Abishai100
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- Sep 22, 2013
- 4,959
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Why are we so fascinated by immortality and the mysteries of the afterlife (if there is such a thing)? We're curious about the existence of ghosts and what we can learn about the afterlife from them. Do ghosts protect some 'secret knowledge' or do they sometimes want to 'frighten' us to intentionally make us curious about the afterlife?
Native-American sacred burial grounds are considered regions of great 'spirits,' and tales of haunted houses invoke ideas about 'lingering ghosts/spectres,' and we often 'deify' these 'realities' in cultural/social festivities such as Halloween.
I am personally interested in two U.S. states of great unusual psychological activity --- Texas and New Jersey.
Texas is home to many odd serial-killers as well as cultural 'criminology folklore' (i.e., The Texas Chainsaw Massacre). New Jersey is home to the somewhat 'other-worldly' forests of the Pine Barrens which is rumored to 'shelter' the cryptic mythological creature the Jersey Devil.
Perhaps there are valuable 'folk mysticism' related paranormal ghost-tales/experiences, which might motivate us to ask a symbolic question such as, "Does paranormal activity in America exhibit any kind of 'geographical pattern'?"
Such a question may help us better 'dissect' the sort of 'haunting-stories' that represent 'pop-Occultism' in the modern age --- e.g., The Blair Witch Project, Silent Hill, Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning, and Halloween III: Season of the Witch.
The hope is to build a framework for our kids, so we can better appreciate some of the new-age paranormal-activity TV programming such as Ghost Adventures. After all, isn't the paranormal supposed to make you curious about parental guidance? Finally, how should we evaluate considerations regarding 'storytelling censorship'?
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Shelbye found an odd old photograph of what seemed to be three real witches from an earlier America in her grandmother's attic-trunk. She wondered if her grandmother had any ties to any kind of Wiccan activity or witches! Shelbye decided to travel around her home-state of New Jersey and do some detective work regarding stories about witch-activity and/or disappearing persons/children in the Garden State.
Shelbye discovered there were indeed some intriguing Wiccan stories and witch activity 'folk-tales' (including disappeared individuals) in New Jersey and also mystical paranormal and cryptic-sightings in the unusual forests of the Pine Barrens. Shelbye decided to travel to the Pine Barrens and do some more field-research. She brought a forest-guide with her so she felt safe! Shelbye did not find anything odd in the Pine Barrens except some rather oddly-shaped footprints, but her forest-guide suggested to her, "Why don't you look into some of the unsolved mysteries in Texas?" Shelbye decided to trek to Texas...
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Native-American sacred burial grounds are considered regions of great 'spirits,' and tales of haunted houses invoke ideas about 'lingering ghosts/spectres,' and we often 'deify' these 'realities' in cultural/social festivities such as Halloween.
I am personally interested in two U.S. states of great unusual psychological activity --- Texas and New Jersey.
Texas is home to many odd serial-killers as well as cultural 'criminology folklore' (i.e., The Texas Chainsaw Massacre). New Jersey is home to the somewhat 'other-worldly' forests of the Pine Barrens which is rumored to 'shelter' the cryptic mythological creature the Jersey Devil.
Perhaps there are valuable 'folk mysticism' related paranormal ghost-tales/experiences, which might motivate us to ask a symbolic question such as, "Does paranormal activity in America exhibit any kind of 'geographical pattern'?"
Such a question may help us better 'dissect' the sort of 'haunting-stories' that represent 'pop-Occultism' in the modern age --- e.g., The Blair Witch Project, Silent Hill, Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning, and Halloween III: Season of the Witch.
The hope is to build a framework for our kids, so we can better appreciate some of the new-age paranormal-activity TV programming such as Ghost Adventures. After all, isn't the paranormal supposed to make you curious about parental guidance? Finally, how should we evaluate considerations regarding 'storytelling censorship'?
====
Shelbye found an odd old photograph of what seemed to be three real witches from an earlier America in her grandmother's attic-trunk. She wondered if her grandmother had any ties to any kind of Wiccan activity or witches! Shelbye decided to travel around her home-state of New Jersey and do some detective work regarding stories about witch-activity and/or disappearing persons/children in the Garden State.
Shelbye discovered there were indeed some intriguing Wiccan stories and witch activity 'folk-tales' (including disappeared individuals) in New Jersey and also mystical paranormal and cryptic-sightings in the unusual forests of the Pine Barrens. Shelbye decided to travel to the Pine Barrens and do some more field-research. She brought a forest-guide with her so she felt safe! Shelbye did not find anything odd in the Pine Barrens except some rather oddly-shaped footprints, but her forest-guide suggested to her, "Why don't you look into some of the unsolved mysteries in Texas?" Shelbye decided to trek to Texas...
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