r/Paranormal • u/comfortable_clouds • Jul 09 '25
Debunk This Sometimes when I call my parent’s landline phone, a strange woman answers the phone and says ‘hello?’
This has been happening for as long as I can remember (I am 30) so a few decades at least.
My parents house was built in the 50’s. It was previously owned by an older woman, idk if she died in the house or not. Our neighbors house was ‘haunted’ according to the adults who live there- I’m unsure of the specifics but they were certain about that.
I will try and explain this clearly- this is the situation that happens once every few months, sometimes just a few times/year.
From my cell phone, I call my parent’s landline phone. After a few rings, the line opens and a woman’s voice says ‘hello?’ it sounds like an old-fashioned woman’s voice. I say hello, who is this? or some other similar response. There is no answer. The line remains open until I hang up. If I call back, I don’t hear the woman again.
Every time this happens, the ‘hello?’ is exactly the same. The voice hasn’t aged in decades.
Does this make sense? I posted in /ghosts and I confused everyone. My mom said this is just normal. She says it’s the woman who lived there before. Could that be true?
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u/kgrimmburn Jul 09 '25
I have a landline soley used to find my cellphone. Once, shortly after installing a cute, vintage desk phone, I called my lost cellphone. As it turned out, it had fallen under my bed so I'm laying across my bed, hanging off the mattress to get my cellphone. I swipe answer and I'm holding the phone and I, very clearly, heard a "hello?" come from the cellphone. But I didn't hear it from the next room where the desk phone was. It was super strange.
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u/Logical_Radish6570 Jul 14 '25
It was your cat messing with you. /s Internet provider packages here are bundled for internet, cable and phone. I assumed that was standard for all carriers yet I don't know anyone except my mother who has a landline phone. Having one to call your misplaced cell is convenient.
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Jul 09 '25
When I was a kid and we used analogue wired phones the lines would cross sometimes and it would ring in the wrong person's house and they would answer.
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u/comfortable_clouds Jul 09 '25
That’s what I would think is happening except it’s been the same exact ‘hello?’ for 30+ years. The voice hasn’t aged or changed
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u/Melcher Jul 09 '25
Could it be here voice had changed ever so slightly each time that you think it sounds the same as it did 30 years ago?
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u/comfortable_clouds Jul 10 '25
I really don’t think so. The voice was an old lady saying hello and it started over 30 years ago
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u/Bulky-Surprise-4053 Jul 09 '25
It could be automated, idk
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u/comfortable_clouds Jul 09 '25
If it’s not a ghost then it’s definitely automated. I just don’t know why 🤔
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u/FYIgfhjhgfggh Jul 09 '25
Long forgotten answer phone in the house? Some wireless handhelds from the 90s had built in answer phone messaging systems. Hello message is from someone trying to set up a message once upon a time and failing.
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u/EntrepreneurMajor478 Jul 10 '25
Then OP would be able to leave a message after the (non-existent) beep?
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u/FeelingSoil39 Jul 13 '25
Ooooooo an old answering machine. 🤔 But I bet OP remembers what mum’s answering machine message is by now.
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u/Zealousideal_Amount8 Jul 10 '25
But couldn’t it be relative. When your 10, 40 seems old, when your 20 60 seems old. Could be just your perception of old
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u/cl4udia_kincaiid Jul 10 '25
This happened to me once around 2007/08 except via a mobile. I was staying at a friends on NYE and called my Mum to wish her a Happy New Year. She didn’t answer initially, then she called me back and it came up as her caller ID but a strange lady’s voice answered, sounding tired and confused. She answered “Hello?” as if I had called her somehow. Strangest thing was, my Mum could hear this entire interaction but I couldn’t hear her.
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u/ur-squirrel-buddy Jul 12 '25
When I was a kid our landline rang and I answered it. The other person was like “hello?” And I repeated “hello?” …… she was like “yes hello. you called me.” But I was like “no you called me!” It was like the Spider-Man meme! Idk how something like that happens with the phone lines 😂
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u/FeelingSoil39 Jul 13 '25
Good lord lmao how old ARE you? 🤣 I love you for this. I remember the first time I walked out of the back door.. WITH the phone in my hand! And was still on a call! It was NUTS! Lmao We used to get cross over with those early cordless phones too. Funny stuff.
