Archive for the ‘ghost’ Category

h1

Amityville Horror home goes up for sale

May 26, 2010

Amityville Horror House

Six members of the DeFeo family were shot and killed in the house in 1974

The house made famous by the 1970s Amityville Horror film has gone on sale in Long Island, New York, with a price tag of $1.15m.

The five-bedroom house at 108 Ocean Avenue, Amityville, gained notoriety through the film based on the story of the Lutz family, who moved in in 1975.

The Lutzes say they soon discovered that the house was haunted.

Several months earlier, six members of another family had been shot and killed as they slept in the house.

The family’s eldest son, Ronald DeFeo Jr, was convicted of the 1974 murders.

A book and a series of films based on the events described by the Lutzes followed.

The high asking price of the house – a Dutch Colonial style home overlooking a canal – is based on renovation work, reports say.

It has had several owners since the 1970s. The address has been changed from the original 112 Ocean Avenue in a effort to keep onlookers away.

h1

Lawrence Community Theatre

May 12, 2010

The Lawrence Community Theatre "ghost" photo taken in 1987

Even the most hardened of cynics, when roaming the halls of the purportedly haunted Lawrence Community Theatre in the dead of night with all of the lights turned off, will be forced to admit that it can be really creepy. Creaks, groans and weird props lurk around every corner of this large and drafty theater.

Whether this half-century-old building is actually infested with ghosts, however, is still up for debate. As far as the theater staff is concerned, that debate is good publicity for their upcoming production of the supernatural comedy “Blithe Spirit.” As one of those hardened cynics who wants to see whether there’s anything to this metaphysical mumbo jumbo, I’m happy to oblige in that publicity.

The ominous-looking structure at 1501 N.H. began its life in the ’50s as a church for Full Gospel Christian Assembly, only adding to the spiritual reputation of the site. LCT purchased the building in 1984 when the church dissolved after a rift in the assembly.

In 1987, during a dress rehearsal for the spy drama “Pack of Lies,” a photo was snapped that would cement the theater as one of Lawrence’s premier spectral hot spots. The photo clearly shows the translucent figure of a woman standing between two actors, a woman not fitting the description of anyone in the venue at the time. The photographer, Jack Riegle, insists that the image has not been intentionally altered, pointing out it was taken well before the era of Photoshop.

That incident seemed to kick off a series of unexplainable encounters over the next 23 years at LCT. Casts and crews have reported everything from feeling cold spots to sensing a vague presence in the room with them. One actress even claims to have been shoved down a flight of stairs by someone who wasn’t physically there. All of this has made the theater a target for ghost hunters and a frequent entry for online haunted house registries.

“We occasionally get college students who heard about the ‘ghost,’” says Mary Doveton, LCT’s executive director. “I understand that the theater is on at least half a dozen sites, including Dark Kansas and Shadowlands. We had nothing to do with it being placed on these sites. In fact, I didn’t know about most of them until we started doing some research to get ready for ‘Blithe Spirit.’”

One such entity interested the theater’s past is the Wichita Paranormal Research Society. This group of amateur-apparition sleuths has been investigating the Midwest’s most haunted locales for nearly five years. They’ve repeatedly requested a chance to monitor LCT over those five years but have been politely rejected until “Blithe Spirit” (which opens April 15) offered Doveton an opportunity to capitalize on the offer. I decided to tag along with Wichita researchers during their recent investigation.

Shane Elliott, founder of the Wichita Paranormal Research Society,  wearing a WPRS T-shirt, stands outside the theater. Photo by Richard Daley

Shane Elliott, founder of the Wichita Paranormal Research Society, wearing a WPRS T-shirt, stands outside the theater.

Enter sleuths

Rather than wild-eyed crackpots or reality television-style media hounds, the group was surprisingly skeptical and upfront about its chances of finding an honest-to-goodness spook.

“Only in about 10-15 percent of our investigations do we find something that we cannot explain,” says Shane Elliott, worker in the Wichita aircraft industry by day, team captain of Wichita Paranormal Research Society by night and weekend.

