This claim states that missing time episodes and their associated regression narratives are fundamentally dreamlike, sharing structure with unremembered REM periods rather than with ordinary historical memory. Rekshan argues that these events should be approached as shamanic dreaming experiences, where meaning arises through symbol, myth, and altered consciousness rather than linear fact.
He emphasizes that case studies in Missing Time Found are presented as documentation of experience and inquiry, not as proof that physical alien abduction occurred during the time gap. The testimony is explicitly framed as comparable to dream journals or dream sharing in traditional shamanic cultures, which are meaningful but not historical evidence in the forensic sense.
Conceptually, this claim underpins the shamanic dreaming hypothesis: missing time is best understood as a dreamlike, multi-layered phenomenon that calls for dreamwork and symbolic analysis instead of literalist ET narratives. DSETI evaluates it as Strong because it preserves meaning while avoiding false evidential claims.








