Postmodern Trendoid III wrote on Oct 9
th, 2014 at 3:31am:
I got a visit from the 'hag' twice in one night a few months ago. There was no sexual element to it; rather, this black thing simply lent forward over the top of me. I then got 'paralysis'. It's hard to get out of that's for sure, and it is quite frightening.
Thanks, Culture Warrior. It takes courage to reveal personal and 'unusual' experiences
Several years ago, an interesting case which was initially published in one of the prestigious medical journals was cited in the popular press. It involved a young boy who was being terrified at night by a 'visitor' which loomed over him as he lay in his bed. The boy claimed the visitor was a woman
Although he'd been toilet-trained successfully in infancy, the boy, aged eight to ten when the problems began, had begun wetting the bed. His performance at school had deteriorated and he'd become withdrawn and nervous. He was evading going to his bedroom in the evenings and was frequently discovered to be awake late in the evenings
His parents finally took the boy to various doctors, seeking explanation for his changed behaviours which had come to include difficulties with both parents
The boy was subjected to numerous tests, but there appeared to be nothing physically wrong. Particular attention was paid to the enuresis (bed wetting). Again, there appeared to be no physical explanation. Subsequent tests focused on the boy's mental and emotional development. He was averagely intelligent and prior to the commencement of the problems had been regarded as a cooperative and diligent student who'd exhibited no social or behaviour problems, etc.
As to the dark, looming figure of the woman they boy finally revealed -- this was dismissed variously by the experts consulted by the parents
The boy and his parents were sent home non the wiser and the boy's mother was exasperated by the continued bed-wetting and need to wash linens, etc. The boy continued to lie awake long after his bed-time as discovered by the parents when they went to check on him. The parents tried a variety of punishments but these made no difference
Again, they proceeded on the round of doctors and specialists. One of these, whom they hadn't consulted before, sought a possible explanation within the parents' relationship. Was their friction, perhaps, which was being picked up by the boy and which might account for his problems?
To his astonishment, the specialist concerned discovered what no other doctor had discerned, namely that the boy's mother was not his biological parent. The boy's 'mother' was in fact his step-mother. The parents had not revealed this to any of the other doctors they'd consulted
The specialist then interviewed each parent separately. Finally, the step-mother revealed she'd resented the boy's presence in her marriage from the outset. She'd wanted a husband, not a son. She admitted she'd never revealed this to her husband, nor, she claimed, had she verbalised it to the boy. Nevertheless, she bore the child a deep resentment. She believed the boy was stealing attention and affection from his father which should have been directed at her. To compensate for and disguise this, she'd made every effort to play the role of loving and concerned mother to the child
The medical journal went on to say that the specialist believed the step-mother's resentment toward the boy and her desire that he be removed from her marriage and her husband's affections, had - due to their being suppressed - assumed a form and life of their own and had stalked and terrified the boy while the mother slept
He explained this to both parents. The step-mother was genuinely aghast. She had not consciously stalked the boy and her genuineness was explained to the understandably upset father. Both parents were counselled and both had considerable work to do in order to come to terms with the fact the marriage involved not only them but a young boy and his emotions concerning his father's re-marriage and the subsequent restructure of the home in which he was forced to live
The outcome was positive, according to the article and the boy's problems resolved
Some might express scepticism, but it's long been known that people are able -- spontaneously, involuntarily or through intent -- project themselves to others, often over long distances
Science is fully aware of this and in the late 60s, 70s and possibly since, the phenomenon was studied by scientists under laboratory conditions. Ingo Swan I think was one of the test subject within the scientific experiments
Non-scientific literature contains numerous examples also, some of which are termed 'crisis aparitions' (when the dead or dying project themselves to loved-ones to say goodbye, etc.) & dopplegangers (the double or lookalike of a living person) and so on. Goethe experienced his own double, for example and a famous case involved a female school-teacher who was witnessed by several students and staff to be in two places at once, even appearing in duplicate when she was teaching a class on one occasion
For more about 'doubles' and dopplegangers, see here:
http://listverse.com/2013/08/30/10-disturbing-tales-of-doppelgangers/