A watch and digital clock... one hour apart

Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

By Dave Powell

I think H.G. Wells did centuries of disservice to future scientists when he wrote “The Time Machine.” It’s a great story, but its title and text subtly imply that a machine is required. Even today, when physicists debate the possibility of time travel, they always remind us that a real time machine could go no further into the past than the day it first turned on.

Not too useful if you ask me!

Modern Reports

But what if a machine isn’t necessary? What if human awareness can move through time more easily– and more extensively– than any machine?

Such has been reported quite often in so-called “time slips.” One of the best-known is the Moberly-Jourdain incident. In 1901, two Oxford educators on vacation claimed that they literally walked back into the gardens of 1792 Versailles. As you can read in the above link, their proof-of-story changed slightly over the years, and their experience has been questioned.

But many similar incidents are reported today. Googling “Time slips in England,” for instance, brings up a list of places where many people seem to step briefly into different eras. The most active of these may be Liverpool’s Bold Street– Where folks (including at least one shoplifter and the security guard chasing him) have experienced sudden, temporary changes in traffic, bus stops, stores, vehicles and clothing styles. This article summarizes three well-known stories.

I’ve long thought that these involuntary trips between levels of experience would be more possible than mechanized time travel. And if they are possible, then one’s destinations wouldn’t be as constrained as physicists claim for machines.

Getting to the Point

That’s where things stood for me until just a few weeks ago, when my wife and I may have driven her Toyota Corolla back in time from 2025 Peterborough, New Hampshire into circa 1946-1990 Townsend, Massachusetts. And as Moberly-Jourdain and many Bold-Street slippers have claimed, our experience began with noticeable changes in “atmosphere,” visual perceptions and physical surroundings.

What first grabbed my attention was– as we approached Townsend– Kate suddenly exclaimed:

“WHERE ARE WE ?… NOTHING LOOKS RIGHT !”

She’s not an alarmist, but things had changed dramatically. You see, she’s a human GPS, who can remember routes for years… even after driving them only once. But we had followed the same route home many times before– 202 south out of Peterborough, with a left turn onto 119 west in Townsend. It’s the same route taken during this trip, described here on 35mmc.

The scenes outside our car had turned WAY more “countrified” as we approached the turn onto Route 119. And the lighting had also changed. We had left our Peterborough motel precisely at its 11 a.m. deadline. But as we made the turn into Townsend (only about 30 minutes later), we were bathed in a warm early-evening glow. Townsend itself was also different:

  • We had never before noticed a large brick mansion that was now on the left side of the road… with a life-sized metal statue of a horse in its front lawn. As it turned out, shrubbery had (in our time) kept us from seeing the horse and most of the house (both of which are also more “aged” now).
  • An antiques shop on the right– The Spaulding Cooperage– had always been surrounded by tools and shelves of sale items. But as we passed this time, there were only piles of wood staves, hoops and finished barrels (just as in vintage photos of the original cooperage). And the place was closed for the weekend (which the antiques shop never did). NOTE: The business had actually transitioned from barrel manufacturing to antiques in 1990.
  • Also, a popular local landmark– McNabb Pharmacy– had moved to its modern location in 1946, and was there as our car’s two confused occupants zipped past. (Hence the estimate that we may have “slipped” into a time between McNabb’s 1946 move and the Cooperage’s 1990 change to antiques.) McNabb Pharmacy also proved to be of “special interest” a short time later.

As we passed through the now unfamiliar town, we never saw another person or car. Until shortly down the road, when the evening light switched back to late morning. And cars were again everywhere.

The rest of the way home, we debated what had just happened. So the next weekend, we re-traced the entire route, and everything was “normal” again.

“Lost Time” Too

On returning home from our weird journey, I ducked into the kitchen to slip some food in the fridge. And I noticed something odd. All our appliances’ digital clocks and my iPhone correctly displayed exactly “12:00.” But my old-reliable Timex quartz watch read “11:00”– the precise time we had left the Peterborough motel. It was as if something had stopped my watch for exactly an hour while time elsewhere around our car rolled on. I suppose that might “make sense” if only the environment inside the car had “slipped.”

To be clear, we weren’t going through one of New England’s 1-hour “Daylight Savings Time” adjustments. And a dying battery hadn’t slowed or stopped my watch. It was still running, and when I reset its hands to the correct time, it hasn’t lost even a minute in the weeks since.

