Poltergeists - Part I

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

This entry was originally posted on the Paranormality blog, on 8 Nov 2008, but has been expanded for Paranormality Reincarnated.

Whenever the word "poltergeist" is mentioned, our minds are automatically drawn to the eponymous movie (usually) and the horrifying events attached thereto. However, in life it doesn't really happen that way. There are incidences of high poltergeist activity, of course, but they are nowhere near as fanciful as the Hollywoodesque creative licenses portrayals.

According to The Free Dictionary, a poltergeist is "a ghost that manifests itself by noises, rappings, and the creation of disorder; a spirit believed to be responsible for noises and acts of mischief, such as throwing objects". Indeed, the word itself originates from the German poltern (to be noisy) and Geist (ghost), so it's a "noisy ghost" - aptly named.

The common symptoms attributed to poltergeist disturbances start out as harmless-seeming, often entertaining, anomalies. As time goes by, however, if the cause is still unresolved, the activity becomes increasingly more severe. It usually reaches the point where the targets' lives are in danger and some kind of physical injury or mental trauma can occur.

The commonest symptoms attributed to poltergeist activity are:

  • Unexplained noises – knocks, bangs and footsteps.
  • Moving objects – furniture sliding across the floor, objects flying through the air, and objects disappearing (apport) and reappearing (asport).
  • Disembodied voices – spoken or whispered words and one or more people speaking in different languages (xenoglossia).
  • Levitation – objects, beds and people raising into the air, and beds shaking violently.
  • Electrical disturbances – lights turning on and off, failing power, electrical appliances failing, and, in some cases, electrocution.
  • Other reported symptoms include unexplained dripping water, electrical appliances still functioning after being unplugged, hallucinations, mysterious figures appearing, extreme mood swings, random fires igniting, epileptic seizures, and anomalous writing on walls or mirrors.


Since poltergeist activity is often experienced by everyone, not just individuals, it is often thought that a poltergeist is an angry spirit haunting the location. However, a haunting usually occurs either as an "intelligent haunting" (spirits remaining after death and interacting with their surroundings) or a "residual haunting" (spirits reliving events as when they were alive). Poltergeist phenomena has been studied for decades and most parapsychologists now agree that poltergeists are psychokinetic manifestations. Poltergeist activity normally revolves around a single person - usually a pubescent girl - who acts as a catalyst (or agent) for these anomalous occurrences.

In my own studies, I have found the latter to be true. I have conducted a fair amount of research into the subject, including visiting homes supposedly haunted by poltergeists. In fact, based on my own findings, not necessarily those of "mainstream" parapsychology, around 95% of these cases involved a poltergeist agent, i.e. the person around whom poltergeist activity seems to revolve.

I've heard many stories where families move into a new home and the poltergeist activity begins and heightens, forcing them to move out of their home. But even then it seems to follow them and the family experiences the same kinds of phenomena as before, suggesting that one or more family members are psychokinetic conduits.

With the remaining 5%, the disturbances continued even after the "agent" had left the house, suggesting something else may be present. These types of haunting are not usually associated with a person, but rather with residual energies from past events and traumas, events, discarnate entities (ghosts and the like), and even in some cases "time phasing".

Poltergeists are often attributed to being "evil spirits", but in all of the research I've done over the years, I have yet to find one that is truly evil, if you subscribe to the notions of the Devil and demons. There may be some spirits that come close to being evil (by definition of the word), but their base emotion is nearly always a deep-seated anger, jealousy and other similar emotions, which has been carried over from life to beyond life.

We still don't know enough about the "Afterlife" to concretely conclude whether or not poltergeists are real, imagined or somewhere in between. We can, however, say for certain that something happens that cannot be explained normally.

0 comments: