Do Ghosts Exist? My Friend Says Yes!

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The discussion centers around the existence of ghosts, sparked by personal anecdotes and varying beliefs. Participants share experiences and fears related to ghost sightings, with one individual recounting a friend's claim of seeing ghosts, which raised concerns about their reality. Many express skepticism, citing a lack of credible evidence and the potential for misinterpretation or deception in ghost sightings. The conversation highlights the prevalence of ghost stories and the entertainment value of ghost-related media, while emphasizing that scientific scrutiny has not substantiated claims of ghosts. Some participants suggest that belief in ghosts may stem from psychological factors, such as the human tendency to seek comfort in the supernatural during times of grief. The dialogue also touches on the idea that fear of ghosts often arises from a lack of understanding, and that facing such fears through education might alleviate anxiety. Ultimately, the consensus leans towards skepticism regarding the existence of ghosts, while acknowledging the complexity of human belief and perception in relation to the supernatural.
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What I really want to know is are ghosts real? Do ghosts exist? I got really freaked out after my friend said his friend can see them (like dead people, especially in graveyards), and once his friend was standing next to a stranger and they could both see the same thing (a ghost obviously)... so that kind of proved they exist... but in some other dimension that only some people can see... that scared me for years!
 
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yes this a better forum to post this, thanks.
Ok, well, I don't have much personal evidence for ghosts, but I think there is plenty in the world - a lot of people claim they have seen ghosts, there's footage, and certain places are 'haunted'... are all these fake?
If not, what are ghosts? and do all life have ghosts?I used to think: if I think there are no ghosts then I will start seeing them (like tempting fate?) but recently I've tried to be 'brave' and think they don't exist, and I haven't seen one yet...
and I've been thinking, if all living things left ghosts, then the world wouldn't even have enough space for them! So that made me less scared...

yes, I'm a little neurotic...
 
I got really freaked out after my friend said his friend can see them (like dead people, especially in graveyards), and once his friend was standing next to a stranger and they could both see the same thing (a ghost obviously)... so that kind of proved they exist... but in some other dimension that only some people can see... that scared me for years!
What's more likely, ghosts existing or liars existing?
Even if they aren't lying, why do you assume people could accurately identify a ghost once they've seen one?
Be wary of anyone who says they saw a ghost. If they're confident what they saw was a ghost, you can be confident they're full of it.
a lot of people claim they have seen ghosts, there's footage, and certain places are 'haunted'... are all these fake?
How many people say they've seen ghosts? Thousands. How many people are capable of lying or being mistaken? Almost 7 billion.
 
I must say, every piece of evidence I've seen for ghosts hasn't stood up to even the slightest scrutiny.

Some videos of them look really believable, but most come from tv shows, and if they're on tv (ghost hunters, most haunted etc) the odds are it was staged to get more viewing figures.

If you could completely seal off a supposed haunted house and then perform scientific analysis under strict testing conditions, and then a video was captured of a figure (or anything out of the ordinary that can't be explained), I'd be inclined to start taking them more seriously, but so far, it hasn't happened and no credible evidence (evidence that can be recreated) exists.
 
:) ok I'm starting to feel a bit better. I used to be scared of seeing the girl from the ring come out of my tv... I know its stupid but I was really scared! and I used to be scared of seeing dead people in mirrors... and behind the shower curtain... and in the toilet... and behind any doorway or wall that I can't see past... seriously! It was horrible!
 
I cannot state categorically that ghosts do not exist. I can merely state that most people do not see ghosts, and that to date no credible evidence exists which supports the existence of ghosts.
 
ah I did not come across that thread in my search. thanks!
 
I personally asked myself this question 4 years ago as I wanted to know if is a true aspect of reality or not as our ability to obtain scientific evidence of ghosts is limited by our level of knowledge and technology. (Science has come a long way over the past century and is certain to continue to advance significantly over the next century and into the distant future - therefore we should not assume that our current level of scientific knowledge is a 100% accurate and complete understanding of the universe we live in.)

The method I used to obtain knowledge on the subject of ghosts (since most scientists either ignore the subject or aren't able to obtain funding there isn't going to be much scientific evidence of ghosts if they are indeed real) was simply to read as many ghost stories that I could find, and ghosts.org has nearly 1,600 ghost stories available for anyone to read. What I did was read several hundred stories and took notes of the details that I felt may be evidence of the presence of any ghosts as I feel that if ghosts are real than there should be seemingly mundane details that are evident across a reasonable number of stories from different people, but if these stories are detailing things that just appear to be ghosts or are entirely fictional then the details will either suggest something else as the cause or there will be little correlation between the details in the stories.

