If your door is ajar and you left it locked, you can be sure someone is inside. Alternately, you might notice a window which is open or smashed in, or a door handle which has been dented as if by a hammer or other heavy object. These signs indicate that someone is in your house who shouldn't be there.
Making a 911 call or text during a break in is a critical part of getting the help you need. Furthermore, don't ever hesitate or debate calling for help and always call 911 instead of calling a friend or family member.
You should always call 911 if you can and text 911 only if you can't. Text-to-911 is beneficial to the Deaf, people with hearing loss or speech disabilities, and those who can't safely call 911. Text-to-911 is free, works through short message service (SMS) with cellular carriers, and requires a text or data plan.
If you dial 911 by mistake, or if a child in your home dials 911 when no emergency exists, do not hang up – that could make 911 officials think that an emergency exists, and possibly send responders to your location. Instead, simply explain to the call-taker what happened.
According to a crime analysis by Vivint Smart Home, 50.3% of burglaries occur at night between 8 p.m. and 7 a.m. while the other half (49.7%) happen in daylight hours. For clarity sake, Vivint, which was recently acquired by energy giant NRG, makes sure to clarify the difference between larceny/theft and burglary.
Sometimes it's due to fear or anxiety: we've all come home at night from seeing a horror film and regarded the shadows in our hallway with extra suspicion. And sometimes it's due to grief: many recently-bereaved people report in some sense “feeling” the continuing presence of their late loved one in their home.
If you feel like you're always being watched, it may be a sign of paranoia. Paranoia is an unreasonable fear or distrust of others. People with paranoia may think that others are constantly trying to harm them or monitoring their every move. This can lead to feelings of isolation, anxiety, and fear.
“Felt presence” is a phenomenon where you feel that someone or some entity is near you, sometimes accompanied by an actual hallucination of some form. The phenomenon occurs in sleep paralysis (see this blog post) but also in certain neurological conditions. It can even be induced in healthy people while they're awake.
Sometimes people sense that another person is in the room, even when no one is present. This sensory hallucination is commonly associated with sleep paralysis, which can co-occur with hypnagogic hallucinations.
The crime of individuals secretly living in someone's home is known as “phrogging,” a reference to how frogs leap from place to place. (It's pronounced “frogging.”) Phrogging can take many forms, from transient intruders to more permanent ones, in occupied homes or ones where the owner is not in residence.
At present, the only way to contact Triple Zero is by voice calling – you cannot send a text or SMS to Triple Zero. 106 is a text-based emergency number for people who are deaf, or who have a hearing or speech impairment.
When calls are received where there is no voice response or difficulty understanding the caller, the 911 Call Taker will complete a call trace to determine the location of the caller and assist with contacting police for that location.
Call 999 from a landline
If you don't speak or answer questions and the operator can only hear background noise, they'll transfer your call to the police.
When departing your room take a long hair or a piece of lint, wet it, place one end on the door and the other on the door frame. If it is gone when you come back you know someone has been in your room. This also works with drawers. A slip of paper between the door and the frame, if gone, tells a story, too.
Banging Noises in the Walls
The knocking or banging noise you hear coming from your walls usually occurs when air pressure builds in your water pipes. This pressure builds up and causes your pipes to vibrate once the pressure is released (when your faucets are turned on or your toilet is flushed).
Summary. Hearing voices at night is not uncommon. While it can be a sign of a mental health condition such as schizophrenia, it is also seen when sleep is disrupted, after stress or trauma, or with certain medications or medical conditions.
Exploding head syndrome belongs to a group of sleep disorders called parasomnias. It causes people to hear loud noises, such as crashing cymbals or thunderclaps, as they transition in or out of deep sleep. Some people also report seeing bright flashes of light at the same time.