Irish Murdoch
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2003
- Messages
- 372
Oleron said:I could never work out why people get nervous, just because someone has died in a house.
Well, quite. My house was built in at least 1662. I imagine quite a few people will have died in it, and a fair few other nasty things would, I think, have happened in all that time. Never felt a thing.
However, in the interests of honesty, my mother has several times in her life got "feelings" in houses where it turns out things have happened. She is honest enough to admit that she hasn't known how that's happened, and certainly hasn't embraced ridiculous theories about afterlives. Neither, needless to say, have I. I remain a sceptic. On a couple of occasions, I was with her when she got these "feelings". I felt nothing.
Examples? Before my time, she had to leave a house her and my dad had visited in Liverpool, because she was overwhelmed with sadness. They later found out it the house that had perviouly stood on the spot had been a direct hit for the Luftwaffe in WWII, with afamily being killed outright. I don't know more than that, so can't provide any more detail.
We all, when I was a child, visited Chingle Hall in Cheshire--supposedly "Britain's most haunted house". On being shown around she froze in one particular room, and had to go out. We were then told (but who knows?) that this was the room where a priest had been murdered and stuck under the floorboards in the Reformation. Fair enough, my mum knew the house's reputation, so was primed to feel something somewhere in it. But we weren't told in advance about it. And she had no such experience in a room triumphantly labelled with the sign "The Haunted Bedroom".
Fast forward a few years. We are about to move into a house, and have been there lots decorating it. But every time my mother gets to the top of the stairs, she gets overcome by a feeling of depression. I have a memory of her sitting on the top step crying her eyes out, indeed. Much to my dad's annoyance, in the end she refuses to move into the house. We later here that two old women had lived in the house, and had been a bit potty. One had died, leaving the other on her own. the remaining one had fallen downstairs. (Now, interestingly, I seem to recall the detail being, as we were told the story, that she had "thrown herself downstairs". But how could anybody have known that?)
To clarify my position on all this: I am a sceptic, though probably of the soft variety. I personally draw no conclusion from these facts (but I assume them to have straightforward explanations, some of which I can already see the germs of--especially in the Chingle Hall case). Neither does my mum. But (a) they are facts, and (b) my mum is an honest person. I'm convinced she had the experiences she represented to us. But I don't know what those experiences show (nothing, I suspect). Anyway, I'd be interested to hear people's thoughts.
