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Compiled from Various Sources
This article is a documented presentation of an alien abduction in which Qi (the underlying force of all of life, matter and consciousness in the universe) along with various unusual techniques of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) were used to treat and apparently heal a sick girl on a UFO. This case ranks as one of the most studied and verified Chinese UFO abduction encounters in modern times.
Disclaimer. This article, The UFO Chinese Qi Healing Abduction and all its related articles listed in the bibliography below are meant only for educational purposes and are not offered for the healing of any illnesses, or as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Abductee Cao Gong's drawing of the male extraterrestrial. Original Source: Zhang Jingping's blog. http://blog.sina.com.cn. Note: that blog as of 2025 is inoperative. This image may now be found at https://www.staradio.com.hk/programs/visitors-ep45/ (accessed June 14, 2025).
On December 11, 1999, in a suburb of Beijing, a 38-year-old man, "Cao Gong" (an alias) was awakened at midnight by a loud noise on his bedroom window situated on the sixth floor of a high-rise apartment building. Standing at the foot of his bed were two beings, apparently male and female with long heads and small round mouths, dressed in silvery white tight-fitting clothes. At first he thought they were thieves and he feared for his life. The male was about 5-½ feet tall, the female was slightly shorter. The woman said to her companion, "He is the one who can cure illnesses. Let us take him!" (Cao Gong was the headmaster of a secondary school that taught various health sciences in the area of Beijing in which he and his family lived.)
Then mysteriously the two floated out through a wall. Cao Gong's body became light-weighted and he rose up from his bed and floated out after them. (Later he said it felt like pushing through a thin cotton curtain.) In about seven or eight minutes and approximately one hundred sixty-nine miles later, all three arrived at a desolate, uninhabited hilly area north of Qinhuangdao City. Below them was a flying saucer in the shape of enormous table tennis racket as large as a football field. They effortlessly floated down into it and entered a small room that resembled a laboratory. This room appeared to be within a medium sized room, which in turn had a door that connected it to an even larger room.
Cao Gong was flabbergasted. The male extraterrestrial (ET) sensing Cao's confusion telepathically told him, "Don't be nervous. We are like you. Our universal life energies [ yuzhou nengliang - 宇宙能量 ] are the same. You're invited here to be in an experiment in which one earth being physically transmits energetic force [neng li 能力] to another earth being to heal illness.
The female extraterrestrial (ET) went into the adjacent large room from which came the sounds of mechanical equipment, along with the mournful cries and screams of pigs, dogs, cattle, sheep, and other unidentifiable animals. It sounded as if they were being beaten, dissected, or painfully injected with chemicals. She returned with a young teen-aged Chinese girl. The girl looked seriously ill, worried and helpless. Her skin was leathery—like dark processed meat. Her forehead was ashen grey and black. Her body was wasted away, all skin and bones. When she saw Cao Gong, another human being, she seemed a bit less frightened.
Computer simulated picture of the sick girl done under the direction of Cao Gong. Original Source: http://www.94677. This site was inoperative as of June 5, 2025. A similar image is at https://k.sina.cn/article_5339870831_ 13e47f66f0010112sy.html ?from=science (Accessed on June 13, 2025.)
The female ET made the girl stand in the middle of a symbol on the floor; then called out, Start it! Give him the energy! [nénliàng, the "energy capabilities."] The male ET gave a hard slap to Cao Gong just below the base of his neck, on the Dazhui —the "Big Hammer" acupuncture point (governing vessel-14) located between the seventh cervical and first thoracic vertebra. Immediately Cao Gong felt a burst of heat surging through his body. It was an extraordinary powerful yet comforting vital life energy (qi -气). It ran from the GV-14 point just below his neck, down into his shoulders, and like rivers of radiating pins and needles, down his arms into the palms and fingers of his hands where it now felt like numbing electrical-like discharges.
The male ET signaled Cao Gong to do the same to the girl. Cao answered that he didn't know how to do such a thing, but he would try anyway. At that moment from a box lying on the floor the female ET took out a strange undefinable instrument, and five or six small metal (perhaps golden) bottles, and something that resembled a black flashlight.
