On April 12, 1983, James Ridley awoke from a 67-day coma at St. Mary's Hospital in Detroit, screaming about "the mouth in the void." What followed would disturb neurologists and philosophers for decades.
Ridley, a 34-year-old auto plant worker, had suffered severe head trauma in a factory accident.
Upon regaining consciousness, he began describing what he called "the true reality" - one he claimed to have witnessed while comatose.
"We're cattle," Ridley told Dr. Sarah Klein during his initial evaluation. "This... everything... it's just a feeding pen. There's something out there, bigger than galaxies, keeping us distracted while it feeds."
He described a vast, ancient entity that maintains our perceived reality as a form of "cosmic anesthesia."
Most disturbing was Ridley's insistence that he had begged the entity to return him to the simulation. "I couldn't bear it," he repeated. "The scope of it. The horror of knowing."
Ridley's EEG readings showed unusual patterns that experts couldn't explain. His brain activity suggested he was simultaneously in deep sleep and a state of extreme alertness.
Three weeks after waking, Ridley vanished from his hospital room. Security footage showed him walking calmly into the parking lot at 3:27 AM, looking upward, and simply... stopping. The final frame captures his expression - described by investigators as "absolute recognition." ...<<<Read More>>>...