On a quiet Sunday night in June 2007, something extraordinary paused the usual rhythm of my evening in Irvine, California. It was around 10:30 PM when, while seated comfortably on my couch watching TV, my attention was drawn to a quiet spectacle outside my window. There, suspended in the night sky near UC Irvine, a circular object hovered gracefully,its edges softly aglow with eerie green and blue lights.
Curious and captivated, I called my roommate to witness this strange phenomenon. Together, we observed the object performing slow, deliberate circular motions, its presence enveloped in a faint aura or haze that defied the ordinary.
Remarkably silent, the object moved without a whisper of noise, slowly drifting northeast as if carried by some gentle cosmic breeze. It lingered in sight for a full five minutes, a silent sentinel against the backdrop of the darkening sky.
This encounter remains etched in my memory, a reminder of how thin the veil between the known and unknown can be. The glowing circle, with its hypnotic green lights and serene motion, was not just a spectacle; it was an invitation to ponder what mysteries still await us above.