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Viewing 37 - 45 out of 102 Blogs.


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This is Haha Scary
Posted On 10/30/2007 22:08:13

Well this is kinda haha scary  ...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8zAE2E5gM0


Nothing like a haunted doll to brighten up your evening.


The World's Finest Demonologists
Posted On 10/30/2007 21:20:55

Gotta love these guys!  Demonology at it's finest ...


http://www.geocities.com/fingerjack/demonologists.html


Sorry If There's a Delay
Posted On 10/30/2007 18:56:13

I really really appreciate it when you guys leave thoughtful comments under my blogs. I try and answer your responses under my blogs soon after reading what you've said but ...


Lately things have been a little wild in my world and so if there's a delay, please forgive ... I will try and get back to you. I know it takes effort to read and respond so THANK YOU  


I truly enjoy reading your wise cracks, wisdom, opposition, agreement, insults and praise!  ... OK, I'm done kissing all your asses now


Oh, and I hope you're having a great day and OMG it's almost HALLOWEEN!!!!!  


I Signed Up for This
Posted On 10/28/2007 00:54:42

I'm disappointed but I signed up for it ...


Just wasted one hour and fifty-four minutes of my life on the "horror" flick called Burnt Offerings even after seeing the low rating it received on Netflix.  The thing dragged along like a dog with three of its legs broken and had some of the worst acting I've seen in quite some time. The plot was cliche and just lame. One of the lead actors is cross-eyed, which isn't a problem in and of itself, but got distracting and dizzying after the first two scenes. 


Am sure .5% of a person out there managed to enjoy the Hell out of this film somehow though. Thanks for living through this little rant as it allowed me to vent my self-inflicted frustration  



The Believer is Responsible
Posted On 10/25/2007 18:10:48

Once heard someone in the haunted community (not necessarily at IAH) defensively state it’s the skeptic’s job to do his or her own “research” to verify that psi claims are real (demons, in particular). But as an EVP enthusiast or “believer“, my thinking is just the opposite: the onus is on the believer to support his or her claim with research/facts in the face of disbelief or skepticism … that is, if the believer’s goal is to try and “win over” the skeptic.


Why should someone outside the paranormal community believe me if I tell them that EVP is real? Let’s see: I could be lying, imagining, doctoring up a sound sample … it could be EM interference (though there are ways to guard against it), etc. And why should I automatically believe someone who says there are invisible fairies floating around? Do I really have a right to get all hot and bothered when someone refuses to abandon their sense of common logic and believe me just because I speak with conviction? … Well I guess I do have the right, but what good will it do me? LOL


… I know people who’ve taken the laudable step of conducting informal research: friends who tried recording EVP and came up short over and over, even after seeming open-minded about it. In their shoes, I’d remain skeptical about EVP too. With good reason.


- R


When We Are Not Believed - Demons & EVP
Posted On 10/25/2007 17:41:26

Skepticism is not a disease and skeptics are not deleterious to the health of the paranormal field. In general, skepticism is born of common sense. I think that until people experience the extreme things you and I have, their skepticism is justified and appropriate, as there is seemingly limited, or no, logical basis for belief in such things.


I happen to think EVP is as real as real gets. But I appreciate why people would be very skeptical about it. If their brains are wired correctly, they should be! Let’s face it, many of our haunted experiences sound a little bizarre and illogical, to put it kindly.


… But while skepticism is healthy in the face of seemingly wild and improbable claims, it does have a poisonous extreme called cynicism. Cynicism leaves no room for the possibility of something improbable or mysterious, being real. My guess is this attitude is a true road block to all sorts of discoveries.


A cynic says things like “Ghosts/a God/fairies/demons can’t exist because there’s such a high probability they don’t exist based on what scientists know“. But this dismisses the objectively immeasurable, small probability as 0 probability, and assumes science is a complete body of understanding that is static, but it isn’t static (science is self-corrective; an evolutionary animal). Skepticism=healthy; cynicism=unhealthy. Well, that’s my equation for now.


- R


Question About Your Haunting
Posted On 10/20/2007 18:39:04

In what ways - if any - did you change your behavior at home after realizing you had a haunting (good or bad)?


For example, I had a knocking/banging haunting. The doors that were knocked at happened to be closed when the knocking occurred (a lot on the front door and two times on the bathroom door).


Now I’m in the habit of keeping all the doors in our home open LOL.


When a Horror Film Does What Talk Therapy Can’t
Posted On 10/20/2007 18:15:16

I’ll call my friend Lisa. Lisa called me from home a few months ago ... Well of course she called me from home. At the time she had severe, untreated agoraphobia. The literal meaning of agoraphobia is “fear of the marketplace” (Greek). In general this means anxiety/panic attacks occur in situations in which escape might be difficult or impossible - like a bustling market place, crowded bus/train or even a street with foot traffic. Often the result is the person becomes home-bound. The home represents a place of safety, where the public humiliation of a panic attack or feared sudden illness, can be avoided.


Lisa sobbed over the phone, crying about a particularly bad panic attack she’d just suffered as her brother drove them about five blocks from home to buy eggs and milk. They came home without the food. This trip had been an assignment from her therapist - given over the phone- that she failed. But she calmed down and felt better after we talked it over for a few minutes.


“Lisa, I’ll call you a little later, O.K.? I’m leaving for the movies soon.”


“What movie are you seeing?”


“Gonna see ‘28 Weeks Later‘.”


I heard her sniffle a couple times, then exhale slowly …


“Can I go with you?”


It was difficult to stifled my laughter. She’d just been crying; beating herself up about lacking the courage reach the friendly neighborhood market for a quick shopping stint. Now she was asking to go to the theater, well over fifteen miles away, to see a movie designed to create fear; a menacing tale of an inescapable virus that transforms humans into frenzied, ugly homicidal maniacs. Though warned, she insisted.


She seemed nervous on the drive over and I thought “Shit, I don’t want to have to turn around and drive her home”. She sat quietly in the theater, barely flinching when people screamed. She giggled nervously, as most of us did. Lisa seemed happy and calm on the trip home. We even stopped and picked up those eggs and milk she‘d failed to get earlier. Lisa couldn’t explain why the horror movie acted as an antidepressant. In retrospect, it made sense:


Lisa was overwhelmed with her life. Horror films do more than distract us from our mundane or uncomfortable personal realities. Horrors rudely pull us up by the scruff of our necks and shout in our faces:


See how much worse things could be for you?!


A well-crafted horror film has a way of knocking things back into perspective for some of us, even as they plague us with nightmares and some degree of mental torment. Truth is, Lisa’s real world had become abnormally restricted; home was not just a security blanket for her, it was Homemade Hell. A homemade horror tale of inertia, imprisonment; a golden cage. She’d found an exciting, momentary alternative - an incentive to remove herself from that cage and escape into a world of unparalleled chaos that was just what the doctor ordered.


I think there are other ways in which horror films serve the human psyche. But maybe that’s best left for another blog.


- R


Erasing a Bad Memory
Posted On 10/17/2007 14:36:15

Would you want this bad memory erased or not? Was it O.K. for them to erase this person’s memory?


Link




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