Old homes and really old homes.
Why do so many people who live in less than new homes, which are over 50 or even just over 100 years old, think that their houses are going to be haunted?
I live in a home that is over 700 years old. It even has huge frescoes that are 400 years old with the faces of a former owner and their children as angels. It's not haunted.
We bought a house near the beach and have been restoring it over the years. The original parts of this house are between 400 and 500 years old, but as we have also found part of an ancient Roman column buried deep in the garden, we assume that people have been living on this plot of land for at least two thousand years. It's not haunted.
I rented a farm house in the countryside that was between 200 and 300 years old. I used to stay there on the weekends alone with my boyfriend. It's all alone and on a hill. There were also stalls in it. It wasn't haunted.
I used to live in a building that was 600 years old. There was also a very hotel at the top of it. It wasn't haunted.
Many people and animals have died in every single one of those places over the years. I'm sure these places have seen the same turmoil and troubles as anywhere else.
In fact, almost everyone I know here lives in a building that is several hundred years old. No one complains of ghosts or spirits or "shadow people" or orbs or strange noises or of being haunted. No one.
In my lifetime, I have read a few books, seen television shows and watched the same movies as everyone else regarding claims of paranormal phenomena. I don't think I'm a complete ignoramus on the subject. I suppose the one part I can consider accepting is that some people are more sensitive to certain energies than others. I'm a sensitive person. I'm sensitive to the energy that is around me. These places are not haunted.
So what's the deal? What's with the haunting claims in just about every rickety, old house or hotel out there? What are these believers talking about?
I don't mean to offend anyone by this question, but I just don't get it.