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Post by evilattachment on Sept 9, 2012 14:04:16 GMT -6
Hello, I am a brand new registered user. I believe my 58 year old father picked up an evil spirit from Custer's battlefield while there on a visit recently. I have never been there myself but he did describe his experience to me. Hopefully someone out there will know the area I'm talking about. The guide told the visitors to stay off certain parts of the area. One being a turnip garden filled with wild turnips the soldiers lived off of. My dad, being curious reached over and tried to grab a turnip. He said he felt an icy sensation run up his arm. He let go of the turnip and continued on. The next day he was feeling ill. He was having a hard time breathing and he had mysterious welts on his body, including his toes. Over the course of a couple of days it got worse. He was sent to emergency where all kinds of tests were done and even sent to another hospital for more special tests. Doctors were very concerned. They could find nothing. It was guessed that he must have had some bad allergy reaction. He is on a special diet so he doesn't eat what he isn't suppose too. He was found to be in perfect health. He suffered like this for a week. Then it went away. I have heard of spirits attaching themselves to people. Has anyone experienced or know of anyone who experienced this sort of thing? Is it likely that the Spirit is gone now that my dad is healthy again? Could it come back? Thank you for your help and insight. It is much appreciated. Clarissa.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Sept 9, 2012 14:51:51 GMT -6
If I'm not mistaken I think I read something that one of our members named "Randy" had posted awhile back concerning Custers battlefield and vibes and strange noises he heard and someone else that was with him. I'll search around and maybe later Randy will see this and chime in. Ill also send him a p.m. concerning this.
Welcome to TEOR Clarissa.
Cliff
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Post by Deleted on Sept 9, 2012 15:11:42 GMT -6
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Post by evilattachment on Sept 9, 2012 16:52:04 GMT -6
Thanks so much Cliff. I really appreciate the link and your pm to randy. Seems a lot of people have experienced strange things there. On the same trip, at a different location, I'll have to ask my dad where it was, he took pictures inside of a really old hotel. It's also a museum as well but people can still stay there. He captured a shadow on the wall of one of the bedrooms. When he got home and uploaded them to his computer he could clearly see the outline of two women. One standing and one sitting. They had hoods over their heads and were dressed very old fashioned. I'm actually waiting for my step mother to email me the picture. Hopefully she will tonight. I will post it on here as soon as I get it.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 9, 2012 17:25:01 GMT -6
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Post by lois on Sept 9, 2012 20:05:34 GMT -6
That location was a slaughterhouse. This does not surprise me a bit. I have read every book on the market which pertains to Custer's last stand. Even a book from 1913 which a New York reporter wrote. He decided he was going to get all the last great chief together out West for this big pow wow. Each Chief told his story. One was at the little big horn but very young native boy at the time. It is so gruesome it made me sick, he told of how the Indian women went from body to body and cut off their privates. Their must be evil lingering still today. You know in the 90s a park ranger or state trooper was combing this area and found two skulls buried in the river bank, one was a Native American. The other was a soldier who was an Irish man. They said two soldiers were never found and one was the Irishman. The guy who puts clay over a skull cast of the original skull was a perfect match to this man. It showed a photo of him. It was on biography channel back in the 90s . I still have it. It was Custer's last trooper. I always wanted to go up there and see this place but after this book and some of these post, I would rather just stay at home. My Mother said when I was a child when anyone brought up this battle in a conversation. " Custer was not so great a man . he murdered women and children in those Indian camps." Can anyone here show me information on this.
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Post by skywalker on Sept 9, 2012 21:33:00 GMT -6
He said he felt an icy sensation run up his arm. He let go of the turnip and continued on. The next day he was feeling ill. He was having a hard time breathing and he had mysterious welts on his body, including his toes. Over the course of a couple of days it got worse. He was sent to emergency where all kinds of tests were done and even sent to another hospital for more special tests. Doctors were very concerned. It's possible he could have been bitten by a spider. The icy sensation running up the arm, trouble breathing and mysterious welts are all symptoms of anaphylactic shock which is a common allergic reaction to spider bites. If the spider were very small the bite may not have been noticed by the hospital. Do you know if they checked for spider bites?