She placed the curious instrument and the bottles at the sick girl's feet, and put the black flashlight-looking thing on the top of her head and pressed down on it. Out from it oozed a translucent membrane; it looked something like a transparent raincoat. It wrapped itself around the girl then covered and tightly sealed her. It continued down to cover the metal bottles, then adhered itself to the floor.
The male ET said, "Start the experiment!" Cao Gong began striking the sick girl on her GV-14 acupuncture point. He felt heat flow from his hands into the girl. When he tried to pull away, a powerful magnetic force prevented it. His hands, now absorbed inside the raincoat-like membrane, were sticking onto the girl. His arms and hands grew numb while a strong electrical discharge (the healing qi) passed from his palms and fingers and flowed deeply into her GV-14 point. Her body, now resembling a distorted leather bag, started trembling and twisting about. The instrument at her feet began to whistle; the metallic bottles shook back and forth. The semi-transparent covering surrounding the girl began to fill with a foul slimy substance. The Chinese descriptive words used by Cao Gong about it can be translated as "dirty," "noxious," "sewer ooze." It seemed as if somehow, someone or something was systematically conducting this filth into each of the bottles. Note: An all-encompassing term for such sickly foul energy is xie qi - 邪气 – (pronounced sh'ay in a rising tone, chee in a descending tone). See Bad (pathogenic) Qi below.
In about five minutes, Cao Gong's hands suddenly sprang back from the girl. She now began to glow with health and vigor; she seemed like a different person. Whatever it was she had been suffering from, she now appeared cured. Seeing their experiment was a success, the two space beings became happy and started to giggle and laugh.
The astonished Cao Gong asked them, "What's going on? How can this be?" The extraterrestrial male answered (seemingly telepathically), Because you are in physically good health, I could supply you with universal cosmic light, electricity, and magnetic energy. Since such magnetic energetic abilities are not mutually repulsive, you were able to transmit it to her. Because she needed it, she absorbed it. This is very normal.
[Note: Here are Chinese translations to the above key terms: universal cosmic light – 宇宙光 , electric power – 电 , magnetic energy abilities - 磁能.]
Next they invited Cao Gong to visit the large room from which still came the torturous cries of the animals. He told them no. Still keeping the girl, the aliens flew him back to his home in Beijing.
The male and female extraterrestrials and Cao Gong entered as they had left two hours and twenty minutes before, by floating in through a wall, but this time into his nine-year old son's bedroom. The boy, "Cao Xing" (also an alias) woke up. He said, "What happened to the nerve in my head that controls sleeping?" Cao Gong was amazed that such grown-up words were coming from his young son. He thought, Were the ETs controlling the boy's mind somehow? After the ETs again left by floating through a wall, the boy asked, "How did these people enter my room? How did they leave like that?" Later investigators believed that the words spoken by his son were circumstantial evidence that Cao Gong was not alone in actually witnessing the two extraterrestrials.
It was 2:20 AM; he had been gone for about two-and-a half hours. By 4:00 AM that same night Cao Gong was on the telephone in deep conversation with a member of the Beijing UFO Research Association, Ma Linghuan, seeking explanations for what had just happened to him.
Cao Gong, UFO Investigator Zhang Jingping, and Xiao Xiaomei. The original source of this image was downloaded in 2017 from http://news.qq.com. In June 2025 a similar image was found at https://bbs-wenxuecity-com.translate.goog/ghost/178361.html?_x_tr_sl=zh-CN&_x_ tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl =en&_x_tr_pto=wapp
Zhang Jingping, Director of Investigations of the World Chinese UFO Association, decided to take on the case, and in April 2000 he began the investigation. After several hypnotic regression sessions, a lie detection session, physiological tests, and talks with Beijing police examiners, as well as with other ufologists, Cao Gong's story was found to be believable and truthful—at least to the extent that Cao Gong was honestly reporting what he believed he had seen and experienced. It seemed unlikely that he dreamt any of it: everything pointed to the probable fact that he was awake when his abduction took place.
