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death.............
death is real....
death haunts... death is strange.... a
child ghost will scare you to death...
Contact:
arthurchilling@ghostkids.com
<>
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1.
Kids: School Bus Load: San Antonio, Texas. D. 1970s?
Haunt: Haunted tracks.
How died: Train/car wreck/mass killing
Story: My cousin and I had gone to San
Antonio, and we had heard rumors of some haunted railroad tracks.
The story was, a school bus full of children had stalled on
these tracks with a train coming. The train was going too fast
for there to be time to get the children off. So they all died.
When we finally found the tracks, we stopped the car, parking
it right on the railroad tracks. We were both a little nervous,
and scared, and waited for something to happen. Just when we
were about to leave, the car started rolling. We were both too
freaked out to do any more than grab each other and gasp, eyes
wide, mouths open. After what seemed like an eternity, (but
was actually less than 5 minutes tops) the car stopped rolling.
We looked around, and we were off the railroad tracks. Now,
that may not seem spooky, but what we saw next scared us enough
to jump back in the car and make the 6 hour trip home THAT NIGHT.
Both of us got out of the car and walked around to the back.
After the first 6 hour drive, our car had accumulated quite
a bit of dust on it. That's not scary, no. But what was scary
was the little sets of handprints all over the back of the car.
All the size of children's hands.
Variations: Sometimes the handprints
show up on the dusty trunk unaided; other times the driver of
the stalled vehicle "dusts" for them with baby powder.
If the occurrence is said to have happened in the early morning,
the handprints will be said to have appeared in the dew on the
car. Origins: This legend dates to at least the early 1970s.
The mythical accident that creates the protective ghosts is
said to take place between a train and a schoolbus stalled on
the tracks. The little ghosts forever after haunt that location,
shoving stalled cars out of harm's way. Tiny handprints on the
back of the saved vehicles are a motif common to this legend
and serve to explain why the stalled vehicles are magically
moved. Another version has some form of tame demon assisting
the dead kids in their crusade. (Hoofprints, since you asked.)
The "ghosts of schoolkids push vehicle
off tracks" group of tales is a subset of a larger group
of stories -- Gravity Hill tales. Many Gravity Hill factlets
are offered as a "gee whiz" kind of thing with no
storyline to them, just that if a car is slipped into neutral
at the right place, it'll move as if by magic.
A further subset of Gravity Hill lore
involves legends about dead teens. Though we also have cars
stalled on train tracks and the onrushing train killing the
occupants (thus creating the helpful ghosts), others involve
a freeway exit ramp where it is rumored a car stopped on it
will roll back uphill. The explanation offered has it that either
a carload of teens heading for no particular destination or
a girl on her way to the prom die in a horrible accident on
that off ramp when their car stalls and is hit from behind or
the brakes go and the vehicle is sent flying into the middle
of the intersection at the end of the ramp where it collides
with a tractor trailer. The mysterious movement of later cars
is explained as the ghost(s) of the dead teen(s) attempting
to push stalled vehicles out of harm's way.
Unlike the kids on the schoolbus tales,
no handprints are found on these rescued cars. The explanation
motif (why did my car just do that?) used in this set of legends
is much like that employed in the Vanishing Hitchhiker -- something
weird happens, the person it happened to remarks upon it in
front of locals, prompting one of them to volunteer the story
about the long-ago accident and the dead teen ghosts.
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2.
Kid: Timothy Crier, The Phantom Crier: Ontario, Canada. D.?
Haunt: Rideau Canal.
How died: Knife to the throat
The house in this account is located in downtown Ottawa and
was built around the same time as the Rideau Canal. It started
with the impression that a small child was observing us when
we - my sister and I - did laundry in the basement. It felt
as if the child was spying on us from the stairwell. Events
escalated to keys and other small things disappearing from the
ground floor when we were in a hurry to leave, to get to work
or any other activity only to reappear a few minutes later in
the most obvious of places: kitchen table, coffee table in living
room, middle of floor in entrance of house...About a month after
we had moved in the faucet in the kitchen would turn on by itself
when no one was on the ground floor of the house. I am not talking
about a small leak but the water running full blast.