Elliott became interested in the paranormal after an incident five years ago involving a strange humming sound on his son’s baby monitor and what may or may not have been an encounter with his deceased grandmother.

“I think we all started out looking for answers to our own personal experiences, but that really only gets you so far,” says Elliott, who fully admits that most so-called supernatural incidents have very natural explanations, such as electromagnetic field (EMF) interference with electronics and the habit of the human mind to see patterns and familiarity where there is none (the team calls this “matrixing”).

The WPRS's tools of the trade. Photo by Richard Daley

The WPRS’s tools of the trade.

The WPRS's heat sensing device. Photo by Richard Daley

The WPRS’s heat sensing device.

“It’s when you get a chance to help a family either by finding normal causes for what they believe could be paranormal, or being able to hand them a copy of possible paranormal claims that backs up what they have been witnessing for years. Those cases really make it all worth it. And seeing some really fascinating historical sites doesn’t hurt either.”

Elliott and his four co-horts unloaded an impressive array of equipment into LCT that dark and stormy night (no, seriously it was overcast and pretty eerie).

“We are a nonprofit organization,” Elliott says. “We don’t charge a dime, and all of the equipment has been purchased and collected over the years. Our first investigation, we had an audio recorder and a hand-held camera. Today we have 10 to 15 audio recorders, 12 infrared and full-spectrum cameras that see in total darkness, thermal-imaging cameras, electromagnetic field detectors, several hand-held cameras, and each investigator has at least one digital photographic camera.”

A monitor displays the feeds from various cameras that the WPRS  has wired up throughout the Lawrence Community Theatre. A monitor displays the feeds from various cameras that the WPRS has wired up throughout the Lawrence Community Theatre.

The investigation

Once the cameras and monitors were set up in each of the theater’s “hot spots,” where activity of some sort has been reported in the past, all of the lights in the building were turned off, and the group split off into two-person teams. Then the waiting around in the dark began. The routine would generally go something like this for an hour in each hot spot: The two investigators would sit in silence, ask a question into the dark (along the lines of “Is anybody there?” or “Would you like to say something?” or “Would you like to tell us about the afterlife?”), sit in silence some more, get excited about a spike in one of the EMF detectors, realize it was probably someone’s cell phone setting it off, repeat.

It all felt like a high school slumber party when someone whips out the Ouija board and you’re all trying to freak each other out. Even though nothing should logically frighten you, there’s an almost willing suspension of disbelief. It was fun to get the hackles raised on the back of your neck. Same principle as a horror movie or an amusement park ride, even though most of it was sitting in silence and snacking on a platter of sandwiches.

This went on for about five hours. Despite a random EMF spike that couldn’t be explained and some whispering voices which couldn’t immediately be dismissed as echoes through the air ducts, the team didn’t come up with anything concrete that night. That’s typical, they tell me. It usually takes upward of two weeks to comb through all of the video and audio they recorded during an investigation. The devil, so to speak, is in the hours and hours of data they compile. Maybe a sourceless orb of light will appear in a few frames of video or a voice directly answering a question will be unscrambled from audio white noise.

In the meantime, while we wait for proof (or the lack thereof) from the Wichita Paranormal Research Society, the proprietors of LCT want everyone to know that the play is the thing, and the supposed “ghost” is but a player.

Doveton says, “I certainly don’t think the theater is home to anything scary, but I do like to think that every theater retains the memories and energies of performers and audience members who have sung and danced and laughed and listened and shared something special together.”

h1

People are seeing more ghosts than ever

April 28, 2010

UK (ChattahBox) – Times may be changing, but the public view on paranormal and demonic activity is apparently not changing with it. A study has shown that many modern day Britons are as convinced as ever of the validity of satanic and ghostly forces in our world.

The study, led by Lionel Fanthorpe and based off of records of alleged sightings, show that Yorkshire is the most common place where modern reports of paranormal activity are found. In that region, 74 reports have been made in 25 years, including ghosts, demons that feed on sexual energy (the succubus), and demonic possession.