In July 2000 to find the girl, Zhang Jingping brought Cao to the Tangshan Bureau of Public security. "The policemen made up a computer image photo-fit of the girl's face according to Cao's description," says Zhang. [The image of the girl is pictured above.] In November 2002, Zhang with a group of students from Beihang University went to Qinglong County to the north of Qinhuangdao, and by using a copy of the picture Cao Gong had helped to draw began searching among the area's 400,000 population. "Amazingly, we found a clue on the second day of our search. An old man in the county recognized the girl in our picture," says Zhang. They found the girl soon after that. She was called Xiao Xiaomei, "Young Little Sister"– a nickname. She was 15 years old, completely healthy, with a baby and a job with her a live-in lover cleaning other people's homes. Zhang brought her back to Beijing to meet Cao Gong. He identified her as the girl he had seen in the UFO. (Bill Chalker, 2005.)
Note. Zhang Jingping, a famous investigative ufologist, believed this case to be the most reliable of any he has ever investigated. https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/201211/746113.shtml, published Nov. 23, 2012.
Comments by John Voigt, Editor of Qi Encyclopedia: The use of external energy for healing is a worldwide technique from ancient times to today. The Christian Laying on of Hands, Reiki, and Healing Touch are all examples that have produced healings that western medicine cannot properly explain or duplicate. The Chinese have been especially proficient and successful with this kind of thing—after all they have been doing it for many millennia. For example, there is the legend—(I suggest that legends are somehow based on historical realities)—of the Yellow Emperor, (died 2598 BC), credited as being the founder of Chinese Medicine.
100-yuan banknote (1938) with a dragon and the Yellow Emperor who was said to have been taken up to heaven by a dragon. In ancient China UFOs were called dragons. Source: Wikipedia Commons. In the Yellow Emperor's court there was a shaman priest named Zhu You who practiced healing by emitting qi combined with sacred prayers. In the Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine it is written, "In earlier times most illnesses were treated in the manner of Zhu You." (Chapter 13). Today in China this healing modality may be called "External Qi Therapy" - Wai qi liaofa - 外气疗法.
Left: Chinese Traditional Form. Source: Google. Right: Chinese Simple ("Modern") Form. Source: Chineseetamology.org
Comments by John Voigt, Editor of Qi Encyclopedia: Qi (pronounced "chee" in a descending tone) is a highly complex term that gains its meaning from within the context in which it is placed. In traditional Chinese thought, Qi is usually thought to be the underlying force of all life, matter and consciousness in the universe. Within humans Qi may be understood as a being a bio-electric interface between conscious awareness and the physical body. As such, qi is the energetic foundation and cause of life.
More commonly and less accurately, the term Qi is used to describe its sensuous manifestations. For example in the Cao Gong abduction case: the sensations Cao Gong felt in the qi transmissions from the extraterrestrial into his GV-14 acupuncture point, and then what he felt as he sent qi into the sick girl as a "burst of heat, rivers of radiating pins and needles, numbing electrical-like discharges." Even the glow of health coming from the healed girl certain people might colloquially call "good qi." However strictly speaking these are not proper definitions, but only the phenomenological effects of the Qi.
In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), well-being is gained through the harmonious flow of qi. If qi is in excess or deficient in the organs or in the energy pathways (called "meridians," or more properly, Jīng Luò - 经络 "channels and collaterals"), or is of the wrong kind, as with the foul gaseous energy removed from girl, sickness and death can be the result.
Bad (pathogenic) Qi. Qi can cause illness as well as heal it. This bad qi is called Xie Qi – pronounced "shay" in a rising tone, and "chee" in a falling tone.
Formal TCM translations offer: Pathogenic (disease causing) – Turbid – Toxic. Especially telling is what the word means in Chinese everyday colloquially speech: "Bad" – "Evil" - "Demonic" – "Devil" – "Sickness making" – "Killing."
Xie Qi is caused by such factors as wind, cold, heat, wet, dry hot (fire), improper diet, phlegm, polluted atmosphere and improper life style behavior. Emotional imbalance can be caused or create xie qi. When abducted, the thirteen-year-old girl, Xiao Xiaomei, may have been in the beginning stages of an unwanted pregnancy. (Within the two years after the abduction she had given birth to a baby.)
