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Making Sense of the Paranormal )O(

Merry meet all,

The next turn in the Wheel of the Year is Lughnasadh, which occurs on August 1. That is only a week away. It amazes me how fast time flies.  Lughnasadh is a Celtic festival celebrating the harvest and the God Lugh. Lughnasadh is the first of the three harvest festivals besides Mabon and Samhain. It is one of the 8 Wiccan Sabbats during the Wheel of the Year. 

Today we will take a look at the paranormal. 

Making sense of the paranormal

Researchers from various disciplines are seeking not to debunk strange events, but rather to understand how people engage with them, and what this reveals about the human experience.

Blinking orange lights cut across the night sky over Shag Harbour on October 4, 1967. Witnesses in the small Nova Scotia fishing village then saw what seemed to be an object crashing into the water. Fishermen and, later, authorities went out into the Atlantic to seek survivors. They saw some yellow foam bubbling on the water’s surface but no wreckage.

Newspapers reported on this strange sighting, the government investigated, and soon enough the incident was nearly forgotten. Then, around the time of the new millennium, a few books and documentaries started to come out about “Canada’s Roswell” (a reference to an incident in Roswell, New Mexico in 1947 that conspiracy theorists believed was a UFO cover-up). Now, the legacy fuels a mini-economy: the town has the Shag Harbour Incident Interpretive Centre and holds an annual festival that draws UFO enthusiasts to revisit the strange story, and to talk of aliens and government complicity.

This is more than just a quirky moment in Canadian history, but a rich vein of human experience that Noah Morritt, a PhD candidate in folklore at Memorial University, is mining for his thesis. He’s looking at Cold War politics, the evolution of the UFO legacy and the impact on locals, particularly devout Baptists. “It reveals the importance of tradition in community, and how we make sense of the world around us,” says Mr. Morritt.

He joins a growing but still relatively small group of researchers examining how people interact with the paranormal – UFOs, alien abductions, crop circles – things “beyond the scope of normal scientific understanding,” according to the Oxford English Dictionary. These researchers are not, in the main, out to prove or debunk the existence of such incidents, but rather are trying to understand what people do when they encounter something that they don’t … understand.

Sounds flaky, right? For “serious” academics, this might even be viewed as outside the bounds of legitimate inquiry. That would be a shame, says Paul Kingsbury, a professor in the department of geography at Simon Fraser University. Writing for The Conversation Canada, he notes: “enduring skepticism in the social sciences about the legitimacy of the claims about paranormal phenomena and experiences has resulted in a lack of critical studies on how people are actually engaging with the paranormal.”

These researchers contend that thinking differently about, and not judging, paranormal claims can yield important insights. “Can we discount an experience because it’s out of the ordinary and strange? I don’t think we can. We need to ask hard and critical questions about it,” says Mr. Morritt.

Those critical questions reveal pivotal issues around community, belief, tradition and knowledge. Ignoring the odd and unexplained has kept us from understanding some of the basics of the human experience, he says.


The start of serious academic work on the paranormal dates back to 19th-century Europe and the founding of the Society for Psychical Research in London in 1882. This group researched hypnotism, apparitions, spirit photography and seances, and was run by highly respected minds – Henry Sidgwick, who held the coveted title of Knightbridge Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Cambridge, was its first president.

“For a time, it was possible to be interested in both serious research and the fantastical, and document it in the same, professional ways,” says Christopher Keep, an associate professor of English at Western University. Of interest, says Dr. Keep, is that these “remarkable scientific efforts to study paranormal phenomenon were driven not so much by scientists but humanists.” Members of the Society for Psychical Research conducted both lab and field studies, coined the term “telepathy,” developed the first algorithm for determining the probability of a phenomenon happening by random occurrence and set early standards for collecting first-hand reports.

The American Society for Psychical Research, based in New York, was founded in 1885. In Canada, starting in the 1920s, Winnipeg physician Thomas Glendenning Hamilton observed Ouija boards and seances in a lab in his home. Dr. Hamilton, who was highly respected and served in the provincial legislature, gave frequent lectures on his privately funded research.

At the time, south of the border, this was a university-approved line of inquiry. “Ivy League schools were very interested in this topic,” says Beth Robertson, an instructor in the department of history at Carleton University. In the 1930s, Joseph Banks Rhine of Duke University founded the field of parapsychology, the study of paranormal and psychic phenomenon, championing scientific methods and making it clear the humanities should focus elsewhere. “You can blame or credit Dr. Rhine for that break” between the disciplines, says Dr. Robertson.

