Field Entry: Sedona, Arizona – 9:47 a.m.
The red rocks look like they’ve been placed here by an alien interior designer with a thing for drama. The locals say the land hums. I can’t hear it yet, but the barista at the organic café insisted it’s more of a “vibrational invitation.” Whatever that means.
I came for answers.
I left with stories.
And one very suspicious “coincidence” involving a man named Travis and a dream I didn’t know I had.
Day 1: Arrival at the Love Bite Capital of the Southwest
You don’t casually visit Sedona. You get pulled here. That’s what they all say — the psychic at the crystal shop, the guy selling handmade copper anklets, even the woman at the rental car counter who looked me dead in the eye and asked if I’d “seen the sky people yet.”
Within hours, three strangers had mentioned soulmates. Two tried to touch my aura.
Zero personal boundaries. Maximum vibes.
Interview #1: Travis, 46, “Love-Bitten” and Still Bleeding
I met Travis on a hiking trail near Cathedral Rock. He looked normal — hiking boots, water pack, classic denial. By the time we hit the second switchback, he was telling me about Elena, the woman he met during a “spontaneous astral activation” during a sound bath.
“We had an instant connection. It was like we’d known each other across dimensions.”
Sure, Travis.
But then came the twist.
After three weeks of emotional euphoria, dreams involving reptilian eyes, and an intense sexual connection that left him “drained but addicted,” Elena ghosted him — literally.
She moved, changed her number, and according to him, “disappeared off the grid entirely.”
He also claims her pupils once shifted into slits “just for a second.”
Eve Lorgen Would Call That a Hit.
This is textbook Love Bite:
- Sudden, unexplainable bonding
- Emotional and energetic obsession
- One partner seems to thrive, the other crashes
- Subtle (or not-so-subtle) paranormal phenomena in the background
According to Lorgen’s work, these aren’t normal relationships.
They’re engineered. Orchestrated.
By who? That depends on which flavor of conspiracy you like.
Interdimensional entities? Aliens? Hyperdimensional parasites feeding on your heartbreak?
Travis just calls it “hell with a great first date.”
Symbol Watch: Spirals, Crosses, and the Gateway Rocks
Sedona is plastered with spirals — carved into rocks, painted on tourist signs, hanging from rearview mirrors. Spirals represent portals, DNA, and the journey inward — or outward, depending on who you ask. Some believe they’re symbols used by off-planet manipulators to mark energy harvesting zones.
I found three spiral formations during a hike near Bell Rock. Each one coincided with a drop in GPS signal, sudden emotional shifts, and one inexplicable craving for lavender kombucha.
Coincidence? Cute theory.
Also noted: crosses etched into rock walls facing east.
One local said they’re meant to “guard against watchers in the sky.”
Another said they’re “just art.”
Right.
Field Notes: Hypothesis in Progress
- Love Bite scenarios aren’t limited to weird city folk. They thrive in spiritual hotspots where people are emotionally open, seeking connection, and surrounded by symbols they don’t understand.
- There’s a pattern to these encounters: intense attraction, rapid entanglement, paranormal symptoms, abrupt loss.
- The victim often feels chosen… then discarded.
And every story echoes what Eve Lorgen described years ago — before TikTok, before alien dating cults, before Travis ever met Elena.
Closing Log: Sedona, 11:03 p.m.
I sleep in a yurt that allegedly sits on a “masculine vortex.”
It buzzes. Or maybe it’s just the electric fence nearby.
As I close my notebook, I glance up at the sky.
A pulsing light hovers, then blinks out.
Travis would call that a message.
I call it blog material.
Whatever it is, I’m not done here.
But the trail moves forward.