Society & Culture

Have you ever seen a ghost or encountered anything spooky?

Society & Culture

Posted by: Rainbow

15th Aug 2011 10:44am

Perhaps you have a room in your house that never quite feels right. Do you hear bumps in the night or see shadows out of the corner of your eye? Are you a medium or clairvoyant who can communicate with the ‘other side’?

kfactor
  • 25th Aug 2011 08:03pm

I remember the first night we moved into our house, I was standing in the kitchen putting things in their proper place when I felt a hand on my shoulder. Both my husband and little girl were in the lounge room. I didn't feel threatened but strangely I knew it was my late grandfather (who died six months before I was born). When I mentioned this to my husband, he said that there was a soft glow in the kitchen and could not explain why. My sister-in-law is a well known oracle in Canada, and she has done a reading for me by phone, and the things she told me were so accurate that I thought my brother must have told her something. Even down to the family issues or should I say dysfunctional family issues. Things that have been revealed sent some shivers down my spine, while others have validated what I went through as a teenager. My mother passed away nearly 9 years ago now and I still feel her around me, and I'm glad.


Cancel

Help Caféstudy members by responding to their questions, or ask your own in Café Chat, and you will get the chance of earning extra rewards. Caféstudy will match these and donate equally to our two chosen Australian charities.

Food Bank Australia not only plays a lead role in fighting hunger, but also a vitally important role in tackling Australia’s $20 billion food waste problem and helping the environment.
Australian Marine Conservation Society are an independent charity, staffed by a committed group of scientists, educators and passionate advocates who have defended Australia’s oceans for over 50 years.
ReachOut is the most accessed online mental health service for young people and their parents in Australia. Their trusted self-help information, peer-support program and referral tools save lives by helping young people be well and stay well. The information they offer parents makes it easier for them to help their teenagers, too.