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Can Ghosts Hurt you or Actually Touch you?

Posted on May 4, 2021 by Clifford Hagger

Ghosts are often conceived as vestiges of the deceased who have never been able to pass completely into the celestial (or infernal) realms. Ghost-hunting researchers experience entities that appear to have some type of post-life trauma. Ghosts have expired cruel or shocking deaths, seen terrible things before they expired, lost something very dear to them that they still cling to after death.

Maybe the movie, Ghost, with Patrick Swayze, Demi Moore and Whoopi Goldberg, isn't a perfect paradigm of what Ghosts are, but it does have some things in common with the above definition. Swayze, such as the Ghosts we talk of, is hanging around due to the cruel manner of its departure and that it might bring some type of threat to his girlfriend. Patrick's lingering on Earth is a temporary phenomenon, often as a result of injury or to hanging onto the surroundings. Some reports of Ghosts would state that Ghosts are often just fragments of better, more whole personalities which haven't passed on to other measurements of the Afterlife.

The film Ghost could be flawed in many ways, but maybe it can give us some framework for addressing a few of the questions about the reality and behavior of Ghosts as addressed through historic anecdote, contemporary reports, parapsychological research and ghost-hunting. As an example, in the movie, Swayze learns to influence matter from a peculiar, half-insane ghost on a subway.

In actuality, can Ghosts hurt you or really touch you? I would say that lots of individuals think that Ghosts can touch you and some say that they could harm you and even kill you. Lots of men and women report a ghostly touch. As an example, Molly Stewart, licensed with the International Ghost Hunters Society, reports that Ghosts have allegedly pulled the hair of guests on her Salem, Massachusetts tour. Ghosts pull the hair In China, for example, Ghosts murdered by drowning are believed to kill people to be able to stop them from reincarnating.

Generally speaking, Ghosts appears to be making contact because they're"stuck" in some pattern, expressing their pain or anxiety - or occasionally. Like Swayze as he reaches out to Moore in the movie, Ghosts actually need to tell us something, something as odd as how they were murdered or to assure us about something. But not everybody has the exact same amount of sensitivity to them.

It would appear, if you think Sylvia Browne, that disembodied spirits, such as releatives, are extremely close to this world. And, they try contact a whole lot, but we don't recognize it. In other, more tribal, shamanistic cultures which contact is possibly more frequent and expected but these cultures do not always keep written records in any quantity so that it could be tricky to know.

Maybe with our EMF and"white noise" machines, science is coming closer to a sort of response about contacting Ghosts? Why hasn't it discovered that response yet? Well, searching for Ghosts may be compared to needing to study sea monsters at a certain depth, but not having the science of submersibles developed enough to have the ability to go there securely and remain long enough to shoot photographs. The Ghosts are there but we do not have the technology.