As far as your fears go, I would encourage you to face your fears and seek as much knowledge as possible about those things you are afraid of as it is quite often that our fears are based on a lack of knowledge, and educating ourselves helps us overcome those irrational fears. (One bit of advice that might help if you are interested in reading the ghost stories at the site I linked is that it should help if you pay less attention to the people and the events in the stories [otherwise your emotions are more likely to run wild] and pay more attention to the details that may be indicative of the presence of a ghost. This is the approach I used and I barely found any of the stories to be scary. I also read the stories with the assumption that they're just stories and not actual events, which I'm sure also helped keep me calm. Though I was saddened by a number of the stories [this one especially] as they do involve death.)
 
  • #10
Um, thanks eupeptic, but I don't think I'm ready to do that just yet! I'll just get more freaked out... and won't be able to do anything by myself... lol.
So after your reading what did you conclude? That there isn't really much evidence for ghosts?
 
  • #11
nucleargirl said:
What I really want to know is are ghosts real? Do ghosts exist? I got really freaked out after my friend said his friend can see them (like dead people, especially in graveyards), and once his friend was standing next to a stranger and they could both see the same thing (a ghost obviously)... so that kind of proved they exist... but in some other dimension that only some people can see... that scared me for years!

I certainly wouldn't take you friend's friend's word for it. His claim is easily testable since I can also see ghosts. I will observe a ghost, and then allow your friend's friend see it. If he describes the same ghost, then we know he can see it.

<<smirk>> I'm terribly sorry, this is all incredibly silly. But I hope you see that I can make the claim just as easily as he can. He might not even be lying, perhaps this friend-of-a-friend has at least gone through the trouble of lying to himself so as to not have to lie to you. Additionally, you are setting a very low threshold for proof here (one person claiming to see something and the other one going "yup" is hardly proof).

No, there is no reason to postulate the ethereal existence of ghosts as they are commonly understood. I loooove ghost shows: Ghost Hunters, Ghost Adventures, and Destination Truth to name a few. These shows offer great entertainment value, but the scientific content is null.

You should remind yourself strongly that if you were to encounter a real ghost, you should feel like the luckiest person alive. I would welcome the experience to the highest degree. Furthermore, you should not be scared it all: the number of people injured by ghosts is still zero. (The number of people injured in the pursuit of ghosts, however...)
 
  • #12
FlexGunship said:
the number of people injured by ghosts is still zero.

yeah! I've never thought about this, but you never see in the news that someone was actually hurt by a ghost! yeah it must not happen very often at all cos otherwise we would all hear of it! yeah and the government doesn't see it as a risk to life - we're never taught how to protect ourselves against ghosts! If I ever get hurt by a ghost I'm complaining to my education system...
 
  • #13
"(The number of people injured in the pursuit of ghosts, however...)"

That's still something that makes me wonder. Why do ghost hunters feel the need to go to such dangerous places (old dilapidated buildings seem to be the favourite - particularly hospitals - ooh and sanitariums, something about the name I suppose?).

They give all that "it's the best place to have spirits appear" talk, but if ghosts truly existed then sitting at home would give just as much chance of them appearing. (I somehow doubt the ground I sit on now has never seen some form of death - human or otherwise, after all why should only humans have spirits?)
 
  • #14
nucleargirl said:
yeah! I've never thought about this, but you never see in the news that someone was actually hurt by a ghost! yeah it must not happen very often at all cos otherwise we would all hear of it! yeah and the government doesn't see it as a risk to life - we're never taught how to protect ourselves against ghosts! If I ever get hurt by a ghost I'm complaining to my education system...

1) Happen very often? Try never.

2) See what as a risk to life? If it doesn't exist, how can it prove a threat to life? A ghost poses no more of a threat to human life than the chance of being impaled by a unicorn.

3) You can only defend against something that poses a real threat.
 
  • #15
jarednjames said:
1) Happen very often? Try never.

2) See what as a risk to life? If it doesn't exist, how can it prove a threat to life? A ghost poses no more of a threat to human life than the chance of being impaled by a unicorn.

3) You can only defend against something that poses a real threat.

