Question:

Why would my bed start shaking in the middle of the night?

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I was trying to go to sleep last night when the bed started to shake. It lasted for about a minute the first time, but happened again a few minutes later. I have felt this a few times before, but always just wrote it off as me losing my marbles and being tired. I awoke my wife last night during the second shaking episode and she felt it as well.

I live in Texas and we have never had an earthquake(to my knowledge). Our mattress is a think foam and sits directly on the floor. I also rolled onto the carpet and could fell it moving as well. I just want to know what I am feeling.

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  1. Well, sorry but you're not going crazy. This kind of thing is happening to more and more people here in the U.S. and in other places as well. It is not clear just how the effect is being generated and projected to specific points in time and space.  It is, however, generated by advanced technology located at some remote point.

    Have you ever felt like the floor was shaking (vibrating) under your feet as you walk?  When in bed and the vibrations occur, does it feel like its very localized and under some kind of program control?

    If so, you could be targeted for human experimentation and subjected to the effects of some very, very advanced and highly classified technology---I kid you not. There are people in this country and around the world who are also targeted in this way and suffer similar effects that your experiencing.

    If it is targeting in terms of human experimentation by remote means, it will get worse---not better.

    As such, I hope for your sake that there's another cause.


  2. I watch the Discovery Channel regularly, so I look forward to seeing you in the up and coming season of A Haunting.

  3. The USGS hasn't recorded recent earthquakes in Texas, so you're probably right about that part.  The next guess would be earth movement due to another cause, like heavy trucks driving by, settling due to pumping out oil, seismic testing for oil, or the like.  My house shakes during winter storms, when the winds are often over 80 knots.  But I think you would have told us about that.  Is the shaking just your wife tossing and turning in bed?  Were you just drinking that night?  Dreaming?  Anything noteworthy on the local news?  If no such reasonable explanation is forthcoming, then the most likely explanation is the dreaming or the semi-conscious state of near sleep.

  4. Even if you live a few miles from a railroad track, very heavy freight trains may cause a rhythmic vibration throughout the entire house.  This is one possible explanation, and occurs at my home several times a week.  I am approx. one mile from the tracks, and often do not hear the trains when this occurs.

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