Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Monday, January 29, 2024

A Spooky Event on My Late Father's Birthday

Today I had a dream that seemed to be a symbolic reference to my deceased father. Very often I get more direct dreams in which my father appears unmistakably in the dream. I have had 129 such dreams since I started recording my dreams in November, 2020. This morning (about two hours ago) after having the dream that may have symbolically referred to my father, I lay in bed thinking about my father. At that instant something spooky happened. I heard a loud "click" sound. The GFCI outlet in my bathroom had suddenly turned off, although there was no one in the bathroom.  This can occur from contact with water or steam or by someone pressing the Test button on the outlet. Other than water at the bottom of the toilet, there was no water or steam in the empty bathroom, which had been unused for more than an hour.  Nothing was plugged in to the outlet. So how could the outlet have shut off?  It was as if some invisible presence had pressed the Test button, at the instant I was thinking about my late father.  After waking up I realized that today is my late father's birthday. 

When I pressed one of the buttons, the outlet turned back on. There was no disturbance in a nearby digital clock, so no power interruption hypothesis can seem to explain the strange event. In the nearly two years I have been living at my current location, I have never observed this outlet shutting off when no one was in the bathroom (although on only one previous day last year I inferred that such a thing had happened). 

Sunday, January 28, 2024

Saturday, January 27, 2024

Striped Orbs With Two Stripes, Part 3

Below are some photos I previously took of double-striped orbs. I will include links to the original posts. All of the photos were taken in clean dry air, and the outdoor photos were taken when there was no fog, mist, rain or precipitation. 

Here are a variety of double-striped orbs I photographed, all with an inverted Y pattern:

orb repeating pattern

The one here is from 2018:


striped orb with two stripes

Here from 2018 is a strange sky orb I photographed:

striped sky orb

The photo below shows a mysterious orb I photographed indoors with a reverse 7 inside it.

number in orb


This reminds me of the three times I have photographed a 7 inside mysterious orbs:

mysterious orb with number

The one below is from 2018:


The one below is also from 2018:




One of these three sky orbs from 2018 is double-striped:

striped sky orbs
This one from 2018 had the lucky number 11:

number in orb

This one from 2017 looked rather like a bird on a branch:

halloween orb

Here is another one from 2017:


double striped orb

Friday, January 26, 2024

Spirit Signs #4

 Here is the latest in a series of short videos I am making 

Thursday, January 25, 2024

Spirit Signs #3

 Here is the latest in a series of short videos I am making. 

Wednesday, January 24, 2024

Spirit Signs #2

 Here is the latest in a series of videos I am creating.

Tuesday, January 23, 2024

Monday, January 22, 2024

Orbs With Two Stripes, Part 2

Below are some photos I previously took of double-striped orbs. I will include links to the original posts. All of the photos were taken in clean dry air, and the outdoor photo was taken when there was no fog, mist, rain or precipitation. 

The one below was nice and bright:

double striped orb

This one was also nice and bright:

double striped orb


The one below was pretty bright. 

Here's another one:

mysterious marks


Here's a pair with a similar look:

mysterious pattern

Here's one that I got at Grand Central Terminal:

spirit orb

There's one double-striped orb here:

strange orbs

This one is like some toppled "V":

spooky orb

There is one double-striped orb here:

weird orbs

This one was a little weak in brightness:



Here's another one:

double striped orb

This one was a sky orb:

orb with letter

Saturday, January 20, 2024

Mystery Orbs Should Make Us More Humble

 The US Department of Defense now has an office dedicated to investigating reports of UFOs (or UAP, variously defined as Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena or Unidentified Aerial Phenomena). The office is officially called the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office or AARO. Sean Kirkpatrick led the office in 2022 and 2023, but resigned around the end of 2023. Sean has written an article that recently appeared in Scientific American, one entitled "Here's What I Learned as the U.S. Government's UFO Hunter."  PC users will find the article blocked by some annoying popup that demands your email address. I read the article on my I-Pad without having to give my email address, and I will summarize the contents. 

