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Looking Through Eyes
of Love
Author: Judy Carroll
Zeus Publications, 2005
Reviewer: Lee Paqui
Fact
masquerading as fiction, Looking Through Eyes of Love comes
from first time author Judy Carroll, and is an exploration of
the extraterrestrial contact issue from a unique perspective –
that of the ETs themselves. Judy Carroll has been in contact
with her extraterrestrial ‘Grey’ teachers from a young age,
receiving lessons, guidance and spiritual teachings from them.
Eyes of Love is Carroll’s way of presenting the things she has
learned in this time, in the guise of a fictional tale about a
young girl, Ali, who is a ‘Grey’ reincarnated into the body of
an Australian woman, placed here on Earth to help humankind in
their development.
Beginning with
a UFO crash in the desert, Eyes of Love takes us from the
totally alien, to the human, to the alien-disguised-as-human.
As the subject of the story, Ali, learns her true origins and
purpose in life, cosmic lessons are taught along the way so
that the reader learns these lessons at the same time that Ali
does. Through lessons on board an ET ‘disc’ we learn about
Grey history, social structure, physicality and psychology. We
are taught such things as how the Greys are able to manipulate
frequency and vibration, the ‘Human Ladder’ of evolution,
cosmic awareness, and our own unknown origins. Deeper concepts
such as death, reincarnation, spiritual evolution and astral
travel are all explored. Carroll even takes the daring step of
introducing, as Ali’s brother, a Catholic priest, who provides
an interesting and open minded collision between our accepted
religious dogma and the true nature of the universe.
Questions are
asked, and answered, in the course of the book. What is the
Greys’ true purpose, their origin, the goals driving the
abduction phenomenon? How are abductions carried out, what are
implants, and the so-called ‘hybridisation project’? It is
explained that a physical adjustment of human DNA is ongoing,
as is the development of the energy system of the body, and
physical versus soul evolution is also explored at patient
length.
Further, more
Earthly phenomena are introduced, such as the Reiki, Eastern
versus Western philosophy, orthodox religion, and the part
that the ET presence may have played in our history. The
lessons that Ali and her brother learn are the lessons that we
also need to learn, and the author takes great pains to teach
us also that the Greys are not the robotic, unemotional and
soulless creatures they have so far been portrayed as.
What is unique
and refreshing throughout Eyes of Love is the constant humour
and playfulness. It is a serious matter Carroll is presenting,
but it is kept light-hearted and, thanks to the author’s
unexpected sense of humour, the funny and ‘human’ side is seen
in almost every situation. Giving the Greys a serious sense of
humour is certainly confronting to the UFO researcher, as it
goes against everything said so far about our unseen visitors
and their activities on this planet. Perhaps this is an effort
to humanise the ‘Greys’ and reduce the distance between our
species, and they are depicted as quite human in their thought
processes and behaviours. This is initially disconcerting to
the reader – ETs are surely not so human… are they? Carroll
maintains that they are, and in this sense she could best be
described as an unofficial ambassador for the Grey species on
our planet.
Carroll has
chosen this avenue because, as she says in the forward to the
novel, the human race is not yet ready to know all there is
about the ET Contact phenomenon. It may be that we will never
be quite ready for reality, but readers of Eyes of Love will
at least have a more open-minded, and far less fearful,
approach to the prospect.
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