Showing posts with label ghosts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ghosts. Show all posts

Tuesday, 31 January 2017

Progressive Thoughts - Day 31


At last we’ve reached the final day of this weird blogathon. I’ve enjoyed it – and I hope some of you have too.

My last song is currently top of the list in terms of number of times played on my iPod. To be fair, if ITunes had been available way back in 1973 the song would have been something completely different I am sure.

And yes, you’ve guessed it, the song is a progressive rock masterpiece, in my opinion anyway. It is called Drive Home by Steven Wilson and features an extraordinarily emotional guitar solo at the end by Guthrie Govan.



Steven Wilson has the uncanny ability to write sad songs and this is up there with the best of them.

The song is about a man who loses his wife in a car crash and blocks the incident out completely until, later, his wife comes back as a ghost to remind him what happened, urging him to move on and deal with the pain.

The accompanying video is equally sad – but despite this, the song is absolutely beautiful.  If you don’t want to listen to the entire song, just listen to the guitar solo from about 5 minutes into the video.

Anyway – that’s it. I’ve completed my second 31 day blogathon and I must say that it has been fun and has actually ticked off a couple of “resolutions” for 2017 (although not completely). I don’t really want to highlight resolutions but if you set yourself a target and (kind of) achieve it, you suddenly feel a warm and fuzzy feeling inside – something akin to happiness and contentment.

I moaned earlier about how dreadful 2016 was and how January as a month is dark, dismal and depressing and how I needed a distraction and this series of posts has helped a lot. I have increased the amount of writing I have done and also resurrected a 30 day challenge and this has helped me forget about 2016 and this, the worst month of the year.

As we enter into February I am content. I still haven’t lost my temper with a rant about Brexit and Donald Trump despite provocation of the highest order and I can hopefully put all that behind me and start being more positive.

It’s tough but I recommend it.

What’s in store next?

February will bring more misery in terms of the cold British weather but in terms of writing, I am going to aim to complete the first draft of my terrible novel.

I am also currently attacking my language skills, by brushing up on my German and French and taking on another language – Italian. We are thinking of a trip to Italy in September so I would like to impress the locals by at least being able to ask for things in their native language. My exploits with Spanish have shown that this is very difficult – but I like a challenge.

Whether I’ll achieve it or not, who knows – but it will be fun trying.

I will also continue with this dreadful blog and maybe try to post more regularly. Sadly, for you dear reader, that means more garbage from Manchester but it at least it will help those who want to see “How Not To Write A Blog Post”.

See you in February sometime.

And, as a footnote, I hope you’ve experienced a wider range of music and enjoyed a little bit of prog!

Welcome to my world!

Sunday, 25 September 2016

The Ghost Hunter

Do you believe in ghosts?

I don’t really but I have had rather a spooky encounter in the past that could have been a ghost (I’m still not 100% convinced but you could judge for yourself – read about it here).

Maybe there is something in it – maybe not. My feeling is that if ghosts really do exist then at some point we all must have seen them or at least felt their presence. The house I live in is over a hundred years old and I am certain that at least one person must have died in it during that time.

Yet I have never felt, seen or heard a ghost in my house – and neither has anybody else that I have known of. In fact, none of my friends, acquaintances or work colleagues have had an encounter with a soul from the afterlife either.

If ghosts really exist then this is a weird thing. I read an article surmising that for every living person today, there are 15 dead people, which means that, potentially, there are 105 billion ghosts wandering the earth. Whenever we walk the streets of our towns and cities there are 15 spooks also wandering the streets for each of us.

I sometimes watch weird videos on YouTube featuring all manner of creepiness, ranging from aliens, to lizard people, ghosts to demons, yet when I watch supposedly genuine images of ghosts caught on camera, I cannot help but chuckle because, to me at least, they like elaborate hoaxes. I’m pretty sure that your everyday psychic would disagree with me, suggesting that not only have these spirits allowed themselves to be caught on camera, they are also able to communicate with certain special people, like a psychic, a person who claims to be able to perceive a different wavelength of reality and as a result can talk to ghosts.

They are lying, dear reader. However, I don’t want to drift into telling you that all psychics are charlatans (deep down you know that already). What intrigues me about the videos you see on YouTube is that they are very well done, so well done in fact that you can barely see the cracks in some of them.

One of the best of these videos is from my adopted home city of Manchester. The video contains CCTV footage from a number of cameras scattered around an office in the city and the security guards on duty flicking between the cameras as spooky things were happening.

