In the summer of 1955, a resident of America, Erkson Gorik, went to the capital of Norway. In Oslo, the businessman intended to purchase glass and porcelain products. The receptionist of the hotel where Gorik was staying greeted the man and called him by name. The guest was surprised, but the hotel worker claimed that this person had recently stayed here.
After that, the wholesaler Olsen, with whom Erkson made a deal, recalled that he had also seen him.
His claims were not unfounded: the Norwegian knew the buyer's full name, telephone number, and warehouse address in the United States. After Gorik convinced his partner that he had not come here yet, Olsen concluded that before the American himself arrived, the wardeger had visited these places. Literally it translates as a ghost, or a harbinger. According to legend, for a very long time, the Norwegians knew how to create their own virtual copy with the power of thought, which would notify the others about their visit.
In 1969, Hilary Evans, a well-known writer in his circles, was very late at work. At night, he heard that someone was walking around the house. The man looked out, but there was no one outside the door. In about ten minutes the bell rang. It turned out that the Norwegian Randy, a friend of his daughter, could not find the key to her house. About ten minutes ago, when the girl discovered the loss, she decided to return to her friend, but she was afraid to wake her father.
In 1956, Mrs. McKahen, while on vacation at a resort, saw a married couple. The next day they happened to start talking. The woman said that she had seen the couple the evening before, but it turned out that the couple had just arrived on vacation.
Vardeger is a kind of vision that means "false return". In the winter of 1910, in Canada, a girl named Mary Travers was waiting for her husband to return from a long trip. She heard the hum of a taxi, the driver's wish for "Good night" and footsteps outside the door. Her husband entered, stood with his back to her, and froze. The surprised wife called him, and when George turned around, she saw his face as white as a sheet. It looked like a mask. The girl screamed so that she woke up all the neighbors. By the time they entered the house, the vision was gone. A few seconds later the phone rang and Mary learned that her husband had died in a train accident.