Universities got in and out of the business of seeking proof of paranormal phenomenon over the next few decades. A group at the University of Colorado, for instance, was funded by the U.S. Air Force to study UFO phenomena from 1966 to 1968 under the direction of physicist Edward Condon. (Between the 1940s until 1969, the Air Force documented 12,618 sightings through its Project Blue Book, classifying 701 as truly “unidentified.”)

But, by the mid-20th century, seeking proof of paranormal phenomena ran out of academic steam and lost credibility. Researchers were unable to replicate Dr. Rhine’s work on extrasensory perception, which many concluded was flawed. Today, both the U.S. and U.K. psychical societies are run as private organizations with no university affiliation. Parapsychology endures as a small, fringe field with a handful of mainly U.S.- and U.K.-based labs. Amateur sleuths took over tracking UFOs, sasquatches and ghosts.

Medium Eva C. during a seance, circa 1912, with Albert Schrenck-Notzing, a German psychical researcher.

That was how the field remained – until recently, when academics began to revisit the paranormal, but in a new way. They stopped asking what was real and instead mined beliefs, stories and experiences for their deeper revelations. While anthropology, folklore, religion and literary scholars have long dabbled in ghosts and magic, now it’s downright fashionable in these disciplines – and historians, geographers and others are joining in.

Christopher Laursen, who completed his PhD in history at the University of British Columbia in 2016 and is now a historian of religions, science and nature at the University of North Carolina Wilmington, counted 25 monographs with a historical or wider humanities angle between 1968 and 2000. That doubled to 50 between 2000 and 2014. He suspects there have been many more since, and his scan didn’t include book chapters.

Dr. Laursen did his thesis on poltergeists and lectures on the supernatural in the modern world. The supernatural “says a lot about who we are,” he writes on his website. “It reveals ‘grey areas’ where religion and science, culture and consciousness intermingle.”

In 2017, Trent University’s Laura Thursby and Matthew Hayes hosted “UFOs, Aliens, and the Academy: An Interdisciplinary Conference.” Mr. Hayes, who is doing his PhD in Canadian studies, met Ms. Thursby, a graduate student in cultural studies, by chance. The two organized the conference “to find out who was doing this work,” says Mr. Hayes. Numerous researchers showed an interest in presenting at the conference, most of them emerging scholars like themselves.

This revival connects to social factors, says Dr. Kingsbury at SFU. “Researchers are driven by popular culture,” he says. The decline in organized religion has led to what he calls the “re-enchantment of the West” in things such as yoga, Buddhism, crystals and New-Age spiritualism. Pop culture – think Harry Potter, Outlander, Game of Thrones – abounds with fantasy. And in some parts of the world, new unorthodox forms of religion are gaining converts.

“More and more, people seem to find that they require a more spiritual understanding of the world and our place in it,” says Kathryn Denning, an associate professor in the department of anthropology at York University, who writes about the ethics of the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. Yet, she says, there are contradictions: we applaud an Eat Pray Love-type spiritual quest, but deeply mistrust anyone who reports being haunted or abducted. Interesting dichotomies that, again, offer ample fodder for research.

 

 

Dr. Keep at Western writes about the late 19th century and the connection between emerging technology and the rise of psychical research. “The typewriter and the telegraph seemed to draw a connection between being able to communicate with spirits across distances. They started thinking that the world is not reducible to pure material understanding,” he says of many Victorians. Seances were the rage and literature embraced gothic tropes such as vampires and werewolves (Bram Stoker’s Dracula was published in 1897).

Dr. Robertson of Carleton notes that certain paranormal factors go in and out of fashion. “At one point, people thought ectoplasm was important,” she says. Some of her work has focused on the 1920s and ’30s, and how high-profile mediums – most of whom were women – were key to paranormal research, yet got little credit for their contributions.

Mr. Hayes, meanwhile, has been combing Library and Archives Canada in Ottawa to see how the Canadian government coped with the approximately 3,500 to 4,000 UFO sightings recorded from the 1950s to the 1990s. “One of the main conclusions I’ve drawn is that UFOs are basically a problem for the Canadian government that they don’t want to have,” he says. “They record it, they type it, they file it away, they forget about it. They never have any other conclusion than this is nonsense.” Their utter dismissal of it all likely fueled conspiracy theories.

 

 

Since the unknown happens “out there,” today’s researchers are again engaging more in field studies. Dr. Kingsbury is nearing completion of a four year study funded by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Insight Grant to observe paranormal investigators. He’s gone on a dozen ghost investigations, attended numerous UFO and sasquatch conferences, and driven around rural England to visit crop circles. He’s looking broadly at who gets involved, what motivates them and how they share their data.

