Science Behind Time Storms | Time Isn't What You Think It Is
3/6/202636 min
In 1977, a soldier walked into a glowing mist in the Chilean mountains and returned fifteen minutes later with five days of stubble on his face.
A pilot flew 250 miles in 34 minutes through a luminous fog over the Bermuda Triangle. An RAF Commander looked down from his biplane and saw an airfield four years before it existed. Two families checked into a French hotel that vanished two weeks later — along with every photo they took inside it.
British researcher Jenny Randles spent decades collecting these cases and found they all share the same symptoms: silence, tingling, glow...
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsAJ Gentile· Host0:00
[mysterious music] On April 25th, 1977, Corporal Armando Valdez was guarding a campfire in the Chilean mountains. Just before dawn, he saw a glowing purple mist. Valdez walked into the mist and vanished. 15 minutes later, he stumbled back into camp. He was shaking. He collapsed. His men checked him over. He seemed fine, except for one detail. When Valdez left, he was clean-shaven. When he returned, he had a short beard, and his watch had jumped ahead to April 30th. He was gone for 15 minutes, but he lived for five days. And Valdez's story isn't unique. This phenomenon has appeared all over the world for centuries. Different cultures call them different names. We know them as time storms. [mysterious music] The Valdez case follows a pattern that has repeated around the world for hundreds of years. In 1947, a British military convoy was driving through the mountains of Nepal. This was dangerous territory. Bandits were everywhere. The group included local soldiers, a British colonel, and his wife, Donna. Donna was sitting in the back of a truck when the temperature dropped instantly. She said it felt like someone flung open the door to a glacier.
Hagglefish· Host1:26
Or just walked into my second ex-wife's bedroom. Uh, she was