What Happened to My Drugs?

I thought the story ended there. But after we returned from the drive, an email from our local Walgreens reminded me that a prescription needed refilling. I had no more refills, and Walgreens offered to request a new one. I said yes, and then waited… and waited… and waited. Nothing happened.

So I called the doctor’s office, they checked my file, and told me that I had recently phoned in a message to transfer all my prescriptions to none other than the same McNabb Pharmacy that we had passed in Townsend! I immediately corrected THAT, but still wonder about the coincidence of it all. Did I– or an evil time-slipping doppelgänger– phone in the prescription change during our hour of lost time? I certainly don’t remember doing it.

But do Doppelgängers even Exist?

It has been said that each of us has an exact “double” somewhere on Earth. One is free to believe that or not. But I didn’t until around 1978.

I had moved from Columbus, Ohio to Boston in 1976. And for a while, I rented an apartment beside the JFK Birthplace in the outlying “village” of Coolidge Corner. A friend of mine had just had an operation in the local hospital, and I donned a tweed jacket and dress pants, bought some flowers, and went to visit her recovery room. But when I entered, the first words out of her mouth were an angry:

“WHAT NOW ???”

As it turned out, I looked, dressed, talked and acted just like her surgeon… or he like me… or both.

Some time later, another friend gave me a good dressing-down for ignoring her when she said “Hi” to “me” in the street. But most truly painfully, was the time I opened a bake-shop door for a third woman, she saw me, did a double-take, raised her voice, snarled “Gary!!!” and slapped me full-force across the face. I wish you could have seen her expression when I smiled back and replied:

“I’M NOT GARY !”

So I have excellent reasons to believe there is (or was) a near duplicate of me, loose in the wild. A doctor named Gary, who sometimes rubbed women the wrong way!

But have you heard of– or possibly even encountered– your duplicate?

–Dave Powell is a Westford, Mass., writer and avid amateur photographer.

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About The Author

By Dave Powell
Trained in mathematics, physics, computer programming and science journalism. Retired mathematician, award-winning technical and journalistic writer. Past winner of an international business-journalism equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize. And past author and editorial advisor for Sesame Street... where I regularly worked with Jim Henson and Kermit! Now enjoying "retirement studies" of photography, quantum physics and "scientific spirituality." (And restoring a shamefully lapsed relationship with the piano.)
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Comments

Bill Watts on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Rather like the premise of the movie "Somewhere in Time" starring Christopher Reeve and Jane Seymour. Young playwright is given a pocket watch by an elderly lady and he becomes obsessed with her picture when she was young. He eventually manages to travel back in time to meet her
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Thanks for reminding me, Bill! I saw the movie a long time ago, and LOVED it. Perhaps one of the best of its genre. And if I remember correctly, Reeve's time travel didn't involve a machine. I must watch it again. Another machineless classic is 1948's "Portrait of Jennie," where an older New York artist (Joseph Cotton) falls in love with a much younger girl (Jennifer Jones)-- who keeps crossing paths with him. But she's significantly older each time. I loved it as a kid, and the story remains fascinating. But though it won an Academy Award for Best Visual Effects, they are much less impressive today. (Especially the sea-stormed boat and lighthouse footage at the end.) But it has a SUPERB soundtrack and enjoys a 93% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes. If you haven't seen it, do so for the story and music!

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Thorsten Wulff on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

That is a pretty amazing story, Dave, which I believe completely. I talked to people over the years who were sure they had met my Doppelgänger, and once while driving up to Maine in 1987, time slipped for me on the Interstate. Love yout Timex, btw.
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Wonderful input and experiences from you as well, Thorsten! And I'm a big fan of older Timex watches like the "Indiglo" model in the photo. Mine isn't the specific watch with a celebrated history, but Timex Indiglos were the first line of watches with self-illuminating dials. And-- true story-- immediately after the 9/11 attacks on NYC's Twin Towers, an Indiglo Timex helped one company's employees escape the South Tower before it crumbled. According to an interview with the watch's owner, people in the towers had been advised to stay put. But he thought "hell with that" and led his co-workers down smoke filled stairs to the ground... with his Indiglo illuminated so that they could follow its faint glow. ALSO, can you share what happened in Maine? On the interstate no less!