I can start by noting the egotistical-sounding article title.  Sean was the leader of an office with quite a few people, but he has described himself as "the" US government's UFO hunter, as if it was a one-man show. Sean then denounces "today's world of misinformation, conspiracy driven decision-making and sensationalist-dominated governance," and claims that "evidence-based critical thinking is eroding." He claims to "have experienced this erosion up close and personal," and that this was "one factor in my decision to step down from my position." Wow, that sounds quite "holier than thou." But it doesn't really make sense. If there are some people around you not thinking very clearly, why not help things out by staying around and standing up for clear, rational thinking? 

Sean then states, "AARO discovered a few things, and none were about aliens." No, actually, AARO encountered quite a few reports of mysterious anomalies, and we do not understand the cause of such anomalies.  Visiting extraterrestrials is one of the main theories to explain such anomalies. Such a theory has not been ruled out by anything AARO has done. 

Next, Sean makes a strange reference to the AATIP program (an acronym which stands for Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program), a program that is also called the  Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Application Program (AAWSAP).  Sean seemingly tries to make the program sound like something that was about "paranormal research at Skinwalker Ranch in Utah." He says "taxpayer money was inappropriately spent on paranormal research at Skinwalker Ranch in Utah." The truth is that the AATIP program seems to have had no more than a slight involvement in Skinwalker Ranch in Utah. The AATIP program mainly produced reports on a wide variety of futuristic topics. You can see a list of the reports it produced at the "Black Vault" link here. Here are the reports it produced

  1.  Metallic Glasses – Status and Prospects for Aerospace Applications [30 Pages, 1.74MB]
  2.  Aerospace Applications of Programmable Matter [20 Pages, 1.34MB]
  3.  Pulsed High-Power Microwave Source Technology [37 Pages, 2.55MB]
  4.  Biomaterials [32 Pages, 1.75MB]
  5.  Materials for Advanced Aerospace Platforms [27 Pages, 1.96MB]
  6.  Space Access – Where We’ve Been and Where We Could Go [57 Pages, 3.27MB]
  7.  Invisibility Cloaking – Theory and Experiments [29 Pages, 1.62MB]
  8.  Positron Aerospace Propulsion [35 Pages, 1.89MB]
  9.  Inertial Electrostatic Confinement Fusion [72 Pages, 4.35MB]
  10.  Metallic Spintronics [27 Pages, 1.77MB]
  11.  Advanced Nuclear Propulsion For Manned Deep Space Missions [37 Pages, 2.12MB]
  12.  Technological Approaches to Controlling External Devices [36 Pages, 2.5MB]
  13.  Warp Drive, Dark Energy, and the Manipulation of Extra Dimensions [33 Pages, 2.13MB]
  14.  The Role of Superconductors in Gravity Research [16 Pages, 1.33MB]
  15.  Advanced Space Propulsion Based on Vacuum (Spacetime Metric) Engineer [17 Pages, 1.2MB]
  16.  The Space Communication Implications of Quantum Entanglement and Nonlocality [32 Pages, 2.03MB]
  17.  Maverick Inventor Versus Corporate Inventor – Where Will the Next Major Innovations Arise? [19 Pages, 1.37MB]
  18.  Traversable Wormholes, Stargates, and Negative Energy [42 Pages, 2.66MB]
  19.  Antigravity for Aerospace Applications [44 Pages, 2.78MB]
  20.  Biosensors and BioMEMS – A Survey of the Present Field [45 Pages, 2.84MB]
  21.  High-Frequency Gravitational Wave Communications [57 Pages, 4.38MB]
  22.  Metamaterials for Aerospace Applications [27 Pages, 1.74MB]
  23.  State of the Art and Evolution of High-Energy Laser Weapons [31 Pages, 1.77MB]
  24.  Concepts for Extracting Energy From the Quantum Vacuum [57 Pages, 3.61MB]
  25.  An Introduction to the Statistical Drake Equation [55 Pages, 2.83MB]
  26.  Anomalous Acute and Subacute Field Effects on Human Biological Tissues [38 Pages, 2.17MB]
  27.  Laser Lightcraft Nanosatellites [77 Pages, 3.8MB]
  28.  Cockpits in the Era of Breakthrough Flight [57 Pages, 3.26MB]
  29.  Negative Mass Propulsion [43 Pages, 3.26MB]
  30.  Aneutronic Fusion Propulsion [49 Pages, 2.35MB]
  31.  Detection and High Resolution Tracking of Vehicles at Hypersonic Velocities [46 Pages, 2.19MB]
  32.  Ultracapacitors as Energy and Power Storage Devices [34 Pages, 2.02MB]
  33.  MHD Air Breathing Propulsion and Power for Aerospace Applications [32 Pages, 2.14MB]
  34.  Cognitive Limits on Simultaneous Control of Multiple Unmanned Spacecraft [30 Pages, 1.92MB]
  35.  Quantum Computing and Utilizing Organic Molecules in Automation Technology [54 Pages, 3.12MB]
  36.  Quantum Tomography of Negative Energy States in the Vacuum [51 Pages, 2.12MB]
  37.  Aneutronic Fusion Propulsion II [36 Pages, 1.88MB]
There's nothing in this list about Skinwalker Ranch. So why has Sean attempted to belittle this program by claiming that "taxpayer money was inappropriately spent on paranormal research at Skinwalker Ranch in Utah"? And why would money be inappropriately spent if someone was researching the paranormal at such a location, reputed to be a hotspot for UFO sightings? For the former head of a US UFO office to be thinking that it is inappropriate to investigate the paranormal sounds very strange indeed. Diligent scholars of UFO reports are well aware than such reports have long been entangled with various types of paranormal phenomena such as ESP.  And dramatic UFO reports are typically themselves reports of the paranormal. 

