December 9th, 2009 I had a pretty extraordinary experience. So did alot of people in my region of the country. I was driving to work, running a little late, so it was just after 7.30 in the morning and pitch black. I saw a light in the sky ahead of me, and at first I thought it was the moon, but then realized the moon should be behind me at that time in the morning. I then realized the light was in motion, and as I watched it, I couldn't believe my eyes. I'm a pretty down-to-earth kinda girl, but this made my chin drop and I stopped my car in the middle of the road and got out to watch. This is what i saw.
The quality of this video doesn't do the phenomenon justice, but here are some pictures that better captured the experience.
So yeah, I kinda freaked out a little. I got to work and realized I was the only individual (out of 126 employees!) that saw it, and they all looked at me weird when I told them what I saw and that "no, this was definetly NOT northeren lights!". My first injection was that somebody had a huge spotlight or laser of come kind, up in the mountains and were playing around with it. And then of course my mind grazed by the supernatural. I have a weakness for alien movies and TV-shows, but I wouldn't really say I spend alot of time wondering if we are alone in the universe. Anyway, I called up our region newspaper, and asked if they had gotten word of this not-so-average viking insident, and they told me that yeah, the phone lines had gone off the hook all morning, and it wasn't long before I found the first pictures, videos and theories on our big, national internet newspapers. That rules out the big-spotlight-theory; no spotlight in the world could do that and be seen by people from around half the country! Turned out I wasn't the only one who thought UFO, and there is still speculations as to what actually happened. At first it was said that nothing man-made could result in this. However, as the day went on our experts claimed this was a rocket explotion (!?) in space. The russians got blamed (as usual, what a cliché!). It was said to be a test-launch and that it could have been launched from a submarine. We never really got a clear answer from any authoroties, but most of the people who spoke up about it joined in on the theory of a rocket-or satelite explotion, and I guess people accepted that. I'm not sure what to believe, but I guess Norway doesn't really have enough conspericy theoretics to make any real noise about it. Below you can see a newsbit about the insident in english, where they claim to have "solved the mystery". Live long and prosper!
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