Blue Mountain
Resident Skeptical Hobbit
Last night I was at a party hosted by a friend of mine whom I'll refer to as Harris. He's spent the last three years remodelling a hundred year old house, and at one point in the evening told his guests of the ghost he believes is in his house.
His first indication that something was amiss was his elderly (21 year old) cat's out of character behaviour one morning. She was staring at a place apparently near the top of the refrigerator and making unusual noises, and attempts to calm her were unsuccessful for several minutes.
A few days later a door or drawer (I think it was a lower door on his new refigerator) would mysteriously open while he was in the kitchen. He said one time the door opened spontaneously when he was cooking an omelette on his gas stove. After he had quickly checked the door and closed it, he returned to his omelette to discover it was no longer cooking. Apparently while he was checking the door the ghost had mischievously turned off the burner.
Harris then consulted a local ghost hunter, who dropped by one day armed with an impressive array of equipment. The devices included the standard EMF meter, which he used as walked through the house. Initially he found nothing, just low readings in the 5 - 10 range. Even the hunter was skeptical there was a ghost there until the meter reading suddenly jumped into the 100 - 150 range. Then the hunter was able to "follow" this anomalous reading around as he "tracked" the ghost.
Now certain there was a ghost in his house, Harris brought in a medium to contact it and determine some details. She reported contacting the spirit of someone named Elizabeth, who she described as being a short, older woman wearing her hair in grey curls. The medium expressed her opinion that Elizabeth was a tenant in the house and had in fact died there, but was unaware she had actually died, so her spirit remains there still.
Harris says the ghost is most active on full moons. Her most common activities appear to be playing with the controls on the gas stove (which he can hear from other rooms but which stop as soon as he goes to the kitchen to investigate) and turning on lights after he's certain he's turned them all off for the night.
I'm by no means convinced there is anything paranormal going on here. Robert Baker and Joe Nickell famously said, "There are no haunted places, only haunted people." About the only two things in this story I can't explain immediately are the apparent fiddling with the stove controls and light switches (Harris doesn't seem to be the type to be forgetful about these things) and the refrigerator door opening on its own. After all, it's a new fridge and the magnets holding the door closed should be strong.
A couple of facts about the house and its inhabitants: the house is just over 100 years old. The south end had settled and had to be raised about eight inches before Harris started renovations. The kitchen was completely re-done as part of the extensive renovations he did on the main floor. Harris is middle-aged and unmarried, but lives with a foster son who is somewhere between 17 and 21 years old.
I'm interested in hearing the opinions of other people here.
His first indication that something was amiss was his elderly (21 year old) cat's out of character behaviour one morning. She was staring at a place apparently near the top of the refrigerator and making unusual noises, and attempts to calm her were unsuccessful for several minutes.
A few days later a door or drawer (I think it was a lower door on his new refigerator) would mysteriously open while he was in the kitchen. He said one time the door opened spontaneously when he was cooking an omelette on his gas stove. After he had quickly checked the door and closed it, he returned to his omelette to discover it was no longer cooking. Apparently while he was checking the door the ghost had mischievously turned off the burner.
Harris then consulted a local ghost hunter, who dropped by one day armed with an impressive array of equipment. The devices included the standard EMF meter, which he used as walked through the house. Initially he found nothing, just low readings in the 5 - 10 range. Even the hunter was skeptical there was a ghost there until the meter reading suddenly jumped into the 100 - 150 range. Then the hunter was able to "follow" this anomalous reading around as he "tracked" the ghost.
Now certain there was a ghost in his house, Harris brought in a medium to contact it and determine some details. She reported contacting the spirit of someone named Elizabeth, who she described as being a short, older woman wearing her hair in grey curls. The medium expressed her opinion that Elizabeth was a tenant in the house and had in fact died there, but was unaware she had actually died, so her spirit remains there still.
Harris says the ghost is most active on full moons. Her most common activities appear to be playing with the controls on the gas stove (which he can hear from other rooms but which stop as soon as he goes to the kitchen to investigate) and turning on lights after he's certain he's turned them all off for the night.
I'm by no means convinced there is anything paranormal going on here. Robert Baker and Joe Nickell famously said, "There are no haunted places, only haunted people." About the only two things in this story I can't explain immediately are the apparent fiddling with the stove controls and light switches (Harris doesn't seem to be the type to be forgetful about these things) and the refrigerator door opening on its own. After all, it's a new fridge and the magnets holding the door closed should be strong.
A couple of facts about the house and its inhabitants: the house is just over 100 years old. The south end had settled and had to be raised about eight inches before Harris started renovations. The kitchen was completely re-done as part of the extensive renovations he did on the main floor. Harris is middle-aged and unmarried, but lives with a foster son who is somewhere between 17 and 21 years old.
I'm interested in hearing the opinions of other people here.
I rather fancy myself a writer.