
Viral TikTok video sparks fear and fascination as woman reveals 12-year spiritual communication with entity named ‘Seven’
A U.S.-based woman has gone viral on social media after claiming she has been in contact with a ghost for over 12 years—an entity she says warned her of the Hiroshima bombing and foretold an upcoming global disaster in May 2025.
Cassie, the woman behind the now-viral video, shared that she and her husband have been communicating with a spirit named “Seven” since 2013. According to her, Seven first contacted them with warnings for humanity to “get their act together” or risk a total collapse of Earth.
The ghost, she claims, speaks in ancient languages and sometimes in English, offering cryptic messages about humanity’s fate. While much of the communication is difficult to interpret, one message was chillingly clear: “All must stop, or Earth will die.”
A warning tied to Hiroshima—and a date to remember: May 27, 2025
Cassie says Seven spoke of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima in 1945, calling it the “first contact” with humanity—one that failed. The spirit reportedly said that the next failed contact would occur 29,149 days after the Hiroshima bombing, which falls on May 27, 2025.
When asked who would die in this foretold disaster, the ghost allegedly answered: “All. Save 7.”
At the time, Cassie recalls, the date felt distant. But with 2025 just months away, the internet is abuzz with speculation, fear, and intrigue.
Rising fear amid global warnings and natural disasters
Cassie’s eerie claims arrive in a year already marked by alarming predictions and global instability. Social media users have drawn parallels between Seven’s warnings and the chilling prophecies of Baba Vanga, a blind Bulgarian mystic whose predictions have resurfaced following recent tragedies.
Earlier this year, a powerful earthquake struck Myanmar, which many claim Baba Vanga had forecasted in her 2025 predictions, which include “shattering earthquakes”, economic collapse, and a European war.
Russia-Ukraine conflict escalates
On May 25, Russia launched what Ukrainian officials called the largest drone attack on Kyiv since the war began in February 2022, killing at least 12 people. The escalating war and President Vladimir Putin’s repeated nuclear threats have intensified fears of a broader conflict, as diplomatic efforts by the United States continue to falter.
Prophecies stir concerns in Japan
Another doomsday prediction gaining traction involves a warning for Japan. In her 1999 book The Future I Saw, Japanese artist Ryo Tatsuki wrote of an undersea crack between Japan and the Philippines that would unleash massive earthquakes and tsunamis in July 2025—waves “three times as tall” as those in the 2011 disaster.
The viral prophecy has already led some tourists to cancel their summer plans to visit Japan.
India-Pakistan tensions add to global anxiety
Adding to the global environment of fear, recent clashes between India and Pakistan have escalated dramatically. After a terrorist attack in Pahalgam, Jammu & Kashmir, killed 26 people, India launched Operation Sindoor, striking terror bases across Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. The conflict has raised fears of a larger regional war—and the possibility of nuclear engagement.
A pattern of prophecies or mass panic?
While skeptics dismiss the ghostly warnings as superstition or attention-seeking, others argue that these patterns—natural disasters, war, and economic upheaval—may point toward something far more serious.
Whether a case of collective fear or a genuine warning from beyond, one thing is certain: Cassie’s story and others like it are capturing the internet’s attention in an already turbulent year.



