😱 A top remote viewer peered into the void of 3I/ATLAS… and what she “saw” chills the soul: shadowy figures emerging from the glow, whispering warnings of cosmic gates cracking open. Is this interstellar “comet” a probe from the stars, or a harbinger of something biblical? NASA’s silence only amps the dread. Uncover the vision that’s got insiders panicking—tap the link before they scrub it:
In the shadowy world where science brushes up against the supernatural, a single psychic session has thrust the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS into a maelstrom of speculation. Discovered on July 1, 2025, by Chile’s ATLAS telescope, this third confirmed visitor from beyond our solar system was already turning heads with its bizarre traits—a potential 7-mile-wide nucleus, a CO2-heavy coma that defies typical comet chemistry, and a trajectory screaming “not from around here.” But when a seasoned remote viewer tuned into its ethereal signal last month, the results weren’t just odd—they were downright terrifying, painting visions of emergent entities and apocalyptic portents that have conspiracy circles buzzing and skeptics scoffing.
Remote viewing, a technique popularized during the Cold War’s Stargate Project—a U.S. government program that ran from 1978 to 1995—claims to allow trained individuals to “see” distant or hidden targets using extrasensory perception. Declassified documents reveal the CIA spent millions exploring its potential for espionage, with mixed results that ranged from eerily accurate location sketches to outright misses. Fast-forward to 2025, and the practice lives on in fringe communities, with practitioners like those at Adventures in Remote Viewing—a site run by self-proclaimed experts in psi phenomena—taking aim at cosmic enigmas.
Their August 19 session on 3I/ATLAS, detailed in a lengthy blog post, stands out for its visceral intensity. Viewer Daz Smith, a veteran with sessions dating back to 2010, described entering a “vast, cold darkness” before locking onto the comet’s “essence.” What followed was no mere rock tumbling through space. “I saw a structured form, elongated like a vessel, pulsing with an inner light that wasn’t reflected sunlight,” Smith recounted. “Shadows moved within—tall, slender figures, not human, observing us as if we’d been spotted.” The vision escalated: swirling portals of energy, a “gate” cracking open near the object’s path, and a flood of emotions—warning, curiosity, and an undercurrent of judgment on humanity’s “reckless experiments,” possibly alluding to CERN’s particle accelerators.
Phase II of the session, released shortly after, delved deeper. Smith sketched geometric patterns resembling circuit boards etched in ice, and a “broadcast signal” emanating from the core, as if 3I/ATLAS were phoning home. Other viewers corroborated fragments: one perceived “ancient guardians” awakened by the comet’s passage, another a “veil thinning” between dimensions. The site’s authors tied these to 3I/ATLAS’s anomalies—its hyperbolic speed of 58 km/s, the lack of a prominent tail in early Hubble images, and JWST’s detection of exotic ices like carbonyl sulfide, rare even among solar system comets. “This isn’t a dead rock; it’s alive with intent,” the post warned, urging readers to “prepare for contact.”
The fallout was swift. On Reddit’s r/remoteviewing, a July 30 thread exploded with 99 upvotes and 79 comments, users sharing their own amateur sessions. One poster described a “front-leading outgassing” that mirrored Avi Loeb’s analysis—no traditional tail, but a glow ahead of the object, like “headlights on a cosmic car.” Another echoed Smith’s figures: “Tall beings, watching from the halo.” The thread veered into prophecy, with mentions of Baba Vanga’s alleged October 29 “landing” prediction—a claim that’s circulated in tabloids but lacks verification. Over on X, posts from accounts like @UAPWatchers racked up thousands of likes, blending the vision with real data: “Webb confirmed the red CO2 fog—no water tail. Remote viewers saw entities. Connect the dots.”
This isn’t isolated mysticism. Harvard’s Avi Loeb, the astrophysicist who branded ‘Oumuamua a possible alien lightsail, has fanned similar flames. In an August 23 Medium post, he questioned if 3I/ATLAS’s lack of dust shedding spelled “techno-signature,” relieved it wasn’t hostile but intrigued by its “relief” at being a natural object. A September interview with Mayim Bialik amplified the remote viewing angle: “If it’s got headlights, and viewers see intent, we can’t dismiss it,” Loeb said, nodding to the Stargate legacy. X user @The_Astral_ piled on: “Glowing nucleus, strange trail—psi sessions confirm it’s no ordinary rock.”