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Post by casper on Sept 11, 2012 20:23:26 GMT -6
I've read lots of stories about ghosts that possessed people for a little while. There was one down in Texas that I just read about at a place called the devils backbone. I have got to go there! They say it is just crawling with ghosts. Even the name sounds like it would have ghosts in it. Some guy was out in the woods with some friends when he saw a wolf up on a ridge up above him. The wolf jumped on him and then disappeared. The guy said he felt really really cold and then he started acting weird. His friends had to help him home and nobody could figure out what was wrong with him. Later on he started talking real weird and acting strange and then the wolf spirit left his body and he was fine again. Here's a link that talks a little bit about it. It's not a very good link tho. Maybe I'll find a better one.
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Post by casper on Sept 11, 2012 20:25:08 GMT -6
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Post by randy on Sept 12, 2012 23:36:15 GMT -6
I have posted on this forum how I and my sister as young children experienced weird things at the Custer battlefield. As a kid I noticed one of the soldiers buried there had a name very similar to mine I tried to metally contact him for some reason and then kept repeating the term "rally the 7th" over the grave to see what would happen. Nothing happened so I walked up a trail and had the experience of first feeling horses around me which the native americans believe they say are strong spirit forces then I heard a hammering noise following by a noise like ocean waves that rose and fell in volume. i was looking around for a horse barn or something like that and walked down a gully and fear begain to take hold of me and I felt that some how I would get a first hand view of the battle if I continued down the gully Since white folk lost that fight I did not want to participate in it so I ran back to the path. the dead soldiers name was too close to mine for comfort. I saw my sister coming up the path She stopped looked around and then ran in fear also. Many years later she told me that she also felt horses and heard people screaming and got scared and ran from the feeling. Given the violence and sudden death at the place I am sure that it is haunted for real. perhaps I could actually see the battle take place but There is a fine line between adventure and disaster Rally the 7th
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Post by randy on Sept 12, 2012 23:49:35 GMT -6
Regarding Custer his wife wrote an interesting book on being on a patrol with him in indian country One has to take things in context with the times back then. indian wars were violent and bloody affairs. indians were creative in how they killed captives and often the army was called on to bury the victims. In the little crow rebellion over 500 civilians were killed by the indians including children and babies who were nailed to the walls of their burning homes. Indian children torutured dogs and sheep to death in practice for later. Soldiers saw this over and over and PTSD existed then also. The town of New Ulm was almost taken by the Sioux in battle. the core of the town held out until help arrived Indian wars were total wars of extermination by both sides. Finally confronting the indians the soldiers were human and all the repressed horror came out. Fortunately it is past history and happened a long time ago
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Post by randy on Sept 12, 2012 23:56:14 GMT -6
As a post script let me say that if one starts a bloody war of killing captives it is wise to win that war as the victors tend to remember such things
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Post by Deleted on Sept 13, 2012 13:13:00 GMT -6
If another country came here right now and started taking over our land and pushing us back into certain areas where they saw fit and then continually took more and more and relocated us and purposefully killed our food supply just to starve us like was done with the slaughtering of the Buffalo, not count polluting the land,,,, I believe we would fight too.
There were atrocities on both sides. I don't blame our forefathers for coming here to escape England but better negotiations should have been done and treaties should have been kept. I'm only partially Indian so I'm a mix of both. I don't blame the Indians though at all for standing their ground. Many of them were true warriors.
Cliff
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Post by evilattachment on Sept 14, 2012 16:35:45 GMT -6
WOW! Thanks for all your stories and insights. Skywalker...I literally just texted my dad asking him if it's possible a spider could have bit him. You know...I have a feeling it probably was a spider bite. I feel MUCH better now. Cliff! I have that picture on my email. Now...how do I upload it on here?
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Post by evilattachment on Sept 14, 2012 16:54:44 GMT -6
Ok I think i got it figured out. Here is the picture my dad took while at an old hotel which is also a museum. You can see the dark shadowy shape on the left hand wall. You can definitely see two woman's faces. Looks like one is sitting and one is standing. If you can put it on your tv it is easier to see. Hope this works. Enjoy! Attachments:
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Post by Deleted on Sept 14, 2012 21:24:35 GMT -6
If another country came here right now and started taking over our land and pushing us back into certain areas where they saw fit and then continually took more and more and relocated us and purposefully killed our food supply just to starve us like was done with the slaughtering of the Buffalo, not count polluting the land,,,, I believe we would fight. . . The question is, would we band together as a nation against such an enemy? The "Indians" had horrible fights against each other, also. as a matter of fact, is the middle east banding together against a common enemy? What about looting in todays day and age, while other people around you are suffering after a disaster caused by nature? Every one is looking at things in their own way. Things were told that were "evil" about the Jews before they were slaughtered. I want someone to tell me a place on this Earth where there is no possibility of ghosts.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 14, 2012 21:32:05 GMT -6
I've read lots of stories about ghosts that possessed people for a little while. There was one down in Texas that I just read about at a place called the devils backbone. I have got to go there! They say it is just crawling with ghosts. Even the name sounds like it would have ghosts in it. Some guy was out in the woods with some friends when he saw a wolf up on a ridge up above him. The wolf jumped on him and then disappeared. The guy said he felt really really cold and then he started acting weird. His friends had to help him home and nobody could figure out what was wrong with him. Later on he started talking real weird and acting strange and then the wolf spirit left his body and he was fine again. Here's a link that talks a little bit about it. It's not a very good link tho. Maybe I'll find a better one. Sorry. This is what "set me off". Fine again after possibly being possessed? You've got to be kidding. And this is no laughing, story-telling thing, IMO. If someone was "fine" after experiencing something like this, they still need to get to their doctor ASAP for a possible health issue.
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Post by randy on Sept 15, 2012 23:46:33 GMT -6
As a side issue I recall meeting a very old man in the mid 1950s as a kid in some place like Deadwood SD who was on the street selling a book he had written claiming to be a survivor of the 7th cavalry. he said he had been left behind as a young soldier to take care of a sick comrade. they were to catch up to Custer later but as such he missed the battle. I bought his book and a sack of gold ore he was selling I dont know if his story was true or not he was interesting to talk to with his stories of the old 7th cavalry.
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Post by randy on Sept 16, 2012 0:28:00 GMT -6
much of American history is rather grim and as such it has been covered up and sugar coated Few people know that tribes such as the Delaware and Mohawk ate their eneimies, boiling was the accepted method of cooking them after death. How many others also ate people is a question. Our native american folk held on to land only so long as they had the man power to defend it Following that pattern of politics we simply followed suit as we had the bigger battalions. How ever charming the native cultures were they were doomed to be replaced by more modern technology of the times. The native American tribes took great delight in slowly killing captives to show how big and powerful they were to visitors Red Cloud took great delight in making moving speeches in treaty talks and them laughed later while sipping whiskey at how dumb the white people were to believe him Stone age peoples meeting basicly industrializef people will be replaced as a society. this is also true of us encountering more advanced civilizations such as the greys. our society will collapse and be replaced by something new and assuming we are not killed off entirely in the encounter our survivors will face some sort new social frame work with the greys. It is only a question of time before we face our own collapse of society when the greys come down Elm St. Changing subject I have read that about 20 men were unaccounted for in the battle including several officers. the sioux have hint that they broke off from Custer and tried to exscape and were cornered and killed in a smaller battle that Sioux have kept secret as to its location
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Post by randy on Sept 19, 2012 23:56:27 GMT -6
More recently the Sioux I believe have taken over the battlefield site and in some sort of cerimony were busy pounding the graves stones of the soldiers with war clubs in symbolism of the battle. I would like to have been there saying "Rally the seventh" over the graves. could have been an interesting time for all. A number of volunteers went over the site with metal detectors and what they found I am not sure of beyond a human arm and hand as bones. As a Kid I did see a private collection owned by a local man of relics he had found including brass belt buckles, bullets and bits of metal odds and ends.