Here it is:



Now I loved watching this and, almost as much, liked reading the comments on it. What struck me is that it was recorded on the night of 1st November 2012, that is Hallowe’en night. It is very well done and could, I think, convince anyone who is even slightly gullible. Since then a Ghost Hunter has debunked the film as a hoax.

What’s more interesting is the term “Ghost Hunter” because until I read that article, I thought that a Ghost Hunter was a figment of the imagination of authors and writers who wrote scary fiction about ghosts.

I am amazed that there is a Ghost Hunter in Manchester – in fact there are possibly more.

People exist who actually go out to find ghosts or at least deal with situations where people think they are being haunted.

While I love this kind of spooky nonsense, I don’t think I would want to go out in search of them, just in case I actually discovered that spooks really exist after all.

But if you had a heart of steel and fear is not part of your DNA, how would you set about becoming a Ghost Hunter?

First of all, you probably need the equipment. And it is not cheap.

Here’s an example of what you would need:

An accelerometer to measure even tiny vibrations in objects.

Video recorders and cameras (obviously – though I am not convinced that ghosts can be photographed), including special infra-red equipment to detect weird stuff in the infra-red spectrum.

Sound recorders to detect abnormal sounds.

Spectrum analysers to detect energy out of the normal perceivable ranges.

Thermal cameras to detect changes in temperature.

Various other essential equipment such as X-ray and UV scanners.

Obviously, you also need to be totally laid back, methodical, patient, confident and, most importantly of all, not prone to squealing like a little girl should you ever see an actual ghost.

Of course, if you can talk to the ghosts when you find them, that might be a bonus but, since nobody can talk to ghosts, that is just a little wishful thinking.

Finally, you have to have an open mind and not be, like me, a totally cynical sceptic.

I know that I may be mocking what could potentially be a fulfilling, if not totally weird career path and for that I apologise. To be honest, if there are any genuine Ghost Hunters out there, please leave a comment and I will read it with an open mind.

In the meantime, if I feel that there is a ghost in my house, I might just hire these guys:



Over to you, dear reader:

Do you believe in ghosts?

Have you ever seen a ghost?

Friday, 16 July 2010

Exit Light - Enter Night


My parents always loved me, of that I am certain.

However, my dad had a slightly mischievous personality and used it to scare the crap out of me when I was a child.

Sadly I have inherited this trait and have taken it to new levels – just ask Mrs PM and my two lads.

Anyway, allow me to tell you how my father, the man who loved me, was responsible for scaring me half to death as a child.

Parents are generally wonderful people who build a found a foundation for our lives. Sometimes they use their own lives as a blueprint to construct a basis for their children to take those first independent steps into the wilderness that is adult life, directing them in the general direction of prosperity and arming them with the tools and equipment to survive.

There are times, however, when our parents, for one reason or another, sow seeds of fear into the minds of their children. Maybe they do it for fun. Perhaps it is to prepare them for the difficulties and reality of life outside childhood.

I only know that a child’s imagination can misinterpret their parents’ words, creating an entity that, in extreme cases can stalk them throughout their lives.

There is enough to fear in the world without inventing horrible creatures, nightmarish characters and bizarre monsters to intensify that fear exponentially.

I have vivid memories of being a child in a cold terraced house in Walsall and my father tucking me into bed. It was winter and the temperature was so cold that I could see my breath. There was no central heating. To keep myself warm, I wore thick pyjamas and my bed was covered in layer upon layer of blankets. Within ten minutes of crawling into the mound of bedding, I was embraced in wonderful warmth and safely tucked in so that nothing could get me. And then my loving father uttered a sentence that chilled me to the bone:

“Stay under the covers or Jack Frost will come after your fingers and toes.”

And then he left the room, turning off the light and leaving me in total darkness, before I had a chance to utter the words:

“Who is Jack Frost?”

Instead of succumbing to sleep in my cosy bed, I hid under the covers, shivering despite the warmth, wondering what kind of man would come into my bedroom in the middle of the night and attack my extremities. If my father's plan was to make me sleep, he made a colossal error of judgement.

After a dreadful night’s sleep, I asked my father the next day who this crazy pervert called “Jack Frost” was.

He told me that Jack Frost was the man who made the windows frosty in winter and that if naughty children messed about in the middle of a cold winter’s night, he would nip their toes.