This is part of an overall 968 reports over two and a half decades from all over Britain.

According to The Telegraph, the most “paranormal activity” comes from the following regions:

  1. Yorkshire 74
  2. Devonshire 57
  3. Somerset 51
  4. Wiltshire 46
  5. Inverness 39
  6. Dorset 37
  7. Norfolk 32, Lancashire 32
  8. Sussex 30, Derbyshire 30
  9. Essex 29, Suffolk 29
  10. Lincolnshire 24
h1

Jeffrey Dahmer’s childhood home.

April 27, 2010

Jeffrey Dahmer

“I bought Jeffrey Dahmer’s childhood home in Bath, Ohio – Let that sink in for a second,” writes owner Chris Butler for NPR. “If your first reaction is “eeewwwww,” that’s perfectly understandable.” “Dahmer was one of America’s most notorious serial killers; his rampage lasted from 1978 to 1991. He confessed to killing at least 17 young men – Many of these murders involved torture and cannibalism,” reports Butler.

“I bought the house, though, not for some kind of perverse, Goth thrill, but because I needed a place in woodsy-suburby Northeastern Ohio where I could make a loud musical racket and not bug my neighbors,” reports Butler. “I was instantly charmed the first time I pulled in the driveway… Charmed turned to creeped-out when 24 hours after I first saw the place with my real estate agent, Greg Greco, he told me of the house’s grisly provenance.”

“Dahmer did commit his first murder here — a hitchhiker named Steven Hicks whom he lured back to the house with promises of drugs and alcohol, and then clubbed with a barbell after Hicks said he wanted to leave – Dahmer later dismembered Hicks’ corpse in the house’s crawlspace,” reports Butler.

“The vibe here is fantastic – The house didn’t kill anybody, and I didn’t see any ghosts. I’m not superstitious or a believer in the paranormal, but after months of people freaking out about where I was living, I did begin to wonder if there might be some leftover bad business in the place,” reports Butler.

“As it turns out, in Northeastern Ohio, there is a lot of interest in the paranormal. Ghost hunts were being offered at creepy sites all around the region, and I’d been approached by several psychics and paranormal clubs that wanted to bring audio recorders and video cameras over to see what they could scare up,” reports Butler.

Read the results of the ghost hunter’s investigation here

Jeffrey Lionel Dahmer (May 21, 1960 – November 28, 1994) was an American serial killer and sex offender. Dahmer murdered 17 men and boys– most of whom were of African or Asian descent – between 1978 and 1991, with the majority of the murders occurring between 1987 and 1991. His murders were particularly gruesome, involving rape, torture, dismemberment, necrophilia and cannibalism. On November 28, 1994, he was beaten to death by fellow Columbia Correctional Institution inmate Christopher Scarver with a bar from a weight machine while on work detail in the prison gym. (Source)

h1

Former TAPS member speaks out

April 26, 2010

Donna Lacroix

“Recently I heard one of GhostDivas’ podcast in which they interviewed Donna Lacroix,” reports Javier Ortega for GhostTheory.com. “Donna Lacroix, a former TAPS team member, in what at first appeared to be a disgruntled former-employee, quickly made sense and defended her point of views about her former bosses,” reports Ortega. In the interview she talks about some really juicy gossip…

Lacroix says that Ghost Hunters is:

  • Completely an entertainment show.
  • Jason and Grant are ‘the kings’ and they had their whipping-boy in Brian and that she feels that Brian was exploited to the point of mental abuse.
  • Everyone is out to stab you in the back.
  • Rumor has it that there is a staging crew.

“One of the more interesting revelations is how Jason and Grant mentally abused Brian – Donna mentions how they were “brutal” and “mentally abusive” towards Brian Harnois,” reports Ortega.

