extraterrestrial
Speculation, theory, UFOs and Aliens. Are we alone in this universe or is there life outside Earth?
Message in a Bottle
Chapter 1 Message in a Bottle Nobody can hear you scream in the vacuum of space, or so they say. That’s what everyone thought. For years. But that was before, something my mother used to tell me, before we realized we weren’t alone. And you need to understand that. We are not alone.
By Mathsitect2 years ago in Futurism
Ultraviolet
Nobody can hear a scream in the vacuum of space, or so they say. That doesn’t mean I didn’t try. If you had told me two weeks ago that I would be in space or even that aliens existed, I would have laughed. I have always been interested in alien movies or video games, but never in a million years did I think I would personally experience it.
By Autumn Easley2 years ago in Futurism
New Worlds
Nobody can hear a scream in the vacuum of space, or so they say. The quantum mechanics seem to evade the highest and best minds. But, We, are Here to impart that the structures of life Here, can be altered with the correct application. There are knobs, dials and switches.
By angel favorite2 years ago in Futurism
Space Days
Nobody can hear a scream in the vacuum of space, or so they say. Alice is starting to believe she will need more convincing. She is hearing a scream inside her head now. It is as real to her as the empty space around her as she floats weightlessly in her pressurized suit next to her family's space shuttle known as the Solarskipper. The scream doesn't relay any words, it is just one long high pitched scream. It reminds her of the screaming banshee stories her mother would tell her when she was younger. Her mother would imitate the banshee by making long sad wailing sounds. But the sounds Alice is hearing are clearly much louder than anything her mother ever audited. She has been hearing the screams more often. She will have to go back and get her head checked by the Medically Obligated Device (MOD) again before eating dinner with her family today. Her mother is not too concerned with the screams. Since Alice is sixteen, her mom thinks she is just going through puberty in space. But her father expresses more concern. He initially thought it could be a brain tumor. Now he suspects it is schizophrenia, which is common in space traveling youths like herself, inflicting up to five percent of anyone growing up in space. It is a side effect of living in a space shuttle with a tenth of earth's gravitational pull for too long while physically developing. Despite getting a negative schizophrenia reading from her last trip to the MOD, her dad insisted Alice should spend at least an hour long session in the gravity pod for every earth cycle. For now she is too immersed in mapping the positions of new stars and solar systems on her phone to go back inside and get inspected by MOD again. Despite the annoyance it causes her, few things can distract her from her most important spacetime task of helping mankind discover what lies in the vast expanse of space.
By R.L.K. Crouse2 years ago in Futurism
Green Paper
Nobody can hear a scream in the vacuum of space, or so they say. But then again no one can comprehend the deafening sound of the silence here either. I long to hear any screams fill the skies of this desolate planet. I placate myself with a continual inner dialog.
By Heidi L. Shepherd2 years ago in Futurism
CIRCLING CHAOS
Nobody can hear a scream in the vacuum of space, or so they say. Althea had been told not to go off the ship, she had been warned. The consequences would be dire but she couldn’t stay away; the stairs called to her, beckoning her to have a look, that’s all—just one simple look.
By K.H. Obergfoll2 years ago in Futurism