Do you know what I think it is? People scare themselves to death! Cos I can see how it could happen to me if left unchecked - like people who believe in ghosts would see ghosts in their mind, and their brain could trick them into thinking they see a real ghost, and then they would be so shocked and scared that they could actually hurt themselves...
I mean as in if someone said they were actually hurt by a ghost, this is how it could happen.
 
  • #16
I can't and won't say ghosts do or don't exist. But I do know that recently, I saw something that can only best be described as "paranormal". I still don't believe in ghosts, OR paranormal, but my world of understanding has been turned upside down. Maybe there aren't ghosts. Maybe there ARE ghosts, and only .00001% of the population can see them. How do you prove, either way? Scientifically, I don't think you can. I believe it currently impossible.

I could tell you my story, but since you said
nucleargirl said:
I'll just get more freaked out... and won't be able to do anything by myself... lol.

I'll pass! :biggrin:

But even if they DO exist, I think you are safe sleeping at night, they aren't scary, our brains are. :)
 
  • #17
what happened! I want to know now! I'm always intrigued by ghosty things and horror movies even though I know they will mess me up!

Did it really happen? were you in a sound state of mind? (like not drunk/hallucinating)
What happened??
 
  • #18
How about I pm you when I get enough time to type up the story? :)

There were 3 of us, all of us were completely sober, and I was very scientific and methodical in my examining it. And the weirdest part of all, even with all the stories you can read on the internet, this one is unique. We had ghost hunters/paranormal hunters that wanted to come see if we could re create it, but my friend didn't want to. (she freaks out, too)

I know, I am the devil for making you wait. :D But work beckons.
 
  • #19
I would say there are definitely ghosts out there, and there is a select group of people that are able to see them and interact with them as well. It would be pretty hard to just make up some of the stories that I have been told within the past few years.
 
  • #20
Sniperman724 said:
I would say there are definitely ghosts out there,

Could you prove this or is this just you 'gut feeling'?

and there is a select group of people that are able to see them and interact with them as well.

Not really testable so how would you know they aren't making it up?

It would be pretty hard to just make up some of the stories that I have been told within the past few years.

It really wouldn't. You'd be surprised at the human imagination. Especially when looking for attention.
 
  • #21
nucleargirl said:
yeah! I've never thought about this, but you never see in the news that someone was actually hurt by a ghost! yeah it must not happen very often at all cos otherwise we would all hear of it! yeah and the government doesn't see it as a risk to life - we're never taught how to protect ourselves against ghosts! If I ever get hurt by a ghost I'm complaining to my education system...

Actually, claims that ghosts leave scratch marks, pull hair, or even pushed someone down a flight of stairs, do pop up from time to time. There are even people who have video taped welt marks as they appear. The default assumption is that this is some kind of trick.
 
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  • #22
Sniperman724 said:
It would be pretty hard to just make up some of the stories that I have been told within the past few years.

I think this is my new favorite quote.
 
  • #23
Ivan Seeking said:
Actually, claims that ghosts leave scratch marks, pull hair, or even pushed someone down a flight of stairs, do pop up from time to time. There are even people who have video taped welt marks as they appear. The default assumption is that this is some kind of trick.

Agree. It seems to be a common mental trick that you can perpetrate on yourself. Try standing perfectly still and you will feel all of the ticks in your body (due do differing potassium levels, if I remember my biochem). Feelings of being touched or having hair pulled is not overly hard to recreate.

I've only seen the scratch thing overtly faked once. The guy pulling up his shirt to show off the scratch just ran his fingernails over his skin as he lifted the shirt. If it can be faked once, it can be faked every time. Although, I'm willing to believe some people do it to themselves by accident when trying to investigate a "perceived touch."
 
  • #24
nucleargirl said:
what happened! I want to know now! I'm always intrigued by ghosty things and horror movies even though I know they will mess me up!

Did it really happen? were you in a sound state of mind? (like not drunk/hallucinating)
What happened??

Nucleargirl, sleep worriless at night.
Ghosts do not exist and dead bodies are really what they seem, dead.
If a thing has been called dead, it is because it is really dead, once for all.
For how sad it is, dead is a truth in our world, and nor me nor you nor everyone in the world today has the power to do much for it.

About the people claiming they saw ghosts and dead people, don't believe them.
People like to be told amazing stories about strange things because the world is, in the end, a boring place. Nothing new really happends, despite the fact we can travel, watch TV, use many wonder, the brain gets terrible bored in the world.

