The Government Could Change Reality with UAP Disclosure
- 4 days ago
- 9 min read
Introducing Slobodan Nesovic, an experienced psychologist whose journey from the tumultuous landscapes of Serbia to the bustling streets of San Francisco has shaped his profound understanding of human nature.

What would it take for your understanding of reality to crack open? I am not talking about a slight shift that makes you uncomfortable for a week. But genuinely crack. The way ice does when the temperature beneath it changes and what seemed solid turns out to have been moving all along.

On February 19, 2026, President Trump ordered the Pentagon and federal agencies to begin releasing classified files on UAPs (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena), including materials that touch on evidence of what officials have called "alien and extraterrestrial life." As of late May 2026, credible reports indicate that White House officials have been quietly meeting with religious leaders across multiple denominations to help prepare communities for the possibility of confirmed non human intelligence (Coulthart, as cited in ibtimes.co.uk, 2026). Investigative journalist Ross Coulthart, who has covered this story for years, has publicly warned of what he calls "catastrophic disclosure." He is referring to a release of information so jarring it could destabilize institutions, financial systems, and individual psyches overnight.
The term that has quietly entered the conversation among psychologists and policy analysts is ontological shock. It refers to the psychological disorientation that occurs when someone's foundational assumptions about reality are suddenly and irreversibly disrupted. It is not the ordinary surprise of bad news, but the deeper shift of discovering that the ground you were standing on is fundamentally different from what you thought it was.
As a psychologist, I find this moment clarifying rather than alarming. I have spent almost twenty years helping people navigate exactly this kind of internal disruption, the person who received an impossible diagnosis, the veteran who came home to a world that no longer made sense, the man who survived something his mind had no category for. The outer trigger changes, but the inner mechanism does not.
You do not need to know whether the files are real, exaggerated, or politically motivated to benefit from what follows. What you need is a grounded psyche, and that is entirely within reach.
When your map of reality no longer matches the territory
Sociologist Anthony Giddens coined the term ontological security to describe the quiet, background confidence most people carry that the world is stable, knowable, and continuous. We rarely notice it because we rarely lose it. But when we do, the nervous system responds as though facing a physical threat. Cortisol rises. Attention narrows. The mind urgently scans for a narrative that restores the feeling of order. This is why conspiratorial thinking spikes during periods of collective uncertainty. Your nervous system finds a pattern and holds onto it.
Psychology Today noted in April 2026 that "people with high intolerance of uncertainty may struggle more when familiar assumptions about reality change." Research suggests that deep discomfort with not knowing is present at clinically significant levels in roughly one in ten people and is one of the strongest predictors of anxiety and obsessive compulsive thinking patterns.
But here is a remarkable piece of information, most people do not shatter. Psychologist Tim Lomas, in a 2024 study published in the Journal of Humanistic Psychology, analyzed public reactions to congressional UAP hearings and found that ontological disruption is better described as fracturing rather than collapse. Dr. Lomas suggests a gradual cracking of assumptions, not a sudden total breakdown. People asked deep questions and struggled, but the majority found ways to widen their frame rather than abandon it entirely.
This is not new, it is just now becoming visible
As I explored in my previous article introducing PsychoEnalysis, Nikola Tesla proposed that everything in the universe is best understood through energy, frequency, and vibration. His theory of the universe's underlying structure, explored by physicist and consciousness researcher Djuro Raković, describes individual and collective human consciousness as part of a quantum holographic field, a web of informational energy that extends far beyond the limits of the biological brain. Tesla did not limit consciousness to the human body. He never believed the universe's intelligence began and ended with us.
Neither do I. Carl Jung, whose depth psychology informs a significant portion of PsychoEnalysis, wrote about the UFO phenomenon directly. In Flying Saucers, A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies, published in 1959 near the end of his life, Jung described the space guests from flying saucers as a kind of "technological angels," a projection of humanity's collective unconscious longing for transcendence, for contact with something greater than the merely human. What Jung was pointing to was not the extraterrestrial question specifically, but the psychological question underneath it, what do we do when the universe is bigger than our current story about it? PsychoEnalysis offers a direct answer to that question. The "E" at the center of the name stands for energy, the recognition that human beings are not only biological and psychological organisms, but energetic and spiritual ones, embedded in a field of consciousness that the quantum sciences are only beginning to formally describe. From this vantage point, the disclosure of non human intelligence is not a destabilization of reality. It is a confirmation that the field of consciousness extends beyond our species, as Tesla's equations and virtually every wisdom tradition in human history have always suggested.
I remember standing in the Arizona desert when I was nineteen, alone under a sky so dense with stars it seemed to be alive. Something in me knew that the universe was populated in ways science had not yet admitted. That knowing never left me. It eventually became part of how I understand consciousness, energy, and healing.
Ontological shock will strike those whose worldview was too small to begin with. The work of PsychoEnalysis is to expand that worldview so that no single disclosure can shatter it.
Three practices to stay grounded when reality shifts
Whether the UAP files ultimately reveal something world altering or something carefully managed and inconclusive, your nervous system will need tools. What follows are the three practices I recommend to higher functioning clients in clinical sessions when one is navigating changes in a reality that has stopped being reliable.
1. Tap out the fear before it becomes a narrative: EFT tapping
Left unaddressed, fear does not stay a feeling. It hardens into stories that make the fear feel permanent. This is why catching fear early, before it builds a story around itself, is the whole point. This is the clinical reality behind Emotional Freedom Techniques, commonly known as EFT tapping, a method developed from Roger Callahan's Thought Field Therapy that involves tapping on specific acupuncture meridian points while verbally acknowledging a distressing emotion. In 2022, a comprehensive systematic review published in Frontiers in Psychology formally classified clinical EFT as an evidence based practice for anxiety, PTSD, and a range of psychological conditions, a classification aligned with APA Division 12 criteria.
