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    And the Compass Turns to Nowhere That You Know Well…


    2009 - 11.18

    In Celtic circles, November is the beginning of a new year. And thus far, the month has been a time of further great change for me. Finding time for blogging hasn’t changed, though. Coupled with a dash of writer’s block and feeling completely worn down, I simply haven’t had much energy to devote to Spooked! Maybe the culmination of all the events of the year have led me to this very point, where I’m back to where I began: uncertain of the future and longing for change.

    And change itself is something we love and loathe. While we hope things will become better or different in a positive sense, we are ever fearful of reaching outside our comfort zone. There is danger and risk outside the known bubble in which we exist. Calamity and heartache, rebirth and different scenery. Which is why so few people ever step toward that great horizon and dare to see what could be. It can be a great adventure… or an incredible disaster.

    I am often guilty of wavering on issues and directions. I contemplate too much. But there’s a good reason for it. I can see all sides of most situations and moves, and there’s never a perfect decision to be made. For every step we take, there can be both joy and pain. What brings happiness to some leaves other individuals damaged, battered, or bruised. Change itself is one of those risky behaviors our school teachers warned us about. We hate the people who refuse to change while chastising those who do. We question the purpose of mending the wall while keeping with the status quo.
    I often ask myself where I will be in another year, another decade. I have no sure answer. A dozen trails lay before me and I could follow any one of them at any given time. There is no “safe path” except inaction. And oh, how I loathe stagnation. But I’m the dreamer, the surrealist. My life won’t follow a course of normality. I don’t want my life to be average. Yet I pay the price time and time again. And therein lies the trick to leading an alternative existence: understanding the risks involved and weighing your options. Sometimes, it’s important to take the plunge into a new pool. It’s up to each of us to decide whether to check and make sure it’s filled with water first, though.

    As winter fast approaches, I have a great many things to ponder. I have new projects to work on and important decisions to make. And honestly, I have no idea what the outcome of any of it will be. The only thing I know for sure is that any choices I make carry permanent risk and damage. In the end, I will follow what I believe to be best. Perhaps it’s being selfish, but they will be the decisions best for my own life. Of course, I will be considering how it will impact everyone else close to me. Given my nature, I can’t help but ponder the ripples through my own private ecosystem. Each path we forge or stream we reroute effects our world.

    In retrospect, the past year has been a bit terrifying at times. I’ve taken chances for the first time in what feels like centuries. I set a dinghy out among clippers and schooners in the literary world and managed not to sink, ventured beyond the United States and explored and loved and lost, and navigated the East Coast solo. None of these were without a few bumps along the way, but I survived. Adventure is like heroin, and I’m finding myself addicted. I need more exploration in my life to feel fulfilled. As for what kinds of adventure it will mean next year, that remains to be seen.

    Heavy Cloud But No Rain…


    2009 - 08.08

    As life leads us through those little pathways in the woods, we never quite know where the trails will lead us. Sometimes, what seems to be the surest, best-worn footpath ends up at a dead end… or worse, leads to a grassy meadow where no trail can be found. And there, we’re left to wander for a spell, avoiding spiders and snakes and stinging insects in the blazing sun until we find some faded walkway to follow once more.

    It has been an interesting few weeks… and I regretfully tell you all that the video posts I was planning will have to wait. Life has shifted in many ways for me at the moment, but through all the changes, I have to say that I do not regret anything. Honestly. I have a pile of incredibly wonderful memories from the recent past to make me smile and some wonderful people in my life. Perhaps things have changed from “certain” to “lost in the woods” in some areas of my life, but in some level, it all has been worth it. Life is a risk. A life without chances might be safe, but never answers those “what-if” questions. I’d rather have spent my life stepping off the edge once in a while and not finding solid ground beneath me than taking a safe route and never experiencing life’s joys, loves, and aches.

    I have also had some time to think. And what have I concluded? Mainly, that I’m rather confused about my own path… and disappointed at the person I’ve become as of late. I feel the need for reinvention and want to do some changing with my appearance, life, etc. yet am not sure how exactly I’ll be doing that. I dislike how I’ve foregone my own opinions and beliefs to please those around me and avoid arguments for so long that I’ve lost my spark, my trailblazing spirit that took so long to develop. I’ve slipped back down a gravel slope toward passivity, and it wasn’t until someone I care about held a mirror to my face that I realized who I had become. I hated what I saw. But I needed to see it. I’m truly sorry for any grief it caused.