Many conference participants, he’s found, focus on one research object – often a “negative object,” like a ghost. He sees things like the plaster casts of large footprints as “the perfect object of desire – it’s just out of reach.”

The crash site at Roswell.

But these groups defy easy generalizations: the haunted and abducted suffer judgment at home and attend conferences to therapeutically share stories, while other attendees are cynics keen to debunk the evidence they see. Some UFO sightings can be contradicted by official reports (the UFO sighting at Roswell, for instance, was later claimed by the Air Force to be a surveillance balloon). Those who confess to creating crop circles, when asked deeper questions, are revealed to be lying.

Ms. Thursby’s fieldwork at the UFO Festival held annually in Roswell, combined with her theoretical and historical research, has led her to draw parallels between the country’s Puritan history, the Salem witch trials, the rise of radio and today’s UFO followers. “They share the conspiracy theory version of the story, and that story is a better story than the official version,” says Ms. Thursby. She sees how generations of mistrust manifest in the conference’s unofficial motto: “Do your own research.” She connects the fear of extraterrestrial aliens and illegal aliens (jokey but clearly racist T-shirts sold at the festival show Mexican faces and the word “alien”), and today’s rise of fake news.


Across fields, academics writing on these topics must constantly prove their legitimacy. When Ms. Thursby and Mr. Hayes were organizing their conference at Trent, some professors voiced their concern on how this might reflect on the department. “They didn’t take too kindly to the idea. They thought we were trying to run a UFO alien convention and bring a bunch of crackpots to Trent,” says Mr. Hayes. When Ms. Thursby attended an academic conference in Europe and spoke about UFO enthusiasts, audience members seemed offended that she didn’t consider them psychologically unbalanced.

These scholars often find that their work collides with others’ beliefs and triggers assumptions about their own. “People always ask me, ‘Do you believe in ghosts?’” says Dr. Kingsbury. “To me, the question is more about desire.” Mr. Morritt at Memorial considers being in a place of not really knowing “a fun place to be” – a stance he’s constantly having to explain. Dr. Kingsbury is testing academic boundaries by doing a co-presentation with a non-academic researcher at a lay UFO conference. He finds the structure of these events deeply familiar, with their breakout sessions and keynote addresses, just like at regular academic gatherings. Many of these amateur researchers follow careful research protocols that their peers then critique.

“What we think of as real science and paranormal science, they both stem from the same thing: the drive to know the world,” says Dr. Robertson at Carleton. By ignoring the work of these amateur investigators, she says, the academic community may risk missing out on key information.

Mr. Morritt agrees. “They’re moving ahead with things – in many ways, we haven’t kept pace with what they’re doing.” There is still much to be gleaned from the complex interplay between the unknown and the lived human experience, he says. “As a field, it’s enormous.”

But, UFOs are real!

Retired associate professor of psychology Don Donderi researched visual perception and memory at McGill University and, starting in the 1960s, assessed the veracity of UFO sightings and alien abduction reports, publishing three peer reviewed papers on the subject. In his book, UFOs, ETs and Alien Abductions, which came out in 2013, he concludes that aliens have visited us and were involved in abductions, putting him at odds with most other academics. He believes a sort of cognitive dissonance has kept his work from being accepted more widely, particularly in academia. “People defend themselves against uncomfortable things,” he says, noting that lay people are more open to his ideas. “The academic world is very conservative in that way,” he says.

Credit given to the site https://universityaffairs.ca/features/making-sense-paranormal/

I believe that we are not the only living beings in the Universe. I have never seen an alien and when I do, I will believe that they exist. I do believe that something is out there, I am just not sure what. There have been a lot of stories lately that suggest that aliens exist. I don’t believe that Bigfoot or the Sasquatch exist. But I am willing to believe that the Mothman exists. I am not sure why I feel that way about it but I do. Seeing is believing though, and I do believe that. 

What do you believe, dear readers? By the way, I am excited to mention that this is the 990th blog post to date. I am nearing 1000 blog posts. When that happens, it is party time! Yes you are all invited. You helped to make this happen. 

I can’t recall if I have posted this before so bear with me. 

Blessings, Spiderwitch

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Our Paranormal Future

Merry meet all,

Do you feel it in the air? Do you smell it or taste it in the water? I do. I know many others do because they told me online. But try to feel it in the air. I am talking about this change, something heavy in the air. It is not always heavy but I think that it represents a change, not necessarily for the better. 

