FMJ
Technical Senior
Breakthrough
FMJ
FMJ
Dr. Thomas Walker parked his car in the lot and opened his private office door every Wednesday night a little before six to set up the conference room for his support group meeting at seven. He was the facilitator for the Bay area Abduction Support group and currently had six members attending with the promise of a new seventh member tonight.
He had to admit that he had been skeptical at first about a sufficient number of individuals coming forward and sharing their private past experiences about such a controversial subject as abduction to make a support group necessary. He had always had an interest in the paranormal and when he discovered a disproportionate number of patients had begun to relate what could only be interpreted as a repressed memory of abduction, the support group was started.
Once established, the group had taken on a life of its own attracting members seeking a non-judgmental forum to relate experiences that they could not discuss with friends or even with members of their own families.
Dr. Walker was a clinical psychologist and demanded a “judgment free zone” of the support group he facilitated. He had always been quick to reassure the group members that “whatever is said here stays here.”
Through these guarantees and a minimum of peer pressure to participate, he had been able to help a few individuals to make successful readjustments in their personal and public lives.
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