Monday, October 4, 2021

What got me interested in the paranormal?

 By Patty Leon

When I was in my early teens, we lived in a nice and somewhat new house in Miami in an up and coming neighborhood near Sunset Drive. One night I was sound sleep when suddenly, I sat upright in my bed and looked toward my bedroom door. There was something there. It looked like a white misty film. I rubbed my eyes and looked again. It was more like a white translucent figure. It appeared to be a female and elderly. I sat there frozen and watched as it appeared to float right towards me. As it got closer, I laid down and pulled the bed covers over my head.  I could no longer see whatever it was I thought I was seeing but I suddenly got a strong smell of perfume. It was a familiar scent, one that my mom used to put on me when we went to church or somewhere fancy.

Violeta Valencia.

It was a perfume my mom said her mother and grandmother also used on her as a child and was a popular perfume for girls in Cuba, where mom was born.

To this day I have no idea who that figure was or might have represented. The house itself had no history of being haunted and it only happened that one time.

While we never openly talked about things of that nature or my encounter, my parents were open to the fact that the spiritual realm existed, even though it may have different meanings to different people.

My mom and dad were both born in Cuba and emigrated to the United States in 1958 before the Castro regime took control of the island. They were raised Catholic, but my mom was raised with many African Cubans who taught her a little bit about Santeria.

SanterĂ­a, (Way of the Saints) is an African diasporic religion that developed in Cuba during the late 19th century. It arose through a process of merging the traditional Yoruba religion of West Africa, the Roman Catholic form of Christianity, and Spiritism.

Mom is a firm believer in the Saints and their powers.

That one instance in my bedroom piqued my curiosity and as a nerdy teen, I dove headfirst into the world of the paranormal. I read books on ghosts, spiritualism, religion, the afterlife, ESP, psychic abilities, dowsing, seances and the metaphysical. I read books by Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud on dream interpretation and the realm of the conscious and subconscious minds.

My mom told me stories about her neighbors using oils, herbs and prayers to remove the “evil,” curses or spells or to help people.

Mind you I started researching and learning about all this years before we had TV shows like Ghost Hunters, Destination Fear, Ghost Adventures, etc, etc. Back then we didn’t have the fancy infrared cameras; meters and all the neat technology currently being utilized in the paranormal field. Back then we used a Polaroid camera, cassette recorder, Ouija Board, dowsing rods and our intuition and senses to detect changes in temperature, or smells or that “gut feeling.”

Since those humble teenage years, I’ve learned a lot.

I’ve learned to pay attention to subtle clues and trust my intuition. I’ve learned how to keep myself and others safe during an investigation. I’ve learned that there is just as much evil in the spiritual world as there is in our current society. There is also just as much good. I have fancy equipment now, but none of that replaces trusting those “gut feelings,” while also being mindful of what you are investigating and more importantly why.

I don’t call myself a ghost hunter, because that sounds like I am seeking to track and dispose of something. I call my self a paranormal investigator because there is so much still unknown about this realm. If I can help others deal with a situation they are experiencing, that is what I’m here for. If a lost spirit is needing help to find its way home, then I’ll try and help.

A paranormal investigator is much more than just seeking spirits. We seek answers to possible unsolved mysteries. We seek to preserve the history and stories of special locations. We seek to connect their world with ours, even if briefly. We seek to learn from it and help create a better future by not repeating reprehensible pasts.

The thin veil, frequency and electromagnetic forces that separate their world from ours is thin and penetrable and worthy of proper study and research. If you need help to understand or deal with possible paranormal activity, send me an email at: bumpinvestigates@aol.com

 

Monday, September 13, 2021

Ghost Hunting in Eatonton

 The television in the little girl's bedroom suddenly comes on in the middle of the night.  She stares at the screen that reveals only a snowy picture.  Walking over to the TV, she calmly says, "They're here."  The entire theater screams in fright. 

 

It is a memorable scene from the 1982 hit movie, Poltergeist crafted by Steven Spielberg and ranked as one of the most frightening movie scenes ever created.  The girl and her family are living in a house constructed on top of an old graveyard.  Ghosts confront them from the graves under the house.  Ultimately, a paranormal medium (played by Zelda Rubinstein) is called in to "clean" the house of ghosts.

 

"They're here" in Eatonton!  And a paranormal specialist, Denise Rolfe and her team from the Southeastern Institute of Paranormal Research will lead a ghost hunt in eleven locations in downtown Eatonton, including the old city jail, the Bronson House and the 1830s Masonic Lodge.  The event will be held on October 16th and 23rd at 5:30 pm, starting at the Georgia Writers Museum with dinner and a short lecture.  The cost is $45 per person ($80 per couple) and includes dinner and the first drink.

 

Attendees will learn what to look for and how to use special paranormal investigating equipment. Then, grouped into teams led by an investigator, they will explore eleven potentially haunted sites.  Think of it like following along with modern-day versions of Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Ernie Hudson, and Harold Ramis; only you get to participate, not just observe! 

 

The Southeastern Institute of Paranormal Research (SIPR) was founded in 2008 by Denise Rolfe, author of the highly acclaimed book, Ghosts and Legends of Charleston and Diane Culpepper.  Their world headquarters is located near Atlanta.  While SIPR uses technical equipment to collect data from the physical environment, they also utilize psychic research methods.  They bring their psychical research team into the investigation "cold." The data collected is then validated through "hard" evidence from historical documentation.

 

How can you prepare for this life-altering event sponsored by Georgia Writers Museum? Start by registering for the event on www.georgiawritersmuseum.org.  Second, get kids you know to submit a spooky story for the 4th annual Spooky Story Contest held between September 13th and October 15th at www.georgiawritersmuseum.org. Winners will be announced on Friday, October 29th. Prizes will be awarded for 1st – 3rd place in each grade level. All first-place winners will have their story and picture printed in the local newspaper!  Check out the website for details.

 

And if you think this ghost stuff is just a bunch of nonsense, withhold your final judgment until you have read the "Do You Believe in Ghosts" article on the Georgia Writers Museum's website. Then, you just might change your view.  So, who you gonna call?  Call the Georgia Writers Museum and learn more details about these amazing events in October.

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Georgia Writers Museum is dedicated to inspiring today’s writers/readers and celebrating Georgia’s literary heritage by exploring the history and life stories of local writers Alice Walker (The Color Purple), Flannery O’Connor (A Good Man is Hard to Find), and Joel Chandler Harris (Brer Rabbit Folktales), along with others in the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame. Currently, small group tours are available by appointment. Admission to the museum is free; the museum relies on donations from guests and supporters to deliver quality programming, exhibits and classes. To learn more, visit www.georgiawritersmuseum.com, Facebook: georgiawritersmuseum, and Instagram: georgiawritersmuseum8.