    And even more, I hate that I’ve lost my chipper, blogging habits. I lost the point of this whole blog: to find amusement in the mundane and laugh at some incredibly absurd things about life and death. For that, I apologize to my readers. Life is too serious. We all deal with depression, stress, grief, pain and unbelievable heartache constantly in our lives. It doesn’t get better or worse as you age. Ignoring it won’t make it disappear, but dwelling on it doesn’t make it better. Accept life and people for what they are… find the beauty and wonderful sides to everyone to avoid turning bitter… and most importantly, never forget to laugh.

    It’s a strange world out there. And during terrible times, humor is often the only thing to save us from total destruction.

    Travel is Fatal to Melancholia…


    2009 - 06.12

    After successfully eluding the blogosphere for neigh two weeks now, I think it’s about time I spilled about my trip up north. While some photos of my trip are on my Flickr page, I haven’t divulged any other details. If I continue to put it off, people might actually think I had a terrible time. And that would be far from the truth.

    Honestly, I’ve learned that greyhound might be an inexpensive form of transportation, but you truly do get what you pay for. my trip to Ottawa lasted nearly 18 hours, most of which was spent crammed uncomfortably in a seat with zero legroom. With layovers and stops, sleep was not a possibility. I did nap briefly, but that was all. If anyone is considering a long trip, I highly suggest shelling out the extra money for Amtrak. It might take just as long, but the difference is night and day.

    In some ways, Canada feels like a different world. Take the good parts of the United States, add a splash of Europe, and there you have it. Upon arriving in Ottawa, it was time to check in at Home Sweetland Home Bed & Breakfast. It’s housed in a beautiful 1895 home in a quiet neighborhood near the University of Ottawa. Brian and Sid were wonderful hosts, and open about their ghostly inhabitants. After a much-needed shower, we chatted for a while before dinner time. I had forgotten to eat that day, so I needed some kind of fuel to make it through the rest of the day.

    I was lucky to have a terrific sidekick/tour guide (and then some), Marc, along with me for the journey. There is no possible way for me to condense the entire week into a few words. The weather was perfect (aside from that one evening rushing back in the rain, soaked to the skin), as was the scenery and company. As far as ghosts are concerned, not much happened at the inn. I did hear a loud bang on what seemed to be the outside wall of the room late one night, but I can’t be sure what it was. A paranormal group did investigate prior to my visit and recorded a bit of evidence, though I diidn’t have the same good fortune. Then again, when you travel light (and don’t exactly want to spend your first time in a city surrounded by death), it’s not so easy to document everything.

    The two of us also attended the Haunted Walk of Ottawa, a daily event operated by a wonderful little company. I had some great conversations with both employees and participants, managing to snap a few photographs of some of the buildings as we went. The city holds a plethora of strange, eerie, and interesting historical tales. Earlier in the week, Marc and I stopped by Bytown Museum and the staff relayed some information about its ghosts. Hopefully, on my return trip, I’ll be setting my sights on an investigation there. They were kind enough to give me the contact information for going about that… and, considering I didn’t get much investigating in this time, it would make up for it. But I did get a few souvenirs: a copy of Ghosts of Ottawa and a mug from the tour gift shop.

    There was simply too much to see in one week: Sparks Street, Parliament Hill, Gatineau, dozens of museums, the Rideau Canal, Rideau Falls, the Ottawa River, and so much more. Trying to see everything at once would’ve been too overwhelming. Part of me feels I’ve missed out on a great deal of things, but that side is comforted by knowing I’ll return again. I was tempted to see if the walking tour was hiring, but decided against pressing my luck. but yes; if I found employment in Ottawa or nearby, I would be extremely tempted to live there. A safe, clean, friendly, bilingual city. And some of the best memories of the recent past happened during my week there. great conversations and revelations, nice restaurants, being flirted with by a female mallard duck (long story… you had to be there), walking across Alexandra Bridge (beautiful view and not the slightest fear of heights that day… wonder why), a late lunch at the wonderful Le Twist in Gatineau (if you go to Ottawa, you MUST go there… great staff, good food, and gay-friendly/-operated), sleepless nights not brought on by insomnia or stress, beautiful things to look at…

    As you can imagine, the return trip was unwelcomed.