I was horrified and suffered several sleepless nights. On one occasion, I swear there was something in the room and screamed until my lungs were empty. My father came rushing in, switched on the light and said: “What’s the matter?”

“J J J J Jack F F F F Frost is in the room,” I stammered.

“Don’t be so bloody stupid,” he said. “Now go to sleep.”

I’m certain that his reasons for introducing me to Jack Frost were not malicious; he probably wanted a peaceful night and thought that Jack Frost would have the desired effect. Unfortunately he forgot how vivid a child’s imagination can be – mine is particularly strange and vivid and it worked overtime.

It wasn’t just Jack Frost; he told me about the Sandman.

Why would a man who loved me, tell me about another imaginary creature who somehow breaks into my room every night and throws sand in my face to send me to sleep? On cold winter nights, I had to contend with Jack Frost and the Sandman invading my room. I started to ask myself questions like:

What if the Sandman had arrived first and sent me sleep before I was fully tucked in and left my feet dangling outside the bed at the mercy of the perverted Jack Frost?

I know my father loved me but whatever his intentions, he couldn’t possibly have dreamed about the sheer terror he introduced into my life for a good few weeks. I got over it because after many sleepless nights it was plain that neither the Sandman nor Jack Frost actually appeared in my room.

Another nasty creature he introduced was the Bogeyman.

I am not talking about the weirdo at work described here.

I am talking about yet another monstrous beast that preys on naughty children. My parents used to say, again just before bedtime:

“You had better behave yourself or the Bogeyman will come to get you.”

And this resulted in even more sleepless nights. I’m surprised I slept at all as a child.

The Bogeyman was probably the scariest of all of the creatures I was warned about. The Sandman and Jack Frost were people, as far as I could tell. They were sick, perverted and fearsome but at least they looked human. The Bogeyman was a formless beast that nobody could describe.

“What does the Bogeyman look like?” I asked my dad as he was about to switch off the light.

“Nobody knows,” said my dad menacingly.

I almost crapped the bed.

To me that meant that if you were unfortunate to be visited by the Bogeyman then you would not live to tell the tale. I hid under my bed clothes and shook with terror. When I finally did get to sleep, I had nightmares. I still remember to this day the terrible recurring dream I used to have about being chased down a tunnel by a huge humanoid monster with a massive white head and huge red eyes.

The problem with the Bogeyman was the fact that I had nothing to guide me. Consequently every single shadow in the room was the Bogeyman; every single noise was the Bogeyman.

My imagination ran amok, resulting in huge terrifying monsters being created within my dreams. I saw beasts with massive sharp teeth, huge claws, bloodshot eyes and vile, terrifying bodies. I had a lot of nightmares.

I got my own back by screaming like a banshee in the middle of this nightmare and waking up my parents. I recall my mum running into the room one night and saying: “What’s wrong, love?”

I had a bad case of the “yips” and could barely get my words out.

I’ll bet you are wondering what the “yips” are, aren’t you, dear reader?

A comedian, Billy Connolly I think, coined the term. It describes the sensation when you have been crying so much that you can barely catch your breath and when you speak you take sharp involuntary breaths.

“Thuh thuh thuh thuh thuh the Buh Buh Buh Buh Bogey muh muh muh muh man wuh wuh wuh wuh wuh was ih ih ih ih ih ih ih in muh muh muh muh muh muh my ruh ruh ruh ruh ruh ruh ruh room.” I yipped.

My mum was livid and not just because it was 3 o’clock in the morning. She comforted me and told me, in soothing tones, that there was no such thing as a Bogeyman. I didn’t believe her.

And then I heard her bellowing at my dad in the other room for “scaring the hell out of him”.

As I grew older, my fear dissipated despite my dad’s attempts to frighten me half to death (you can read about one such episode involving vampires here ) and I found myself becoming fascinated with all things that go bump in the night.

I am drawn to creepy horror films. I’m not talking about those dreadful films with axe wielding maniacs that seem to delight in hacking teenagers to bits. I am talking about genuinely frightening films that stretch your imagination to its limits.
Moreover, I love a really good horror novel.

I have been known to read these stories late at night and struggle to sleep as a result – even now.

Take “The Dark” by James Herbert. The synopsis on the back cover of the book describes “a malignant power”, “physical blackness” and “unstoppable evil”.