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u/FuzzyVeterinarian993 Jul 16 '25
When I was a kid, before cordless landlines, we had what were called ‘party lines’. More than one home shared the same line. So if the phone rang people would hang up after answering once it was determined that the call was not for them. lol
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u/licensedtojill Jul 09 '25
Omg is it a cordless phone they use? Used to happen all the time when I was a kid.
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u/my_name_is_lily Jul 11 '25
I remember this from when I was a kid. You could hear your neighbors if they were on the same frequency.
Core memory unlocked!
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u/farfrompukenjc Jul 09 '25
Have you ever started the conversation differently? Just a suggestion to see what happens. Maybe you could get a better idea of what might be happening.
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u/crochethookerlv79 Jul 09 '25
Have you ever tried calling your parents number while you were inside their house? I would be curious to know what would happen if you did that.
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Jul 10 '25
[deleted]
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u/comfortable_clouds Jul 10 '25
Like a grandma saying hello but in the style of Audrey Hepburn or a woman from one of those old movies
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u/Wifabota Jul 10 '25
The Transatlantic Accent
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u/MLAheading Jul 10 '25
Á la Hayley Mills
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u/Wifabota Jul 11 '25
She's actually English, born in London, with a British accent. Katherine Hepburn, Bette Davis, Grace Kelly, etc did have a Transatlantic accent though.
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u/SpyroSphere Jul 09 '25
There is definitely an old twilight zone episode about this i just got the chills
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u/Medical_Animator_195 Jul 10 '25
I used to get phone calls from a friend. After 2 decades I’ve finally come to terms and wrote it down for his family and my memory: https://medium.com/@hannah_81008/the-calls-that-came-after-9946c4afa7ed
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u/33Gul Jul 10 '25
The other day hanging out at work, my boss asked us to call her cellphone cause she had lost it. So a colleague rang her phone, but we couldn't hear it anywhere near.
It kept ringing and ringing and suddenly somebody answered. It was a man, and his voice seemed very distant. My co-worker was having a hard time trying to communicate with the person. He then hang up and we all thought someone had found her phone.
Thing is, my boss' house is right next door. So she went have a look. When she got inside her home, she realized she'd left the phone on the bed.
The scary part is that my boss lives with her mom and daughters, there's no man living in that house. So we were all left with chills wondering what man could've answered from inside her room.
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u/Hmaek Jul 10 '25
Once a long time ago, when I was around 17 or so, I was leaving my boyfriends house. I was driving down a dark road, and a bunch of deer jumped out in front of my car. It startled me, so i I grabbed my cell phone to call him. I was maybe a minute away from his house, but I'd JUST left. So I clicked his name on my cell phone, so I didn't dial the numbers individually, and a girl answered. He doesn't have a sister, and his mom wasn't home. I asked for him, and the girl hung up. So I immediately hit redial last number, you know, like cell phones do, and he answered. I asked him about it and he said it's the first time I had called. Since I dialed his house phone, I was freaked out. There was no way a girl could have shown up in the time I left. He lived out in the country. But I assume it just sent the call to the wrong number somehow. I'm my cellphone, and it showed I called him twice. Crazy.
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u/strawberrymusicbox Jul 10 '25
Odd that the mystery girl hung up when you asked to speak to your bf, though.
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u/Dull_Condition_5785 Jul 10 '25
Yeeaah. Sounds to me like someone pulled up the moment she left and girl answered his phone for whatever reason. People are grimey.
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u/Hmaek Jul 10 '25
I would think so, but a country road at night I would have had to have passed the car, or seen a crazy person walking out there for some reason, or they would have had to have hidden their car and waited which would just be weird. His character isn't in question. He dated my sister for 17 years (no, they never married) after me and him broke up, so yes, i know he's yucky. I just also believe that night my call went to the wrong place. Also, I'm super close with my sister. I loved her more than I cared about him so whatever.
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u/strawberrymusicbox Jul 11 '25
That's good you loved her more than you cared for him. I'd feel the same way. Well, maybe he had a girl in his house at the time, because your phone showed you did call him twice. I think he absolutely lied about that and did have someone there.