The mechanism is worth understanding. Tapping on meridian points while naming a fear sends a calming signal directly to the amygdala, the brain's threat detection structure, reducing cortisol levels measurably within minutes. This happens independent of whether the fear is "rational." You do not need to resolve whether non human intelligence exists before you can settle your nervous system. EFT works on the feeling, not the fact. For those unfamiliar with the protocol, the basic sequence is explained in my YouTube video titled 'How to Improve Your Mental Health Starting Today' as Tip number four.
EFT could be a five minute intervention. No equipment required. It works for UAP anxiety the same way it works for the fear of a medical procedure, a difficult conversation, or the middle of the night when the mind will not stop running.
2. Anchor yourself in the unified field: Complete meditation
When ontological shock takes hold, the first thing that happens neurologically is a surge into beta brain wave activity, the rapid, analytical, high alert frequency associated with stress, overthinking, and the constant scanning we recognize today as doomscrolling. The antidote is not more information. It is a deliberate descent into alpha and theta brain wave states, where the analytical barrier quiets and the practitioner makes contact with what Serbian energy worker Zoran Gruicic describes as the unified field of Infinite Power, Infinite Love, and Infinite Knowledge. I have been practicing and teaching a specific kind of meditation that teaches you how to lower brain waves for years. The reason it is the first tool I reach for in moments of existential disruption is precisely because it does not ask you to think your way through the problem. It asks you to go beneath the problem, to access a layer of reality that remains stable regardless of what any government announces. You are not going into denial. You are touching the ground beneath the ground. Pick a meditation practice such as Complete Meditation that will help you lower your brain waves and go past the analytical barrier into a calm space that allows for nervous system regulation.
3. Expand your worldview before the world does it for you: Psycho spiritual centering
The third practice is the most distinctly PsychoEnalysis in nature and, in some ways, the most important. It is less a technique and more a reorientation. A paradigm shift.
Ontological shock, at its deepest level, is a failure of worldview expansion. People who build their sense of self entirely at the level of the ego, what Freud called the psychic structure that manages the boundary between inner experience and outer reality, are uniquely vulnerable when that outer reality changes. Because if the ego's story about the world collapses, the ego loses its footing entirely.
Those who have developed a relationship with what Roberto Assagioli called the transpersonal self carry a different kind of stability. They are not immune to disruption, but they have an anchor that does not depend on any particular version of reality being true.
When you feel reality shifting, I invite you to sit with three questions, not to answer them intellectually, but to feel into them:
Is my sense of self dependent on this belief being true? If the answer is yes, that belief was a borrowed anchor. Real groundedness does not outsource itself to facts about the universe.
What in me is not shocked, what remains stable? Turn your attention toward the observer within, what Jung called the Self with a capital S, the witnessing presence beneath every thought and feeling and breaking news alert.
What does this expand in me rather than destroy? Every time the horizon of reality has moved outward in human history, human beings have become, eventually, after the disorientation, larger. This moment carries the same invitation.
The universe was always bigger than we thought
Before anyone had coined the phrase "ontological shock," mystics sat with the enormity of the cosmos and called it home. Shamans traveled to realms beyond ordinary perception and returned with medicine. Physicists stared at equations that implied a universe of staggering interconnection and did not flinch. They were not destabilized by what was out there. They were enlarged by it.
The fifth wave of psychology that includes PsychoEnalysis offers the framework of a bio psycho spiritual architecture robust enough to hold expanded realities without collapse. A worldview that includes the possibilities of other dimensional existence, unlike the closed view of Newtonian physics, which limits our thinking to a three dimensional time and space. PsychoEnalysis provides the flexible strength of one who has already made peace with not knowing everything. In that not knowing, something spacious rather than frightening is found.
Whatever the files eventually reveal, one truth will remain constant, the quality of your inner foundation determines whether new information breaks you open destructively or opens you up into something more whole.
If you find yourself navigating existential anxiety, an unsettled sense of groundlessness, or the particular discomfort of a world that has stopped making familiar sense, I invite you to explore PsychoEnalysis. For a free 20 minute consultation, visit Psy-e or reach out directly at +1 (747) 327-6333. Healing is not about having every answer. It is a journey that you take within yourself.
Slobodan Nesovic, CA licensed Clinical Psychologist
Slobodan Nesovic, PsyD, is a seasoned California-licensed clinical psychologist with a deep-rooted passion for psycho-spiritual development spanning over two decades. Inspired by spiritual experiences in the Arizona desert during his late teens, Slobodan embarked on a journey of self-discovery, delving into the works of Plato, Lao Tzu, Jung, and Nikola Tesla. With over 17 years of experience, Slobodan integrates a unique approach to therapy—PsychoEnalysis—blending energy psychology, psychodynamic methods, and spirituality. As a psychologist and a Complete Meditation (CM) teacher, he empowers clients to navigate their journey to healing and self-discovery, leveraging his holistic understanding of human nature. Beyond his professional pursuits, Slobodan is a dedicated father, quantum medicine enthusiast, and admirer of Nikola Tesla's work. A basketball lover, he even shared the court with future NBA player Marko Jaric. For a transformative experience tailored to mind and spirit, connect with Slobodan for a free 20-minute phone consultation at +1 747 327 6333 or click here.