I read this book before I was married. I was twenty two years old, living alone in a small flat in Manchester and I recall lying in bed at around midnight, totally engrossed in a particularly tense scene. I switched the light off and tried to sleep. As my eyes grew accustomed to the dim room, I looked across at the wardrobe and noticed something odd. The wardrobe was white and clearly visible – except it wasn’t white at all – a black shadow was cast over it.

My imagination screamed at me.

“Come on Dave,” I thought. “You are an adult. You’re eyes are deceiving you.”

I studied the wardrobe and, sure enough, it was obscured by an amorphous black shadow. My mind drifted into the past, remembering the time when I thought I saw the ghost of my father.

Even further back, I started to recall the fear of vampires and the time that I convinced myself Count Dracula was in my room, his red eyes boring into mine as he prepared to feast on my blood.

Even further back, I remembered the Bogeyman and the recurring nightmare that I was being chased by a horrifying monster down an endless tunnel. Images of Jack Frost appeared and I pulled my toes under the duvet, for fear that the shadow was going to lunge forward and attack my extremities. I kind of hoped it was the Sandman – at least if he were to throw sand in my eyes, I might actually get some sleep.

The shadow didn’t move at all. It waited there, teasing me, taunting me, terrifying me.

I had no choice but to reach out and switch on the light. My heart was pounding more than Neil Peart’s drum kit during a Rush drum solo.

I reached for the bedside lamp and promptly knocked it on the floor.

What should I do?

Should I hide under the duvet and hope that it scared the shadow?

Should I be brave and get out of bed and face the beast?

To be honest, the idea that a duvet will act as protection against a hellish fiend is as preposterous as the concept of supernatural monsters actually existing. What use would a duvet be if Count Dracula decided to break down my door and use my neck as chewing gum? How would a duvet protect me against a Bogeyman with ten inch teeth, claws that can rip skin from bone and who delights in dismembering young children?
I went for the light.

I leapt out of bed and fumbled around in the dark, almost crippling myself as I fell over the bedside table. It seemed like an eternity until I got the light on – enough time even for a crippled old vampire to hobble over to my bed and gum suck my jugular.

The room was bathed in glorious bright light.

I stared at the wardrobe.

What do you think I saw?

The bloody door was open. I almost kicked myself in frustration. Why? Because I remember opening the bloody thing. I just forgot to close it.

What an utter arse I was.

These days I am much braver and far less inclined to crap myself because of my imagination.

Mrs PM on the other hand is not. She is fine as long as she can forget whatever scares her. And I am just as bad as my dad was; I delight in scaring her half to death.

We were watching “The Ring” a very scary remake of an even scarier Japanese film. A work colleague (who incidentally reads this blog – sorry Mr T) went to the pictures to see it and was so scared that he couldn’t even say the name of the film; he referred to it as the “R” film.

Anyway, we were watching it at home and, to make the atmosphere totally conducive to the tone of the film, I insisted that we switch off the lights and watch it in the dark.

It scared the buggery out of me and terrified Mrs PM even more. She clung to me like a limpet.

When it came to bedtime, she insisted – no - DEMANDED – that we take one of the cats in to act as protection. I howled with laughter at the image of our fat cat sitting on the bed watching an insane beast tear us limb from limb, staring into those grizzly red eyes as if to say “you’ve had your food – can you feed me now?”

We lay in bed reading (I was reading a Stephen King novel and she was reading something soft, fluffy and safe) and eventually she started falling asleep.
I turned the light off and, instead of saying “See you tomorrow” I said something else. I don’t know what possessed me to be honest but I said it anyway. I whispered:

“Don’t forget – SHE NEVER SLEEPS”.

It was a quote from the film and it had a dramatic effect. All of the lovely fluffiness from the book that had filled her head making her totally content and happy with life was annihilated as the image of the monstrous girl crawling out of the TV stampeded into her imagination.

YOU UTTER &*%$£*&” she screamed. “I’LL NEVER GET TO SLEEP NOW!!

And she didn’t – at least not for a long time.

Did I regret it? Absolutely – she had a nightmare and woke me up in the middle of the night. Worse, she didn’t speak to me the next day.

“It’s only a film,” I said laughing.

It didn’t work – she simply didn’t see the funny side of it at all.

She did say that she would get me back and I sense that she might.
The truth is, all she needs to do is fire up my imagination and allow it to go beserk.

I’m not going to tell her how to do that.

I just hope she doesn’t read this post.