in the seat vacated by my partner. He reached 
			into his pocket and brought out a shiny gray bottle.
 
				
				“Sergeant Sherman, do you remember 
				taking some pills while you were at school?” the captain asked 
				as he placed the bottle on the counter in front of me. “Yes, Sir. I took two tablets every day I attended school. I was 
				wondering if I was ever going to take them again.”
 “Well, that’s what these are. We need you to start taking them 
				again until further notice.”
 I started to get a little more bold in my questioning, 
				especially since I hadn’t had any questions answered for a long 
				time.
 “What are they, Captain?” I asked.
 “I actually have no idea, Sergeant Sherman. I’ve just been 
				instructed to have you start taking these again.”
 Pushing further, I continued on, “Do you take them?”
 “I can’t answer any questions about the pills, Sergeant Sherman. 
				I know you’re naturally curious, but I honestly cannot talk 
				about them anymore. Take two every shift. You’re to keep them in 
				your safe drawer here in the C-Van. I know you know better, but 
				I have to say it anyway: don’t try to take them from the site. 
				It’s important that you take them as instructed. I know this 
				sounds heavy handed but we’ll know if you haven’t taken even one 
				so please follow the instructions to the letter.”
 
			With that, he left the van.  
			What in the world were in these things anyway? I never felt any 
			abnormal physical effects while taking them but I was curious what 
			they were and what effect they had on my abilities.
 
			I was sitting there looking at them when my crew partner came back 
			into the van. I was beyond caring whether he asked any questions. At 
			that very moment I was very bitter at PPD and the world. It was the 
			same feeling I had felt in the past and would continue to feel. It 
			was as though I had no control over my own life. It seemed 
			everything I did was dictated by someone else. Of course, in the 
			military this was not uncommon. But this situation went deeper.
			My partner did the obvious; he asked what the bottle was for. I told 
			him they were for headaches. As far as I was concerned at that 
			particular moment, that was the truth!
 
			As he shrugged and turned to his computer I popped two of the pills 
			into my mouth and swallowed dryly. I had no choice. I had to bark 
			when the master said “speak.”
 
			 
 
 
			  
			  
			My tour at this base was quick as I was only there for about 11 
			months. But the end was the most exciting part. 
			 
			 About three months before I was to leave I had an unusual comm with 
			Spock. It started out like all the rest, with the normal preamble 
			and subsequent, mostly numerical information. Because all the comms 
			were from 30 seconds to 45 seconds long, I could tell the comm was 
			coming to a close when I suddenly “tripped” and stepped up in my
			comm “level.” This is very difficult to describe, but the closest 
			analogy I can find is what happens when you take too much mouthpiece 
			into your mouth while playing a reed instrument. The beautiful sound 
			you may have been making a moment before is quite suddenly replaced 
			with a screeching sound. Although there is no sound associated with 
			comms, it’s the closest I can come to describing what happened.
 
			Spock immediately picked up on my accidental mental leap and “met 
			me” on this other level. I was startled because I didn’t even know 
			this other level existed prior. Spock immediately asked if I had 
			intentionally changed planes.
 
			  
			(Note: I have no choice but to write 
			the contents of the comms with my alien contacts in a conversational 
			format, like two humans talking. The actual comms were much more 
			rich in texture and informational in content but in ways I am unable 
			to convey to the reader on paper.)  
			I answered “no” and told him that I didn’t even know this “plane” 
			existed.
 
			I use the word “plane” in this explanation because I can’t think of 
			another alternative to how Spock referred to it. If 
			Spock and I had 
			been communicating vocally, I would have asked what was meant by 
			that “word.” When you intuitively communicate, though, the rules are 
			not the same. You understand things that otherwise make no sense in 
			linguistic terms.
 
			Spock immediately signed off and I was left wondering what had just 
			happened. I knew from Spock’s response that this event was totally 
			unexpected not only by me but also by him.
 
