Cordelia » 18 Aug 2017 18:03 wrote:Forgot about this thread I started back in 2009 about the 'Taos Hum'.
http://rigorousintuition.ca/board2/view ... =8&t=25737
(Haven't 'heard' the hum in the last few years.)
Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff
Cordelia » 18 Aug 2017 18:03 wrote:Forgot about this thread I started back in 2009 about the 'Taos Hum'.
http://rigorousintuition.ca/board2/view ... =8&t=25737
(Haven't 'heard' the hum in the last few years.)
I think I was alluding to our commonplace electrical lines hung between poles acting like HAARP, but if in phase, could sympathetic vibrations be induced in wires set at a distance that could create what seems to be being described as low frequency audible sounds that vary somewhat in pitch. Just a brain fart ~
Iamwhomiam » Fri Aug 18, 2017 6:37 pm wrote: MRIs aligns all your hydrogen atoms.
Iamwhomiam » Sat Aug 19, 2017 12:21 am wrote:It's difficult to tell what is being quoted from your own words, BH. This bit a quote: "want to correct a small misconception you have. It's not the protons that are aligned. It's the hydrogen atoms." or your words?
Not sure who's talking, BH. I'm pretty familiar with MRIs and how they function. The tiniest sliver of a burr thrown off from grinding metal and buried deep in your skin could migrate and do all sorts of damage when the magnet is operational. I had to undergo a full body series of x-rays before being cleared for an MRI. My concern was knowing I've pulled steel splinters from my eyes several times, could I have missed any?
elfismiles » 17 Aug 2017 20:03 wrote:Miles' and Mack's Mystery Hum Experiences discussed on PsiOp-Radio 184 - 170402
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jNw-vBw3W8MPsiOp Radio 184 – 170402Mystery Hummmm Mind ControlMeanwhile, in this week’s Anomaly News round-up there are several articles of interest including a New York Times article, United States of Paranoia, about the people who feel they are the victims of Gang-Stalking. That article even touches on those who feel they are being attacked by E.L.F. mind control technology and Mystery Hum related phenomena. Two years ago, Jared Keller wrote another excellent and comprehensive article on the Mystery Hums that also touched on the mind control element but also documents the various research into finding the sounds ultimate source. Earlier this year, I myself experienced a series of mysterious deep humming like effects over a period of time. In this week’s news round-up we also have a new article from The Guardian about the Windsor Hum.
SOURCE: Anomaly Archives eNews 6/15/2016 | Anomaly Archives
http://www.anomalyarchives.org/public-h ... s-6152016/
SMiles’ experience entry in The World Hum Map and Database
Do you know what it is? Mystery surrounds ‘hum’ in Cromer
http://www.edp24.co.uk/news/do-you-know ... -1-4936660
Anomaly Archives: Mystery Hums / Sounds
http://www.anomalyarchives.org/public-h ... tery-hums/
TheHum.info – The World Hum Map and Database by Glen MacPherson, British Columbia
http://www.thehum.info / https://hummap.wordpress.com
What is causing the mysterious worldwide hum’? – Al Jazeera (Youtube.com Video)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WuSdzxhWpU0
Cracking the mystery of the ‘Worldwide Hum’ – Glen MacPherson Lecturer, University of British Columbia, TheConversation.com
https://theconversation.com/cracking-th ... -hum-60296
A Maddening Sound Is the Hum, a mysterious noise heard around the world, science or mass delusion? Colin Dickey, NewRepublic.com
https://newrepublic.com/article/132128/maddening-sound
http://www.psiopradio.com/2017/04/psiop ... 84-170402/
See also...
search.php?keywords=%22mystery+hum%22
The Atlantic Selects
The Unexplained Noise 2 Percent of People Can Hear
A man is tormented by a low-frequency humming sound emanating from his house, which he believes is caused by a nearby gas pipeline.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwE8kIBd1xY
video by Garret Harkawik
posted by Emily Buder
Jul 18, 2019
Some describe it as sounding like an engine idling just outside the house. Others report hearing a low-frequency rumble. But almost everyone who can hear it—2 percent of the population, by some estimates—agrees on one thing: “the hum,” as it has come to be called, is a persistent, maddening noise for which the scientific world has no known explanation.
