Some days, being a skeptic is a losing proposition.
Only days after I posted a desperate plea for people to please check sources before posting/reposting/sharing/forwarding/whatever, I start seeing this popping up all over the place:
What if, for a second, reality itself took a breath?
Somewhere between seconds, something strange happened. Instruments across multiple observatories briefly froze—exactly 1.3 seconds of missing data, gone without error, glitch, or interference. The world kept moving. Clocks ticked. But deep-space monitors, atomic timers, and gravitational wave sensors all recorded the same silence. For a moment, time itself may have stopped.
Scientists are calling it a temporal anomaly, a mysterious blip that doesn’t fit any known pattern. There was no solar flare, no magnetic disturbance, no hardware fault. Everything just paused, then resumed as if nothing had happened.
While skeptics label it a data artifact, others suspect something deeper—perhaps a micro disruption in spacetime, or a ripple caused by massive gravitational shifts somewhere far across the cosmos. If true, it means time isn’t as constant as we believe—it can tremble, stutter, or even halt briefly before stitching itself back together.
No one felt it. No one saw it. But machines built to measure eternity noticed—and that’s what makes it haunting.
If time can stop for 1.3 seconds… how many times has it already done so without us ever knowing?
Well, of all the things that never happened, this is the one that never happened the most.
We're told that this was reported as a huge mystery in Scientific American (it wasn't), and that physicists at MIT are hard at work trying to figure out what caused it (they aren't). But the thing is, it doesn't take a Ph.D. in physics to see that there's something very off with this claim.
The problem here is that we always have to measure time relative to something (Cf. Einstein), so if every time-measuring device stopped simultaneously, there'd be no way to tell -- especially if (their words) "No one felt it... no one saw it." If your watch is wrong, the only way you find out is by comparing it to an accurate clock, right? If there was no accurate clock available, you'd continue thinking your own time measurement was the correct one, and show up to your doctor's appointment an hour late.
Even Star Trek: The Next Generation, which kind of made a name for itself playing fast and loose with the laws of physics, got that much right. In "Timescape," Captain Picard, Deanna Troi, Geordi LaForge, and Data are on a shuttlecraft, and it passes through patches of distorted spacetime, in each of which time runs at a different speed; they figure it out because the patches are small, so they can actually see the effects of time passing at different rates in different parts of the shuttlecraft's interior (in one scene, Deanna sees everyone else seem to freeze in place, while she herself is still moving). Likewise, in the extremely creepy episode "Schisms," Data figures out he was abducted from the ship (and from ordinary spacetime) for ninety minutes and seventeen seconds, but only because his internal chronometer is out of sync by that amount, by comparison to the ship's clocks.
- Time is determined by “light years” we are legitimately less than 1 second of life in the overall existence of what “time” truly is.
- Fuck yeah we did it, enough people are accessing the eternal now it’s starting to bring the rest of us over.
- It is possible that what happened in 1991 is beginning to come true. I not only saw a UFO, but also met with Aliens on their spaceship.
- Time didn’t stop because time is made up by humans, everything exists all at once
- Its why my microwave keeps shifting backwards each week!!!! I swear I set it to the right time, and within days, its back to being off by minutes.
- i actually experienced this but found it challenging to explain to others without sounding crazy or even dylusuonal so thank you for this post
- Probably due to the "asteriod" 3i/Atlas.
- Time is a human creation. Ofcourse it has a flaw
- The moon is 1.3 light-seconds away. Coincidence?
*brief pause to stop crying softly and banging my head on my desk*
I was somewhat heartened to run across a few comments stating that this is bullshit, and even one brave soul who waded in, guns blazing, making many of the same objections that I've made. But the people who thought this all made sense far outnumbered the ones who recognized that it couldn't be true.
Look, on one level, I get it. The world is kind of an awful place right now, and worse, it's so... banal. Here we are in 2025, when we were told we'd have a sleek, shiny, high-tech world like The Jetsons, and instead we're still surrounded by the same old tawdry shoddiness as always, where the billionaires are trying to become trillionaires and the president of the United States spends millions of dollars tearing down half of the White House and turning the rest into what looks like a branch office of Cheesecake Factory, while the rest of us are trying to figure out how we can afford to buy groceries and pay for our health insurance. I understand why anything that is enigmatic or exciting would be attractive.
Hell, at this point if the aliens did try to abduct me, I'll look upon it as a rescue mission.
But let's not let our attraction toward mysteries switch our brains off, okay? In short: there was no temporal anomaly. As described, if it did happen it would be at best undetectable, and at worst completely meaningless. Time is not measured in light years, your microwave clock running slow is not an indication of a glitch in spacetime, we haven't "accessed the eternal," and none of this has anything to do with "asteriods."
Thank you.