So, people get attention to whatever new things might happend. But 99.99999% of the time it is just false.
 
  • #26
A few of my friends have 'strange' ghost stories. Even my best friend 100% believes due to these 'trances' his parents go in. It actually happened again quite recently, he says he'd be sitting watching TV with his parents then all of a sudden his dad will just start staring into nothing, claiming to see the ghost of his dead father. The mum says she sometimes sees it too.

It's difficult for me to talk about it with him, since on one hand I want to tell him his parents have some serious mental issues, but on the other hand I don't understand why they would lie or make that up? It's quite hard to mistake a shadow for the ghost of your dead father who keeps appearing to you and speaking (even his mum and dad claiming to see the same thing)

I'm almost certain they don't exist due to the fact that people have been claiming to see them all the time for hundreds of years, and as of yet, there's no single piece of evidence to prove it. It's usually explainable by some trick of the eye or someone just completely lying.

How can I explain the supposed many times my friend's dad's dead father appears to him and his wife?
 
  • #27
Kaldanis said:
A few of my friends have 'strange' ghost stories. Even my best friend 100% believes due to these 'trances' his parents go in.

I would discount anything someone tells you that involves a trance. The "trance" phenomenon is well understood (closely related to "hypnotism") and has nothing to do with spirituality or the like. I would suggest you rely less on your best friends' world view.

Kaldanis said:
It's difficult for me to talk about it with him, since on one hand I want to tell him his parents have some serious mental issues, but on the other hand I don't understand why they would lie or make that up?

False dichotomy. There are other options besides "serious mental issues" and "lying." These people could be mildly delusional. They could be involved in the recreational drug scene. They might just be so emotionally destroyed that they hallucinate when in the right frame of mind.

The human brain is a miracle piece of cause-and-effect and stimulus-and-response. Never discount the nuances at play there. The human brain is the only machine (biological or otherwise) in which its observational and computational abilities can be affected significantly by it's emotional state.

Kaldanis said:
How can I explain the supposed many times my friend's dad's dead father appears to him and his wife?

It is not your responsibility to explain it.

Illusion 10%
Confusion 30%
Hallucination 50%
Hoax 10%

Frankly, if my dad were dead I would miss him terribly. If my brain were to "hiccup" and produce a vivid image of him, I would probably cling to it as well. Furthermore, I would likely fight off any attacks on the veracity of my claim.

You should express sympathy for your friend's loss, but encourage him to seek psychiatric help.
  • Supporting him while he seeks help could be very valuable.
  • But supporting his delusion would not be.
 
  • #28
I appologise if I didn't explain correctly, it's not my friend's dad who is dead, it's his grandfather. My friend's mum and dad are the two who frequently have these experiences. Especially the dad, he often wakes up and sees his father sitting on his bed, or just randomly when watching TV. Sometimes they both have claimed to see the same thing.

My friend frequently tells me his ghostly experiences and I give him other possible explanations (which he ignores), but with his dad and his dead grandfather it's a little harder to discuss it with him without him getting upset- so I just don't talk about that with him.

I will say this though, his family is very open to supernatural things. They aren't religious, but they often go to psychics and believe their horoscope. My friend is also easily spooked and very quick to think something supernatural is happening when there's any number of explanations. Maybe his family is just so inclined to think that way that they're more likey to have these experiences?
 
  • #29
If we believe we have a spirit, soul, or energy, then logically that essence must go somewhere when our mortal shell expires. I can also understand that when an entity has unfinished business, they would most probably become Earth bound spirits. I unfortunately have not had the opportunity of experience such a phenomena.
 
  • #30
Kaldanis said:
I will say this though, his family is very open to supernatural things. They aren't religious, but they often go to psychics and believe their horoscope.

images-1.jpe


Kaldanis said:
Maybe his family is just so inclined to think that way that they're more likey to have these experiences?

Would you apply that line of thinking to any other type of REAL experience? Allow me to replace "these experiences" with "other experiences."

  • Maybe his family is just so inclined to believe in fire that they're more likey to be burned to death
  • Maybe his family is just so inclined to believe in electricity that they're more likey to have have working light-bulbs

Do you see how ridiculous the statement is when you apply it to any other phenomenon?
 
  • #31
MASep101 said:
If we believe we have a spirit, soul, or energy

You have a long way to go to prove that humans have a spirit or soul... or "energy."

