Read Haunted Objects: Stories of Ghosts on Your Shelf Online

Authors: Christopher Balzano,Tim Weisberg

Haunted Objects: Stories of Ghosts on Your Shelf

BOOK: Haunted Objects: Stories of Ghosts on Your Shelf
11.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

HAUNTED
OBJECTS

Stroies of Ghosts on Your Shelf

CHRISTOPHER BALZANO AND TIM WEISBERG

Acknowledgments

Special thanks go to those who chose to share these stories with us, and with the world, through this book.

Chris would like to thank: My amazingly understanding and supportive wife, Jill, and my two wonderful kids, Devin and Ella; Jeff Belanger for finding me another great project; the Spooky Crew for keeping my toe in the paranormal waters; my parents for pictures and support; and my students at Gateway Middle School for allowing me to use them as a sounding board for many of these stories. I would especially like to thank Tim Weisberg for stepping to the steering wheel with me and helping me bring these stories to light.

Tim would like to thank: my wife, Jennifer, my son, Adam, and the rest of my family; my fellow Spooky Crew members Matt Costa and Matt Moniz; the listeners of “Spooky Southcoast”; Jeff Belanger; and especially Christopher Balzano, who allowed me to get involved in this project and get my mind away from the need to prove the paranormal and back to just enjoying a good ghost story.

Contents

Introduction

Section 1
The Ghosts You Wear

Stone’s Dress
|
Never a Bride
|
The Little Girls’ Dresses
|
Some Things Are Better Left Dead
|
The Belt That May Have Started It All

Section 2
Beware of What is Passed Down

Moving Moments
|
What My Grandparents Left Behind: Tim’s Story
|
The Mummy That Sunk the Unsinkable
|
Uncle Webb’s Tools
|
The Ghost of Two Christmases Past
|
Three Ways to Get From Here to There

Section 3
The Written Word

The Lady of the Lake
|
Her Birth Certificate
|
Knives and Shadow: Chris’ Story
|
The Psychic, The Little Girl, and Three Killers

Section 4
Ghosts at Play

The Haunted Violin
|
Robert’s Rules: Chris’ Experience with the World’s Most Haunted Doll
|
Claire the Doll
|
My First Spirit Board: Chris’ Story
|
Sarah Finds a Board

Section 5
Hauntings Around the House

Bed of Dread
|
Altered Belief
|
The Haunted Travel Clock
|
The Haunted Butter Dish
|
Don’t Sit There!

Section 6
Haunted Jewelry

The Healing Medal
|
An Assurance From the Unknown
|
I Dream of Djinn
|
Rocks of Love
|
Raphael on the Headstone

Section 7
Off the Wall

Mirror, Mirror on the Wall
|
Sacrifice
|
Masking Evil
|
The Haunted Painting
|
Poster Child

Section 8
Wrapping Your Head—and Your Hands —Around Haunted Objects

Getting Attached
|
Hands-On Experience
|
Haunted Collections
|
I Bought My Ghost on eBay!

Photo Credits

Glossary

Online Resources

About the Authors

INTRODUCTION

O
ur ideas of ghosts are formed by the stories we read or see on television. Sometimes they’re molded by a personal experience we have.

Ghosts, or more accurately, ghost stories, are everywhere around us, but we do not understand as much as we might think about what a ghost truly is. We fall back on what we have seen on television or heard from others. In investigating ghosts and ghost stories, I’ve even found evidence that implies ghosts learn how to be ghosts based on what the person believed about the paranormal when they were still alive.

But can an object be haunted?

My story starts in the library.

Before the days of after-school child-care programs, I walked about half a mile to the local public library after class. I spent my time between the stacks, pulling out books and reading all types of tales until 5:30, when my mother picked me up. I read about dinosaurs and the universe and about countries in Asia I knew I might never see. There were two books I kept rereading, and looking back, it is not too much of a leap to see how they might have affected the rest of my life.

The first book was about how to be a private detective. It taught you how to sneak around the house, open doors without a sound, and interview suspects. The other was a collection of stories about unexplained happenings. One story featured a witch’s grave where grass wouldn’t grow, and one was about Daniel Webster fighting the devil on a cliff not too far from where I lived. There was also the story of a painting said to be haunted. It was of a castle with a light in one of the towers that would go on when odd things were happening in the house. If there was no ghostly activity, the window was black; if the ghost was around, the window was lit. There was even a time when a shadowy figure appeared in the window. In each instance, the paint-on window was dry. I was drawn into this story, and since then, my passion for all things unexplained has never left me.

Looking back, my analytical brain and my experience tell me this story has to be a piece of folklore. I accept there are things in this world I will never understand. Looking for ghosts and researching hauntings and folklore is often about discovering what can be possible based on scientific fact.

For example, people often say they feel a chill or a heat wave before something ghostly happens to them. Ghost hunters measure changes in temperature, believing the two are connected. The science makes some sense, but it can’t be proven yet. I can handle that as a potential link, but dry paint that appears and disappears? It spits in the face of every scientific fact and pseudoscientific paranormal fact—but that doesn’t make the story a lie.

Years later, the story about the painting is one I still remember. It was not only the creepy nature of the tale, but also how normal the story started. It was just a picture. My father is an artist, and while I grew up, our walls were covered with framed bits of his creations. Could any of these lure a ghost? No one had died in our basement and I know the house wasn’t built on an old cemetery. I was pretty safe. But those pictures … any of them could be a haunting waiting to happen.

If I only knew then what I know now. When asking if an object in your house is haunted, it is important to look at what we think we know about ghosts. The honest answer is very little. There are many theories out there, but some come to the surface more than others.

A spirit is the essence of a person or a moment in a person’s life, somehow trapped in a way we can perceive. It might take the form of what we call a residual haunting—this means the essence is trapped, and lacking any consciousness, it acts like a recording of a moment or a person.

Think of it like this: A woman gets thrown down the stairs, screams, and dies when she hits the bottom step. Now, every night, at the time of her death, the residents of the house hear a scream and a series of pounds on the stairs and may even see the woman fall. She can’t talk to them or move to a different room. They can’t communicate with her. From a homeowner’s perspective, all you can do is try to change the environment to break up the energy, or accept it and hope it runs out of juice. Keep in mind that some residual hauntings in Europe have lasted for centuries.

It’s recommended to stay away from dolls and yard sales, and especially dolls at yard sales.

The other type of ghost is what investigators call an intelligent haunting. This has nothing to do with an actual IQ. It basically refers to a ghost with a mind that is still active and a “body” that can interact with its environment. It may be able to go from room to room, answer questions, and impact its surroundings in a variety of ways. The easiest way for ghosts to communicate is through electrical devices (see Uncle Webb’s story on P. 52), but they are not bound by rules. They can move things, travel from room to room or off the property, and manifest in different ways. One day there might be banging on the wall and the next day there might be an orb of light or a shadow in the room. It is difficult to predict what will happen next, although it is important to remember there are few cases in which people get hurt by ghosts.

There are many types of other paranormal elements that fall outside of these definitions. Poltergeists, which are generally associated with thrown objects and loud noises, may not be ghosts at all, but telekinetic energy from the living. Things like time slips, doppelgangers, and shadow people may not be ghosts, but often occur in connection with other unexplained phenomena in a specific location. Elementals, or spirits created by forces in nature instead of the remnants of living people, are ill defined but still blamed for turning on the faucet when no one is in the room. Then there are demons and dark forces that were never human and seem to have a sinister purpose for being in your house and may even try to possess you.

Silverware is among the common household items that can hold trapped energy, which can lead to a residual haunting.

All of this can be confusing, but it doesn’t change the question: Can an object be haunted? The answer is a resounding yes, and there are good reasons why. In many ways, it is almost logical that an object can be haunted, if you accept what we know about ghosts.

A residual haunting—trapped energy—is more likely to be stored by an item near the event, especially if that item conducts electricity. It becomes almost like a character in the moment of the event. A crystal lamp or a setting of silverware becomes haunted and then replays the moment when the right environmental tumblers fall into place. The object can be moved to another location and when the situation is right, the recording replays, creating a haunting.

BOOK: Haunted Objects: Stories of Ghosts on Your Shelf
11.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Transformation by Carol Berg
Blazing Ice by John H. Wright
Lucky Strikes by Louis Bayard
Man on the Ice by Rex Saunders
Wanna Get Lucky? by Deborah Coonts
Lusted in Las Vegas by Sandra Bunino
Merger By Matrimony by Cathy Williams