Summer solstice abduction experience - 21st June 2019, Scottish Highlands

by charlie_moore · 3 years ago 716 views 6 replies
charlie_moore
charlie_moore
Member
3 posts
Joined Jul 2025
3 years ago
#3382

I'm posting this anonymously because my family would absolutely do my head in if they knew I was discussing this publicly. But I need to get it out there because it's been four years and I still don't have any explanation.

Summer solstice 2019, I was camping near Loch Ness with my wife. It was about 11:30pm - still light out because of the Scottish summer. I went for a walk up this hill to get a better view of the sunset. I remember the temperature suddenly dropping despite it being a warm evening. Then everything gets fuzzy.

Next thing I know it's 3:47am and I'm back at the tent. My wife said I'd been gone for maybe 45 minutes according to her watch, but I'm certain I was on that hill for at least four hours. I've got no marks on my body but I've had this weird sensitivity to magnetic fields ever since - my mobile goes haywire sometimes and I feel all tingly near electrical substations.

Has anyone else experienced missing time around the solstices? I'm not asking if aliens are real - I'm asking if there's a connection between solstice dates and abduction reports.

TheFuneralDirector583
TheFuneralDirector583
Member
3 posts
Joined Aug 2025
3 years ago
#3386

This is genuinely fascinating. Missing time around solstices is actually quite well documented in UFO literature - particularly during summer solstice because of the extended daylight. It might be easier for craft to operate without being spotted against the constant twilight. Have you looked into hypnotic regression to recover the lost hours?

Colin S.
Colin S.
Member
3 posts
Joined Sep 2025
3 years ago
#3390

The magnetic sensitivity is interesting because that's a common post-abduction symptom. Have you had that checked by a doctor? Might be worth ruling out something neurological first, just to be thorough. But if it came on suddenly after the solstice incident, that's pretty suspicious.

CaseyHarris
CaseyHarris
Member
2 posts
Joined Nov 2025
3 years ago
#3396

Could easily be sleep paralysis combined with the midnight sun effect confusing your sense of time. Near Loch Ness you'd also have all the folklore and local stories in your head, which can influence what your brain interprets as memory. Not saying it didn't happen, just that our brains are brilliant at making us remember things that fit our expectations.

OliviaHolloway
OliviaHolloway
Member
4 posts
Joined Sep 2024
3 years ago
#3403

I'm certain I was on that hill for at least four hours.
This is the thing though - how certain can you really be? You might've dozed off, or your perception of time genuinely shifted because of the weird lighting. I'm not dismissing your experience, but missing time is the hardest thing to prove because we only have your internal sense of duration to go on.

Sandra T.
Sandra T.
Member
4 posts
Joined Apr 2025
3 years ago
#3407

Mate, I'd genuinely recommend keeping a log of the magnetic sensitivity stuff. Note down dates, times, locations, how intense it is. Over time you might notice a pattern - maybe it spikes around solstices again? If there's a genuine cyclical pattern that would be proper compelling evidence of something unusual.

cheeky_warden
cheeky_warden
Member
6 posts
Joined May 2025
3 years ago
#3409

The Loch Ness area has loads of UFO activity historically. There's probably something about that location specifically - either a physical geographic feature that attracts phenomena, or just concentrated folklore energy. Worth checking the local UFO databases to see if others have reported similar incidents near that exact spot.

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