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Post by evilattachment on Sept 30, 2012 14:50:18 GMT -6
Update : It was NOT a spider bite!! I had the timing wrong. It was FIVE days after the encounter with the wild turnip that he began having the symptoms. My dad is now convinced that it had something to do with the wild turnips he touched. Thank goodness he's been healthy since. His experience is still unexplainable. IF it is true that my dad experienced an evil spirit... be warned. This spirit made him terribly ill and caused horrible welts all over his body. I don't believe he was experiencing possession but I do believe that he was under attack by this unseen spirit. I have now made my dad promise not to ever go ghost hunting again. The strange thing is that he was not at Custer's battlefield to ghost hunt he is just very interested in the history.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 30, 2012 15:55:32 GMT -6
I'm glad your dad is o.k. now Clarissa, thanks for sharing. I do see the images on the left wall. Do you happen to know how old the place is that he was staying at and any history about it or the town ? About a week ago I had my 3rd ghost encounter. If you don't mind I'll post it here so you don't have to look for it. I don't mean to hijack your thread, just wanted to share this with you as I think you may find it interesting. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It's reply # 326 Read more: theedgeofreality.proboards.com/index.cgi?action=display&board=encounters&thread=1352&page=14#33813#ixzz27zb6sXnS
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Post by lois on May 31, 2013 23:47:12 GMT -6
Update : It was NOT a spider bite!! I had the timing wrong. It was FIVE days after the encounter with the wild turnip that he began having the symptoms. My dad is now convinced that it had something to do with the wild turnips he touched. Thank goodness he's been healthy since. His experience is still unexplainable. IF it is true that my dad experienced an evil spirit... be warned. This spirit made him terribly ill and caused horrible welts all over his body. I don't believe he was experiencing possession but I do believe that he was under attack by this unseen spirit. I have now made my dad promise not to ever go ghost hunting again. The strange thing is that he was not at Custer's battlefield to ghost hunt he is just very interested in the history. I have always wanted to go there since a child. I never did. Not all that interested now.. Glad things worked out for your Dad. I came here as I mention Randy's post the other day on another thread which pertain to his post here. Been looking for a week now. Hope he comes back soon.
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mia
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Post by mia on Jun 16, 2013 13:53:13 GMT -6
My father purchased a bugle that supposedly came from Custer's Last Stand. I am not sure how that can be verified - I have seen that there are lots of fakes out there
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Post by skywalker on Jun 16, 2013 15:25:15 GMT -6
It would be extremely difficult to verify something like that. It might be possible to date the bugle to the time period it came from but whether it actually came from the battle of Little Bighorn would just be a guess...unless it was actually dug up from the battlefield and there was documentation to prove it. What makes him think it actually was used at the battle?
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DEADnGONE
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Still have this damn illness to put up with. Not terminal,can be seen as good or bad, depending
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Post by DEADnGONE on Sept 11, 2013 21:52:36 GMT -6
"Spirit attachments" are so very old the ancient Egyptains spoke of them around 7,000 BCE, give or take a thousand years or so. The "nasty part' comes to the point that the "spirit' enjoys its human host and decides to move in. Attachment" can and often does go from simple atachment, I mean "attchment" isn't "simple", into "possession". Depending on what "infected" the body, its strength, "power", and alot of other stuff that any decent book on "demonology" can cite you better than I would even try to do,could have been worse, lots worse.
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