Ortega also points out that he doesn’t watch Ghost Hunters any longer by saying, “As the show’s reputation grew more and more, so did their claims of ghostly evidence. Things became more overly-dramatic and you start to see outrageous things being captured on tape. Shadows popping in and out of corners, thermal images of ghostly kids running through walls and the ever so annoying “Dude! I just felt something,” screams seem to fill up each episode.”

While we don’t agree with everything Ortega and Lacroix have to say, we’ve got to agree with the “Dude! I just felt something” comment – It has driven us nuts for a long time.

Read Ortega’s full article here and listen to the Donna Lacroix interviewed by the Ghost Divas here.

According to their website, “The Ghost Divas dish out the straight talk with Donna LaCroix about TAPS and the community. You haven’t heard honesty on radio until you hear Donna speak.”

h1

New book about death

April 25, 2010

Pam Adam’s new book Letters from Raymond is a heartwarming story about love between two soul mates that transcends the physical world. In it, Adams shares her story of triumph over tragedy and also offers readers 21 empowering lessons by which to live—shared directly from those in ‘transition.’

Adams—who established Raybert Lodge in 1999, a spiritual retreat in South Africa for bereavement and healing—was able to communicate with Raymond through a psychic medium to help readers make sense of life on earth. Letters From Raymond provides comfort to those who fear death and those who mourn the loss of loved ones. The book’s 21 life lessons—gleaned from Raymond’s after-life experiences—focus on love, compassion, and acceptance as being our true salvation.

“True love is not just something to envy in a fairy tale; it is as real as death itself,” promises Adams. “Letters From Raymond is a bittersweet tale of everlasting love from beyond the grave; the lessons that lie within are pages are nuggets of wisdom to implement when we are faced with daily challenges and/or tragedy.”

Adams, a long-time, highly-respected South Coast psychic and medium, offers readers an enlightened story that bridges the gap between this world and the next, her book is an extraordinary collection of inspiring love letters which she received from Ray after his untimely death. These are a testament to a love so powerful that it endures beyond the grave. To those who doubt, the book will reveal how close our loved ones are to us in spirit and suggests opportunities to communicate messages of love guidance and reassurance. Topics Adams discusses in her book include:

  • Exactly how she communicates with her deceased husband, and how she knows it’s real
  • Beware of spiritual ‘teachers,’ ‘mentors,’ and ‘gurus’ who claim to have all the truth; they know so little and rob others of free will. Look closely at their motives.
  • Start each morning fresh. Yesterdays are history and how we live today determines our tomorrow.
  • Don’t waste time with ‘fear’ and ‘worry’. These feelings block our spiritual development and breed negativity.
  • We all possess divine intuition. Though, it needs to be practiced and nurtured. Trust your gut.
  • Ask and you SHALL receive… Apply the effort and your questions will be answered.
  • Life is a learning process and one that enriches the soul, so pay attention, accept and learn your lessons wisely.

After having suffered a near-death experience as a child, Pam Adams realized her gift.  But it was not until the tragic loss of her husband, Ray, that Pam accepted that her gift was also her destiny.  She uses her psychic abilities to help those who have lost a loved one.

A mother and a grandmother, Pam Adams maintains a happy life on the South Coast of Africa where she runs Raybert Lodge.  There, she helps heal the bereaved lost souls on earth who need spiritual guidance and support.  She offers private consultations at the Lodge.  Ray continues to send messages to her.  They are working on their second book.

h1

Haunted hotels’ ghost stories can be good for business

April 24, 2010

Crescent Hotel in Eureka Springs, Ark

By Gary Stoller, USA TODAY

Ygnacio Salinas says he won’t forget his brush with a ghost in a Marriott hotel room in Minneapolis during a business trip three years ago.

Sitting alone on a bed working on his laptop, he saw a man more than 6 feet tall wearing a fedora and a long coat. “I did a double-take, and he was gone,” says Salinas, who lives in Yorba Linda, Calif., and consults for a computer manufacturer.

Salinas says he later stood up for a drink, and something shoved his left shoulder, pushing him into a wall between the living area and the kitchenette. A few hours later, he awakened to see the same ghostly character wearing clothing from a bygone era staring at him from the foot of the bed.