I sense a change in the air. It is transitioning to autumn, fall. Yes Samhain approaches. (Which means I need to get my shit together but that is another topic). I just feel like a darkness is coming over the world. I think it goes beyond the Goddess is pissed at us for disrespecting the earth on such a huge global scale. I think that that is part of it. I would be called crazy for talking about this stuff but I can post this here. 

Ok so… I believe we are going to see a lot of change in the near future. If you don’t believe me or in the paranormal, then go read up about Skinwalker Ranch. I do. I also believe that the paranormal has something to do with it – the aliens which I believe exists, and the spirits roaming the earth now also know about the change. Of course, they are just waiting around for us mortals to figure it all out. I not only believe that but I feel it. I imagine or understand it as a darkness growing over the world, like some people say the devil is having his way. 

I sense that if people are being good to the earth that they might survive. If someone or an organization has harmed the earth like the destruction of the amazon rainforests, deforestation, etc, then they are not going to be fortunate. The evil companies will drive us toward a mass destruction of our planet. I don’t even use pesticides in my garden. I did catch a Japanese beetle in a jar from my garden. I tossed the jar in the dumpster. But if I did use pesticides, that would throw off the balance in my garden. Balance can’t be touched or tasted or felt but it exists. I keep a balance in my garden. I grow nasturtiums which attract aphids. That draws the predatory insects to the aphids. I grow the nasturtiums because I know that some bugs want to eat the aphids such as ladybugs. I keep a balance. It keeps the insects out of my apartment and keeps them productive in the garden. I have a beautiful thriving garden.  I work with the energies and the land spirits that are already there. I also offer gemstones, coins, honey, milk to the spirits in the spring and fall. I give thanks to the spirits and the Goddess/ God for the beautiful garden I have. The gratitude I show ensures I can have a good harvest and that they will continue to help me. 

I think we should all hit the pause button and reflect deeply on not what the paranormal is about but why it is suddenly the hottest thing to hit social media. Why is it so huge right now? I believe that it has something to do with what I mentioned above. This is a good time to strengthen relationships with your chosen deity or gods that you follow. It is a good time to strengthen relationships with your mortal friends too. 

Aliens, UFOs, crop circles, cattle mutilations, poltergeist activity etc are so hugely popular now. I am on the fence about Bigfoot but I would believe in aliens way more than Bigfoot. I know that social media connects us globally. We can now have information at an unprecedented rate now and faster than ever before on earth. We all communicate globally within mere seconds or minutes. So this is why we all know so much about the paranormal and many other things of course. I am terrified about aliens. I don’t want to think that they exist. 

The greed, corruption, the huge demand of the earth’s resources, violence, crime, war (Ukraine, anyone?), and apathy sweeping over the planet now is not helping anything. It casts a dark shadow  over the earth. I don’t know what happened in Skinwalker Ranch that ignited all that activity occurring there but it is a great example of what I am talking about here. We have to remember that we are not in control of the earth like we want to believe. We need earth but she doesn’t need us. We can’t live anywhere else. I have zero intention of leaving earth and moving up the stars – where the aliens are watching over us. I serve the Goddess, she doesn’t serve me. I was meant to be here on earth. This is how it works for me. 

Not everyone believes in these things. But for those that do and that includes me! The paranormal is so hot right now. I feel that something is coming, and I also feel that whatever that is isn’t good at all. I mean if all this crazy stuff is happening, there has to be an explanation for it all and that explanation might make you uncomfortable. I am still feverishly curious. You have to admit this is all cool. 

I would love to see all your comments on what you think this is. It is ok to be a skeptic! It’s ok to believe. It is real cool when skeptics become believers. Be good to the earth, be good to your fellow man, and be good to yourselves!

I love this blog post and I have posted a link to it. It affirms what I believe. https://www.patheos.com/blogs/johnbeckett/2016/06/the-otherworld-is-bleeding-through.html#disqus_thread

I enjoy this post as well: https://www.patheos.com/blogs/johnbeckett/2016/11/the-veil-is-shredded.html#disqus_thread

Here is a cool link to a paranormal post about Skinwalker Ranch: https://youtu.be/cxjHba9OO0I

Whatever transpires for us in our weird paranormal future, let’s hope it is for the best of all mortals and animals -or amphibians out there. I do sense a darkness coming. It is good to remember from time to time that change is good and that as long as we maintain the balance of life,  we just may be fine. I hope I am wrong but I wouldn’t be shocked if I was right. 

Blessings, Spiderwitch 

 

 

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In search of the unknown: The tussle between paranormal researchers and rationalists

Merry meet all,

The next turn in the Wheel of the year is Yule, or the Winter Solstice. I will post more about that later. For now, I am posting about ghosts and if they are real. It’s hard for people to believe in ghosts and it’s not hard to see why. I found an article about the paranormal in India that presents a balanced, skeptical perspective about the paranormal. I hope you enjoy it, dear readers. 

In search of the unknown: The tussle between paranormal researchers and rationalists

Ghost hunters and paranormal researchers are trying to find the science behind paranormal occurrences.

ET Bureau

A techie, working in the San Francisco Bay Area, received a call from his home at Shivaji Park, Mumbai, just after the lunch hour. The techie was taken aback because it was three in the morning back home, and that was not the time his aged dad and mom ever called. It was his mom on the other end. “Why are you calling me so early in the morning? Is everything ok?” the techie asked.

The old lady spoke to her son in chaste Telugu: “Why? Can’t I call you now? Can’t I speak with my son when I want to,” the lady shot back angrily, and slammed the phone down. The techie was worried as his mom never spoke to him so harshly — and that too in Telegu, a language rarely used at home.

He called back, and this time it was his father who answered the phone — after five to six rounds of rings. He told his father about mom’s phone call a few minutes earlier. “No, she didn’t call you… She’s sound asleep. Besides, it’s early morning here,” the dad said.

The techie was quite alarmed; he had clearly heard his mom on the other end. He sent a screenshot of his mobile call log to his father on WhatsApp. But his father — and now the mom was also fully awake – denied having made any call to the US at that hour. The next day, the techie’s father visited the local telephone exchange to get a copy of his recent call-log. Upon checking the records, he found no calls were made to US from his home for over a week.

The family decided to pass off the incident as a “telecom glitch”, but a few more bizarre incidents over the next two weeks forced the family to consult a psychologist first, and a psychic healer later, when the shrink failed to solve the problem. Constant ringing of the doorbell at dead of night — and pounding and banging of bedroom doors — made the family believe their house was haunted. “That place had a lot of electromagnetic

swirling around … These energies were causing such actions,” explained Akshai Sthalekar, founder of India Paranormal Team, which conducted a series of “cleansing rituals” (with water, crystals and pranik and reiki healing) to deviate or clear-off bad energies from the techie’s family home.

BUT WAS THAT A GHOST?
“We don’t call them ghosts … we call them energies. It could be energies let out of dead people, too. Energies cannot be created or destroyed; it just get released into the lower cosmic strata,” said Rahul Kumar, a trained allopathic doctor and founder of Bengaluru-based Spirit Hunting & Research in Paranormal.

Ghost hunters and paranormal researchers are trying to find the science behind paranormal occurrences. “Metaphysics and parapsychology form the basis of all things that cannot be explained by science,” said Kumar. But anti-superstition activists and atheists are not willing to buy these theories.

“This is all pseudo-science … Paranormal researchers use scientific terminologies to mislead people. They just cheat people with scientific mumbo-jumbo,” said Avinash Patil, state executive president of the MaharashtraAndhashraddha Nirmoolan Samiti.Neither pure sciences nor paranormal research have managed to pierce the veil of the unknown. But paranormal researchers are having a field day finding solutions to the problems of the “other realm”trying to unravel the mysteries of the “other realm” – and also make some money off it.

BIG SPOOK BUSINESS
India’s top spirit hunters such as Akshai Sthalekar, Waqar Raj, Rahul Kumar and Shishir Kumar attend to 20-30 cases every month.

“Most paranormal cases are misunderstood … in fact, 99 out of 100 cases we attend to pertains to psychological disorders or external energy influence,” said Shishir Kumar, head of Team Pentacle, a group specialising in paranormal activities and UFO sightings.

By external energy influence, Shishir means the presence of an electronic device which emits a lot of electromagnetic waves (EMWs). Higher levels of EMW exposure leads to incurable headache and auditory hallucinations, researchers say.

Most paranormal researchers advise their clients to approach a psychiatrist prior to opting for a psychic investigation. Only when the shrink fails, the psychic healers start investigating the phenomenon.

Paranormal investigators charge about Rs 15,000 to Rs 20,000 for primary investigations.

The remedy part could get expensive as it may entail a series of cleansing or healing processes and religious rituals. Psychics may charge anywhere between Rs 20,000 and Rs 1 lakh to exorcise, deviate or neutralise “bad energy” or negative vibrations.

“We come across a lot of such cases every month… our clients come from all backgrounds… Bollywood stars, politicians, rich socialites, slum dwellers — everyone comes to us when they’re left with no other option,” said Sthalekar of India Paranormal Team, a member organisation of the Secret Society of the Paranormal.

