Hi everyone,
Here is a BBC article about 'invisible others'.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20230526-felt-presence-why-we-sometimes-feel-invisible-others***********
explorers and adventurers have reported feeling similar presences, notably Ernest Shackleton, who had a sense of a "fourth man" accompanying his three-man party on the final stage of their epic trek across South Georgia in 1916. Everest mountaineers have also experienced these phantoms acting as guardian angels, helping them to survive and providing an eerie comfort. Sometimes it's referred to as the "third man factor".
In psychology, this experience is known as a "felt presence". Ben Alderson-Day, an associate professor of psychology at Durham University in the UK, is the author of a new book called Presence: The Strange Science and True Stories of the Unseen Other. He has found that these experiences are not limited to people in extreme situations. You may well have had the sense yourself at some point that someone is right there in the room with you, even though you can't see them.
A felt presence feels as though it's there with you in your personal space. It's hard to pin down exactly what a felt presence consists of. It's not experienced via the five physical senses of touch, sight, hearing, smell or taste, so it's not an hallucination. Objectively, in reality, there is nothing there at all. Yet they're not quite delusions either, which involve thoughts. Nor is it the same as imagining someone is there. People sometimes talk of something as nebulous as "a thickness in the air". It's almost like a sixth sense, which feels very real at the time.
The way we experience a felt presence can depend on our personal feelings and beliefs. It might feel comforting, as it was for Robertson, or malign or religious perhaps, depending on how you interpret the experience – a guardian angel maybe or a ghost or a visitor or your brain trying to help you.
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Yeah......I know...I know! It's all just your brain conjuring up such things in moments of stress or wishful thinking during lonely moments. 'The brain of the gaps'.
But there could be other worlds and other people close to us in 'parallel universes' who might be able to access us during moments of stress.
Cheers.
Sriram