But by almost any definition, shadow people are somewhat different than ghost phenomena. Whereas ghost apparitions are almost always a misty white, vaporish or have a decidedly human form and appearance (very often with discernable "clothing"), shadow beings are much darker and more shadow-like.
You know, the Grays were bad enough. Now these guys.
2 comments:
Although I rather strongly lean toward the most likely explanation of shadow people being psychological or neurological in nature, it's also true that I had a weird personal experience of this type.
When I was a child, my bedroom looked out into a short hallway. I would frequently (about twice a week), see a shadow person. It was pretty comparable to the ones that you here nowadays. The only thing that set it apart was that it wasn't rare, and the "person" plainly wore a black flowing cape and a hat somewhat similar to the ones worn by the Three Musketeers.
This continued until we moved out of that house, and I never had a similar experience again. A few years ago, I was telling the story at a new friend's house, and she went pale, visibly shaken. It turns out that she experience the exact same thing, right down to the hat and regularity of its appearance, when she was a child, too. She thought that I had somehow learned of her experience and was intentionally trying to freak her out.
As a child for a while we lived at my grandmothers house along with a few other family members. In that house there was a darkness, often in the shape of a person, that I and others would see cross the hall from the kitchen or in other places in the house.
Other times people in the house would wake up with it standing next to the bed. I tend to rule sleep paralysis out because none of us who woke up were kept from moving. Within a second or two of sitting up it would disappear. Not the most pleasent of experiences.
The reason I think shadow people are just another aspect of the ghost phenomenon is that small appliances in the kitchen would go on by themselves. Mind you the blender, popcorn maker, and such were NEVER left plugged in. Something to do with a paranoid belief on my grandmothers part that if you left the toaster oven plugged in overnight it would catch fire and we would all die.
Anyway on two different occasions I was in the kitchen when an unplugged in blender went on all by itself and stayed that way for almost two whole minutes. I can tell you there is no feeling quite like holding the plug for a blender in your hand, the blender on puree and you keep hitting the off button. Fear and giddiness and foolishness. Why should the off button shut off something that doesnt have the juice to be on in the first place?
This also happened to most everyone else in the house as well. Thankfully it all stopped once we moved out.
Post a Comment