|
The Open-minded Skeptic
By: Kris Baker
Sounds oxymoron doesn’t it? Is it possible to
be open to new ideas and possibilities, yet you do not believe, or you question
other’s conclusions? What role does this play when it comes to ghost tracking?
The best piece of advice that I can pass on to
you is let the evidence guide you. You should enter any hunt or investigation
with an open-mind but do not be so open minded that you accept everything that
happens as paranormal. A lot of times there is a very logical explanation for
reported paranormal activity. We, as paranormal researchers, need to be able to
eliminate all of those natural explanations before determining that something is
in fact paranormal in nature.
Let’s say that you have been asked to
investigate a home where the residents claim that there have been shadows,
apparitions, levitations and unusual sounds. You and your team go in one
evening, set up your equipment and spend 6 hours in the home. You have tried to
recreate the shadows and sounds that have been reported yet all of your efforts
fail to do so. You review all of your data from that evening and come up empty
handed. Does this mean that the house is not haunted? Does this mean that the
people were trying to pull a fast one? No. You know as well as I do that
ghosts do not perform on command and will not show up just because that day is
the day you chose to conduct the investigation.
How can you tell someone that they are not
seeing what they say they saw? You can’t. The only thing you can say is that
you were not able to find a logical explanation for the phenomena that they
reported and that you were not able to obtain anything scientifically. There
is nothing wrong with reassuring the clients that you believe what they told
you; however, at this particular time you cannot confirm that the residence is
haunted. By doing this you are remaining the open-minded skeptic.
|