Ghost Files - Page 2

Before riffling through the book, I turned to the back of the book and saw the picture of a frumpy curly headed some sixty year old psychic and read the words provided below her wrinkly face-

Guiding the reader behind the scenes of genuine cases of possession and exorcism, Sybil Leek describes the concept of evil, the psychology of possession, and the horrifying, exhausting rite of exorcism. Here are historic cases of possession-Dr Faustus, the nuns and the devils of Loudon- and cases where the author herself has taken personal control: the Anderson Case and the Galveston Possession.

I couldn’t believe it when I read the words, "The Galveston Possession". Two years ago when I had visited that dilapidated summer resort of Texas I hadn’t liked it one bit. The town had too many mixed vibrations of old and new, of menacing beauty and dingy side lanes. We had stayed there overnight before heading back to Dallas the next morning and though I had a fantastic time at the local crab shack and in the strange hotel room with my not so strange husband (wink), I was glad to get out of that old town.

And now my uneasy feelings were confirmed by this author. I flipped to the part where she and her friends decided to stay at an old mansion in Galveston for the weekend just to get away from the pesky spirits that had been bothering the Leeky family in their new Houston home.

From the first footsteps into the house I felt an old gooseflesh feeling I had always get before anything spectacularly psychic happens, It is not fear ,because I have yet to be frightened by phenomena ,but rather more sensitive, delicate awareness of a yet-to-be experienced incident. I was shocked to find myself feeling revulsion for the place, even though the rooms looked as if they were about to be photographed for inclusion in beautiful homes.

Ah, the book had me hooked, it was better than a Stephen King. I grabbed a chair and sat down to read while keeping a wary eye on my two year old son who was going through his own books.

Continued on the next page Page 1 — Page 2 — Page 3Page 4

Article tags

Spread the word
Bookmark and Share
Profile image for deepti-lamba

Article Author: Deepti Lamba

Deepti Lamba is an aspiring writer and an editor for Desicritics. She can be found at Things That Bang and at Suspended Moments

Visit Deepti Lamba's author pageDeepti Lamba's Blog

Read comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own

Article comments

  • 1 - RJ

    Apr 11, 2005 at 2:06 am

    I had a particularly weird experience once as a kid. Probably not supernatural, but I still remember it...

    A bunch of us were having a sleepover in the basement of my pal's house. We played various games, you know, turth-or-dare, whatever, and then one of the kids came up with the idea of trying a "levitating"...

    To be brief about it all, one of the the kids laid down flat on his back, and there were six of us around him. One held the head, one the feet, and the others (two to a side) the body.

    But all we "held" him with was two fingers, our middle and index, to be exact.

    Anyway, some inane "chant" ("light as a feather" was a part of it, though I do not remember the rest) was recited by all six of us as he laid there with his eyes closed, and then we attempted to "lift" him.

    And, uh, we DID. With ease. Up to our noses. Until, well, we got sorta freaked out, and started gasping and making various profane exclamations, and then suddenly his body became quite heavy, and we let him back down to the floor.

    I seem to remember him crying after this (we were like 13), but a couple more kids volunteered (I sure as hell was not one of them!) to be the "body" and the "ritual" was repeated a couple more times, with the same results.

    Now, this is most likely explained by the fact that there were 6 of us doing the "lifting" and therefore even two fingers times two per person times 6 people could provide enough power to lift a person so high. But, I swear, it was like he was no weight at all, UNTIL the "spell" was broken and people began talking again. Then, the body became heavy indeed!

    Anyway, just throwing that out there for ya'll. Anyone else do something similar as a youth? Or am I alone in this? And what, exactly, is the reasonable explanation?

  • 2 - Aaman

    Apr 11, 2005 at 10:36 am

    I've done the 'lifting' too - wierd. Orbs are harder to explain - while I've not particularly been gung-ho about the paranormal, there are stranger things on heaven and earth...

  • 3 - swingingpuss

    Apr 11, 2005 at 1:27 pm

    I, too seen a whole lot of 'lifting' and it has less to do with the paranormal and more with the male libido;-)

    The only weird things I've experienced are are a few premonitions. Apart from that I'm as thick as a doornob as far as psychic abilities are concerned.