			That night in bed, I replayed in my mind what had happened. I was 
			trying to figure out what might have occurred differently that 
			precipitated this unusual turn of events. I had been getting much 
			better and quicker at interpreting the data. Did my proficiency have 
			anything to do with this moving to a higher plane? I was just 
			getting used to the intangible nature of my abilities and this hits 
			me from left field.
 
			My next comm after the “higher-plane” event came two or three days 
			later. I gave the go-ahead and Spock sent the routine preamble and 
			continued with the comm. I was nervous, wondering if he would refer 
			to what had happened. I was somewhat concerned that it was perhaps 
			an unauthorized comm. Of course, I had no idea if there was even 
			such thing as an unauthorized comm. If there was, I was concerned I 
			had initiated one.
 
			Nothing happened. The comm ended as usual and that was it. Now I 
			started to wonder why he hadn’t addressed it. I actually began to 
			wish he had so I could find out more about why it happened.
 
			I thought about trying to do it again, but I was hesitant, still 
			unsure as to whether communicating on this other plane was something 
			I was supposed to be doing. But I knew that if Spock wasn’t going to 
			refer to it, sooner or later curiosity would get the better of me 
			and I would breach the subject on my own.
 
			A few more comms went by without Spock referring to it. I was 
			getting impatient and my curiosity was becoming overwhelming.
 
			It was two weeks after the plane changing event that I finally got 
			up enough nerve to try it again. I received the normal comm “prepare 
			for information string.” Conveniently, my partner had gone out of 
			the van to use the restroom. (Short lapses in security were 
			tolerated for such urgencies.) I sent back the go ahead and began to 
			type the incoming comm in the blank screen. I knew I had mere 
			seconds to decide whether I was going to try to change planes again. 
			I knew the comm was coming to an end so I started to gather up the 
			nerve. As soon as Spock had finished and I sensed he was terminating
			comms I lunged forward with what I thought would duplicate what I 
			had done last time.
			Nothing!
 
			Spock was gone and I sat there wondering what had happened. It felt 
			different. It was definitely not the same feeling I got when it 
			happened last time. I figured I must have done it wrong or 
			something.
			I sat there dumb-founded, trying to remember what had happened the 
			last time that may have been different. I couldn’t figure out how to 
			repeat it. I sat there thinking about it the rest of my shift. I 
			couldn’t get my mind off of it.
 
			Thereafter, I kept trying to change planes each time I received a 
			comm but to no avail. I started to think that it was a simple fluke 
			and that I wouldn’t be able to repeat it when it finally happened 
			again.
			It was about two months from when it happened originally when I 
			finally broke through again. Although I had been attempting to do it 
			at the close of every comm with Spock, I was finally successful. It 
			didn’t take me by surprise this time, either, because I was more in 
			tune with the mechanics of what was happening.
 
			Spock immediately picked up on what I had just done. Again, he asked 
			if this was something I had done intentionally. This time I answered 
			“Yes.”
 
			Spock replied that it was an interesting turn of events and that he 
			ignored it the first time because he felt it was an anomaly.
 
				
				“Is this an unauthorized comm?” I 
				asked. “There is no harm in communicating on this plane,” he said 
				nonchalantly.
 I was surprised by how effortlessly he had said that. Here I had 
				been sweating out the fact that I might have been doing 
				something wrong and he acted as if it was no big deal.
 “How come you are comm’ing so candidly on this plane and you 
				don’t during our normal comms?” I asked.
 “You have never given me reason,” he replied.
 I stopped to think about this. It was true. I hadn’t attempted 
				to ask any questions or to communicate anything except what 
				pertained to our regular comms. I had always assumed we were not 
				to discuss anything else.
 My impression of Spock was one of being official, with no room 
				for emotion. Even as we now communicated on this other plane, I 
				still felt a sense of rigidity. Perhaps this was just how they 
				were.
 Pressing forward with my curiosity, I asked whatever came to my 
				mind first. Since I was thinking of how formal Spock sounded I 
				continued with that line of thought. “Do you have feelings like 
				humans?” I asked bluntly.
 “We are quite alike in our emotional makeup, 118,” he said, 
				referring to me as my PPD code number. “We react to our 
				surroundings, just as you do, but are much less impacted by what 
				we sense. In the absence of markedly increased stimuli, emotion 
				is not readily useful.”
 