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Thorsten Wulff replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Incredible, Dave. Of course 911 would trigger other stories to tell, but let me go back to Maine. It was my first time in the US, and after three weeks roaming the streets of Manhattan with my trusty F3 I grabbed a pack of TMAX400 and up to Maine I went, in a »rent a wreck«. This was not long after reading Stephen Kings IT. My destination was the town of York, a friend of mine who was with the Army in germany lived there with his folks. On my way up the 95 I ended up in a heavy thunderstorm and got lost. After I found my way again I realized that I lost three hours in the rain, in what felt like a 10 minutes drive. (It was the 80s, I had a funky swatch to meter the time. A russian soldier tried to trade it for his AK47 years later on the way to Lithuania) While I was still nonplussed about lost time a yellow VW bus passed me, with a fully dressed clown on the wheel, smiling down to me. In York I stayed at the bed and breakfast of the lovely widow of an Army General. Her house was lonely in the woods, and full of ticking Grandfather clocks. One night I ventured out into the garden and left the camera for one hour open under a maple tree, taking a long time exposure of the starry sky.

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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Wow Thorsten... A lot of moving cogs in that story! First-- and completely unrelated-- I love the York area. My first wife's family owned a cottage in York Beach. So I spent a bit of time there in the early 1970s. One sunny afternoon found me standing on the Long-Sands side of Goldenrod, watching its old salt-water-taffy machine pull, cut and wrap the delicious morsels. Someone walked up beside me and said "Isn't technology wonderful?" I recognized the voice, and proceeded to enjoy a fabulous conversation with Captain James T. Kirk of the Starship Enterprise! He was in town-- out of both his century and uniform-- to star in a musical at the Ogunquit Playhouse. And he loved old mechanical machinery. But I digress! Lost-time and other experiences similar to yours have also been reported by ships and planes passing through thunderstorms! The closest I ever came to that was having to duck a tornado passing right over my car in Ohio. More than time almost stopped for me then! Your Maine experience was certainly memorable... and not the least for the coincidence (?) of reading Stephen King's "IT"... only to have a clown driving a VW bus grin down at you later. Creepy on many counts!

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Thorsten Wulff replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

This gets better and better, Dave! This journey 38 years ago defined me in many ways… from Manhattan to the fantastic beach in Ogunquit. Last week I printed a series of those pictures on a box of Ilford Ilfobrom galerie… Every night after shooting New York I watched Star Trek on TV. This morning I wrote an essay about the impact of Trek in my life, going back to 1970 ;)) All the best to Kate!

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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

And it'll get better still! I'm currently working on an article about my younger brother Byron's "Brilliant Machines." Sadly, he's no longer with us. But through college anyway, he was a certifiable genius in art, mathematics AND physics. (In his freshman year at Case Western Reserve in Cleveland, Ohio, he actually taught his physics professors more about the universe than they were teaching him!) And one of the machines I'll describe was inspired by Star Trek's transporter. He was literally decades ahead of Science back in the 1970s... and it's still catching up. Anything more than that would be a spoiler! (And I will definitely say Hi to Kate... Thanks!)

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Thorsten Wulff replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

That sounds like Byron was a real renaissance man. Wonderful. Thank you for this inspiring conversation, I will write a story around the pictures from 87 next!

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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

He was indeed. I can't even imagine the things he'd be doing now if he was still alive! The conversations have been inspiring and thank you as well. Looking forward to your '87 story! Dave

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Thorsten Wulff replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

I will return to Maine this fall… maybe we meet at the Goldenrod! ;))

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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Amazing, they still make my favorite taffy flavors: Peanut Butter, Molasses Peppermint, and Lime. But Molasses-Peppermint???? (One must experience it.) And the wrappers are still the same. Must be a time-warp again!