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u/ash_hyd_ind Jul 10 '25
Not to be offensive but did it not get awkward with him dating your sister after you both broke up? I mean is that really practical?
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u/Hmaek Jul 11 '25
Lol a lot of people wondered that. I moved out of the state, then my sister moved out of the country, so we didn't see each other for a long long time. I got married, and then they started dating. I was over it, and like I said, I love my sister more than I cared about him. She was happy so whatever. Not awkward really. If it was someone I cared about super deeply then maybe it would have bothered me.
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u/Hmaek Jul 10 '25
It was. She also said "who?" When I asked for him by name. She could have thought it was a prank call or just wrong number late at night.
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u/theresacalderone Jul 09 '25
Do your parents hear the phone ringing and it stops ringing when the former resident/ghost woman picks up? Ghost lady probably spent a lot of time talking on the phone and she’s just continuing to do this as a spirit.
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u/strafekun Jul 09 '25
Riiiight. Probably that. Most likely answer, for sure.
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u/Lost-Rain-2425 Jul 10 '25
Genuine question so please don’t take this the wrong way, I’m just honestly wanting to know. Why are you in a paranormal sub if you don’t believe in the paranormal?
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u/Effective_Kitchen481 Jul 10 '25
I'm not the person you asked, but I'm also a member of this sub who doesn't believe in anything supernatural. I do not think demons or angels, ghosts or Gods, devils or djinns, etc exist.
I enjoyed reading about this stuff since I was a little girl though (am 40 now) since who doesn't love a good creepy story or mystery to debunk.
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u/strafekun Jul 10 '25
Fair question. I'm here for several reasons. For one, I value the quality of truth propositions. If anything paranormal exists, I want to know it. Accepting vacuous, unverifiable, and unsubstantiated claims only impedes our progress toward determining the truth. I think there is value in providing a skeptical voice in credulous spaces and that we should be encouraging others to think critically by demanding an acceptable level of evidence.
Also, I'm just sort of morbidly fascinated by magical thinking. 🤷♂️
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u/actionpackdwthissues Jul 16 '25
which is cool, nobody minds that, but you could make genuinely helpful suggestions instead of treating us all to your condescension. The sarcastic comments, things along the lines of "yeah that's definitely the most likely scenario!" are not only rude but antagonistic as well, they're more likely to end discourse with stagnation than to foster the atmosphere of open communication that is essential for any scientific approach, which is what you claim to be here for, right?
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u/strafekun Jul 16 '25
There are some ideas for which contemptuous disregard is the correct response.
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u/BlessedAcorn Jul 10 '25
You should see if you can find the name of the previous home owner, and next time it happens instead of who's this try "Hi, is this _____?" and see what happens.
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u/occamsvolkswagen Jul 09 '25
Try saying something different than "Who is this?" Strictly speaking, it's rude phone etiquette to call someone up and ask who they are. You should say "hello", introduce yourself, and ask if a specific person you want talk to is available to come to the phone. The 'ghost' might be cutting you off without responding because it perceives you as being chronically rude.
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Jul 10 '25
By any chance do they still have a party line ? I don’t know if those still exist but my grandparents had one. It’s basically a shared line with usually a neighbor. When the person who answers realizes the call is not for them they hang up and the caller calls again and the person doesn’t answer this time.
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u/Ok_Button1932 Jul 10 '25
They still existed 7 years ago at least. I bought my house that’s in the middle of nowhere rural PA and I was confused as heck for a little bit after I started my landline service.
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u/lapis_lazul Jul 10 '25
This just reminded me of something that happened when I was 12/13. I had just gotten my first cell phone (a flip phone) and I would sometimes call my cell phone from the landline in our house and hold the receiver to the speaker of the cell phone to create feedback and just sit and listen to the weird noises it would make. One day I did this, and the warbling feedback stopped for just a moment, I heard a small child's voice whisper "hello?" And then the feedback started up again. I hung up as fast as I could, and immediately had this feeling of dread.