For more about Xie Qi see, "Turbid Qi," by Professor Jerry Alan Johnson. https://qi-encyclopedia.com [Accessed, June 23, 2025.]
Her skin looked leathery like dark meat. Her forehead was ashen grey and black. Her body was wasted away, all skin and bones. [Source: https://www.163.com/dy/article/J9VKMF9F0511F1TQ.html. [Accessed June 25, 2025.]
The key to Xiao Xiaomei's healing was the sending into her body what the male ET called, "cosmic light, electricity and magnetic energy" by way of Cao Gong's percussive striking for five to six minutes at the base of the girl's neck just below the prominent bone at the back of the neck, the C7 vertebra, the location of the "Great Hammer," the Governing Vessel 14, (GV-14). This point may be used to expel the disease producers, Wind Heat or Wind Cold. The girl appeared to be healed right after Cao Gong's percussive striking.
From a Google AI Overview on black and grey skin caused by wind heat, accessed June 25, 2025.
Also black skin may be a sign of severe imbalances of Yin and Yang energies.
Private information from an unnamed source given to John Voigt in 2017. Although the Big Hammer is the major collection point in the back for the gathering of Yang Qi, this area is also the center axes point for the "Back Bridge Bar" (the area located in-between the shoulders that energetically connects both arms together). This area is an important place for transferring Qi. When the ET slapped Cao Gong's Big Hammer he possibly activated Cao Gong's arms via the Back Bridge Bar, and thus increased Cao Gong's capacity to store and maintain additional healing Qi within his body, and thereby transfer it to the sick girl. The "Big Hammer" [or "Grand Hammer"] is often used to remove Wind Heat (and Wind Cold), either of which could have been a factor in the young girl's illness.
TALISMANS. Many Daoist priests, and other spiritual healers still use these ritualistic symbols to communicate with the heavenly spirit world and with the energetic forces of nature to cure illness. In modern China and Taiwan you may see them everywhere—however, it should be clearly understood that unless created by someone who is fully schooled in their meanings and in how to draw them, they are no more than art objects. I admonish any reader without the needed extensive training not to attempt to create a power talisman—for that you need a very wise, experienced and proficient person. Inadvertently an ignorant person (and most of us are that in this area) may call down upon themselves and their clients the exact opposite of what they are seeking to accomplish. Talismans can mysteriously bring evil and sickness as well as good and well-being. [John Voigt].
TALISMANS. Remember that as part of the healing treatment for the young girl, the female extraterrestrial had her stand on a diagram on the floor. I suggest that this was a talisman, or at least functioned as one. I asked my unnamed source about that. He replied, I am assuming that the patient [is] the young Chinese girl in the picture. In her particular condition - after the treatment having successfully purged the Wind-Heat, and Tonified all of her internal organ deficiencies - I would then provide her with the following Talisman used to strengthen her Five Yin Organs, and rebuild her constitution.
Draw the Healing Talisman [shown in the adjacent sidebar] on yellow paper with black ink, add the patient's name and Four Pillars to the talisman (her birth year, month, day, and hour) at the center of the bottom hill; then at the bottom dedicate the talisman to the healing power of Taishang Laojun, one of the three highest immortals of Daoism.
Taishang Laojun, "The Grand Supreme Elderly Lord." One of the three highest immortals of Daoism. Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org
While doing this [dedication] draw a Talisman Gall Bladder; i.e., a black ball and fill it with clockwise circling ink while speaking a healing incantation dedicated to quickly bringing healing Qi into the patient's three San Bao bodies: physical-jing, energetic-qi, mental-shen.
Next "Activate" the Talisman: First place a Three-Star Seal at the top of the talisman, representing the Celestial Power and Divine Authority of the Three Pure Ones (this top image looks like the out-stretched wings of 3 seagulls side-by-side). Second, exhale your Daoist Priest Lineage Name into the talisman paper, and then place the official Daoist monastery chop seal in red ink in the center of the talisman. Third place the talisman inside the Altar Incense, and swirl it clockwise nine times while repeating the talisman's specific energetic function.
