February 13 arrives quietly every year.
They call it World Radio Day — a celebration of transmission, of invisible threads crossing oceans and borders, of voices carried by frequency rather than force. It is meant to honor communication. Clarity. Signal over silence.
This year, the signal is less clean.
Across multiple bands — shortwave, amateur frequencies, even isolated civilian channels — operators have reported irregular noise patterns. Not constant. Not overwhelming. Just present enough to be noticed.
Static with structure.
Echoes where none should exist.
Brief overlapping transmissions that cannot be traced to a known source.
Official explanations range from solar interference to atmospheric distortion. Geomagnetic activity. Equipment malfunction. Routine anomalies.
Routine does not usually synchronize across continents.
The noise has been described similarly in different regions: a layered hum beneath active frequencies, intermittent bursts of tonal fragments, clipped syllables that almost resemble language but collapse into incoherence when replayed.
Meaningless.
Or perhaps incomplete.
Since the acknowledged collision between Earth — once called Terra — and Destia, the Destopian Paradise, most anomalies have been visual or environmental. Atmospheric pressure shifts. Orbital irregularities. Thermal instability.
But interference in transmission was inevitable.
Radio waves do not respect borders.
If two planetary systems are pressing into proximity — even at subtle dimensional edges — then frequency bleed is not impossible. Destia’s atmospheric or electromagnetic signature may be overlapping ours at bandwidths we were not prepared to monitor.
Echoes bleeding from Destia into Earth’s spectrum.
Waves of echo.
On a day meant to celebrate communication, we are reminded that not all signals are meant for us.
There is a temptation to respond.
To tune in closer.
To amplify unidentified transmissions and attempt decoding.
For now, restraint is advisable.
Unknown signals should not be engaged with. Do not answer unidentified or unintelligible calls, especially those repeating fragmented patterns or producing rhythmic pulses outside standard broadcast protocols. Avoid rebroadcasting or amplifying gibberish transmissions through public channels.
Log them.
Timestamp them.
Archive recordings.
But do not interact.
Meaningless signals can become meaningful through repetition. Repetition can create resonance. Resonance can create alignment.
Alignment is not neutral in a period of planetary collision.
World Radio Day reminds us that radio is powerful because it carries presence without proximity. That principle applies to interference as well.
If Destia’s frequencies are bleeding into ours — even faintly — then what we are hearing may not be intended communication. It may be structural leakage. Background mechanics of two atmospheres negotiating shared space.
Or it may be something attempting to establish a bridge.
Either way, caution is not paranoia. It is protocol.
Monitor for:
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Recurring unidentified tonal sequences
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Echo-lag distortions inconsistent with atmospheric reflection
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Reversed or mirrored speech patterns
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Signal strength fluctuations without corresponding solar activity
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Electrical anomalies coinciding with radio disturbances
Report findings through verified scientific or regulatory channels. Avoid sensational platforms. Avoid mythologizing the interference.
We do not need panic.
We need clean data.
The Ring of Fire will mark alignment in the sky.
The heat has marked instability on the ground.
The airwaves may now be marking overlap in the unseen spectrum.
World Radio Day celebrates connection.
For the near future, connection should be selective.
Listen carefully.
Transmit carefully.
And if the noise begins to sound like language, do not assume it is meant for us.
