TV NoiseJohn Takao Collier writes:
Bizarre scientific things seem to happen to me between 4 and 5 am.
A couple of nights ago, a thunderstorm rolled in around 4:30 am.  The approaching storm woke me up, but basic laziness kept me from jumping out of bed to check for basketball-sized hail or untethered houses flying by. I laid in bed with my eyes closed, listening to the thunder getting closer and closer.  Then something very strange happened – across my visual field (or whatever you would call it, given that  I was “seeing” the darkness of the inside of my eyelids)  a moving pattern of random black and white specks, very much like television snow, flickered for a fraction of a second.
My immediate reaction was “Oh oh, the next one is gonna be really clo…”
CRACK!
The damn thing sounded like it was right outside my window.  It’s a good thing that I have adequate bladder control.
A minute or two later, when the spike of adrenaline wore off, I started to wonder just what had occurred.  Was my optic nerve, or the visual center in my brain, momentarily zapped by the nearby electrostatic field?  Did I briefly channel a vision from an alien analog TV?  Did I eat too much garlic the night before?
Recently, magnetically induced hallucinations were suggested as an explanation for  ball lightning, so perhaps my visual cortex was temporarily overloaded by lightning-induced magnetic fields.  Maybe lightning is attracted to garlic (sort of like an anti-vampire).
The next day, I did an Google search for “lightning” and “television snow” (and similar search terms)  but didn’t get any hits.  So, I’m curious if anyone else has experienced this phenomenon.  I ask my gentle readers, have any of you had a similar “TV snow” effect during a thunderstorm?  Comment away.

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