Long before spiritualism or paranormal investigation, there was a complete art called sciomancy that investigated and attempted to resolve disturbances caused by unquiet spirits of the dead, known as revenants or ghosts. Sciomancy is the lesser-known of the two branches of medieval necromancy (not to be confused with the practice of divining by shadows, which shares the same name). This ancient art is as relevant today as it was in the Middle Ages, and has influenced the development of subsequent local traditions. In Britain, the method of bringing peace to a troubled spirit is known as Laying Ghosts, a practice that has spread across the seas, from generation to generation. It is from ...
When the conditions are right, spirits who wish to interact certainly will. It is a natural process, just as it will rain when atmospheric conditions are fitting. The relationship of human beings and spirits has always existed, and always will. The way in which a spirit becomes visible follows a universal pattern of manifestation comprising progressive stages. This pattern applies regardless of whether it is a human spirit or one of the other sublunary entities. All these stages of manifestation occur at one simultaneous moment, but our perception and the environmental conditions dictate what we see. It is apparent the spirit does not have control of this process, nor are they affected ...
Hello! For those of you who do not know me, my name is Daryl Marston; I'm the former co-lead investigator of the A&E network TV series Ghost Hunters, and the author of The Horrors of the House of Wills. In almost every interview I have done over the years, I was always asked what my most chilling paranormal investigation was; my answer was always The House of Wills in Cleveland, Ohio. For years, I was also asked to write a book about this location and investigation. I have investigated over 400 locations in the almost twenty years that I have been investigating the paranormal, but nothing has come close to being as dark of a location as The House of Wills. When people ask me what it ...
Every paranormal investigator is asked, "Where's the scariest place you've ever investigated?" There's always one location that gets to you, follows you home, and beckons you to come back, even though the thought of it gives you chills and you've told yourself to not think about it. From the get-go, mine was always Fort Delaware. It was my first investigation, and was where I had my first real paranormal experience. It still calls me back. But we all have that one location that shakes an investigator to our core. If it hasn't happened yet, it will, and when it does, it quite possibly can make or break you, if you let it. This location almost broke me, in more ways than one. I was torn if ...