MASep101 said:
then logically that essence must go somewhere when our mortal shell expires.

Disagree strongly. Where does fire go when it's extinguished? Where does the light form the light-bulb go when you turn it off?

MASep101 said:
I can also understand that when an entity has unfinished business, they would most probably become Earth bound spirits.

Careful, you're in very deep tautological waters here.

EDIT: Welcome to the forums.
 
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  • #32
MASep101 said:
If we believe we have a spirit, soul, or energy, then logically that essence must go somewhere when our mortal shell expires. I can also understand that when an entity has unfinished business, they would most probably become Earth bound spirits. I unfortunately have not had the opportunity of experience such a phenomena.

I agree with flex on this one. I'm seeing nothing logical in your argument and it would take serious proof to back any of it up.
 
  • #33
FlexGunship said:
Do you see how ridiculous the statement is when you apply it to any other phenomenon?

I partly agree. Just because someone is more open to supernatural occurances certainly doesn't make them more likely to see something so spefic and detailed such as the ghost of a dead family member. I do however think it makes them more likely to explain simple things with the supernatural. For example, my friend regularly hears some kind of 'tapping' in his walls or on the bathroom door, and he immediately put this down to the ghost of his dead grandfather trying to communicate with him.
 
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  • #34
Kaldanis said:
I partly agree. Just because someone is more open to supernatural occurances certainly doesn't make them more likely to see something so spefic and detailed the ghost of a dead family member. I do however think it makes them more likely to explain simple things with the supernatural. For example, my friend regularly hears some kind of 'tapping' in his walls or on the bathroom door, and he immediately put this down to the ghost of his dead grandfather trying to communicate with him.

I think I see what you're saying. You're saying that they are more likely to interpret an event as supernatural (regardless of whether or not it is) because of their credulity. You are not proposing that their belief in the supernatural actually increases their chance of an "Actual event."

The way in which your friend's family is living is really kind of depressing. I'm not trying to pass judgement, but you can tell that they are prisoners of unreasonable belief. I grew up next door to a woman that lived like this. She had collected "lucky charms" and had short rituals that she believed would give her a better chance of surviving the day.

Honestly, that type of life is only a few short steps from obsessive-compulsive behavior. For example: the neurological imperative that you must not spill salt or break mirrors is not much different than the neurological imperative to touch a door knob three times before opening it.

You should not be embarrassed to suggest this to your friend. If you honestly have his best interest in mind, then suggesting moderate psychiatric evaluation is a compassionate effort.

Look, let me be clear, given the proliferation of "supernatural media" belief is not crazy in and of itself. In fact, it's a common human experience (we all love cool mysteries even if we invent them for ourselves). But your friend and his family seem to have taken it to an unhealthy level so much so that it's impacting their mental health.

Pose the following question to your friend the next time he reports something supernatural to you, ask him how his experience would be different if it were water in pipes, the house settling, or mice in the ceiling. Ask him to tell you how he decides between the two... what criteria does he use?
 
  • #35
FlexGunship said:
I think I see what you're saying. You're saying that they are more likely to interpret an event as supernatural (regardless of whether or not it is) because of their credulity. You are not proposing that their belief in the supernatural actually increases their chance of an "Actual event."

The way in which your friend's family is living is really kind of depressing. I'm not trying to pass judgement, but you can tell that they are prisoners of unreasonable belief. I grew up next door to a woman that lived like this. She had collected "lucky charms" and had short rituals that she believed would give her a better chance of surviving the day.

Honestly, that type of life is only a few short steps from obsessive-compulsive behavior. For example: the neurological imperative that you must not spill salt or break mirrors is not much different than the neurological imperative to touch a door knob three times before opening it.

You should not be embarrassed to suggest this to your friend. If you honestly have his best interest in mind, then suggesting moderate psychiatric evaluation is a compassionate effort.

Look, let me be clear, given the proliferation of "supernatural media" belief is not crazy in and of itself. In fact, it's a common human experience (we all love cool mysteries even if we invent them for ourselves). But your friend and his family seem to have taken it to an unhealthy level so much so that it's impacting their mental health.

Pose the following question to your friend the next time he reports something supernatural to you, ask him how his experience would be different if it were water in pipes, the house settling, or mice in the ceiling. Ask him to tell you how he decides between the two... what criteria does he use?

