The author on an investigation. Notice the mist in the right side of photo. It wasn't present in the picture before, nor in the picture after. |
"What is it like to be a
paranormal investigator? Well, honestly, it's a lot like fishing."
A
few years ago I took up a new hobby. As a middle aged woman with a career and a
child at home you might expect me to take up golf, as my husband did. After
all, it’s easy on the joints and it would allow me to enjoy well-manicured
nature while sporting cute outfits and coordinating clubs. But I went a
different route, I became a paranormal investigator
Say
you’re a ghost hunter to the uninitiated and images of proton packs and near
fatal slimmings come to mind. You probably envision Dan Akroyd and Bill Murray
playing high-tech ghost busting conquistadors. That unfortunately is not the
reality of paranormal investigating. I’ve not been issued a proton pack to
date, and no ghost, according to my research, has ever slimed anyone.
So what is ghost hunting like, you ask? I have to admit, I’ve found ghost hunting to be more like…fishing. Just like fishing, when you’ve got a ghost “on the line,” it is an adrenaline rush like little I’ve ever experienced before. But most of the time, and I mean most of the time, you’re merely casting into the dark. Back home we used to fish for muskies, (short for Muskellunge) an elusive fish that fights like the dickens when hooked. The fisherman’s motto is that a fisherman has to cast 100,000 times before catching one of these beasties. It’s no wonder that one lucky enough to catch a Muskie usually has it stuffed and mounted versus eating it for dinner.
So
how often do ghost hunters experience something honestly paranormal? Opinions
vary, but somewhere between 1 in 5 investigations to 1 in 20 investigations. In
other words you’ll spend somewhere between five or twenty sleepless nights
wandering around in spider-ridden old basements and sneezing in dusty, hot
attics before you actually capture anything even considered as sound evidence. Granted,
what is considered verifiable evidence depends enormously on the investigation
group and how rigorous they are with what they collect.
When
I say rigorous I’m talking about the degree to which a group or individual is
willing to examine the evidence for verification, discarding any occurrences
that can be reasonably explained by natural occurrences. Obviously there is a
desire to advance the field of study by those in the paranormal field. The study of the paranormal has always been
resoundingly snubbed by the scientific community. Paranormal activity is, after
all, unverifiable using scientific methods of study. You can’t, for example,
grow a spirit in a test tube and then grow another 1000 just like it. That is
not to say that organizations such as the Society for Psychical Research, which
was founded by in Great Britain in 1882 by some of the greatest scientific
minds of its day, haven’t made advances in paranormal studies. However, the
scientific community remains a conservative and skeptical group. Hence, much in
the paranormal world has fallen to normal people to investigate, and regular
folks aren’t trained in scientific study methods by and large; so evidential
review can be somewhat ragged.
Some few groups are extremely careful in their data collection, throwing out the vast majority of the evidence they collect in the name of scientific rigor. Technology advancements are helping to make evidence collection extremely precise, at least for groups that have deep pockets and tech know-how. Some savvy teams have constructed systems that record environmental samples of many different data types simultaneously (in some cases several times a second). Such systems can sample temperature, electromagnetic field fluctuations, ion levels, radiation levels etc. streaming all the information real-time to a computer which records it. Then, when something potentially paranormal occurs, these different types of data can be compared, giving a synchronized second by second picture of what actually changed in the environment during the episode. The data can then be compared with any audio or video evidence, giving an investigator a much broader picture and hopefully a better idea of how to detect future potential phenomenon.
The Believers
Then
are the groups of ambitious amateurs, who blithely call every photo of a flying
bug or dust mote an orb, and post everything they catch proudly on the web. I recently took the brunt of an argument with
a woman who was convinced that every photographic anomaly was the face of a
spirit. She proudly pointed out faces
and beards and hair in every dust moat captured. I didn’t have the heart to
tell her that our brains automatically attempt to find patterns in illogical
situations. It has been dubbed (incorrectly)
by many in the paranormal community as matrixing, actually the correct terms
are apophenia or pareidolia.
The Fame Seekers
I interviewed a seasoned investigator once who told me that she felt that those who stayed in the field found it necessary to periodically examine and develop their individual goals. Those that didn’t develop over time, she said, ended up leaving the field quickly. Personally I have found her observation enlightened. My own journey has involved a lot of soul searching and many changed paths. Over time I’ve decided my priority is research and writing, exploring all the topics about which I want to know more and then sharing my findings with the community.
I got into the field because I wanted to
explore the possibility of life after death, and that still remains my greatest
driving force. I started in the field as
an undecided vote, and I’ve yet to find that one piece of unambiguous evidence
that has convinced me to climb off the fence of skepticism yet. That’s not to
say that I haven’t experienced some undeniably strange things. But that truly profound, absolutely
unambiguous piece of evidence…still fishing for that.
Paranormal Tourism – The Thrill Seeker’s Vacation
The
gross majority of people that approach me about becoming an investigator are of
the thrill-seeker type. They drop me a
cryptic email about doing some investigating but can’t ever seem to find the
time to meet, or are far too busy to actually show up for an investigation. That’s
just fine. If you really want to try your hand but don’t have the time for a
commitment there is now a whole genre of tourism pandering to the paranormal
enthusiast. Haunted hotels, haunted
cruise ships, haunted houses, haunted forts and battlefields, séances, EVP
sessions, lecture series…. It’s all out
there and you can experience it all for the price of admission. If after an event or two you find you have an
insatiable need for more there are organizations out there that have a constant
need for new blood.
And so I approach my anniversary of fives. Five years of investigating, 50 online articles published and approaching 50,000 views on the blog. I still have no proton pack, I have no personal television show, and I have no unequivocal evidence proving the existence of life after death. But I do have a sense of accomplishment...almost as good as the perfect round of golf.
Definitions
Apophenia is when our brain
perceives connections or patterns where there are none.
Pareidolia is when we assign significance to otherwise random
patterns, like seeing the Virgin Mary’s face on the side of a potato.
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