“We’re flooded with panic calls when horror movies such as Conjuring get released in India,” he added.

Waqar Raj, who heads the Indian Paranormal Society, has a word of advice: “There’s a lot of fraud happening around paranormal sciences … Lot of people are entering this field to make money. I personally feel paranormal researchers should not charge money for investigations. It should be seen as pure research.”

A few paranormal research groups have also started offering certification courses in paranormal sciences. They charge Rs 50,000-75,000 for three to six-month courses.

DECODING GHOSTS THROUGH SCIENCE
The red needle on the electromagnetic field meter (EFMs) jumped to life, swinging wildly towards the extreme right end of the monitor. The static sound flowing out of a digital voice recorder is interrupted by a short crackling sound and a prolonged hum. It turned cold suddenly — the reading on the thermometer dropped to 22 degrees Celsius, from 29 just a few minutes earlier.

A team of paranormal researchers, spending a full moon night at Kuldhara, an abandoned village in Rajasthan, was scared and elated at the same time. It was the first time all their scientific “ghostbusting gadgets” reacted concurrently to the presence of “supernaturals”.

“Kuldhara is a haunted place … there’s no electricity in that place, but still your EFMs come to life; sometimes it scales to as high as 20-30 milligauss. Now such high levels can’t be the effect of the earth’s geomagnetic fields alone,” said Waqar Raj.

Many a time, clients approach paranormal experts when they stumble upon “white patches” or “white apparition forms” in photographs clicked at home.

“They believe their house is haunted then … But many a time, these are just orbs resulting out of humidity in air or dust particle on lens. We use photo detailers to inspect these photographs and report back,” said Sthalekar.

Several “poltergeist actions” also come up on the tables of most paranormal researchers.

These include beds and chairs getting picked and dropped or dragged, incidents of stone throwing and crockery breaking. “But poltergeist actions are not actually classified as paranormal activities … some people have “high levels of brain power” to move things, without actually touching them,” said Raj. Then comes cases of apparition sightings.

“It will require a lot of energy for a ghost (or a spirit) to appear as an apparition…,” says Rahul Kumar, the allopathic doctor-turnedspirit hunter. “So most of them time, an apparition you see is the result of a weak mind. Prolonged exposure to EMWs could weaken your mind; it maysetoffboutsof hallucination or even turn you a schizophrenic,” he added.

Cases of ghost possessing — where the ghost is believed to have entered a living person’s body — always accompany tales of the afflicted physically “bending and twisting” in unimaginable ways. This, according to Kumar, is a case of ‘Rubber man syndrome’, a rare medical condition. Cases pertaining to people speaking a foreign language never learnt or even heard by them relate with another medical condition called ‘Foreign accent syndrome’. A person suffering from ‘Alien hand syndrome’ would hit or harm people sitting next to him without really meaning to do so.

“Many a time, all the above cases are misunderstood as a demonic possession or haunting,” said Rahul Kumar.

“Ghosts or spirits are intelligent energy sources … They’re not like what they show in movies. These can’t enter human bodies in normal courses,” said Shishir Kumar of Team Pentacle.

Sthalekar added: “Psychics try to communicate with energies and try to send them away … If the lingering energy is of a dead person, we tell the energy source it is dead and it has to move on. We help them to cross over to the other realm.”

According to Waqar Raj, the problem of “bad energy” only compounds when people use these powers to harm others. “These powers may not affect you, if you’re not scared of them … But if you start worry about them, they’ll make you a nervous wreck, make you depressed or start suicidal tendencies,” he added.

These words do not mean much for the non-believers though. “This is purely superstition … We challenge them to prove their theories. These people should be prosecuted under anti-superstition laws,” Patil of Andhashraddha Nirmoolan Samiti said.” End of article. 

I disagree that an ‘energy’s is responsible for the angry prank calls late at night in the article. I need way more proof to be able to believe that. I find it very hard to believe. I am sure that someone got hold of the phone, a living person and is the one responsible for the calls. No ghost could do that. Someone broke into the parents’ home and did the prank calls. The phone was slammed down too. Right. If those people are willing to blame it on a ghost or energy, then they are in dire need of a good head check. It would take a huge amount of energy on the ghost’s part to do that. I welcome your opinions in the comments below. 

