Saturday, March 19, 2022

Meteor sync

Earlier today I posted about meteorites at The Magician’s Table.

A few hours later, a student happened to ask me how to say “shooting star” in Chinese.

Then, at about half past midnight, I stepped outside for a few minutes and saw an extremely large meteor streak by overhead. It was a good six or seven arcminutes across at the wide end, and the strangest thing was that the path it traced was not a straight line but a squiggle, almost as if it were swimming like a fish rather than falling. I’m pretty sure it’s physically impossible for a meteor to do that, but that’s what I very clearly saw. I remember some years ago reading a description of a comet with its tail “luffing like a sail in the wind” and thinking that was completely ridiculous, but it would be an excellent way of describing what this meteor was doing. No idea what to make of it, and the timing only adds to the weirdness.

Update: I've found the luffing comet reference. It's from The Secret School by Whitley Strieber, p. 100.

A little boy is taken out of his life and made to confront a strange machine. Maybe he resists, maybe he even screams, but he looks in it, he cannot resist, first once and then many times.

He sees a glowing mass of material, pure white. Above it there is a comet, and the comet is moving. I recall the tail, which was very different from that of an ordinary comet. You could see its movement, you could see it luffing like a winded sail.

I've seen comets -- Halley's in 1986 and Hale-Bopp in 1997 -- and they don't do that. Strieber says as much when he says the luffing tail was "very different from that of an ordinary comet." Meteors don't do it, either. Strieber saw this luffing comet while wearing a VR helmet -- it wasn't real -- but I saw my squiggly meteor with my own eyes in a perfectly normal state of consciousness. It was in every other way an ordinary meteor; nothing even remotely UFO-like about it,

Update 2: Apparently meteors do sometimes squiggle. This article quotes a planetarium director saying, "I’ve seen some fireballs corkscrew before during some meteor showers." This thread also addresses the question.

I saw a zig zag meteorite in Bukuru, Northern Nigeria, when I was about 13 in 1959. That started from small to increasing swings, then went out near the horizon. For many years I puzzled about this, but rarely mentioned it, because no one would believe it. Years later I attended an astronomy lecture at college in London. I cornered the astronomer with this sighting and he said we know what this is. A flat dish shaped meteorite enters the atmosphere shallowly & flies in a circular motion that gets wider as it approaches the earth then extinguishes. Seeing this from the horizon, it appears to zigzag down. He told me that I was very very lucky to witness this meteor show, and I am glad that others have seen it too.

Update 3: When I was searching for Strieber's luffing comment reference, I found this just three pages later, describing a childhood phobia: "Many a night, my mother would carry me naked to the bathroom mirror to prove to me that I was not covered with scorpions."

Just after reading that, I checked the Secret Sun blog, and found this in one of Knowles's goofy everything-is-a-star-map posts.

In my Magician's Table post, I had referred to "the vision-inducing meteorite which served as Jacob's pillow."

6 comments:

Poppop said...

Clearly, Strieber was a most unimaginative, suggestible, credulous and obliging child.

I would have told mom, "sure, that kid in the mirror has no scorpions on him, but I certainly do!"

Wm Jas Tychonievich said...

Yeah, the function of the mirror's not exactly clear. How would it be any more convincing than just looking at your own body directly?

Bruce Charlton said...

This is a good set of synchros - one of your best.

I saw a very impressive fireball a few years ago, which was reddish, moved quite slowly and horizontally near the horizon, lasted about 4 seconds, and made a hissing noise before extinguishing. It was so vivid; I assumed there would be many reports of it on the internet, but I couldn't find anything.

I think not many people look up at the sky, and you would need to be looking at a particular sector at exactly the right time. A few years ago I posted about some astonishing nacreous clouds which were visible high in the sky, in the morning (c8.30, when people go to work), for about 20 minutes - but hardly anybody I asked had noticed them.

https://charltonteaching.blogspot.com/2016/02/rainbow-clouds-today.html

I presume that rather a lot of wonderful things go unnoticed.

Bruce Charlton said...

"he function of the mirror's not exactly clear"

But it is exactly the kind of *ritual* by which parents calm and distract kids from irrational fears - since it provides something-to-do and a sense of control.

I think it may have been GK Chesterton who said that when children fear monsters in the night, it is futile to claim that monsters don't exist; what the kid needs to be told is how to beat the monsters.

It really works.

Wm Jas Tychonievich said...

Yes, Bruce, I think you’re right.

lea said...

I like Chris and have had fun and insightful discussions on his patreon, left the occasional rambling turd as well especially after a drink too many, but all in all it seemed to go somewhere. Having some doubts recently though since treating it as a very alternative message board and the map thing getting rather loose. If real synchronicity is difficult to point at OR clear and in your face, why go to lengths to tie it together? - He wrote a guideline of sorts, which is mostly correct but at the same time missing the point; it guides you, not the other way around.

K. West, five years or hours, and spiders

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