  • 4 - Aaman

    Apr 11, 2005 at 1:31 pm

    Haven't you seen ghosts?

  • 5 - swingingpuss

    Apr 11, 2005 at 1:57 pm

    Well Aaman, some might call my experiences childhood hallucinations or schizophrenia. Just kidding;) I plead the Fifth.

  • 6 - RJ

    Apr 11, 2005 at 8:15 pm

    I've had quite a few "premonitions," or at least huge coincidences between prior thought and later fact, in my life. But they are never about anything that could actually benefit me (like the number of the winning horse in the Kentucky Derby, for example)...

  • 7 - bhw

    Apr 11, 2005 at 8:25 pm

    RJ, I thought levitation [and Ouija boards] were the domain of 13-year-old girls' sleepovers. Glad to hear the boys tried it, too!

  • 8 - Mark Saleski

    Apr 11, 2005 at 8:31 pm

    rj, ya think the two-finger 'levitation'thing can be explained by the kid's weight divided by the number of 'pressure' spots? there were six of you, 12 pairs of two fingers...that's only a little over 4 pounds per finger for a 100lb kid.

    i say this because i once saw a guy lift the back end of a chevy broco off the ground using a couple trashbags & a vacuum cleaner.

  • 9 - RJ

    Apr 11, 2005 at 9:15 pm

    "RJ, I thought levitation [and Ouija boards] were the domain of 13-year-old girls' sleepovers. Glad to hear the boys tried it, too!"

    Well, there were a couple girls there too! (I didn't get laid tho...too busy playing D&D...) :-/

  • 10 - RJ

    Apr 11, 2005 at 9:17 pm

    "rj, ya think the two-finger 'levitation'thing can be explained by the kid's weight divided by the number of 'pressure' spots? there were six of you, 12 pairs of two fingers...that's only a little over 4 pounds per finger for a 100lb kid."

    Interesting.

    Like I said, I doubt there was anything supernatural about it all. BUT, if my memory serves me correctly, it was like the kid was nearly WEIGHTLESS while we lifted him, and then he suddenly got REAL heavy once the "spell" was broken...

  • 11 - Mark Saleski

    Apr 11, 2005 at 10:40 pm

    ok, physics doesn't explain that!

    maybe adrenaline...or something.

  • 12 - Victor Plenty

    Apr 12, 2005 at 1:41 am

    Physics might not explain it, but psychology does. Your perception of the amount of weight you are lifting can be dramatically altered by your state of mind.

    Hypnotically repeating the incantation about somebody being "as light as a feather" is a great way to affect your mental interpretation of what your senses are telling you. Nothing needs to change other than the way your brain interprets the data, for you to feel as if the person has become "lighter" than they were before.

    Giggling, gasping, swearing, getting nervous and losing your focused concentration are great ways to disrupt the altered perception. Your mind returns from the temporary conviction of "lightness" to your previous conviction that the person is "heavy," and so your perceptions follow suit.

  • 13 - Sandra

    Apr 12, 2005 at 1:43 am

    Very cool - I have seen orbs too - Ghost Hunters featured them, but said they were just weather anomalies or temperature variations. I don't know myself.

  • 14 - RJ

    Apr 12, 2005 at 11:02 pm

    My folks claim to have seen "ball lightning" once...very remarkable experience, from what they told me...would that be akin to an "orb"?

  • 15 - swingingpuss

    Apr 13, 2005 at 12:06 am

    RJ, generally speaking "ball lightnings" are supposed to be weather related. But then again I don't want to play down your parents experience which I'm sure must have been spectacular for them:)

  • 16 - HW Saxton

    Apr 13, 2005 at 12:25 am

    I've never experienced anything that I
    could call "Paranormal" I don't think.
    However,once in San Fransisco I saw a
    traveling group of "Fakirs" (Magicians/
    Illusionists from *India)perform a trick
    that still perplexes me to this day.

    One of the "Fakirs" threw what looked to
    be just a normal piece of hemp rope (it
    was passed around the audience before
    the trick was done,of course)up into the
    air. He then balanced the rope on the
    flat of his hand and made it stand up in
    the air seemingly suspended by itself.
    This in itself was a mindf*cker.Then he
    (the Fakir)jumped on it and shimmied up
    and down it like a rope in a high school
    gym class.I am still to this day like
    100% friggin' baffled. Was it some sort
    of a mass hypnosis or what???

