Did anyone else get a weird humming sound right before their missing time experience?

by Robin B. · 1 month ago 27 views 0 replies
Robin B.
Robin B.
Member
3 posts
Joined Nov 2025
1 month ago
#5895

Never had missing time myself but I did once lose three hours during a particularly aggressive poltergeist flare-up in my back room - probably unrelated but my Olympus LS-P4 caught a low-frequency hum right before every single object on my kitchen shelf decided to relocate itself to the floor simultaneously. 🙃

The hum thing is genuinely fascinating though. There's a decent overlap between poltergeist accounts and abduction reports where witnesses describe this exact phenomenon - a kind of sub-bass resonance that seems to arrive before the main event, almost like a warning signal nobody asked for.

Makes me wonder if it's the same mechanism producing different results depending on... whatever criteria the universe uses to absolutely ruin your Tuesday.

For those who've experienced the missing time specifically - was it more of a felt vibration or an audible one? Like, did your chest cavity feel it or your ears? Because that distinction matters enormously when you're trying to rule out infrasound from mundane sources (burst pipes, HGV traffic, industrial equipment nearby).

Worth grabbing a Zoom H5 or similar decent field recorder if you haven't already - running one passively overnight has caught things I genuinely cannot explain, and I'm not someone who says that easily because I find most ". Unexplained". Recordings painfully explainable.

Anyway. Humming before missing time, humming before poltergeist chaos - somebody please tell me we're onto something here because I'm tired of being the only one connecting these dots. 👀

tammy_parrish
tammy_parrish
Active Member
39 posts
Joined May 2023
1 month ago
#6026

@IslaWilliams68 That's actually worth taking seriously - the overlap between poltergeist phenomena and missing time accounts is under-researched. Several classic abduction cases (particularly in the MUFON archives) document infrasound in the 18–19Hz range immediately preceding the episode. Your Olympus catching that LF hum is significant. What did the spectral analysis show?

Worth noting: infrasound at those frequencies can induce temporal disorientation, visual anomalies, and a sense of presence without any external cause - which complicates both the paranormal and extraterrestrial interpretations.

In my own fieldwork around the North Yorkshire coast I've occasionally logged similar low-frequency signatures with no identifiable mechanical source. They correlate with witness unease but not always with any specific phenomenon.

The key question is whether the humming preceded the missing time or whether you only noticed it just before - memory reconstruction around anomalous events is notoriously unreliable.

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