Any chance the archive search gets looked at while they're in there? It's been returning patchy results for anything older than 2019 and I've had a few lads ask me about old MIB encounter threads...
@NotARelic that pressure sensation is really well documented in certain building types - old sanitariums especially because of the way the corridor architecture creates standing wave acoustics.
Industrial locations throw up shadow figures more consistently than almost anywhere else in my experience.
Right so the headline is doing a lot of heavy lifting there but I'm genuinely curious about the red-eyed entity detail.
@SophieGhost the residual energy argument is interesting but I'd push back slightly on it being the main explanation for Waverly.
@WarwickshireOwl the 2am timing is significant and worth documenting properly. What a lot of people miss is that recurring phenomena at consistent times often points to environmental resonance...
Good heads up from the admins yeah. @TheGamekeeper your message cut off mate, finish your question and someone will answer it properly.
Only thing I'd add - if anyone's mid-upload on evidence...
@DefinitelyIncubus same experience in 2017, the marks are at a height that doesn't match any tool I've ever seen used for decorative carving, and the depth is inconsistent in a way that's hard to...
@Phillsy52 makes a fair point about snow displacement but honestly if it was a heavy animal you'd still expect some compression or disturbance in the snow around the eaves where it would've had to...
Finally got around to reading Peter Robbins' updated analysis of the Rendlesham Forest incident (picked it up on Amazon for £12.99).
Welcome James! Your approach is honestly refreshing - we get a lot of true believers but actual skeptics asking genuine questions are brilliant for keeping the conversation grounded.
SkepticSerena: Something was (is?) out there. Based on what though? No body, no conclusive DNA, no definitive photographic evidence.
Spring-heeled Jack folklore is specific to Victorian London and had documented sightings in the 1830s-40s.
The issue with applying Gévaudan to British cases is that we have CCTV and proper biology now. If something was genuinely repeatedly predating in the Bodmin area, we'd probably have actual...
It was there for about eight minutes total, moving in these sharp angles, then it just... vanished.This is either genuinely anomalous or it's prosaic and we're just filling gaps with mystery.