    Anyone out there ever seen any tricks or
    illusions similar to this done? Was it
    just smoke and mirrors, some sort of a
    sleight of hand or again some kind of
    hypnosis on a grand scale?Anyone got any
    kind of input?

    *They were supposedly from India anyway.



  • 17 - mootiy

    Apr 15, 2005 at 3:07 pm

    i have seen a floating orb before, not on camera though, just floating by my apartment window one day, a friend with me at the time also saw it, we rushed outside only to see it had vanished, i dont really think these are ghost, i think it is probably something just just lives among us and always have and rarely been seen, so when it is seen it is a great phenominon..it could be another form of life, not from another planet, formed on this one or energy of some sort..it is vry interesting...

  • 18 - Eric Olsen

    Apr 15, 2005 at 3:24 pm

    great story, thanks SP. I have had three experiences, all within a few years in my late-teens and early-20s, I am certain were supernatural. One is here, another here

  • 19 - swingingpuss

    Apr 15, 2005 at 5:16 pm

    Eric, I just finished reading both the posts you had linked to and second one gave me the heebie-jeebies.

    Aaman's father had told us a similar story about a scary looking hag trying hail them down while they were driving towards Srinagar (Kashmir)and his description of the hag sounds similar to yours.

    And I couldnt shrug off his experience because he is as dependable and rational as the Rock of Gibraltar

  • 20 - Eric Olsen

    Apr 15, 2005 at 6:43 pm

    thanks SP, I still have nightmares about that to this day. The other one is more vague and ambiguous since I was about to pass out from lack of oxygen, but I swear that's the way I remember it. The third one, the most certain of all for mee, involves my grandmother and I guess I haven't written that up, although maybe I just can't find it.

  • 21 - Amy

    Jun 09, 2005 at 12:44 pm

    I went to Heidelberg College in Tiffin, OH many, many years ago and we, too, had a decidedly terrifying graveyard near campus with unexplained goings on. I did a little research back then and discovered that all of Seneca County has a history of rather cultish, unexplained, and generally creepy things. I wanted to say, also, that although I'm not a blogger, I've been visiting this Web site several times a day for over a year now and I want to compliment you (all) on fascinating writing, entertaining arguments, and truly intelligent thought. Thank you.

  • 22 - swingingpuss

    Jun 09, 2005 at 12:52 pm

    Amy, thanks for the kind words, I think I can say that on behalf of all BC contributors :)

    Here in Milwaukee there are a number of old homes, resturants and hotels that are supposed to be haunted.

    It would be nice if you could do a post on your research. I'm sure there are a bunch of us who would be interested in your piece :)

  • 23 - Rachel

    Jul 25, 2005 at 12:13 am

    I was searching for information on ouija boards and i saw some on the levitating slumber party thing. Since I am a teen ager, and I still do those kinds of things at sleepovers, i know what the chant is. "Light as a feather, stiff as a board."

    It's not really a big deal, I think it might have something to do with adrenaline. I'm not completely sure. But last night we all used an ouija board that my wicca friend made...and it worked! I've just been looking on information about it. I have read all the rules and everything but I need to know one thing. When your done with it and you have to like...how should i say this. You have to like put a seal on it to like protect it or renew it so a certian spirit won't stay in it. I watched my wiccan friend do a pentagram with her fingers over the whole board about 4 or 3 times! I really need to know how to do this right. Do any of you know or know a website? Also does it matter how you draw a pentagram cause i notice she does the star a different way from how i do mine. E-mail me please!!

  • 24 - swingingpuss

    Jul 25, 2005 at 12:18 am

    Trapped souls are hard to get rid of - I suggest you stick with slumber party sleepovers minus the ouija board. For excitement, go watch "Seed Of Chucky" or invite some boys over;) (over 18 only)

Add your comment, speak your mind

Personal attacks are NOT allowed.
Please read our comment policy.
Please preview your comment.

blogcritics lists for Feb 11, 2012

fresh articles Most recent articles site-wide

fresh comments Most recent comments site-wide

most comments Most comments in 24hrs

top writers Most prolific Blogcritics for January

top commenters Most prolific Commenters in 24 hrs