There will always be believers in the paranormal and skeptics. They are both entitled to their beliefs. They work best when balancing each other out. A good dose of skepticism can actually be of help when dealing with the paranormal. There just may be a rational explanation for creaking floorboards. If you believe it’s ghosts for every single time your cat Fido stares at the ceiling, your doors creak open from an open window, or your hat keeps falling to the floor, you will have serious health problems to deal with. Paranormal investigators first rule out possible solid scientific and rational explanations for occurrences. 

Yule is almost here! I hope you’re looking forward to it! 

Blessings, Spiderwitch

Credit to the website:

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/magazines/panache/in-search-of-the-unknown-the-tussle-between-paranormal-researchers-and-rationalists/articleshow/58757343.cms

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The Zozo Phenomenon

Merry meet all,

I just read the book The Zozo Phenomenon. It was a very good book if not far fetched in parts. I don’t believe all the hype but it was a good book overall. I do believe that people can convince themselves that something exists.There is a fine line between what is real and what is fake. In one section of the book during a paranormal investigation, the wife of Darren Evans enters the house and claims to be sexually assaulted by Zozo. She is not dressed well but seems oddly calm, acting like she is drugged even ( she probably was) and her husband takes it very calmly. Excuse me, if my husband sees me or hears me say I was sexually assaulted, I would expect him to be behaving way more damn concerned. Instead, he continues with the investigation with Ghost Adventures.  I would divorce him on the spot. He just goes outside and finds her at a hotel and leaves her there. What an asshole! That right there tells me it was fake. She desperately wanted attention. If I was assaulted by a far fetched demon no less, I would expect more done about it and I would not be behaving that calmly. 

The power of suggestion is powerful. I suspect that is what is occurring here in the book. I don’t believe the Slender Man exists either. People start a story and it goes viral. But on the other hand, I have had actual paranormal things happen to me. But I never looked for it or forced it to happen. It just did. I had no control over it. But people do have control over what they choose to believe exists. I have used ouija boards and nothing happened- at all. That may be because I was alone. I am sure the boards function better with two people. So no a demon didn’t pop out and possess me. 

I am skeptical that that demon exists. The people who want to believe he is real search for any explanation or story that he exists and then that should make it so that it does. Sheesh. If anyone has a genuine occurrence that they never forced to occur, then yeah I would believe that person. 

I know a guy who is a Witch and has discussed demonic possession with a priest. The priest told him nine times out of ten, the person believing themselves to be possessed are instead dealing with mental illness. That is a more  logical explanation. I do believe in the paranormal but I also believe in being practical and logical. First you rule out all the plausible causes, then when you can’t explain it and you are sure, then you go deeper and accept the paranormal explanation. 

It was a good entertaining read. That is all. I don’t regret reading it but I don’t believe it. It is fake , the whole thing. A cry for attention. There is something to the maxim seeing is believing. A lot of spooky things have happened to me that I never forced or sought out. they just did. An editor who read the book Dracul by Dacre Stoker claimed that Mina and Jonathan Harker were real people, acquaintances of Bram Stoker. People are so eager to believe in anything that they will accept anything. He believed that Dracula existed. He is a fictional character, nothing more, based on the actual historical figure Vlad Tepes. 

To demonstrate my skepticism even more, I have bad news. The publishing company J Ellington Ashton Press is a scam. I am now not having my horror novel published with them. 

This is what convinced me it was a scam all along:

The editor who encouraged me to sing on has zero ratings and reviews on Amazon- no ratings mean no sales
They were terrified of deadlines A First
Signed me on too fast- the same day they got my partial
Praised me up
I couldn’t google or find the editor anywhere online even on Facebook
I was told it would be too hard for her to be in touch with me from Australia- it takes seconds to send an email
I had a fishy feeling about them
I had a fishy feeling about being told it would hard for her to be in touch or her constant assurance she was working on it
Their website looks like shit
Their ratings and reviews on Amazon are bad
They have zero web presence
Told me I would be shelved- my book would be shelved next to other famous authors
The editor constantly name dropped He is full of shit
I was on bated breath waiting for them to ask me for money
In order for you to avoid this happening to you, do your research first. That will save you heartbreak. And you want to be happy right? And you want to be with a legit company right? Right. If publishing is your goal, then go for it but be careful.! Scams are everywhere these days. It is terrible that a publishing company will prey on gullible authors and wreak havoc with their dreams but the scammers are out there. 
Now don’t get me wrong. I love watching Ghost Adventures as much as the next person. I am not writing this to sprinkle hate confetti. I do watch the show. But I just maintain a healthy dose of skepticism. I don’t agree with the way they bash witchcraft not knowing enough about it, But I just brush that aside because my ability see ghosts leaves me feeling quite isolated. I can’t just stop being what I am. I am what I am. I accept it but I bear the mantle for it. I don’t boast or act proud or show off. I think that with an ability like mine, I guess you have to pay the price. The guys on that show validate it for me because they make it cool and acceptable. It makes me feel less alone. 
We live in a society that pushes conformity. I say never be afraid to stand out and be true to yourself. 
The paranormal is now more accepted than it was say 20 years ago. I do believe though there are more ghosts, spirits. demons out now than there ever were before. I also know that we have more ghost hunting tools on the market. I never knew those tools existed. I just used my own natural clairvoyant senses to detect ghosts. When I do encounter a spirit it never sticks around for me to find out what it wants. How can I help it that way? Maybe with more ghost hunting tools, I will be able to know what they want. Let’s hope. The future seems spooky. I believe something is coming, something big. And I think that the spirits all know what that will be and are waiting for us mere mortal to figure it out. Let’s do just that before it is too late. This pandemic is only the beginning. 
Blessings, Spiderwitch