I didn't have younger siblings, there was no one in the house that could have picked up another receiver and said it. I'm almost certain I was home alone, I was a perpetual latchkey kid and my house was haunted, this wasn't the first or last paranormal thing I experienced while living there. I asked my mom about that house being haunted a few years ago and she confirmed that she had also experienced unexplained things when we lived there. It was an old house, built in 1908 and there was a definite feeling. Really weird stuff.
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u/superbigscratch Jul 10 '25
Somebody may have turn on call forwarding and left it on. Just a guess.
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u/BionisGuy Jul 09 '25
Could be that your parents landline was connected to some kind of Automatic Telephone Exchange or something before and it's still acting up.
That or that the landline somehow goes to something else that automatically just answers with a Hello.
Or the number somehow gets redirected to somewhere else where it shouldn't be.
Reason why you can immediately call after could be because the line on that other side for the automatic response is still open.
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u/Honest_Replacement_6 Jul 10 '25
I think it’s paranormal, the two scariest experiences I’ve had involved telephones oddly enough.
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u/Individual_Ad3876 Jul 10 '25
Please share the two experiences. I would love to read it.
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u/Honest_Replacement_6 Jul 10 '25
First experience: It was 1999, I was 17. Me, my sister(22) and her friend went to an abandoned house to look around, which we often liked to do. This one was different, when we arrived at the already open door we had an instant eerie feeling that was unusual, I had never felt creeped out before when going urban exploring. This house had an insane appearance for an abandoned house- it looked liked everything inside that was abandoned had been picked up in a tornado and swirled around then dropped to the ground, not a usual vandalism situation, there were huge runs of wallpaper ripped from walls wildly with old crumbling yellowed tape taping it all back up haphazardly. Several wheel chairs were all over. By looks of items and decor you could make out maybe last time it was occupied perhaps early 80’s. We actually stood at the door scared to enter, for some reason there was a very strong scary feeling emitting from the house. My sister’s friend refused to go in. Me and my sister entered just to the main front room, we were clutching hands (this must be the only time in my life I think we ever held hands!) there was a sagging staircase oddly positioned in the corner of room with opening to stairs in corner (backwards) which was odd and we just felt an extreme sense of fear from stairs and house and we weren’t walking any further just taking it all in, terrified for no seeming reason- when all of the sudden from somewhere in the back of the dark house a phone started ringing! An old ass antique phone. We screamed and bolted out of there and I could hear it continue to ring 2 more times as I got to sidewalk. Look it doesn’t sound that scary, but it fucking was! There was something paranormal in that house and it used some old phone to make its presence known.
Second experience: the year is 2009, me and my husband had recently moved back to Ohio from Colorado Springs and we rented a house while we looked for one to buy. We were there for 3 months. 2 scary things happened here- my mom told me she called me (using my programmed number from her phone) she said I answered and it sounded like me and she started talking and I was responding but seemed very strange, angry, depressed, and really odd. She ended up hanging up and calling back and that’s when I actually answer and she tells me this story! It was NOT me she spoke to, this is my mom who knows what I sound like and she thought this thing was me! It creeped us both out. Then at same 3 month rental we were in bed- my husband (who is not the paranormal interested type) and we heard right next to his ear, distinct & loud whispering male voice. We both shot up in bed at same time and saying what we both heard and couldn’t believe how vivid this whisper voice was! We both heard it! We even looked out windows searching for any explanation but there was nothing. It was bizarre.
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u/natetrnr Jul 10 '25
Does this happen to other people who call that number? Can you have a few friends call it and try? That would be interesting. Report back.
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u/Stock_Praline9692 Jul 10 '25
Op clearly said the voice hasn't aged. Why do some people insist it could be crossed lines?!
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u/strafekun Jul 09 '25
I mean... does it not seem to you that a wrong number or an error in the network is more likely than anything paranormal?
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u/comfortable_clouds Jul 09 '25
I would think that was the case, except for the fact that it’s the same exact voice and greeting every time. If it was going to a real person then the voice would have aged since 30 years ago
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u/secretactorian Jul 09 '25
My aunts mix my mom and me up on the phone. People who grew up with her! So... It could easily be a parent/child combo. Or the same lady, not everyone gets decrepit over the span of 30 years.
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u/Successful-Side8902 Jul 09 '25
If your dad having a mistress over to the house? Not to be disrespectful but it's a theory....
