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Showing posts from May, 2026

SPECIAL EDITION: ๐ŸŒบ The Watchers of Hawaii: Spirits Along the Tides ๐Ÿ‘️

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๐ŸŒบ The Watchers of Hawaii: Spirits Along the Tides ๐Ÿ‘️ Special Edition for The Oracle of the Green Sight Written in honor of a woman from Hawaii whose presence and stories opened the door to this haunted island journey. There are places where ghost stories feel like entertainment, and there are places where they feel like memory. Hawaii belongs to the second kind. The islands are not passive scenery. The sea, the cliffs, the volcanic fields, the valleys, the rain forests, and the old footpaths all seem to carry presence. In Hawaiian tradition, the land is alive with ancestry, warning, reverence, and spirit. Some stories are told as folklore. Some are guarded as family knowledge. Some are repeated in whispers because people still believe it is unwise to speak too lightly of what walks after dark. This special edition is not meant to flatten Hawaiian belief into a tourist ghost tale. It is meant to listen carefully. The supernatural stories of Hawaii often revolve aroun...

๐Ÿ•ฏ️ When the Dead Became Expected — The First Living Years of Spiritualism

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๐Ÿ•ฏ️ When the Dead Became Expected — The First Living Years of Spiritualism There is a point in this history where something changes—but not in the way people expect. It is not a moment of proof. It is not a moment of exposure. It is not even a moment that can be clearly named. It is quieter than that. Because after the Fox sisters—after the sounds, the questions, the rooms that held their breath and waited—something else begins to take shape. Not an event. A pattern. ๐Ÿ”ฎ The Question That Did Not Go Away At first, the question had been simple. Did something happen? That question had driven people into rooms. It had pulled them toward the possibility that something unseen might answer back. But as the years moved forward, that question shifted. Not because it was resolved, but because it was not. It became something more persistent, more difficult to dismiss: Could it happen again? And for some, the answer—whatever it was—seemed to be yes. ...

SPECIAL EDITION: ๐Ÿ‘ป 45 West Park Square: A Haunted Stop on Marietta Square

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SPECIAL EDITION:๐Ÿ‘ป 45 West Park Square: A Haunted Stop on Marietta Square There are places on Marietta Square that feel older than the businesses that occupy them. They change names. They are renovated. New owners come in, new concepts take over, and everything on the surface moves forward. But sometimes, something underneath the surface seems to stay. For me, 45 West Park Square is one of those places. Today, the building is home to Asher & Rose, a modern grocer and cafรฉ. Before that, it was Piastra. Before that, it was La Famiglia. And before it was any of those, it was part of the long commercial life of Marietta Square itself. 1 That is the part that interests me most. Because the stories tied to this building did not seem to belong to only one business name. They stayed. ๐ŸŒฟ A Building That Outlasts Its Name What can be documented is simple enough. La Famiglia occupied 45 West Park Square before Piastra opened there in 2015. More recently, P...

๐Ÿ”” The Confession and the Fracture — Truth, Survival, and Legacy

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๐Ÿ””e The Confession and the Fracture — Truth, Survival, and Legacy There is a point in this story where people expect resolution. A moment where everything uncertain should finally become clear. But that is not what happens here. What happens instead is something far more difficult to sit with. Because when the Fox sisters reach this stage of their lives, the question is no longer simply what happened in Hydesville. It becomes something heavier: What did it do to them? ๐Ÿ•ฏ️ Margaret Fox — The Breaking Point By 1888, Margaret Fox Kane was no longer the girl from Hydesville. She had lived inside the phenomenon for decades—not as a moment, but as a life. Public demonstrations, private sittings, scrutiny, belief, doubt, repetition. And by this point, the weight of that life had settled into something harder to carry. Financial instability followed her. So did illness. So did the long shadow of a life that had never fully belonged to her. In October 1888, a...