Nevertheless, I had an experience not to long ago, that I am struggling to come up with a rational explanation for.
So far with over half a year of "struggling", old honest Al the "extremely skeptical" person still can't come up with a rational explanation for floors creaking, despite his trade as a building safety inspector. He claimed to be inspecting the ceilings specifically, so nothing could be more important to that professional judgement than, uh, the ceiling itself, attached directly to the second story creaking floor above.
It's antisocial behavior to ignore repeated questions after demanding someone's attention to a problem you claim is a "struggle" for you and asking for their help.
So it is a lesson to those who think that enjoying a little "duper's delight" by fibbing to people - exaggerating, embellishing, leaving out important story components, etc. - the only way out of the trap you have set for yourself (besides the more ethical strategy of coming clean) is to be rude.
He concealed anything that would instantly solve this "struggle" of his: like the building itself, or the engineer he is pretending believes in ghosts.
There is zero doubt in my mind that I could ask this engineer why the floors in that building creak and he will give me a straight answer that doesn't involve ghosts.
When we fib about Santa Claus, our intention is the
delight the children have in it. We get joy out of seeing their faces light up, their glee, and decades later those children still look back with happy memories about Christmas. They don't resent being lied to about Santa Claus.
Look how this contrasts with the OP's little game of duper's delight. Parents come clean about Santa Claus. We "confronted" our parents in my family - my sister had discovered the presents in their closet the night before Christmas. Our parents did not double-down on the lie. They came clean. To ignore our question, to evade or divert us, to put effort into manipulating us into a false belief in Santa Claus after this bullet-proof evidence is discovered... that would have been abusing us. For the parents, children maturing to the point of reasoning like this is also a joy. Growing, maturing, learning - so we are proud of them.
Honest Al had to think ahead about how he would be questioned. So he knew what questions to expect, how to evade answers, what to conceal... He posted on a skeptic site for crying out loud, not a kindergarten class.
What would be a lot more beneficial to skeptics concerning themselves with bogus ghost stories is to come clean on his own bogus ghost story. The benefit of the doubt I can give him is that he thought it would be a fun little game, without sufficient thought to how it had to end logically: it is a bogus story and skeptics will probe the places where they are being deceived. You have to be rude to them in order to defeat the logical lines of inquiry. He didn't think through how rude he had to be at the end, sans coming clean.
You ran away Al, hoping we would forget about it. But that just proves beyond any doubt that your claims about "struggling", about needing our help to solve the problem, and most especially about being "extremely" skeptical were merely classic embellishment/exaggeration.
This lending of our credentials to woo always backfires under scrutiny. The game being played is to say that you are a professional building inspector that can't figure out why floors creak. To a skeptic, we conclude in the context of all this other deceptive behavior that you are either incompetent at your professed trade, or you are lying.
Why not model your behavior, Al, after the parents who come clean about Santa Claus. Because evading, diverting, running away - that is what makes it trolling.