I want to know how they explain unrelated people "seeing" the same ghost in the same place.
I'm pretty sure infrasound didn't flick on the light switch as I passed an open doorway on two occasions back in 2004. Or turn on the radio in a locked room (though I can't absolutely rule out housekeeping on that one). At least I didn't see any apparitions or get a creepy feeling either.
Well, so far my weekend plans are hospital. Hope I get sleep soon.
Aw, crap, ita. I'm about to go spend a festive day learning to program, which isn't entirely crappitous but still doesn't count as fun, either. Still, I'd volunteer to trade days with you just one time because it would be like a vacation for you.
Am I the only one who is not on Facebook?
No. I don't need to be a real person on the internet. I don't really see the point. I know where my family is, and any old classmates I want to be in touch with, I'm in touch with.
Oh dear ita, that doesn't sound good. Call me if I can help at all.
I want to know how they explain unrelated people "seeing" the same ghost in the same place.
I would think the infrasound argument could explain that easily, as the sound source (which presumably wouldn't have been moved) would be the cause of the sightings. On the other hand, it doesn't help to explain Matt's light switch at all.
Back when I had my students write about their dreams several wrote about dreams that they believed were visitations from someone who had died, in a couple cases the person had died at the same time that the dreamer was dreaming.
Real science is pretty much: must be able to reproduce in a controlled experiment.
In which case astral projection counts, because neuroscientists can pretty easily induce out of body experiences in the lab. They can do the same with religious epiphanies. It's not that the experiences aren't "real" - it's simply that they're biochemical rather than supernatural.
Yeah, I can't ever be on facebook. Violating rules of internet!
Of course, I thought I'd never be on lj, either.
I would think the infrasound argument could explain that easily, as the sound source (which presumably wouldn't have been moved) would be the cause of the sightings. On the other hand, it doesn't help to explain Matt's light switch at all.
I've heard so many different ghost stories that I believe, for which I don't believe low frequency can account. There's definitely situations that it can account for, but not all of them. For instance, in the first apartment my parents lived in, they each saw a girl with long blonde hair and jeans. Neither one got a creepy vibe off of her, but they saw her. One time my mom even felt her touch her hair, and my father came into the room and saw her do so. And every time they saw her in the apartment, this cross that they had nailed to the wall in their bedroom would end up turned around. Like, something that could only be accomplished with a hammer, unstuck from the wall, then turned around and nailed back into the wall, kind of turned around. Eventually, months and months later, my mom asked a neighbor if she ever saw a blonde girl wandering around, and my mom described her. The neighbor ended up producing a picture of the last tenant in my parents' apartment, who had gotten a little too high and walked off the balcony one day, and it turns out that girl was the same one my parents had seen for months.
And believe me when I tell you that my father was absolutely not the sort of person to buy into any of that stuff. I'm sort of surprised he would even admit to seeing her, whether he saw her or not.