Critics, however, aren’t buying the ESP spin. NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory labels 3I/ATLAS a standard interstellar comet, rich in CO2 from its presumed Oort Cloud analog in another system. Karen Meech, lead ‘Oumuamua investigator, watched live Gemini South observations in September, noting the growing tail—now 56,000 km long—as proof of sublimating ices, not alien engineering. “Remote viewing is pseudoscience; we’ve got spectra showing cyanide and nickel, just like homegrown comets,” she told Space.com. ESA’s ExoMars TGO images from October 3, capturing the comet 30 million km from Mars, show a fuzzy coma but no resolved nucleus—blame the 50,000-fold faintness, not cover-ups.
Yet the vision’s shock value endures, echoing Stargate’s heyday. Declassified files describe viewers “locating” Soviet subs with 20% accuracy, enough for believers to argue psi complements tech. A Facebook group for remote viewing lit up with 3I/ATLAS targets, one member posting: “Saw the same shadows—CERN’s involved?” YouTube’s October 10 stream by James Lasher, “Remote Viewing Reveals Secrets of 3I/Atlas: Alien Contact, CERN & End Time Prophecy,” hit 50,000 views overnight, dissecting Smith’s sketches against Hubble’s teardrop glow.
Skeptics point to confirmation bias: Viewers know the hype from Loeb’s books, which sold millions post-‘Oumuamua. Northeastern’s Jacqueline McCleary chalks the glow to CO2 fog, an 8:1 ice ratio “out of this world” but natural for distant formation. Planetary Society’s Bryce Bolin, who’s tracked all three interstellar objects, calls the size estimates (up to 7 miles) tricky amid the dust but firmly cometary.
Still, the visions tap a cultural nerve. X threads like @UAPWatchers’ September 10 post on “polarization anomalies” garnered 800 likes, questioning why 3I/ATLAS’s light scatters oddly—no micrometer dust, per Loeb. Amateur images, like Filipp Romanov’s July 2 remote telescope shot, fuel the fire with “horns” or triangles in the coma—artifacts, say pros, but viral gold. NASA’s Perseverance rover’s October 6 “smudge” in Mars’ sky? Likely the comet, but unconfirmed amid shutdown rumors.
As 3I/ATLAS hurtles toward perihelion on October 30—1.4 AU from the sun, behind solar glare—tensions mount. ESA’s Juice probe eyes a November 2-25 window for post-flare data, potentially spotting a tail or… something else. If the visions hold, expect “end times” chatter to peak; if not, it’s another notch for skeptics.
Reddit user Traditional_Excuse_1 summed the divide: “Avi Loeb says probe; viewers see watchers. NASA says comet. Who’s right?” In a world of JWST revelations and UAP hearings, 3I/ATLAS embodies the unknown—icy relic or harbinger? Smith’s chilling gaze suggests the latter, but science demands proof. As the comet vanishes behind the sun, one thing’s certain: The debate, like the visions, lingers in the dark.
For now, ground telescopes track till September’s end, amateurs chase December reappearances. VLT’s July timelapse shows motion over 13 minutes—mundane, yet mesmerizing. SPHEREx’s August infrareds reveal water ice older than Earth, a “messenger from another star.” Gemini’s live student sessions in August captured the tail’s growth, a “scientific milestone.”
But in quiet sessions, viewers like Smith see more: A call to awaken, or a warning unheeded. As X’s @JinxedHorizon posted October 10, aligning it with the 1977 WOW! Signal: “ET replying? Baba Vanga says lands Oct 29.” Hyperbole? Perhaps. Yet with 3I/ATLAS’s 130,000 mph dash and tilted 5° orbit for “peeping,” the cosmos feels watched back.
History offers parallels. ‘Oumuamua’s 2017 non-gravitational tug sparked Loeb’s tech theory, dismissed but enduring. Borisov in 2019 behaved cometary, calming nerves. 3I/ATLAS? It splits the difference—active yet anomalous. Live Science’s October 7 ExoMars close-up: A halo, no tail yet, but brightening soon. BBC Sky at Night’s image roundup: From ATLAS’s discovery dot to Webb’s infrared haze.
The remote viewing community presses on, with a Facebook call-out: “Has anyone RV’d 3I/Atlas?” Responses flood in—echoes of Smith’s shadows. EarthSky’s October 8 path graphic shows the slingshot: Mars pass, solar dip, Jupiter graze. No Earth threat at 1.8 AU minimum.
Ultimately, the shocking vision underscores humanity’s dual gaze: Telescopes pierce the veil; minds wander beyond. As 3I/ATLAS fades, its legacy—comet or conduit—hinges on November’s light. Until then, Smith’s words haunt: “They’re here, and they’re seeing us.” In the starlit quiet, is that dread… or dawn?