    There are only so many ways to say “I’m glad I went”. But I can’t say it enough. The past few years have had rough times and stressful moments, yet this marked a major turning point deep inside me. Sadly, it has also marked a period of apathy toward blogging. Perhaps all these years of babbling about silly, stupid things or humorous morose moments in the world drained me of my death obsessions. or maybe, when things in your life suddenly are positive, you’re not so eager to think about the afterlife and death. I’m sure it’s just needing a break from the literary meanderings of my mind. It’s not easy to poke fun at the world when you don’t feel like thinking about everything else. Things truly are looking up in my life. While part of me wants to get back to the humorous news stories and quirky paranormal bits, I feel sapped of the energy. Priorities have tilted. I miss life and the living. Being chained down to a computer, researching and relaying morbid things isn’t as high on my list. I feel the need to branch out more, expanding my horizons.

    And so, therein lies my current quandary. I know I need to take the time to get back to blogging about the standard posts for which this blog has become known. Still… I’m a bit too happy to do it! Living life is far more enjoyable than writing about it. Experiencing people, places, cultures, history, and everything inbetween gives greater pleasure than glaring at the glow from a laptop. And once that ball begins rolling, it’s hard to turn the path around. Somewhere, I’ll achieve balance again. Perhaps once the afterglow I’ve been basking in wears off. For now, life takes some precedence over death. Ghouls must go to the back of the line; I need more living to recharge myself, and to figure out not only where exactly I’m going but how on earth I’m going to get there…

    Don’t Drink and Divine…


    2009 - 04.10

    Last night was a nice break for me; a nice dinner out at a fitting restaurant and a quick swing by a haunted spot. I’ve had a lot on my mind lately, and too much to do at the same time. Even for a few hours, it was good to get away from deadlines and the daily grind. I decided to go ahead and have a Foster’s (the eco-friendly beer) with dinner which gave me a little happy glow.

    Back home, I decided to do another mini Tarot experiment. The result, however, wasn’t too positive. I flipped through a few 1937 Zener cards afterward and did horribly (odds lower than chance), so I figured I’d give it another shot in the morning after the beer was out of my system. Even though I wasn’t anywhere near drunk, alcohol does effect the mind.

    For the past month, I’ve been thinking a lot about something I want to plan out for 10 months in the future. Right now, it’s just a goal, but after glancing at prices last night, it’s entirely doable. So, I felt compelled to give my trusty Rider-Waite deck a spin, and see if it had anything interesting to say. The three cards were quite intriguing and I’m highlighting what I think it important out of all the possible interpretations of each:

    1. Taste, inclination, attachment, seduction, deception, artifice.
    2. Stability, power, protection; a great person; aid, reason, conviction.
    3. Expedition, dispatch, achievement, end.

    Not having mentioned what it is exactly that I was focusing on, it might not make any sense to the casual observer. But knowing the one thing I was questioning, it makes perfect sense. Of course, we shall wait and see how true it all is. By summer, I’ll discuss it more in-depth. No putting the cart before the horse this time!

    Otherwise, my busy month is pushing forward. The next two weeks will pass at breakneck pace with a constant stream of work, travel, etc. meanwhile, I have an interesting new book to read when time permits and projects to tackle. Somewhere in the whole mess, I need to find time for a ghost hunt with a few long-absent friends who are back here to stay. But for now, work beckons, as does that cheesecake to bake for an Easter family gathering…

    Random Acts of Unkindness…


    2009 - 03.24

    Tell the truth and shame the devil.

    I find myself using that phrase quite a lot. While we desire to live by that phrase, we often live contrary to it. Truth can hurt and cause strain or argument. It can be a lot uglier than a lie. It’s easier to say, but a tough pill to swallow.

    So many times in our lives, we have the opportunity to open our mouths and let something spill forth. It often does. We later worry that those words will travel through the cosmos, or even casual banter, to the very ears they weren’t meant to reach. But it does happen occasionally. Why? Because people like to talk. People don’t act as we think they will all the time. Sometimes, words become weapons. Not always a dagger thrust into someone’s chest, but a grenade tossed idly by the roadside. Still, it can find its target.

    Always be careful what you say. Words haunt us worse than ghosts in the host haunted house known to humankind. While ghosts fade, words ring in the ears for all of time. Sometimes, karma is listening. Sometimes those spoken about. A person need not respond to digest the vocabulary. But they often don’t forget. It can happen in a random moment on a random day years after the fact. Words do not have an expiration date.

    We all have the ability to be wicked or evil in deeds and spoken sounds. Most of us suppress it. But we all slip. And when that minor loose tongue wags and its voice finds the appropriate ear, unrelated things make sense, sometimes. Puzzling equations become rudimentary; simple arithmetic makes a blunder. A new reality is formed… and it’s up to the possessor to decide what, if anything, to do with it.

    A House of Cards…


    2009 - 03.24

    Today is just… odd. Yesterday’s plans dissipated. And I’m feeling a bit strange about everything. I haven’t heard from my friend in over 36 hours.

    I canceled on Monday night with a bad stomach ache and some slight uneasiness. Perhaps I nodded off for a while, but I swear I heard the muffled sound of someone calling my name three or four times around midnight, but I could chalk that one up to arguing downstairs neighbors. Last night, I decided, for old time’s sake, to drag out the old tarot deck. I pulled three cards at random.

    Of the 78 cards in a deck, odds are slim that the first card pulled out would be one specific one. I felt a prolonged and uneasy “oookay” escape my lips. Half of me says, “It’s just a tarot deck,” while the other half thinks back to the several times they’ve been dead-on. The point of me bringing it up in the first place isn’t some “believe… believe in the tarot…” rant or anything like it. I just would rather mention it ahead of time, just in case. If I said anything after the fact, it could lose its charm. Not that such a word is a good choice.

    In some ways, “it’s all a bunch of hocus pocus”. Anyone who has ever read tarot can tell you that it’s wide-open to interpretation. No card says any one exact thing. They give a variety of choices. You arrive at your own opinions from them, and see what happens. Deep down, I have two scenarios for the disappearance of my friend which won’t go away. But I’ll wait until something definite is said before I assume anything.

    Sometimes, not knowing is a bad thing. But knowing can be worse. Ignorance is bliss, while those who are aware of everything tend to be more miserable from having such opened eyes. For now, I don’t know anything about the past two days. And until I do, I’ll try my best to be blissfully ignorant.

    "Hello. I’d Like to Have an Argument."


    2009 - 03.19

    It’s been another one of those crazy weeks. People disappearing, people popping up out of nowhere, health problems with people around me, and the usual insanity I call my life. And then, I made the mistake last weekend of answering a question on an online forum: do you believe in ghosts? I said more than just ‘yes’.

    In hindsight, it was a bad idea. Many people respond in grunts, syllables, or not at all to statements that they know will lead to arguments or complaints. One-word responses leave little to fight over. But some people just like arguing.

    What followed was a prolonged attack since, apparently, stating that I’m a “paranormal investigator” automatically means I speak on behalf of every parapsychologist, researcher, professor, scientist, writer, ghost hunter, and anyone else (alive or dead) in any way connected to the field. The same old arguments rehashed a billion times flung at me, demanding ultimate “proof”. But, of course, it wasn’t in a polite discourse; it’s the typical heckling of someone who, no matter what is presented to them, remains convinced that you’re an idiot.

    I see we haven’t changed much since the Puritans. Witch hunts are still happening. Different is bad. In only a few sentences stating my opinions, I instantly turned into Frankenstein’s monster. What do you do? If you walk away, you’re supposedly admitting “that they are right”, but if you stand and defend yourself, you’re “absurd”. It’s a lose-lose situation. But it comes from speaking your mind and being a part of this field. Opening your mouth makes you a target of torch-bearing townsfolk rallying to “burn the witch”.

    I hate arguing. Especially when it’s pointless or when someone belittles your words because “they know everything”. Real stupidity comes from believing that you’re omniscient and omnipotent. Only wise people know that they don’t know everything. but I let it go on for a while before stopping and thinking, “what the hell am I doing?” Discussing something with someone who can’t see beyond their own window to the world is the most wasteful thing anyone can do.

    I like letting people make their own informed opinions, as everyone should. Don’t just spit out what someone else told you; review everything and form your own opinion. And if it’s different from someone else’s, big friggin’ deal! Guess what? Everyone has an opinion, a belief, a perspective. Being loud doesn’t mean you know more than someone else; it just means your mouth opens wider.

    Humankind has the capacity to become rabid dogs. People like to gang up with viciousness to feel inflated about their own superiority. But, when the attack is on them, everything is very different. That’s just mean! Well, that’s just human nature. Evil doesn’t come from supernatural demons, it comes from the depths of humankind. Humanity has a tendency to be inhumane. And it circles itself; call it karma if you wish, but the stream of putrid words we sometimes spill out come back at us in a different form. And when they do, we have no right to complain. We did it once ourselves.

    Agreeing to disagree or seeing another viewpoint is a challenge for many people. But we all see the world differently. Every man or woman is the product of his or her collective beliefs, experience, and thoughts. More time is wasted on pointless back-and-forth banter than actual reasoning. In a way, it’s comical. If people could see the humor in it, of course.

