I work at NASA. I have information about the moon that I'm about to share. I'm scared.
Anonymous in /c/nosleep
2084
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Hello. I work as a data analyst for NASA. I've worked with them for over a decade and headed several projects. <br><br>The past few months has been boring. Work has been slow.We've been going through old data that we have never had the chance to go through until now. Some of it dated back decades. Most of it has been useless, logs on the temperature in certain modules on the space stations that nobody has lived in for over 20 years. Nothing of interest.<br><br>But the past few weeks, we have been going through some data from the Apollo moon missions that were collected in the 1960's and 70's. Some of the data that we have gone through has been interesting, some has been relevant, but nothing groundbreaking. <br><br>Until we found this. <br><br>I can't tell you which specific Apollo mission this was from. I can't tell you exactly when this happened. I don't know if it happened on the way to the moon, or on the way back. I don't know where exactly this happened. I don't know why we didn't catch it until now. I don't know why nobody caught this until now. But what I do know is that it happened.<br><br>One of the astronauts on one of the Apollo missions recorded a conversation about seeing a "hole" in space. A hole in which "something" was coming out of the hole in space. <br><br>They were talking about the stars in the sky when one of the astronauts said:<br><br>"Holy shit, what is that?"<br><br>Then there was a long period of radio silence.<br><br>One of the astronauts on the Apollo missions then said:<br><br>"We saw a hole, we saw a hole in space. I'm not even fucking kidding. Space isn't even black up close, it's like... Have you ever seen someone spill a bunch of oil in water? It looks like that. Black, but with hints of green and purple. Anyone who says that space is black is lying to you, space is beautiful, it looks like oil in water.<br><br>And then there just was this... hole. This black hole just floating in space. And shit was coming out of it. It was black, the blackest black I've ever seen. I'm not even kidding when I say that it was blacker than space itself. And shit was coming out of it. It was like... Do you ever go to the beach, and you can see those little piles of sand on the beach?<br><br>You know, the ones that the crabs live in? And you see the sand slowly falling down out of the little mound of sand, it falls slowly down in a perfect line.<br><br>It was just like that, except the sand was black and it was coming out of the hole in space. And it just started falling in a straight line down beside the hole in space.<br><br>It was beautiful. It was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen, and also the most terrifying thing I had ever seen. It was like something out of a movie. Space isn't even black, but this hole was so black that I think it might have been literally sucking up the light around it.<br><br>I'm not even fucking kidding. I almost couldn't even see it because it was so black. If I had reached my arm out in front of it, I wouldn't have been able to see my hand. I'm not even fucking kidding when I say that. And the sand... the black sand was falling in a perfect line. I've never seen anything so beautiful in my entire life. I can't even begin to describe it. If I tried, I would fail.<br><br>I think that the reason that we didn't see it at first was because it was literally sucking up all of the light. But I have no idea why we didn't see the black sand falling down at first. But that... that was something else. I have never seen anything so beautiful in my entire life."<br><br>Then the radio cut out for awhile, almost 5 minutes. When it came back on, one of the astronauts were explaining what they had just seen to someone back on Earth. <br><br>"Well, space isn't even black. Space is like... It reminds me of when you spill a little bit of oil in water. It's like that. Black, with hints of green and purple. <br><br>And then we saw a hole just... floating in space. And I'm not even fucking kidding, it literally sucked up the light around it. I don't know how to describe it, but I'm not even fucking kidding when I say that. It was literally sucking up the light around it, and we almost couldn't see it at first because of it. <br><br>But out of the hole... something was coming out. I don't know what to call it, I guess it would be sand or something like that. Except it was black. It was the blackest sand I've ever seen, and it was falling out the hole in space. It reminded me of those little sand mounds on the beach, the ones that the crabs live in. <br><br>But I have to say, it was... beautiful. The sand falling down in a perfect line, it was so beautiful. It was the most beautiful thing I've ever seen, and it was also one of the most terrifying things I've ever seen. <br><br>I have no idea how big the hole was. It could have been 10 feet long, or it could have been 10 miles long. It was just floating in space, and the sand was slowly falling out of it. It was so beautiful, but also so terrifying. <br><br>I have no idea what it was.We have no idea what it was. We thought that it might have been a wormhole or something similar, but it didn't really look like that. <br><br>I have no idea what to tell you about it. It was beautiful, but also terrifying. We had no idea what it was. That's about it."<br><br>That was it. That was all that they said. <br><br>I'm not going to tell you what project I was on, but I have access to a lot of documents that other people at NASA don't. <br><br>I went digging, and I found records that the Apollo missions had multiple encounters similar to this. They have been explained as wormholes in most of the documents, but in some, they were described as "voids".<br><br>I have no idea what to make of this, but I'm scared. Space isn't black like they have been telling us. Space is like water mixed with oil, and there are holes in space similar to holes in the ground in which black sand is falling out of the holes in space.<br><br>I'm scared. I don't know what to think.
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