Actually, what you're describing sounds like OCD to me, or at least some form of anxiety disorder. Without knowing how this person would react when kept from her rituals it's hard to say, but it seems fairly clear-cut.

In the case of Kaldanis' friend, it's probably far more benign and simple: you miss a relative, and so when you hear something which is (for that person) inexplicable, you go to something comforting: "grandma is still around". To me, they are very different scenarios.
 
  • #36
nismaratwork said:
In the case of Kaldanis' friend, it's probably far more benign and simple: you miss a relative, and so when you hear something which is (for that person) inexplicable, you go to something comforting: "grandma is still around". To me, they are very different scenarios.

At it's heart, ghost-belief is superstition. It's the act of anthropomorphizing your environment. I understand some people disagree in premise, but if you accept the idea that "ghosts aren't real" then there isn't a significant difference between thinking a ghost is interfering with your life, and thinking that your broken mirror will haunt you for 7 years interfering with your life (I've never understood that mechanism... how is a mirror supposed to cause bad luck? And after it's broken no less).
 
  • #37
FlexGunship said:
At it's heart, ghost-belief is superstition. It's the act of anthropomorphizing your environment. I understand some people disagree in premise, but if you accept the idea that "ghosts aren't real" then there isn't a significant difference between thinking a ghost is interfering with your life, and thinking that your broken mirror will haunt you for 7 years interfering with your life (I've never understood that mechanism... how is a mirror supposed to cause bad luck?).

I agree completely, but when it comes to people having "wacky beliefs" vs. an illness, we always must ask if the issue is clinically significant; is this interfering with their quality of life? Your example of the lucky charm women screams "yes" to me, the ghost tapping... eh, not so much.

As for the mirror thing, I have no idea, but if I were to float a guess without even the aid of Google.. maybe because glass mirrors were very valuable at some point? I'm going to check google now...

*real time delay*

AND wow was I wrong.

Wisegeek.com said:
The origin of the "break a mirror, face seven years of bad luck" superstition can be traced back to the Romans, who were the first to create glass mirrors. Just because your culture invents something totally useful like a mirror doesn't mean you can't still have some irrational beliefs about its use. The Romans, along with the Greek, Chinese, African and Indian cultures, believed that a mirror had the power to confiscate part of the user's soul. If the user's reflected image became distorted in any way, this could mean a corruption of his or her soul.

To make bad matters even worse, if the user should break a mirror it would mean his or her soul would be trapped inside the Bizarro world the mirror represented. Essentially, a broken mirror created a broken soul, which in turn lead to the broken health of the unfortunate user. The Romans also believed that a person's physical body renewed itself every seven years, so under that criteria it would take seven years before the user's soul would be fully restored. Up until then, life for a mirror breaker would be one long string of unfortunate events, since he or she no longer had a healthy soul to ward off spiritual evil-doers.

I am way too practical for this superstitious ****. I checked with other sources, and this is the most common explanation. Oh well, my guesswork is pitiful.
 
  • #38
nismaratwork said:
I am way too practical for this superstitious ****.

There's nothing like the reactions of people as I walk under a ladder. I honestly don't know what they're expecting to happen to me. My only concern is the plonker on top of it drops a tin of paint on my head!
 
  • #39
jarednjames said:
There's nothing like the reactions of people as I walk under a ladder. I honestly don't know what they're expecting to happen to me. My only concern is the plonker on top of it drops a tin of paint on my head!

You know, even people who aren't in the least superstitious seem to flinch... I love that.
 
  • #40
After watching a show such as Ghost Hunters or a ghost film, I always find myself walking around my house in the dark (usually on my way to bed) and every sound / light startles me (I don't believe in ghosts at all, just get really immersed in the film - particularly a good horror). Normally, I just walk around and not care what goes on around me, most of the times sounds and lights around me don't even register that strongly with me.

I can fully understand how a person who believes in ghosts and is totally immersed in their beliefs could be constantly seeing little 'oddities' around them as paranormal and proof that ghosts exist. I don't think this is a psychiatric issue and requires any treatment, it's no different to a religious belief. As with religion, I'd go as far to say that most people just use it so they don't have to face the fact that once you die that's it. They need an afterlife / possibility of something more to help them accept death.

Personally I don't see a problem with people believing in ghosts, I just wish they'd stop pushing clearly explainable evidence as proof of ghosts existence.
 
