whereas there's something creepy about an obsessive collector having certain things - concentration camp memorabilia particularly. It's not limited to the 'bad guys', though. Some of the creepiest people I've ever met were obsessives for the allied stuff, guys who fantasised about being in their own Hollywood version of WW2 where they could get to kill people and be praised for it because their intended victims would be the bad people. There's something very wrong indeed about anyone who would actively relish killing someone, irrespective of who. Killing for the enjoyment of killing, irrespective of any arguments over justice. Creepy.
... Theorists speak of our "psychic footprint" and "reciprocal influences" in what we do, how we do it and it's lasting effect on other people's lives and also our environment. ...
Something like that, yeah.
same with Bayonets and knives from the war, Some of them tasted blood..you dont want those lying around the place.
My brother-in-law purchased a bayonet from Gettysburg, and it came with a ghost of a man who had been killed by the bayonet. I saw that ghost on a couple of times and had some interesting interactions with the ghost (that scared the bejibbers out of me).
I personally never see, hear, or smell anything caused by paranormal sources, but I can't say ones who experience all that are lying or have overactive imagination, or what they experience should all be able to be explained logically.
It would be the same like saying HBO doesn't exist just because I don't have a subscription with cable tv to decode it. We have limited senses, dog hears and smells much better than we do, cat and owl can see in the dark much better than we do, snake can detect heat sources with their tongue, what are we to use our selves as the ultimate standard to decide things exist or not exist.... so I personally keep an open mind toward all things, and feeling blessed not being sensitive enough to experience all those scary things.
You see, this is exactly the type of thing that stops me from criticizing people who have ghost stories.
Don't get me wrong, my logical, scientific brain says that all such stories are baloney that can be explained by psychology, science, or they are just plain old 'marketing', because the fact is that I have never knowingly seen a 'ghost'.
But people I know have. My father saw the ghost of a dead colleague at work, my mother saw the ghost of my fathers grandmother, and a pilot at a WW2 airfield converted into a factory, and three Air Force buddies saw an alien.
So I want to say all these stories are rubbish, but if I do, I have to doubt the testimony of people I'd otherwise trust with my life, and that's a mental jolt.
You see, this is exactly the type of thing that stops me from criticizing people who have ghost stories.
Don't get me wrong, my logical, scientific brain says that all such stories are baloney that can be explained by psychology, science, or they are just plain old 'marketing', because the fact is that I have never knowingly seen a 'ghost'.
But people I know have. My father saw the ghost of a dead colleague at work, my mother saw the ghost of my fathers grandmother, and a pilot at a WW2 airfield converted into a factory, and three Air Force buddies saw an alien.
So I want to say all these stories are rubbish, but if I do, I have to doubt the testimony of people I'd otherwise trust with my life, and that's a mental jolt.
I would never in a million years put on a Nazi uniform.What about jacket "karma"? Would anyone be hesitant to own/wear a piece of militaria that had an infamous history, for example, an SS concentration camp guard's uniform?
Sorry for necroing stupid old thread, i just watched "paranormal caught on camera" season 2 episode 9
There it was.... a case of haunted thrifted leather jacket.