When I was about seven years old, an ordinary evening took a strange turn while my aunt and I were heading to an ice cream shop in Gatineau, Quebec. The quiet night sky suddenly filled with an eerie buzzing sound that made me look up in wonder and fear. Above, I saw four circular objects moving slowly and deliberately across the sky. These weren’t ordinary lights or airplanes—they had a haunting, otherworldly quality to them. Each circle emitted smaller objects and produced a low, buzzing sound that sent chills down my spine. The entire spectacle lasted about three minutes before they vanished as mysteriously as they had appeared.
This uncanny experience in Gatineau remains vivid in my memory, not just because of the strange shapes or the weird noise, but the way those circles moved so deliberately and silently, like something beyond our world was watching us. For a child, witnessing something so extraordinary—in a sky usually filled with only stars and clouds—left a lasting impression, one that calls for deeper exploration into the mysteries that hover just beyond our understanding.