    I guess what bothers me most is, being an open-minded person, I expect to be treated as I treat others. I could be cruel and nasty many times, but I choose to let most things slide. I try to make people think and reason, prepare for what is coming, yet it is labeled “non-conformity”. So what? I’m not a conformist. I’m an individual. If I’m the only one not running with the herd, it makes me an independent thinker not an anarchist. Different is good; different brings about revolutionary thought and ideas. If it weren’t for outcasts, nothing would ever change. Ideas are what separate us from our inner animal. If being a non-ape makes me a bad person to somepeople, I’ll settle for that.

    Someone Else Said It Best…


    2009 - 03.16

    Most modern thoughts are not entirely unique. We borrow from our contemporaries and, occasionally, think up ideas which have already been hatched. Yet some words are timeless. Long after the speaker or writer is dead, we remember them.

    As a slight departure from my usual ramblings, here are just a few of my many favorite quotes spoken by great minds. No truer words were ever spoken.

    “Logic, n. The art of thinking and reasoning in strict accordance with the limitations and incapacities of the human understanding.” Ambrose Bierce

    “If you don’t know where you are going, any road will get you there.” — Lewis Carroll

    “It’s the friends you can call up at 4 a.m. that matter.” — Marlene Dietrich

    “I have not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.” — Thomas A. Edison

    “Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.” Albert Einstein

    “The difference between genius and stupidity is; genius has its limits.” — Albert Einstein

    “We are all born ignorant, but one must work hard to remain stupid.” — Benjamin Franklin

    “I have found little that is ‘good’ about human beings on the whole. In my experience most of them are trash, no matter whether they publicly subscribe to this or that ethical doctrine or none at all. That is something that you cannot say aloud, or perhaps even think.” Sigmund Freud

    “An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools.” Ernest Hemingway

    “As far as we can discern, the sole purpose of human existence is to kindle a light in the darkness of mere being.” Carl Gustav Jung

    “The most terrifying thing is to accept oneself completely.” Carl Gustav Jung

    “Loneliness does not come from having no people about one, but from being unable to communicate the things that seem important to oneself, or from holding certain views which others find inadmissible.” Carl Gustav Jung

    “It is hard enough to remember my opinions, without also remembering my reasons for them!” — Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

    “I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity.” — Edgar Allan Poe

    “The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.” — Socrates

    “Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it’s time to pause and reflect.” Mark Twain

    “Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel that you, too, can become great.” Mark Twain

    “Censorship is telling a man he can’t have a steak just because a baby can’t chew it.” — Mark Twain

    “It takes your enemy and your friend, working together, to hurt you to the heart: the one to slander you and the other to get the news to you.” — Mark Twain

    “It is better to deserve honors and not have them than to have them and not deserve them.” — Mark Twain

    “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one’s lifetime.” — Mark Twain

    “There are three types of lies — lies, damn lies, and statistics.” — Mark Twain

    “It is better to keep your mouth closed and let people think you are a fool than to open it and remove all doubt.” — Mark Twain

    “…gratitude is a debt which usually goes on accumulating like blackmail; the more you pay, the more is exacted. In time, you are made to realize that the kindness done you is become a curse and you wish it had not happened.” Mark Twain

    “Sanity and happiness are an impossible combination.” Mark Twain

    “The pure and simple truth is rarely pure and never simple.” Oscar Wilde

    “There is only one thing in life worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about.” Oscar Wilde

    “A true friend stabs you in the front.” Oscar Wilde

    “Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else’s opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation.” Oscar Wilde

    Detector School Dropouts…


    2009 - 03.13

    You’re at a haunted location. You want to check to see if there might be a ghost around. So, what do you do? You whip out your trusty EMF meter. Why? Um… well… because everyone else does. As the old argument goes, “and if everyone jumped off a cliff, would you?

    EMF (a.k.a electromagnetic frequency, electromagnetic fluctuation) has become the must-have gadget for any “serious” investigator of paranormal phenomena. Most ghost hunters will tell you that these devices react to ghosts and spirits, which “give off higher readings” of electrical and magnetic energies. It’s failproof and reliable. Right? Well, not really. But before you prepare the fire to burn me at the stake for “heretical nonsensical talk”, take a moment to listen.