Most of the topics mentioned above are no more outrageous or fringe than many types of research that receive abundant government funding, such as research on the never-observed hypothetical realities called dark energy and dark matter.  Trying to belittle some claim he doesn't believe, Sean strangely tells us "the key purveyors of this narrative have known one another for decades," as if such a claim was important. Sean then tries to create bad impressions about the AATIP program by saying that it worked on "fringe studies."  The word "fringe" is a long-used term of disparagement that no director of a UFO office has any business using. The topics in the list above (and also the topic of UFOs) are no more "fringe" than many research topics the US government lavishly funds, such as the search for dark matter, dark energy, and primordial cosmic inflation.  

Later, Sean makes this statement: "Simply put, 'unidentified' is unacceptable." To the contrary, man's knowledge of nature is fragmentary, and many types of unidentified phenomena have always been an important part of human experience. Any idea that "unidentified" is unacceptable would seem to involve vast overconfidence about the state of human understanding. Later, Sean strangely claims that UFO research is "data poor." To the contrary, organizations such as MUFON have tons of data about UFO sightings.   

For example, one of the documents above (" Anomalous Acute and Subacute Field Effects on Human Biological Tissues") has the following interesting data-rich table in an appendix, listing effects reported in UFO encounters:

UFO effects

Sean's article is centered around his grievances against some people he seems very annoyed by, and he seems more interested in talking about his grievances against such people than shedding light on the topic of unidentified aerial phenomena. Sean's article has a  "UFO researchers should not taint themselves" ring to it, with the idea perhaps being that there must be no mingling with things that NASA materialists might disapprove of.  That does not make sense, because UFO reports are thoroughly entangled with psychic phenomena,  as I discuss in my posts here and here. A good attitude for the leader of some government office having the task of investigating UFO reports would be: fearlessly collect and analyze observations, and make whatever conclusions are justified by them, no matter how much that may offend the easily-offended ears of today's experts. 

Here are quotes that Sean made in a public hearing:

"Sean Kirkpatrick: "The vast majority of what has been reported and what we have data on, a little less than half now, are orbs, round spheres."

"Sean Kirkpatrick:  "This is a spherical orb metallic in the Middle East 2022 by an MQ-9. I will come back to the sensor question that David raised here in a moment. This is a typical example of the thing that we see most of. We see these all over the world and we see these in making very interesting apparent maneuvers."

Such puzzling anomalies should teach us great humility, but I think Sean failed to learn the lesson. "Unidentified is unacceptable" is not something suggesting humility before the countless mysteries of reality. 

Strangely, the link that previously took you to NASA's report on UFOs (a low-effort affair, as I discuss here) is now a dead link.