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Art Meripol on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Fascinating! Time slips are new to me and would truly freak me out.
For a few years I did seem to have a doppelgänger. There was a popular host of a home remodeling show on TV who people often confused me with. I would get requests for autographs and they would not accept I wasn't him. That's more than close enough for me.
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Hi Art, Time slips weren't entirely new to me then. I'd heard about them only a short time before. But it was in an extremely strange dream... which I'll describe in a future article titled "Byron's Brilliant Machines." Haven't started writing it though. So it'll be a while! Interesting about your doppelgänger experience! When I was younger, several people said I looked like the singer Ed Ames or the game-show host Gene Rayburn. But not so much that anyone ever asked me for an autograph (or slapped me in the face for that matter)! Cheers, Dave

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Geoff Chaplin on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Embarrassingly I read several paragraphs down before it twigged "ah! must be Dave Powell". You didn't take any photos going through the old town? Are you sure you don't freelance as a surgeon? Presumably you looked up all surgeons in the area named Gary? Thoroughly enjoyed the story as always, and I'll chase up some of your links. Thanks!
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Oh I wish I HAD taken photos, Geoff! We were just dumbstruck, chattered back and forth about what was going on, and the whole event spanned mere minutes. Actually, I didn't need to look up the surgeon, but discovered his identity accidentally. I had to change dry-cleaners, and when I brought a pair of trousers to a new one, they asked "Put it on your tab doc?" I'm embarrassed to admit it, but... well... I remembered being chewed out by two friends and slapped across the face by a stranger, and replied "YES!" Only just that once, though. And never went back. Very naughty of me. Enjoy the links!

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Ibraar Hussain on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

I read and re read ! What a fascinating story
It’s bizarre and I can’t imagine anything like this ever happening to me
And I never knew about the other examples you gave, though there was one about a Russian guy with a Russian camera who turned up in modern day Russia or somewhere still with his 35mm camera with expired he’d just shot decades ago!!

I’ve a couple of Timex in my collection - including a Snoopy one with a yellow strap which was given to me on my First birthday. I’ve never worn it and it stays in a display box as mint as the day it was bought - a time more than anything else
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Glad you liked it Ibraar! Like ghosts, time slips can seemingly occur anywhere, for anyone to experience. So don't count yourself out just yet! I vaguely remember the Russian story you mention, but a Google search didn't find it. Will keep looking! And with the great care you've provided, your Timex Snoopy is probably worth much more than a "pretty penny" by now!

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Ibraar Hussain replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

he was Soviet rather than strictly Russian (he was Ukrainian) https://www.historicmysteries.com/unexplained-mysteries/sergei-ponomarenko/35379/

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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Thanks Ibraar... I've heard of him. A very interesting link!

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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Made more interesting by the role that photography played in perhaps exposing a hoax. (There is, however, something goofy about the story's formatting on my computer... and I'm not sure I'm seeing all the hoax proof that the article mentions.) But interesting none-the-less!

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Gary Smith on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Thanks for taking that slap for me Dave, I just never got around to apologizing to her.

Now, let me get back to: The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

LOLOLOLOLO Gary... Brilliant !! I hadn't heard of that book. But after reading its description on Amazon, I'm seeing a birthday purchase soon. Looks fascinating. At first, the title made me think it was the diary of a lothario. But that fortunately doesn't seem the case. When I was in college, a Yugoslavian studying for the priesthood lived for a semester in my fraternity. He often gave the kind of dating advice that would have fit in a "lothario" version of the book. For example, when I was dressing for a date with the woman who would become my first wife, he suggested that I "simply not show up... to see how she handles it." I already KNEW how she (or any woman) would... and showed up for the date!

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Ibraar Hussain replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Hahahahahahah!!!! That killed Me I’m very familiar with Don Juan’s work.

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Gary Smith replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

I thought we all read those back in the 1970's and '80's. There is a whole series of them. The first was (supposedly) his anthropology thesis. Over time the entire premise was debunked however they still might offer you some interesting perspectives. The concept of wakeful dreaming is interesting.

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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Thanks Gary! As a math major, I heard of 'em... but never read one. This one looks quite interesting though!

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Gary Smith replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

As I recall, "A Yaqui Way of Knowledge" is the first of Castenada's books and it recalls his introduction and beginning apprenticeship with the brujos Don Jaun. The subsequent books recount his path along the way and introduce others. I'd like to think that there are individuals who are tapped into something beyond this existence. If one runs with the concepts being explored in Quantum Physics and multiverses...