Salinas’ experience — of seeing what he’s sure was a ghost or coming in contact with unexplained activity in a hotel — is far from unique. Many frequent travelers, ordinary businessmen and women, and well-known people such as professional athletes, say they’ve had similarly strange and paranormal experiences on the road. Earlier this year, for instance, New York Knicks basketball player Eddy Curry said he didn’t sleep well before a road game because an Oklahoma City hotel was haunted.

Hotels have long served as settings for ghost stories, and many are reputed to be haunted. Horror writer Stephen King helped popularize the notion of haunted hotels when he wrote The Shining, inspired by the Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, Colo. Author Bruce Raisch, who wrote Haunted Hotels of the West, says Arizona alone has 24 with the reputation. Hotels are part of ghost tours in New Orleans, San Antonio and other cities.

Some hotels, such as the Crescent Hotel in Eureka Springs, Ark., are proud of their reputation for being haunted. The Crescent advertises it in hopes of attracting the curious. Other hoteliers dismiss guests’ tales and would just as soon the notion that they’re harboring ghosts be exorcised for fear of scaring guests away.

“It’s a touchy subject,” says Charlyn Keating Chisholm, a travel writer who lists haunted hotels on the About.com website. “Some hotels fear it will scare off customers, and others worry guests who are looking for a supernatural event will feel cheated if they don’t experience one.”

Chisholm says she’s noticed that more hotels are becoming comfortable with going public with ghost stories.

That could coincide with what Dave Howe, president of the Syfy television network, says is growing public interest in the paranormal. He says his Ghost Hunters show, which has investigated reports of sightings in hotels, has “tapped into a phenomenon that’s universal.” It’s opened the door for at least seven other TV shows dealing with the paranormal. A new iPhone and iPod Touch application, Ghost Radar, has even been designed to detect paranormal activity.

Whether a growing interest in the topic is leading to more reports of ghosts or making it easier for people to relate their experiences, there’s little doubt that many frequent travelers have plenty of stories of the supernatural from the road.

Elizabeth Toedt, a pilot from Olympia, Wash., who flies for a company that operates private jets, says she’s had plenty of paranormal experiences.

Toedt says she has felt cold spots and electrical tingling or heard “vague whisperings” in numerous rooms in old hotels worldwide. She’s had them at newer ones, too. At the fairly modern Hilton Savannah DeSoto in Savannah, Ga., Toedt says she’s seen movement out of the corner of her eyes in the lobby and in the third-floor hallway when no one else was there. She says she’s also heard “very soft whispering noises” echoing behind and next to her.

Toedt, who has spent more than 100 nights at the hotel since 1987, also believes one of the elevators has “a mind of its own.” She says it’s frequently gone to floors unselected and then stopped when she commanded it to stop.

Something dangerously eerie

Rodney Musselman, the hotel’s general manager, says he’s worked at the hotel for 15 years and never had anyone report paranormal activity to him. A guest, though, recently posted such activity on the TripAdvisor website, he says. In the post dated Jan. 21, an unidentified woman from Acworth, Ga., wrote that she was awakened by the toilet seat opening and closing, sounds of feet on the carpet and “cracking noises.” A “small, childlike arm and hand” moved her hair away from her face and then vanished, she wrote.

At the Crescent in Eureka Springs, Beth Shibley of Burgaw, N.C., says she came across something dangerously eerie at the hotel that raises the question of whether it’s “America’s Most Haunted Resort Hotel,” as it says on its website.

Shibley, 42, says that while sleeping in a double bed with her mother there in April, something held down her legs and arms and began suffocating her.

“It was like a great force of intense pressure pressing down over my whole body, and I couldn’t breathe,” Shibley, who works as a graphic artist, says of the 2 a.m. experience.

Shibley says her heart was pounding and, in desperation, she tapped her mother. The suffocating feeling stopped, she says, and she could move again. But there was a bad smell in the air, like a mixture of sulfur and the smell of earth and sweat after working in a garden. About 30 minutes later, something grabbed her ankles and pulled her halfway down the bed under the blankets, she says.