  • #41
jarednjames said:
After watching a show such as Ghost Hunters or a ghost film, I always find myself walking around my house in the dark (usually on my way to bed) and every sound / light startles me (I don't believe in ghosts at all, just get really immersed in the film - particularly a good horror). Normally, I just walk around and not care what goes on around me, most of the times sounds and lights around me don't even register that strongly with me.

I can fully understand how a person who believes in ghosts and is totally immersed in their beliefs could be constantly seeing little 'oddities' around them as paranormal and proof that ghosts exist. I don't think this is a psychiatric issue and requires any treatment, it's no different to a religious belief. As with religion, I'd go as far to say that most people just use it so they don't have to face the fact that once you die that's it. They need an afterlife / possibility of something more to help them accept death.

Personally I don't see a problem with people believing in ghosts, I just wish they'd stop pushing clearly explainable evidence as proof of ghosts existence.

I'd just settle for an end to these awful television "ghost hunter" programs.
 
  • #42
Yep, they're all rubbish. Although I will say, I do get a good laugh out of them.

I'd like to see a good scientific investigation of a series of 'haunted' locations. Properly conducted, closed environment, covered in cameras, none of this emf rubbish. That's all it would take. Just get a few random people to walk around and 'stir things up' so to speak, if anything happens, it's there on tape. Wouldn't take much. But no, they'd rather send in a bunch of people with the shakiest, low quality cameras going and let them run around a building they haven't truly secured.

Or just cover these places sightings take place in cameras. If I was told people kept seeing some figure walking up and down my stairs every now and then, I'd have myself a full CCTV kit constantly watching the area. No one ever seems to do that. I bet the haunting claims would die out fairly quickly.
 
  • #43
jarednjames said:
I can fully understand how a person who believes in ghosts and is totally immersed in their beliefs could be constantly seeing little 'oddities' around them as paranormal and proof that ghosts exist. I don't think this is a psychiatric issue and requires any treatment, it's no different to a religious belief.

Except that in this particular instance it has led to unhealthy behavior; see below.

Kaldanis said:
My friend frequently tells me his ghostly experiences and I give him other possible explanations (which he ignores), but with his dad and his dead grandfather it's a little harder to discuss it with him without him getting upset- so I just don't talk about that with him.

I will say this though, his family is very open to supernatural things. They aren't religious, but they often go to psychics and believe their horoscope. My friend is also easily spooked and very quick to think something supernatural is happening when there's any number of explanations

He ignores rational explanations, he's gets upset when discussing his passed grandfather, the family goes to psychics and make decisions based on their horoscopes. He's easily spooked and attributes things around him to intentional mechanics.

This is not a recipe for a healthy mental state.
 
  • #44
What's unhealthy about what you have quoted there? Ignoring other possible explanations for the ghostly experiences is no difference to religious people ignoring science.

They go to psychics and believe their horoscope? I don't see what's wrong with that. I don't believe in any of it, but it isn't unhealthy behaviour.

Easily spooked and always goes for the supernatural explanation, I just see this as him being brought up in an environment which has told him that is the explanation and no other one will suffice. I agree, not a good way of thinking but then if that's how he wants to be it doesn't affect anyone else.

I'm just not seeing the problem here. (Except the belief in ghosts :biggrin:)
 
  • #45
jarednjames said:
What's unhealthy about what you have quoted there?

FlexGunship said:
Except that in this particular instance it has led to unhealthy behavior; see below.

Am I reading into this too much? Maybe, but Kaldanis posted here with sincere concern for his friend. I dated a girl with schizophrenia a while ago (not for very long since her disorder severely comprised her ability to maintain interpersonal relationships) and his friend is showing a lot of the signs of a sub-type called paranoid schizophrenia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paranoid_schizophrenia).

If his daily behavior has grown to include this type of behavior then they could be precursors to serious mental health concerns. The worst part is that his parents seem to encourage it. Schizophrenia can be made better or worse depending upon environmental variables. One of the key factors in schizophrenia is "reality distortion" and this guy seems to have it in spades.

Disclaimer: I'm not a mental health specialist, so take what I say with a grain of rock salt. I'm just trying to express concern for accepting that type of lifestyle unreservedly.
 