Right after that, light the talisman in the left red candle of the altar table, then place the ashes into a small cup. Add some water and stir it with a wooden chop stick while again repeating a healing talisman.
After that - give the talisman water to the patient to drink. As the patient drinks the talisman water, repeat the following Incantation "An - Lam" "An - Lam" "An - Lam" while she or he swallows it. This is done in order to purify the way and to quickly release the imprinted energy currently inserted inside the talisman water.
Professor Sun Shili, the director of the Beijing UFO Research Association, made the following comments about Cao Gong, We first checked his personality traits and discovered that he is a man dedicated to public welfare. Those that know him all admit that he is a respectable man of upright behavior, thus ruling out personality traits where he would willfully fabricate lies." MUFON, December 2005, p.5.
"His great-grand father was a wizard, who healed people, and refused payments. The Emperor gave the wizard a wood plaque that thanked and honored him." [Cao Gong is] skilled in Bone Massage inherited from his Buddhist family. Soon after the abduction he practiced such healing practices on several of China's leading political figures. Certain sources say that he was a member of a governmental advisory group, the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC). Source: https://www.chinesemedicineliving.com/acupuncture/strangest-energy-healing-ever-reported-part-three/ (Site unavailable June 29, 2025.)
The author may be reached at john.voigt@comcast.net
"Aliens are right next to the Chinese!" 外星人就在中国人身边!
https://bbs-wenxuecity-com.translate.goog/ghost/178361.html
"Aliens to cure humans? In 1999, a Beijing headmaster was brought into a UFO by two strange people."
"外星人给人类治病?1999年北京一校长,被两个怪人带进UFO."
https://k.sina.cn
Beijing "Cao Gong was abducted by aliens" .... 北京"曹公被外星人劫持" ....
https://www.163.com
Marlow Brooks. "Chinese Healing Talismans." http://marlowbrooks.com/chinese-healing-talismans
Bill Chalker. "Abducted from Beijing to Qinhuangdao." The Oz Files, May, 2005. https://theozfiles.blogspot.com
Bill Chalker. "The Untold Story of UFOs in China." New Dawn Special Issue, Vol. 14, no.1 (Jan. 2020).
"China Central Television (CCTV) Reveals for the First Time the Shocking Abduction of a Beijing Resident." 外星人劫持北京人!電視台首次震撼曝光 –
https://read01.com
"Chinese Schoolmaster Reports Flying Abduction and Healing by Proxy." MUFON UFO Journal, pp. 3-5; December 2005, Number 452.
"In the 1990s, a Beijing primary school principal was abducted by aliens for medical treatment."
https://www-163-com
Zhang Jingping. 曹公对领导人说见过外星人吗 -
"Cao Gong told the leaders about aliens?" http://blog.sina.com.cn
[Inaccessible on June 29, 2025]
Professor Jerry Alan Johnson. "Turbid Qi." Qi-Encyclopedia, [Accessed June 23, 2025]. https://qi-encyclopedia.com/
Luis Fernando Bernardi Junqueira, "Revealing Secrets: Talismans, Healthcare and the Market of the Occult in Early Twentieth-century China." Social History of Medicine, Volume 34, Issue 4, November 2021, pages 1068–1093. https://doi.org
John Voigt. "The Beijing Qi Healing Abduction." Qi-Encyclopedia, (Published about August 24, 2017).
John Voigt. "The Strangest Energy Healing Ever Reported: The Beijing UFO Abduction Case, [in three parts]." ChineseMedicineLiving.com, August 28, 2017. https://www.chinesemedicineliving.com
The Strangest Energy Healing Ever Reported – Part 2
The Strangest Energy Healing Ever Reported – Part 3
[These three URLs were accessed June 24, 2025.]
Yongsheng, Bi. Chinese Qigong Outgoing-Qi Therapy. Shandong Science and Technology Press, 1997; [text in English].
Related: Qi | Modified: 07/10/2025 |