One Ohio woman believes her late sister has found a very modern way to stay in touch. No flickering lights. No creaky doors. Just a microwave that insists on hitting the number seven button, over and over again, no matter how many times it’s cleared.
According to the woman’s TikTok, the strange behavior started not long after her sister passed away. Living quietly in her Ohio home, she noticed something small at first: the microwave lighting up on its own, the number seven appearing on the display without explanation, and it kept happening.
Some may assume it was a glitch. Appliances break. Buttons stick. Electronics act weird all the time. But this wasn’t random. It was always the same number. Always seven. And that’s where things took a more emotional turn. Seven, she explained, wasn’t just a number. It was her sister’s favorite number.
Ohio Woman Believes Sister Communicates With Her Through The Microwave
Instead of fear, the woman felt comfort. She laughed and made light about it, but obviously believed that it was sign that her sister is still with her. She described the experience as playful rather than spooky, saying it felt exactly like something her sister would do. The kind of harmless prank meant to say, “I’m still here,” without making a big dramatic production out of it. No terror. No panic. Just a soft nudge from someone she misses deeply.
“The first time I ever heard it, it spooked me. But then I realized what number it always was. 7 was my sisters favorite number,” the caption of the video read.
Culturally, stories like this resonate strongly when family ties often run deep and belief systems tend to leave room for the unexplained. Whether someone chalks it up to spirituality, grief, or pure coincidence often depends on personal experience. And for those who’ve lost someone close, moments like these can feel like lifelines rather than logic puzzles.
TikTok Loved It!
Grief has a funny way of rewriting the rules. It sharpens awareness, magnifies patterns, and sometimes turns everyday objects into emotional symbols. For this Ohio woman, the microwave has become less of an appliance and more of a conversation starter between worlds.
“This is more evidence than Zak Bagans got in 30 seasons,” one person joked about the famous ghost hunter. “My sister must be doing something wrong , my sister needs to step up her ghostly sisterly duties,” another stated. “Ouija microwave is crazy,” a third person chimed in. “I mean if you believe in angel numbers 777 is a really good message,” a fourth comment read.
And whether it’s a faulty button, a lingering energy, or simply a sister’s personality refusing to fade quietly, she’s made peace with it. The Ohio woman decided that if her sister is going to haunt her, at least she’s doing it with humor.