Since it was first reported in Bristol, England, in 1970, this elusive phenomenon has plagued thousands of people across the globe, slowly eroding their sanity. One of them is Steve Kohlhase, an industrial-facilities mechanical engineer living in Brookfield, Connecticut. In Garret Harkawik’s short documentary Doom Vibrations, Kohlhase describes the noise: “Your ears are ringing real bad. If it’s a bad day, it feels like your brain is being squeezed. It’s nauseating.” Kohlhase says his dog, too, seems to suffer from the noise; once Kohlhase started hearing it, the canine became lethargic, and has never recovered.
In the film, Kohlhase lays out the extensive evidence he has collected on the unexplained noise pollution. The quest for answers has consumed him; he estimates that he has spent $30,000 on legal fees and equipment related to his independent investigation. The single through line in all reported cases Kohlhase has studied, he says, is that the locations are along high-pressure gas pipelines, or at least in close proximity to them.
The phenomenon has spawned many conspiracy theories. Sufferers, known as “hummers,” have pointed fingers at sources such as electrical power lines, wireless communication devices, and low-frequency electromagnetic radiation. For decades, doctors dismissed patients’ complaints as tinnitus, an auditory problem that affects 15 percent of people. But the latest research suggests that the noise is not a hallucination and that many hummers do not suffer from impaired hearing.
Dr. David Baguley, an audiologist at Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge, estimates that about a third of cases can be attributed to environmental causes, such as industrial machinery at a nearby factory. But the majority of cases remain unexplained. Baguley himself believes that many of his patients suffer from extreme sensitivity to signals outside the normal range of human hearing.
“I think most people view the hum as a fringe belief,” Harkawik told me, “because it’s so subjective—people say they hear something that most people can’t hear. But when you look at the vast number of people who say they hear it, it’s obvious that there’s something going on.”
So, does the filmmaker subscribe to Kohlhase’s gas-pipeline theory? “Some parts are definitely believable; others less so,” Harkawik said. He admits that some of Kohlhase’s wilder extrapolations veer into conspiracy-theory territory. “I don’t think we will ever know for sure, though, since it would require an extraordinary amount of coordination and work to prove it.”
But Harkawik was drawn to Kohlhase’s story regardless of the relative plausibility of his claims. “When I make something about a person with unusual beliefs, I no longer go into it thinking, What will it be like if they realize they’re wrong?” he said. “I spend more time on how they arrived at their beliefs and what of myself I see in them.”
In this case, the filmmaker identified with Kohlhase’s obsessive devotion to his project, despite the fact that it had very little broad appeal. “The response to his research was underwhelming to him, but the people he has positively impacted keep him going,” Harkawik said. “I often feel the same way about documentary film—I spend years on a project, inevitably feel underwhelmed by the response, but ultimately keep working because one or two people email me to say it meant something to them. I think most creative people would identify with Steve’s story.”
Emily Buder is a film curator at The Atlantic.
https://amp.theatlantic.com/amp/video/593992/
Pele'sDaughter wrote:https://www.fox4news.com/news/nine-tornadoes-confirmed-from-sunday-night-outbreak-across-north-texas
Many of you have probably heard about the storms in N Texas Sunday around 9:30. There were a total of 9 tornados, but fortunately, 7 were F 1 and 0. Where I'm located it started with some crazy lightning with the majority of it cloud to cloud. I decided to sit on the patio and watch. There was a huge cloud mass to the west which I presumed to be the front line itself. While I was sitting there, I began to hear a low roaring sound. At first I thought it was a tornado and began to scan the skies for one. However, I never saw anything and the sound continued without changing direction or volume. I've never heard anything like that during a thunderstorm. I had to go back inside upon receiving a tornado warning for my immediate area. After going through one that came right up my backyard 12/26/15, I take these things seriously.
Anyone else living up here observe anything strange during this weather event?
Pele'sDaughter » 23 Oct 2019 11:46 wrote:https://www.fox4news.com/news/nine-tornadoes-confirmed-from-sunday-night-outbreak-across-north-texas
Many of you have probably heard about the storms in N Texas Sunday around 9:30. There were a total of 9 tornados, but fortunately, 7 were F 1 and 0. Where I'm located it started with some crazy lightning with the majority of it cloud to cloud. I decided to sit on the patio and watch. There was a huge cloud mass to the west which I presumed to be the front line itself. While I was sitting there, I began to hear a low roaring sound. At first I thought it was a tornado and began to scan the skies for one. However, I never saw anything and the sound continued without changing direction or volume. I've never heard anything like that during a thunderstorm. I had to go back inside upon receiving a tornado warning for my immediate area. After going through one that came right up my backyard 12/26/15, I take these things seriously.
Anyone else living up here observe anything strange during this weather event?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 49 guests