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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Your last two sentences may be closer-to-truth than one might imagine! When Google's "Willow" quantum computer solved a complex problem in minutes that would have taken 10 septillion years for non-quantum supercomputers, scientists speculated that it "borrowed" computation resources from the "parallel universes" hypothesized by many-worlds models. But there may be a less dramatic explanation of Willow's hyper-speed: It was attacking a problem for which its unique architecture was ideally suited... a problem immensely more difficult for traditional bit-based architectures to handle. Interestingly, in more traditional applications like word processors and spreadsheets, quantum computers might actually be slower....... But when you said you'd "like to think that there are individuals who are tapped into something beyond this existence," you were speaking directly to my original premise that human awareness might be better equipped for time travel than machines. Quantum physicists and cognitive scientists have discovered what they've called "multi-dimensional structures" in our brain cells (and others) that directly connect with the "quantum zero-point field" on which our universe is built. In essence, each one of US is physically "tapped into something beyond this existence"! We just have to figure out how to use that!

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Martin on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Actually my dad met his doppelgänger when he visited the Bahamas - a trip he had won from a sporting goods company for being one of the best dealers or so, idk I was just a kid. But he met the guy in the transit zone of a US airport (Miami?) when he had to change planes coming from Austria via Frankfurt or London. His doppelgänger was American and my dad recalled his name the town that guy lived all his live. They had a few drinks together in the airport then. I forgot. No photos. My dad wasn't a photographer. I don't think I have a doppelgänger, no second person could be that ugly.
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Fas...cin...ating, Martin! And I bet your "double" may someday appear when and where you least expect it. And you two could hit a bar for drinks and commiseration! Cheers, Dave

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David Dutchison on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

With a bit of a mind flip,
You're into the time slip,
And nothing can ever be the same.

You're spaced out on sensation,
Like you're under sedation,
Let's do the Time Warp again,
Let's do the Time Warp again.

(Richard O'Brien)
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Oh yea... A blast from the past! Must have watched "Rocky Horror Picture Show" at least four times! But those words convey much more now than they did then. Thanks David!

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Umberto Fracassi on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Dave, what an exceptional story. I actually had no memory of the historical incidents you mention, but the 'missing hour' - and the intervening action that some person, possibly yourself, throughout the 'missing hour', had recorded externally - makes the whole story independently verified. Actually, it leaves me pretty amazed and very puzzled.
BTW, what a captivating, instructive narrative style you exhibit, apparently effortlessly. Reading the above praises from those who know your prose and style well, it seems I was the only one around not knowing it already. Well, besides your clinical, possibly insensitive doppelganger, of course :-)
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 08/06/2025

Hi Umberto... Thanks so much for the nice compliments! I'm glad you liked the story and my writing style. But you should see how many times I edit stories, both before and after they are posted! I'm always trying to make them more simple and clear. Nearly a quarter century of technical writing also taught the value of coming back to things after a taking a break from them. That often reveals still more streamlining!

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Gary on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

Balderdash, I'm sure. But a good story.
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

Hi Gary, It's taken me all day to make it down to your comment! I'm very glad you enjoyed the story. And that's good enough for me. I believe that people tend to believe what they have experienced, and doubt what they have not. There are excellent psychological and scientific reasons for that (especially from cognitive science). But I also strongly believe that nobody should try to force others to buy into anything that goes against their own deepest holdings. For to do so might derail them from their purposes for being here in the first place. So I won't do that. Thanks so much Gary!

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Gary on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

Ps. I'm not the Gary in your story!
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

Well that's good, Gary!!!

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Ibraar Hussain on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

Reading the introduction to Simon Marsden’s book ‘phantoms of the isles’ (the B&W work is simply brilliant ) he writes:
“..I have found the weight of evidence that surrounds the existence of ghosts and other supernatural occurrences to be overwhelming, and the constant repetition of certain themes throughout the multitude of stories has always impressed me, particularly the theory of
'time-slips'…”

Uncanny
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

Yes... and timely too! And as I mentioned in my response to Jukka Reimola's comment, that "weight of evidence" is becoming increasingly scientific! The problem scientists have to deal with now is that their own experiments produce such "out there" results, that they'll have a hard time getting non-scientists to understand. As one example, quantum physicists have avoided suggesting that the mysterious "Observer Effect" means we all re-create our external realities when we open our eyes each morning! But a few of them are starting to voice just that. Of course, even saying that is controversial. But if quantum physicists themselves disagree on interpreting their own lab results, how can non-scientists be persuaded? Or perhaps more to the point, when?