  • #46
He ignores rational explanations

So do most religions.

he's gets upset when discussing his passed grandfather

I don't know many people who wouldn't be.

the family goes to psychics and make decisions based on their horoscopes

He said "believes horoscopes", not makes decisions on them (I'll retract this if you know where he said about decisions, but I can't remember it). Belief in a horoscope can simply mean they've read it and then if something happens to coincide with what is written, however vague "you will have good luck today", they will remember it and consider it to prove the horoscope correct.

He's easily spooked.

So is my sister, don't see a problem, she's just afraid of the dark.

and attributes things around him to intentional mechanics.

This to me is covered by your first point.

This just says his friend has been brought up to believe in the paranormal and has simply grown to accept every little thing to be so.
 
  • #47
jarednjames said:
So do most [...] paranormal and has simply grown to accept every little thing to be so.

Like I said Jared and James, I'm not trying to make a diagnosis here, but the coincidence of all of these symptoms leads me to believe the person is not experiencing the same reality that we all share.

True, there are nuances of human experience and that most people fall along a wide spectrum, but it seems like this particular individual has found the extreme end in every case.

Regarding him being upset about discussing his grandfather; I didn't mean to seem callous, but the original post indicated that he believed his grandfather had survived death and was visiting him and that any effort to dissuade him from this idea caused him to become upset. Grief is normal, and I experienced it tremendously when each of my grandfathers died, but I eventually came to terms with it. I don't claim either of them to be alive and visiting me.

That's how I interpreted it, anyway. Maybe I'm wrong.
 
  • #48
FlexGunship said:
Jared and James

My name is Jared Nathan James.

At least that's what I'd attribute my username choice to. Otherwise it's my subconscious trying to tell me I have a closet multiple personality disorder. :eek:
 
  • #49
nismaratwork said:
As for the mirror thing, I have no idea, but if I were to float a guess without even the aid of Google.. maybe because glass mirrors were very valuable at some point? I'm going to check google now...

*real time delay*

AND wow was I wrong.



I am way too practical for this superstitious ****. I checked with other sources, and this is the most common explanation. Oh well, my guesswork is pitiful.
You weren't wrong nismar. Attributing the 7 years of bad luck to the Romans appears to be misinformation that has been spread through the internet. It never ceases to amaze me how misinformation can get repeated so quickly and widely on the internet that even otherwise reliable sources become guilty of spreading the misinformation.

I have always been a history buff, with an interest in superstitions and the occult. Prior to the internet, there was nothing ever claiming the romans as being responsible for the 7 years of bad luck. I don't know when this new myth was created but it's not the origin.

Here is what I could find quickly on the origin of the 7 years of bad luck.

The looking-glass is one of the handful of domestic items which have attracted more than their fair share of beliefs. Opie and Tatem identify fourteen different superstitions, and unlike those associated with the fire, many of them can be shown to date back a long time. One of the best-known and often-quoted superstitions of the late 20th century is that breaking a mirror brings seven years bad luck, and this was the third most often reported item in our Superstitions Survey 1998/9. The earliest known reference to this being unlucky comes from 1777, and it has been regularly reported ever since, but the ‘seven years’ is not mentioned until the mid-19th century (Sternberg, 1851: 172). Previous to that time, it was said to mean a death, or simply to be very unlucky.

http://www.answers.com/topic/mirror

Some information on Roman beliefs http://www.roman-empire.net/religion/superstitions.html

Now my interest is piqued as to who started this new mirror "myth". I may do more sniffing around.
 
  • #50
Evo said:
You weren't wrong nismar. Attributing the 7 years of bad luck to the Romans appears to be misinformation that has been spread through the internet. It never ceases to amaze me how misinformation can get repeated so quickly and widely on the internet that even otherwise reliable sources become guilty of spreading the misinformation.

I have always been a history buff, with an interest in superstitions and the occult. Prior to the internet, there was nothing ever claiming the romans as being responsible for the 7 years of bad luck. I don't know when this new myth was created but it's not the origin.

Here is what I could find quickly on the origin of the 7 years of bad luck.



http://www.answers.com/topic/mirror

Some information on Roman beliefs http://www.roman-empire.net/religion/superstitions.html

Now my interest is piqued as to who started this new mirror "myth". I may do more sniffing around.

Wow... I think I'll do some of that sniffing myself. Truly the internet is a double-edged sword. Thanks for checking on this... I admit I was surprised at first by what I found, but I won't lie, if you hadn't posted I might have been another agent spreading this little bit of misinformation.

:!) @ Evo :!)

Thank you!
 
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