Bill Ott, the hotel’s director of marketing and communications since 1997, has never seen a ghost but says he doesn’t understand what happened there one night several years ago. He and two staff members of the Deal Or No Deal TV show were alone in the hotel’s dining room. They heard three or four people laughing in the room for 25 to 30 seconds, though no one else was in the room or in an adjacent lobby and kitchen, Ott says. Josh Silberman, a former producer for the TV show, was there and confirms the incident.

“It freaks me out to think about it,” Silberman says. “The place was creepy. When you walk up stairs, it feels like you’re being chased.”

At the Crescent, paranormal researchers Jason Hawes and Grant Wilson, stars of the Ghost Hunters show, say they caught on a thermal-imaging camera “the Holy Grail” of paranormal investigation: “a full-body apparition” wearing a hat and nodding. In 20 years of investigating paranormal activity at all locales, a full-body apparition has been captured on the camera only eight to 10 times, Hawes says.

Reports of ghostly activity at the Crescent have been good for business, Ott says. “The haunted reputation gives us awareness.”

Haunting fascinations

Other hotels, such as the Hotel Provincial, situated a few blocks from Bourbon Street in New Orleans’ French Quarter, say having a reputation for ghostly activity is good for business.

The Provincial “may have shied away years ago” from publicizing the hotel’s haunted reputation, says Bryan Dupepe, the owner and general manager. “But I definitely believe over the past few years the fascination with hauntings and ghosts has helped our business.”

Dupepe says his family has owned the hotel since the early 1960s, and they haven’t noticed any paranormal activity. Guests and employees, though, have reported it. The most frequent involves an apparition of a woman who may be a nurse, he says.

Cassy Scrima, marketing director for The Pfister Hotel and two other Milwaukee hotels, says an equal number of people book The Pfister or stay away because of its reputation.

The Pfister, which opened its doors in 1893, most recently added to its haunted reputation last summer when Minnesota Twins baseball outfielder Carlos Gomez said he was scared to stay in his room there because he heard voices and noises. Gomez, who now plays for the Milwaukee Brewers, ran from his room to the lobby in 2008 after his iPod started playing with a static noise, suddenly changed to music and turned to static again.

At some hotels, more than guests say strange occurrences are common. At The Heathman Hotel in Portland, Ore., for example, the staff has no doubt the hotel is haunted. “I guarantee that if I asked the question, half my team would say they encountered a ghost,” says Chris Erickson, The Heathman’s general manager, who has never seen one.

According to legend, Erickson says, a woman committed suicide or was murdered by falling out a window of Room 703 in the 1920s or ’30s.

About six months ago, a guest on the seventh floor demanded a room change after awakening at about 3 a.m. and seeing a ghost: “a lady sitting in a chair crying,” says Erickson.

Hauntings or hooey?

Paranormal investigators debate whether the reports are proof of otherworldly happenings or hogwash.

“I am sure many of them could be explained through natural reasons,” says paranormal author and researcher Donald Ryles. “But I believe most of them are genuine paranormal events of some kind.”

Hotel rooms, Ryles says, are “opportune environments for paranormal activity” because of “the ever-changing people and energies” in them. He defines ghosts as “energy recordings from past events” and spirits as “human souls.” Both are drawn to hotel guests’ energies and emotions, he says.

But Joe Nickell, who investigates reports of paranormal activity for the science-based Committee for Skeptical Inquiry, founded in part by Carl Sagan and Isaac Asimov, doesn’t buy it.

“People are more apt to have an apparitional experience in a hotel or an inn where they are alone and it’s quiet,” says Nickell, who’s been investigating reports of paranormal events since the 1960s and never found proof of ghosts or paranormal activity. “In most cases, the person is tired, daydreaming, falling asleep or waking up.”

