Mystery is not a show, it is a deep reflection on the fragility of what we call “reality”. With that premise, Juan Manuel Torreblanca and Roberto Belmont return to the microphones with an episode that is already shaking the social networks: “Travelers Lost in Time”. Far from the cheap sensationalism and alarmism that floods the internet, the hosts of Observador Paranormal defend an editorial line where rigor and philosophy meet the inexplicable. HERE you can listen to the podcast.
The trajectory of both is the pillar of this space. Juan Manuel, with his keenness to connect science with phenomenology, and Roberto, with his literary and intuitive sensibility, manage to turn topics such as missing time from simple campfire stories into existential dilemmas. In this episode, they remind us that technically we are all time travelers: the moonlight you see is a reflection of the past and your brain always integrates reality with a slight sensory delay.
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One of the most tense moments of the talk occurs when they relate the case of Lerina García Gordo.
Imagine waking up one day and noticing that your sheets are different, that your office is in the same place, but the booth is different, and the scariest thing: that the man you love doesn’t exist in anyone’s records.
Juan and Roberto analyze this 2008 event in Madrid as a possible “personal temporal misalignment”, where a consciousness ends up trapped in a line of reality that does not belong to it.
This story serves as a bridge to discuss the fragility of memory.
“How many times have we woken up feeling like something in the environment doesn’t fit?” drivers ask.
For them, these phenomena are not delusions, but possible dimensional junctions where our consciousness, especially during sleep, crosses temporal layers that science has not yet been able to fully explain.
Taured and Rudolf Fentz: Intruders from Other Dimensions
The conversation ratchets up a notch when the “classics” of serious mystery enter the scene.
The story of the Man from Taured, the man who in 1954 landed in Japan with a passport from a country that does not exist on our maps, but which he was sure to be somewhere between France and Spain, is analyzed.
His disappearance from a room guarded by the authorities remains, for Torreblanca and Belmont, one of the most disturbing proofs that there are folds between realities that touch for moments.
But if we are talking about impact, the case of Rudolf Fentz takes the cake.
A man dressed in 19th century clothes appears confused in the middle of 1950’s Times Square, only to be run over and killed when the police find bills from 1876 in his pockets.
For Roberto, this resonates with the literature of Borges: the idea of possible worlds where the “would have” is not a lament, but a reality that beats in another parallel universe.
The nostalgia of “would have” and contact in dreams
Towards the end of the episode, the talk becomes intimate.
The drivers reflect on how every decision we make could be opening up universes where other versions of ourselves exist: a Juan a firefighter or a Roberto with a radically different life.
They propose that dreams could be that point of contact, that window where for a few seconds we greet the life that we did not choose but that is still happening somewhere in space-time.
Paranormal Observer closes this journey by thanking its community of “observers” for judiciously evaluating content.
Between laughter, anecdotes about supposed children’s voices detected by the audience in previous episodes and a very particular humor, Juan and Roberto leave us with a doubt in our chests: Are we really in the present or are we just the echo of a reality that has already moved?
The episode of Travelers Lost in Time is now available on all audio platforms, such as Apple Podcast and Spotify, where you can also listen to other titles promoted by QuéOnnda and Nueva Network, such as Crímenes del Más Allá.
What about you Onnda, have you ever had the feeling that you woke up in a slightly different reality or experienced “lost time”?
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