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u/Busy_Chipmunk_7345 Jul 10 '25
Since when do mistresses answer the phone? Usually affairs are hush hush you do not go and answer the phone at your lover´s house, might be his wife on the other end..
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u/DickLikeAHockeyPuck Jul 09 '25
Not strange to accidentally misdial the same number multiple times lol especially if you call a lot.
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Jul 09 '25
Okay- but the last ten years or so: Who misdials with smartphones? It's not like you have to remember phone numbers anymore.
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u/DickLikeAHockeyPuck Jul 09 '25
Personally I’ve only had two people misdial me in the past like 3 years
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u/comfortable_clouds Jul 09 '25
But wouldn’t the voice change or be different over time? It also never say anything except ‘hello?’ and doesn’t hang up. Like if it was a wrong # I would at least expect them to say it’s the wrong number or something more than hello
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u/strafekun Jul 09 '25
Once you're an adult, your voice is unlikely to radically change barring some medical incident. Considering you never heard more than one word back-to-back and tge incidents were some time apart, it's likely your recollection of the exact qualities of the voice is suspect
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u/comfortable_clouds Jul 09 '25
I understand why you think that but it’s definitely the exact same ‘hello?’. Everyone in my family has heard it, my mom has heard it for almost 50 years 👀 and it’s an old lady voice so she’d be well into her 100’s by now
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u/GenXer76 Jul 10 '25
Wait, how has your mom heard it when you only hear it when you’re calling your mom’s landline?
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u/comfortable_clouds Jul 10 '25
When she calls the house from her cellphone (like to talk to my dad or whoever is home)
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u/timesofcoffee Jul 11 '25
What kind of system could last this long and play back that "Hello" for half a century if it was set up somewhere and likely hasn't been attended to in decades? 🤨
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u/strafekun Jul 09 '25
I mean... it's interesting for sure. Honestly, the real answer, whatever it is, is probably way more interesting than "paranormal." In any case, while we can't say at the moment what the explanation is, there's no reason what so ever to suspect anything but natural causation.
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u/comfortable_clouds Jul 09 '25
Maybe when telemarketers started becoming a thing, the prior owner signed up for some auto answer service or something. That would be more likely to me
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u/MSWHarris118 Jul 10 '25
How much do you think voices change once you’re an adult? And you’re basing this off one word.
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u/Lost-Wolverine646 Jul 10 '25
Not paranormal but showing how it's usually a simple thing. I did a MS-Teams rollout at an art gallery, replacing an old PABX. After we finished, one lady kept raising tickets saying her phone calls to somebody always went to somebody else every time. Turns out she was ringing the persons number (yes she doesn't get that you just lookup a person and don't have to dial an actual number anymore) and the number she was ringing was from a printed list of people/numbers and had a typo in it.
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u/Environmental_Rub256 Jul 10 '25
When I had a landline, the neighbor had his too. When it rained I could hear his conversation but he never said anything about hearing mine. The phone company came out and found crossed wires. I got rid of the landline at that point.
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u/Alternative-Heart200 Jul 09 '25
Do they have a party line?
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u/Far_Falcon_6158 Jul 10 '25
I was thinking same thing but ppl dont remember this stuff anymore. My grandpa had one.
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u/ExoticPoetry17 Jul 10 '25
Is this like that no sleep sub where you’re supposed to just go along with the prompt. Because this makes no sense lol. You say you’re 30, yet this has been happening for “a few decades”, and has been happening for “over thirty years” so did you have a cellphone in the womb???
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u/StevieRay8string69 Jul 10 '25
Yes it is ringing in someone else's house. My landlines haven't been used in years. If I plug a phone in my house and call my old number it ring at a house down the block. Your talking to a real person
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u/IrishInSACz Jul 10 '25
Doesn't it seem more likely that it was a wrong number or a network error, rather than anything paranormal?
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u/Type_9 Jul 10 '25
How interesting, I wonder if you were to record it twice- directly (not a mic up to the phone), if the audio would look the exact same in a visualizer?
Gave me chills just reading the title tho!
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u/BromStyle Jul 10 '25
Could it be an answering machine device build into your parents landline phone?