He says many people making the reports are normal, sane and well-educated. About 4% of Americans have a fantasy-prone personality, he says, and are more apt to have numerous and rich experiences such as ghosts, angels or extraterrestrials.

Salinas’ wife, Deborah, says her husband is “as normal as normal can be” and never mentioned other paranormal activity besides the ghost he first encountered in Minneapolis. That ghost has now become a fixture in her husband’s life.

Salinas says it’s appeared in his California home, at his workplace and in restaurants in six states. It’s become so familiar that he calls it “Basil.”

Basil appeared once at work, Salinas says, when he was struggling with a spreadsheet formula. It was the only time Basil ever spoke, Salinas says. Basil gave him the answer, then walked out of the room.

Deborah Salinas, and her husband’s boss, Dean Garlick, say it was hard to believe Ygnacio when he first reported seeing a ghost. Neither has seen Basil, but they’ve become believers. Deborah says she’s sensed something invisible walking alongside her and standing at the top of the stairs in her home. Garlick says he was at a restaurant in New York when Salinas said Basil was sitting at an adjacent table. Garlick says he turned to look, saw nothing but was struck by cold air in an otherwise warm restaurant.

Salinas says he first met Basil in a section of Minneapolis called The Depot, at the Courtyard by Marriott. It’s now a Renaissance Hotel.

Joel Carver, a vice president of the hotel and an adjacent Residence Inn, isn’t aware of any paranormal activity. But he says the Renaissance is built on the site of a train depot. Outside it are stone statues depicting individuals of yesteryear called The Ghosts of the Depot.

Despite what many would consider a strange relationship with a ghost he met in a hotel room, Salinas is reluctant to ever see him go. “Basil,” he says, “spices life up a little bit.”

h1

6 Types of Hauntings

April 1, 2010

Residual Haunting Activity:

Residual haunting activity can occur when something traumatic/stressful occurs, such as a murder or a rape. Negative energy is literally blasted into the atmosphere, causing the atmosphere to imprint or record the events. Like a recording tape, it will play the events over and over again. The entities involved in this residual haunting activity are unaware of their surroundings. This is not an intelligent haunting, there is no interaction between you and the entity.

Residual haunting activity can also be caused by positive energy blasted into the atmosphere. Many times you have heard ghost stories, where people can hear the sounds of a party. They hear music, singing, dancing, laughter and when they enter the room where they hear the party, there is no one there. Residual haunting activity can be the specters of living beings.

Case example: Woman who faces domestic violence from her husband

The husband and wife move out of the apartment and the new renters see residual haunting activity in which the previous owners are involved in a domestic dispute, they appear to be specters. The new renters are able to identify the faces of the specters. When they go to a neighborhood barbecue, they see a neighborhood get-together photograph and identify a man and woman as being the specters they see in their apartment. They discover that their specters are still living, but are now divorced. Their specters were the previous renters who were always quarreling in that apartment.

Residual haunting activity can be caused by agitated nervousness, such as a new politician that is nervous about talking in front of a crowd of people. The speech by this politician is played back over and over again as a residual haunting effect.

Poltergeist Activity:

Poltergeist activity is usually caused by an adolescent teenage girl going through puberty stages. During this stage of development, a young girl can harbor an extreme amount of inner energy. This energy can be projected with the mind, which can cause tapping sounds, the movement of objects, lights flickering off and on. Poltergeist activity usually originates from a human being.

Case Example: Walter B. Gibson, The Shadow

Walter B. Gibson, writer of the pulp series The Shadow thought about his character The Shadow so much, that his projected thoughts would actually create a hologram image of The Shadow, that would lurk in his apartment. When he had guests over, his guests were frightened by a man dressed all in black, with fedora hat and red scarf covering his face. They were describing the fictional character The Shadow. The Shadow was Walter B. Gibson’s poltergeist, an entity projected from his mind. With this case example, not all poltergeist activity is created from adolescent teenage girls.