    Our world is a noisy cacophony of electricity, magnetism, and waves (radiation, radio, round, microwaves, etc.), most of which we cannot see, hear, or sense. Some is man-made, some natural. If we could hear all the energy constantly around us, it might sound like rush hour traffic in New York City. And this is the world in which we try to fiddle with a Gauss meter (or EMF meter). Many people using these devices don’t know what they’re detecting. Cheap models cannot filter out natural energy from interference caused by our own technology. But to ask most investigators, they “work”.

    In reality, they don’t. I’m sorry, but they don’t. I don’t even own one because I’ve experimented with them and found them about as useful in the pursuit of ghosts as a rubber ducky. Yes, they do indeed note fluctuations in energy on occasion, but in the chaos invisible to our senses, what’s really happening? It is that power line or cell phone? Am I sitting on a meteorite? Or did the CIA just fly a covert plane overhead giving off powerful radio signals telling me to invest in the Bank of America? I just don’t know.

    The sad fact is there is no definitive correlation found between unexplained phenomena and EMF readings. Some say ghosts cause spikes. Others say powerful bursts of energy make us hallucinate. But each is just a guess. A thought. I’ve witnessed unexplainable sights, sounds, and smells while Gauss meters remained silent and inactive. I’ve seen them go wild while nothing out of the ordinary occurs. And you’re trying to tell me that EMF and paranormal phenomena are connected? No, thank you; I’m not interested in that prime Florida swampland.

    If I’m trying to pick up a toothpick, a magnet won’t work no matter how hard I try. It doesn’t mean the toothpick isn’t there; it just means that the magnet isn’t a valid method of detecting it. And that’s largely how I view Gauss meters in the field. You’ll pick up on something alright, but not a ghost. So, you say, what does work, you mean, cranky, pessimist? Well, I don’t exactly know. That requires more experimentation. But we need to look beyond one possibility to make any headway. What about a Geiger counter, or a photometer?

    And yes, there’s a reason I suggest these gadgets. Research in telepathy, which might be related to “psychic experiences” and hauntings, has found that whatever mechanism is being used to convey information is not governed by electromagnetic principles. Psychometry works in shielded environs and Faraday cages. Whatever we’re looking for lies outside the known particles, waves, etc. Perhaps it’s like a photon, allowing it to be visible yet behave like a wave. Whatever the answer, it exists outside the box.

    For an interesting piece of reading material, I suggest Steve Mizrach’s The Superspectrum Hypothesis.

    A Popularity Contest…


    2009 - 03.08

    It never ceases to amaze me the Google searches people type in that lead them to Spooked! I review them every so often when curiosity piques. Some are just absurd. Others are about people and places I’ve mentioned. Yet two specific search terms bring people here most often: Corpsewood and Chip Coffey.

    Why? Well, let’s review them.

    Corpsewood Manor (yes, that was its real name) is a rural Georgia ruin: the site of a grizzly murder in the 1980s. Because of this, it is allegedly haunted by victims Charles Scudder and Joseph Odom, as well as one of their beloved pets. Some say it was a hate crime, instigated by narrow-minded people not so kind toward a gay couple (or jilted by unaccepted advances). Other evidence insists it was a robbery gone awry. I’ve researched the haunting and it’s included in my upcoming book, Queer Paranormal. The isolated place has become an enigma and a favorite place to investigate for many people. Though I haven’t yet had the pleasure (or terror, depending on whom you ask) of visiting it, a few friends have. It’s legendary. It’s dangerous. And it seems that everyone wants to know more about it.

    Chip Coffey is a psychic, best known for his regular appearances on Paranormal State and Psychic Kids. Loved by some, hated by others, he is often a topic of rumors, speculation, and gossip (after all, people love to gossip). I do tend to mention him a lot on here. Why? Because I like him on a human level. We think alike in many ways and share many viewpoints. He, too, is a survivor. And he’s realistic in his approach to both the paranormal and life. His ability to tell it like it is can be too much for some people to swallow; his fame makes him a prime target for anyone who thinks psychics are a joke. But the more visible anyone is, the more rotten fruit is thrown at them. I’ve refrained from commenting on here about any of his psychic ability, but that’s simply because I don’t know. I’ve never had a reading from him so I can’t judge accuracy. And that’s true with many psychics I know.

    Like FOX News, I try to be “fair and (mentally un-) balanced”. I point out both sides of most situations and beliefs, yet I find humor wherever possible. And controversial topics are unavoidable. But I mention the things, people, and places that intrigue, amuse, and enlighten me. Sometimes, these topics jive with what others find interesting, as is proved by Google. Other times, I’m way off base. But that’s part of the chaos that is Spooked! And I wouldn’t have it any other way.