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Jukka Reimola on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

This happened decades ago. I was walking downtown on a beautiful summer morning when, from a shop I was just passing, stepped out a very attractive young lady, about my age. Upon noticing me, her eyes widened and she greeted me very warmly, saying something along the lines "We sure had fun last time!" Now, I was absolutely positive never having met this young woman ever before. She was attractive enough to have made a lasting imprint to my memory, if we had. She seemed quite perplexed, when I tried to assure her, I was not the fellow she thought I was.

So, apparently there is a copy of me somewhere. I wonder, wether we still resemble each other, if he happens to be still alive.
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

Oh that's extremely interesting, Jukka! There are actually scientific reasons why time slips could happen. But the science involved-- the proven quantum nature of the universe-- has yet to filter out widely into the general population. That's because even quantum physicists don't always understand what lab experiments tell them. For instance, in a local Thai restaurant, I once heard IBM quantum-computer developers debating their latest surprise: that their computer was processing orders of magnitude faster than its circuits' capabilities should allow. And the reason seemed to be that it was "processing simultaneously in multiple dimensions"! Try explaining THAT on the evening news! Interestingly, the very same process could well explain many so-called "paranormal" phenomena-- including ghosts, psychic dreams, out-of-body experiences and time slips. I also envy your experience with the young lady! I described my closest thing to that in THIS 35MMC ARTICLE . It wasn't a time slip... but maybe she just thought I seemed like a nice guy. She was beautiful though! Thanks Jukka!

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Mark Ellerby on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

Your title photo reminded me of my alarm clock which often loses time during the night. A few days ago it was showing the time from exactly 2 hours ago when I woke up. It's a radio-controlled clock so I don't know how it could do that. And I have had various other clocks and watches lose various amounts of time over the past couple of years.

I can't help thinking perhaps they're trying to tell me something.
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

WOW. So it was 2 hours slow, which happened while you were sleeping? Sort of like my mechanical watch, where something briefly stopped it. But I was (theoretically) awake at the time. And if time slips (by definition) occur while we're awake, then there may be another cause in your case. For example, in THIS 35MMC ARTICLE, I described how my digital camera's image processing was strangely paused in a haunted cabana! Something like that could be affecting your electronic clock while you sleep. Would your home happen to be haunted? Or does the clock ever need resetting after a system update? Just trying to cover some bases here! Thanks Mark!

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Mark Ellerby on Can Time “Slip”? – One-Shot Story

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

The clock has done that a few times, but not normally exactly to an hour, which is why your Timex jogged my memory with it having lost exactly an hour. The building I live in is old and has a 'history' so it could be haunted I suppose. If it was just this one clock then I could just think it's faulty, but it has happened on many occasions with two digital clocks and two analog watches (and I changed the batteries), so it hints at something strange going on. I'm not prone to paranormal experiences though; reading your various posts it sounds like they make your life much more interesting than mine!
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Mark Ellerby replied:

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

Oops, this was meant to be a reply to Dave's reply to me above !

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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

Ah... OK... back on track! It does indeed sound like it could be a haunting. There may be other possibilities too, though I can think of only one right now. It's what causes electrical devices to sometimes turn on or off when I come near. It's happened with coffee makers (dangerous), TVs (irritating), and even the smart scale in our bathroom (which once activated its glowing weight display at "0.0" when I entered the room). In 1970, I discovered in a highly unusual way that my "aura" is room-filling. Now, I believe that auras are nothing more than electrical fields generated by our bodies. So I don't ascribe any special meaning to them. But if my aura is potentially large enough to play with electrical equipment around me, then perhaps yours might be as well?

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Mark Ellerby replied:

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

I don't know if my aura is big or not. I don't generally have strange effects on electrical equipment. I think my timepiece-related strangeness will just have to go into my little book of mysteries.

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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 09/06/2025

Agreed... though a haunt or poltergeist is not entirely out of the question! You said that your building has a "history" of possibly haunting. And electrical devices are common targets. For instance, San Diego's Del Coronado hotel is famously haunted by a young woman who plays with TVs. I found that out the hard way when I spent several days there on a business trip. The TV in my suite would turn on at all hours, day or night, and its screen would always open on the movie "Anaconda"! One night, after this happened three times, I told "her" to "cut it out because I need to sleep." And she did!

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