			Wow! I was constantly reminding myself I 
			was actually having a conversation, of sorts, with an alien species. 
			Up to this moment I hadn’t internalized the meaning of it. Until 
			now, I might as well have been receiving information from a computer 
			somewhere on the other side of world.  
			  
			There was no meaning to it. 
			Now I was actually communicating in such a manner that we could 
			easily start talking about the Cowboys winning the Superbowl if we 
			wanted. It was quite a shift in perception for me.  
			 A million questions came to my mind. I managed to pick one and throw 
			it out before I lost my new friend’s attention span.
 
				
				“Why did you think it was 
				unintentional when I first comm’ed with you on this plane?” “Until now, we thought it impossible for a water-human to 
				sustain communication on this plane. But we are continually 
				being surprised by other IC’s abilities as well.”
 
				(“Water-human” 
				is the closest I can come to an accurate translation of how 
				Spock referred to humans. Other alternatives would be perhaps 
				“water-vessel” or “water-entity.”) I realized by now that I had stopped typing our comms into my 
				reporting window as soon as we had jumped to this other plane. I 
				wasn’t sure if I was supposed to continue or not.
 “Am I supposed to report our comms while on this other plane?” I 
				asked, wanting the answer to be “no” so I could concentrate on 
				what was being communicated.
 To my surprise Spock said, “No, that is not necessary. Our 
				communications are only being monitored through your reports so 
				as to calculate an accuracy factor. Your communicating on this 
				plane was never anticipated and therefore will never be known 
				unless you discuss it with your chain of command.”
 “Will anyone get upset if they find out I have communicated with 
				you on this other level?” I asked. I was still slightly paranoid 
				about what rule I might be breaking, if any.
 “I am unaware of your people’s standards for this. However, we 
				are not adverse to communicating with water-humans on this 
				plane. It is interesting to us that we are able to communicate 
				with water-humans as it is, but communicating on this plane 
				creates even more interest.”
 
			I sensed an underlying current of 
			scientific interest in our communications that I had previously only 
			sensed during our first few comms.
			I was thinking of this when Spock broke through my thoughts and said 
			“comms will cease” and signed off.
			 
			 Just like that.
 
			 I sat there, staring at my computer screen, thinking how amazing it 
			was that I had just carried on a conversation with an alien species.
			I must have been in a daze because I had allowed my other job to go 
			by me unnoticed. My crew mate jolted me out of my deep thoughts.
 
				
				“Are you okay, Dan?” my crew mate 
				asked, obviously noticing I was in a daze. “I’m okay Brad, thanks,” I answered. “Just a bit tired, that’s 
				all.”
 
			I went on with my duties, but I couldn’t 
			stop thinking about my latest comm. I kept replaying it in my mind 
			during the rest of the shift.  
			I stayed awake most of the morning after my shift had ended. I just 
			couldn’t go to sleep. There were so many questions that I had to 
			ask. Unfortunately, I was close to being relieved of duty in order 
			to leave for my next assignment. I was anxious for my next comm to 
			come so that I could get some answers to my other questions.
 
			 My next comm never came at PPD Base #1. I was relieved of duty two 
			weeks after that last comm. I felt so frustrated. I wasn’t sure 
			whether I would ever be communicating with Spock again. I didn’t 
			even know for sure whether or not I would be conducting PPD duties 
			at my next base. I assumed that I would still be communicating with 
			Spock if I did.
 
			 It turns out that my fears were unfounded. I never communicated with 
			Spock again, but my communications took on a whole new life at
			PPD 
			Base #2.
 
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