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Belief in the Paranormal

Merry meet all,

I am a fan of the paranormal, as my blog readers all know. Today I want to post about why I choose to believe in it and how I handle the paranormal occurrences in my life that I have become accustomed to. While I know I have mentioned some odd events around my home, I do believe in also looking first for a rational explanation to explain it.

I just read two interesting articles online about why some people believe more in the paranormal than others. The group of people who believe are more prone to a certain type of cognitive thinking. They may be more intuitive than reflective. The ones who are skeptics are more likely to be more reflective thinkers. The intuitive thinkers go more with their gut feeling and are more likely to believe there is a paranormal explanation for everything. A more reflective thinker will find a logical solution for everything first. This is similar to right brain and left brain thinking.

I manage to achieve both intuitive and reflective thinking. Some could argue that when the cast iron potbellied cauldron fell from my fridge, that it was the fridge’s vibrations that caused it to fall. If that is the explanation of why that occurred, then why didn’t anything else fall from the top of the fridge? But I digress. I had no pet cat at the time nor mice. No mouse could make that cauldron fall due to the cauldron’s weight. That would be some remarkable feat on the mouse’s part. I know it seems boring and counterproductive to my blog to include such analysis but it is still necessary. Remembering to be a bit analytical while still enjoying the paranormal can actually enhance your experience of the paranormal because you can be freer to enjoy it. If a draft blows into a room, it may not be a cold spot. There might be a door or window left open that blew in a breeze. So remember to use common sense when first looking for an explanation of why something happened.

There are many skeptics who are out to debunk the existence of Bigfoot or explain away out of body experiences. I say let them be. They are just as entitled to their beliefs and views as we all are. They have the right to criticize and analyze everything as we have the right to Ouija boards. Science seeks an explanation to everything. Science might just come up with some excellent arguments and amazing ideas on things. There has to be a balance between science and intuition. I think science is changing and becoming more accepting of life after death with the invention of Kirlian photography. They believe they can now capture the spirit leaving the body after death with the use of Kirlian photography. Power to them. I would love to see that.

I also believe that some people seek a paranormal explanation for EVERYTHING that happens. I mean everything. This is not healthy. This is a tad obsessive. I see this all the time on paranormal Facebook groups. I do love the world of the supernatural but I am not super obsessed about it. I obviously love it or I would not be writing this blog. But I just still believe in being practical to a certain degree. We are all capable of being rational and intuitive. Some use one more than the other. It is important to maintain some objectivity.

On the other hand, I still hear sounds that my rational mind makes herculean effort to explain. This is so when my cat is in a room with me and I hear a sound from another room. I will know at the time we are the only living beings in the residence. I decided that the sounds at night had to be the house settling. Houses do settle at night. That can explain creaks and groans. Pipes can cause creaks and groans too. I can’t explain everything I have experienced or witnessed like the shadowy person that appeared in my kitchen when a friend was over. I hear a sound of a mop or broom crashing to the floor during the day. I can’t explain that one either especially when I check the room and nothing has moved. If any of you dear readers have an reasonable explanation for that, then I welcome your comments on this post. I truly do welcome your views.

I believe in polarity and balance. I believe in the light and the dark, logic and intuition, and universal love. I believe all are necessary to maintain harmony. We can’t have light without dark and vice versa. I need sunlight to go to the bank during the day but I need nighttime to perform an esbat under the milky orb of the luminous full moon. (Which reminds me…)

This post sums up my beliefs in the paranormal and why I believe in a balance between logic and intuition. I hope that many people out there can also find their own balance, their own harmony. 

Blessings, Spiderwitch

 

 

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