reSee.it Podcast Summary
The episode explores the idea that time itself may be more fluid than commonly believed, presenting time storms as electromagnetic phenomena that can warp perception and reality. The hosts recount a series of century-spanning cases—from a Chilean guard who vanished and returned with a different appearance and a clock that jumped ahead, to Nepali mountains, French road trips, and a Florida Bermuda Triangle-like region—that share similar symptoms: sudden silence, tingling sensations, glowing mists, and episodes of missing time. The narrative threads together documented physical effects such as burns, rashes, and instrument failures, suggesting that some events may be more than folklore.
Jenny Randles’ work anchors the discussion, proposing that UFO sightings, abductions, ghosts, and missing times might be different manifestations of the same underlying phenomenon. The scientific portion focuses on how electromagnetic fields can influence the temporal lobe, producing experiences that resemble contact with other beings or alternate timelines. Persinger’s God helmet is cited as a laboratory demonstration that magnetism can evoke sensations of presence and altered time, while Vallée’s critique files the UFO narrative into a broader consciousness-linked framework.
The episode also entertains cosmological interpretations, including block universe theory and many-worlds, positing that storms could momentarily tilt perception across timelines or even introduce doorway-like interactions between realities. The discussion concludes with skepticism about data, memory reliability, and the need for more objective evidence, while acknowledging that the idea challenges conventional views of time and reality.