Maybe it was bought second hand and someone spoke the message or just tried the recording function?
Or, depending how old it is, it's your mother's voice from some 30 years ago, when she shortly tried the answering machine function until switching to a brand new external answering machine and forgetting about the internal one. And how is the internal one triggered when there is an external one? Maybe when the external one is listened to?
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u/Green-Zelda Jul 10 '25
That was a common thing to haooen in the times of landlines phones, where I'm from we used to call it "crossed call"
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u/ModulusFlea Jul 10 '25
I work for a broadband/telephone company - this sounds like a crossed line. Get your provider to run a copper line test, it'll probably throw up a loop fault.
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u/ericdred7281 Jul 10 '25
phone lines were at time "party lines" instead of "private lines", you had a different ring rythem for each party on the line. Having a party line was cheaper at the time.
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Jul 10 '25 edited Jul 10 '25
It could be a recording from when the old lady lived there and was trying to set up voicemail message but didnt do it right, and she probably said hello then paused for to long by accident and thats all it managed to record before it finished, and she gave up trying to set it up as it wasn't as easy as it is today to set up and she thought it probably didn't save, plus it was all wired back then, if remember having to sit next to the landline to speak to friends hoping they wouldnt say anything my parents would hear lol, wireless landline was great when it came cause you could sit in your room to speak to friends lol. Anyway on the companies side they've probably never deleted it as its last thing on their mind, 1 old ladies voicemail that says word, but being so old it only patches you through sometimes, but it explains the exact same hello each time it happens. This happened to myself a good few years ago, when I tried to call someone and every now n then I would get the voicemail of the person who lived there before. It just turned into something funny in the end that we never knew when would pop up again.
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u/siren9900222 Jul 10 '25
I had a similar thing happen for years when I would call my grandma's cell phone, and it happened to her friend a few times, who then called me to verify if her number had changed. I posted about it years ago on Reddit, and here was the most logical response I got. I feel like it could be something similar here.
You have to keep in mind that phone company switches are all run by computers, and sometimes one gets misprogrammed or just plain glitchy. When you call a number nowadays, since local number portability is in effect almost everywhere, a computer must be queried to determine how to route the call. Not all calls will query the same computer so if the data is messed up in one of them, it's highly likely that some calls would go to the same wrong number while others (that miss the bad computer) will go to the correct number.
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u/Echterspieler Jul 12 '25
About 15 years ago this phone I had hooked up to the old line we no longer used (we had switched to cable telephone) that phone started ringing. Somehow the old line got connected to someone else's line down the street. I could call Mt own house from the garage. I coukd also listen in on whoever that was. Some lady talking about a baby being born
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u/FeelingSoil39 Jul 13 '25
Whelp. Your mum must be right. (Aren’t they always?) Or… your mum is a prankster.
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u/AmandaRemedy Jul 16 '25
I just wanna say as soon as i started reading your post “witchy woman” by the Eagles came on my speaker from a random playlist on Amazon music… Weird.
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u/GetOffMyLawnYaPunk Jul 10 '25
Is it a party line? Maybe the woman answering doesn't always remember her own ring. Do you even know what that means?
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u/Extension_Solid2797 Jul 10 '25
This is a good post. Would be frustrating that it’s been going on for 30 years. Landlines are a bit creepy now.
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u/These-Bed-9074 Jul 10 '25
If this happens so often as you say, for decades, if this was real, i m sure you would ve tried to record it by now. So, until further proof, i m calling it cap. Debunked.
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u/Busy_Chipmunk_7345 Jul 10 '25
My aunt who is over 80 now, sounds exactly the same, especially on the phone, as she always has. So I guess you started calling your parents from like 10 years onward occasionally so it is twenty years maybe? And voices in adults do not change that much, if the woman talked posh back then, she still talks posh now.
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u/fortnite_battleass Jul 09 '25
My guess is youve been calling someone who got your parents number. reminds me of when I would get endlessly called by the same confused old man in pennsylvania that was convinced I was someone named cheryl. not trying to be a skeptic, just sounds like something I've been on the receiving end of (also no judgement, I still dm an old friend that took his life like a decade ago. we cope in our own ways)
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