Demon Activity:

Demons are entities that never had a mortal human form. Origins: Extraterrestrial. Why? If you believe that God and his angels are from the ‘heavens’, that would make them extraterrestrial. If Satan and 1/3 of the angels rebelled against God’s Kingdom, then Satan and 1/3 of the angels that became demons are also extraterrestrial. That is why they never had mortal human form. Einstein said that E = MC2. Energy can be converted into matter and matter into energy. Demons are pure energy entities. They are described in three different ways.

1. As angelic, a being of beauty that will manipulate the person to commit something that is sinful or out of the ordinary.

2. Horrific, evil looking. Some people claim, they have seen demons that are incredibly hideous to look at. I believe demons do this for a scare effect, they know what we fear and this is not their true appearance.

3. Black mist, black fog, black shadow, black smoke. Most demonic hauntings, the occupants claim to be followed by black mist or black fog.

Demons can travel from San Francisco to Hong Kong in a blink of an eye. The demons main purpose is to cause chaos and havoc upon mankind. Demons are deceivers and they manipulate our society towards social upheaval. Demons seek out our destruction. Demon cases are extremely rare. To handle demonic cases, it is essential that a blessing of the purest kind is conducted on the person or home. Consult your clergyman, priest or Demonologist.

Intelligent/Interactive Activity:

Back to Einstein’s theory. As matter beings, we are all energy beings on the quantum level. We are made up of atoms and neutrons. As matter/energy beings we have intelligence. While we live, we have an energy aura that surrounds our living bodies. This aura is created by the millions of electrical currents that are created through our bodies. Our brains creates brain waves, a form of pure energy that is transmitting our thoughts, what we see, what we feel, etc.

When our mortal form dies, the aura that constantly surrounds our bodies, leaves our bodies. We lose 6 ounces on the instance of death. What is this 6 ounces? Perhaps it is energy leaving our body. Our soul. This energy, the aura, or you may even call it your soul, is carrying the information of what we used to be. If it can do this, then why couldn’t it also carry our intelligence? If it can carry our former intelligence of our previous life, then it should be able to interact with us intelligently. When we see this aura, we call it a ghost.

If this ghost is able to interact with us, is aware of us, can touch us, can communicate with us, then this is an intelligent/interactive haunting.

Shadow People or Shadow Creatures Activity:

This is a type of haunting activity that has no real explanation. They are different from ghosts. They are usually shapeless dark masses. Mostly seen with your peripheral vision. They are known to do things that are different from ghosts. They can move between walls, they have no human features, they wear no clothes (except for the hat man/hooded figure shadow creatures). People who encounter them, have a feeling of dread. Clairvoyants that encounter Shadow People, say they do not feel they are human and consider them non-human.

Shadow People have no discernible mouth, noses or facial expressions. Some are seen as child sized dark humanoids. Some people say they seem to be made up of dark smoke or dark steam. At times when they move, they appear to be moving on an invisible track from one place to another, such as a toy train on a small scale railroad track. They have been seen to hop or what appears to be a strange dance. They are known to stare at the floor.

Two common types of Shadow People are the ‘hat man’, that looks like he or she is wearing a 1930s fedora hat and the ‘hooded figure’, which looks like the shadow person has a hood over their head. The hood and hat stand out as clothing, but otherwise, they are not wearing any clothing at all. There are also reports of shadow animals, such as a shadow in the form of a cat, with no discernible mouth, nose or eyes.

Doppelganger Haunting Activity:

Extremely rare.

Case example: German ghost hunting investigative team is called upon a doppelganger haunting activity to investigate.

The woman victim was standing on a street corner and with her peripheral vision saw the image of herself on a bus. The image of herself was staring back at her. One week later she again faced her doppelganger in a crowded mall, it stared at her and seemed to disappear amongst the mass of people. It wore the same clothes that she wore. One week later, she was diagnosed with cancer.

Doppelganger haunting activity is considered the evil twin, the harbinger of misfortune, the omen of death.

In most cases, the victim of this haunting activity is in danger with her immediate surroundings, her family or in some cases the victim themselves are in grave danger of illness or death.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.