Quote:
Originally Posted by Aleister Crowley
The ghosts (dead people) see everything. I have a friend who works as a nurse at Harborview Hospital in Seattle. They get the worst accidents from Washington, Alaska, Idaho flown in. I asked her if she talks to the dead spirits when they die. I asked her if she saw paranormal activity in the ER rooms. She is not consciously aware of the spirit world. I have a friend who is a fireman who finds the worst accidents on I-90 who sends the patients to her at Harborview. I always ask for details, I tell them somebody has to care for the dead after they pass.
When you care for the dead, you get used to the holograms, halos & auras.
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Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, and though I don't have all the answers, I do believe the years I have been involved in the study of spirits, and paranormal behavior, qualifies me to give more insight to your thoughts regarding why spirits haunt hospitals.
Spirits inhabit every corner of the universe.
There is no place they are not.
So why do they frequent hospitals as opposed to other places?
Spirits re-incarnate into what ever matter they feel is necessary to fulfill their obligation to gain in purity.
Sometimes the human body gives out before the spirit is ready to disembark from the body, and in essence, the spirit is not ready to return from whence it came.
Many times people die in hospitals through nothing more than old age, while other times it may be as a result of some physical misfortune.
Either way, when these human bodies breathe their last breath, in rare instances, the spirit within, is not ready to leave, though it must.
When this happens, the spirit lingers at the last place it remembered, trying to regain the life form it had to disembark from, and hopelessly wandering the hospital, in search of that lost material being it no longer has contact with.
Spirits, unless of evil nature, (and there are many) do not haunt for the purpose of revenge.
More often than not, in a hospital setting, they are there trying to recover what is lost.
It is no more complicated than that.
Bob.