Thank you for the welcome Trev! Nice to know I'm not the only hum sufferer out there......And, I'm in my late 50's, not 80! (although I'm sure the hum will be apart of my life if I should reach that ripe ole age)
I feel like I'm at a disadvantage with alot of the posts here because I haven't questioned, or feel capable of questioning all the technical reasons that might be behind the hum. (A better education might of helped, but hey, I took the artistic route!) It just happens, not all the time and when it does? Its like taking a front seat to a deep bass, sound show. Love music, although nothing sounds good since the 60's. I do come from a musical family, all my brothers play string instruments and my sisters opted to raised families. Yes, if I might be so bold as to suggest, we are a very small perecentage of "quality listeners" able to hear the hum. And where do we go from here? Animals seem to have the ability to forecast natural disasters - like earthquakes, tidalwaves, tornados, hurricanes. They can't talk and few notice when animals react to impending disasters. So I'm wondering, how many hum sufferers around the planet, might have tuned into the the latest earthquake in Greece and the volcanic erruption in Chile and didn't realize what they were tuning into? On Apr 7, 5:59 am, Trev <[email protected]> wrote: > Welcome SnowC ! > 17+ years of Hum is a long time.Are you really hitting 80? > I know reports go back to then- but not many come up to report it now. > To give a quick personal view, as you asked, I don't think Hum is > natural ie: earth sounds per se. > The closest would be Schumann resonance , they are implicated in > Haarp, but a bit too low f - and random also. > Hum seems to be a triggered response at a personal tone based on > physiological state- seeing how it varies so much.The biggest support > that this is not tinnitus, is that some (not enough), couples/ family > members report co-incident start and stop periods of hum. > * This indicates a common external source of trigger- if not freq of > response. > [This is not proof- only hearsay.] > It would be interesting to find data on magnetometer readings at Hum > freqs, though. > Not sure what the bandwidth of the sensor is, for this. > The graph I posted recently here was steady state and it never dawned > on me to think of that element. > A 'wobble' on the earths core would be too slow due to its size and > this would also dampen out any extraneous effect from ' rogue planets' > skirting the outback. > I do wonder about the people who hear Hum though- they do have 'a > profile', and you are in it- I reckon!. > Do you play/ love music too? > Probably a rebellious nature .. > On an existential basis , maybe hum is lonely and picks on quality > listeners ;) > > On Apr 7, 12:26 am, snowcountry <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > Hello everyone. I am also a hum sufferer. Emailed John D's site and > > John suggested checking out this discussion. > > > Didn't notice the hum til I moved to a remote part of Montana about 17 > > years ago. The hum could of been a part of my life much earlier than > > that, in my late 50's, but I'm not sure I would of noticed given the > > fact that I lived around cities and suburbs that generated a great > > deal of everyday noises. > > > Moving here, the hum became a BIG part of my life, because I could > > hear it loud and clear - and there was nothing around me except > > wilderness (and the few appliances running in my house which I turned > > off, trying to pin point where the sound was coming from) Yet, I > > still had a hard time understanding it til Unsolved Mysteries did an > > episode on the hum few years back and I had one of those Ah Ha moments > > when I realized thousands of other people out there were experiencing > > the same phenomenon. > > > I've accepted the hum and live with it and I seldom hear it on a grand > > scale anymore (can recall getting out of car one night awhile back and > > the sound was deafening) but that was quite awhile ago and then a > > couple of weeks ago, the 30th of March to be exact, it was once again > > deafening, in the middle of the afternoon, inside my cabin. That's > > when I started researching again, emailed some friends (that wouldn't > > think I'd gone off the deep end) and one friend mentioned her > > brother, who could also hear the hum and linked me to John's site. > > > So, in the last week there's an earthquake and a volcanic erruption in > > parts of the world and I have to wonder if what hum sufferers hear > > might not be an early warning system when it comes to natural > > disasters because of our ability to tune in on what might be going on > > inside the planet? > > > I emailed John D's site because I'm curious about how many hum > > sufferers out there can relate to spikes in activity and when those > > spikes occur. Given where we are now in technology around the planet, > > it could have everything to do with that but I'm still wondering if > > the planet isn't somehow responding to a slow destruction and just a > > few us are privy to that fact? > > Your thoughts?- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Hum Sufferers" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/hum-sufferers?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
