I'm a big fan of the YouTube channel "The Darkest
Secret". It is presented by a lady from Mexico
who produces very well-designed videos featuring spooky photos and footage,
usually of ghosts and related phenomena. Hospitals are hotbeds for the presence
of such phenomena. Nobody knows why for sure. Believers in the paranormal say
that it is caused by the amount of pain, suffering, fear and death that goes on
with their walls. This generates a kind of "psychic charge" that
causes rifts between our world and the "spirit-world". Skeptics claim
that these are hallucinations brought on by overworked and stressed out healthcare
providers or drug induced in the case of patients. I can honestly tell you that
I never saw anything definitively spooky in all my twenty-three years as a
hospital porter; however I heard stories from other staff along those lines. On
one occasion, I came on duty for a night shift at ten
PM and was deployed to A and E. There I heard that the previous
nursing shift, that finished about an hour and half before the portering late
shift, was buzzing with excitement over an incident in the Clinical Decisions
Unit (This is really just an extension of A and E where patients can be moved
to so we can falsely claim we are beating the waiting time targets). A nurse on
duty in the unit saw a glowing spectral humanoid figure standing in one of the
corridors of the ward. The source for this apparition is unknown and there were
no independent witnesses. However, a patient was undergoing CPR in Resus, about
forty yards away, at that time. Was this the patient astral travelling? This
video includes skin-crawling evidence gathered in hospital post-mortem suites. It's
a terrifying thing if you're not used to it, but occasionally dead bodies can
move slightly and even make sounds. Indeed, I've had to comfort one or two new
rookies over the years when they experience this for the first time and run
screaming from the department. This is caused by the contraction of muscles as
rigor mortis sets in; and vocal chords being active so when air flows in the lungs
and respiratory tracts as the porters move the cadaver, it moans and groans. The
case in the thumbnail image, of the body sitting bolt upright and screaming,
has been known; but this is due to the misdiagnosis of death. Fortunately it is
very rare nowadays, but was quite common in the past. People in very deep
unconscious states were wrongly pronounced dead and later came to while being
processed for burial. What a horrible experience! The most famous modern case
is that of Dannion Brinkley, see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDrDYPzbvlc.
The video image of a Grim Reaper-like black figure is one of
the most frequently reported phenomenon. It could be that there really is such
a thing. The ancient Greeks called it an "asphyx", an aetheric being
that comes down from the spirit-world to collect a soul when it departs a body
at the point of death. This concept led to what I consider one of the finest
horror films ever made, see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3RlB9NiNGr4.
Could that little amateur video clip be evidence of a real asphyx? Alternatively
it could simply be somebody actually dressed like that. The providers do not
react to its presence; so either they know what it already or they can't see
it. Sometimes creepy images can appear in photographs where what is depicted is
not visibly present. The car selfie is a good example. Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGixwPeFIWU.
Of course this image could be faked. It is easily possible to produce digital
images using modern available electronics like this that look as real as if
they were truly there. That is the current burden for all kinds of paranormal
research, UFOlogy, Loch Ness, ghosts etc. Photographic evidence no longer
carries the same weight that it used to and there is a terrible signal-to-noise
ratio problem as a result. However images like the one taken can sometimes be
seen in older photographs that predate that technology. Hospital ghosts are a
very scary and yet interesting topic, regardless of your opinion of their
factual nature.
See here for background: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2015/07/alyson-dunlop-on-hospital-ghosts.html.
See here for background: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2015/07/alyson-dunlop-on-hospital-ghosts.html.
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