This little being also loved playing with our two cats. He seemed
to be very curious about the television. He once made his presence
known to us by making the lid on the garbage right beside us
move of its own volition while we were watching a movie. He
also appeared to my sister in the middle of the night. She woke
up to see a transparent child looking at the television in her
room, just standing there. The TV was off at the time. We never
felt threatened by this little creature.
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3.
Kid: Jimmy Stevens Baker, The Invisible Toddler: Oregon, USA
D.?
Haunt: Rural home
How died: Dropped down flight of stairs/accidental killing
I hear the sound of a toddler (about 18 months) running up and
down my hallway, but never goes into any of the rooms. My cat
stares down the hallway the entire time, his body rigid, his
ears forward and his eyes huge. There is just my husband and
I as our children are grown and on their own.
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4.
Kid: Jeremy Sebastian Sinclair: Bakersfield, California. D.
1980s?
Haunt: Oleander neighborhood and local ghost house mansion.
How died: Murdered by mysterious group called “Lords”
Head chopped off/mutilation/torture
Story: This creepy 'kid ghost' has flaunted
itself about Bakersfield, California for more than 25 years.
Once a troubled young teen, Jeremy hailed from Dallas, Texas,
and moved to Bakersfield with his two brothers, Mike and Jared
Sinclair and their mother and father, Fawn and Marty. Marty,
a Petroleum truck driver relocated his family in 1975. Jeremy,
a runaway, disappeared to Hollywood, California soon after their
relocation to the San Joaquin Valley. There he met up with a
group known as the Hollywood SIckPunks, which Jeremy rebelled
against and then was kicked out of their group after an attempted
murder on one of the lead members, Johhny SIckPunk. Jeremy moved
back to Bakersfield and associated with the mysterious 'Lords'
group of aging cops, politicians, runaways, and other lawmakers,
including the newspaper publisher. Jeremy stayed in hiding and
had an evil influence on several young boys while hiding out
in Bakersfield. According to local myth, Jeremy became a young
murderer before he joined this group. Punk myth states he may
have killed upwards of five young punk rockers from various
Hollywood bands, then turned to a life of crime elsewhere. With
the Lords he made other kids into hoodlum killers and eventually
was murdered himself in a Satanic ritual by paranoid Lords who
may have feared Jeremy's strange powers. His ghost wanders the
Oleander area and is known to be seen attempting to run directly
at victims, biting at chests and reaching for hearts with hands
that have very long decayed fingernails. These stories were
shared by at least three young wards locked away in Californa
State facilities with psychoses in the mid to late 1980s, and
who shared such stories with a Dr. Steve Smithson who interviewed
them while under hypnosis.
Jeremy haunts the Padre Hotel in bakersfield
as well. Legend has it that he used to sneak into the piano
bar and hide in a bathtub in the rafters. Late at night he would
scare patrons. His just rewards is to ocassionally haunt the
very place where he pretended to haunt. Bartenders have seen
many ghosts in the Padre Hotel, an old Hollywood hangout from
the 1930s and 1940s, but there is only one child haunt there.
He has also been seen in the Westchester area at the fog covered
Jastro Park and wandering near what is known as 'The old Brownstone
Apartments'. Some say Jeremy is the reason for a fire there
as well as the apparition seen wandering Westchester streets.
Some skeptics think this is merely a crossover from the Oleander
area myths...
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This child is one of the Lords of >removed
sata> removed
demonic character of child in report
34-ua-b by Doctor Smithson indicates child suffered from severe
and multiple complex of behavioral> removed
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5.
Kid: Eugene Pinkney, Nerdle Lake, Washington D. 1976
Haunt: Apt./House 1948-DD
How Died: Car Wreck into Lake
The story begins in 1987, right before
I gave birth to Julie, our child killer. We had been living
in a American-style Korean hovel when we got suspicious of our
own bad breath from all that marinaded fish. We didn't know
who we were anymore. We were tired of the drives in the moonlit
winters and felt rather Japanese, like we weren't in Korea at
all but on some World War Two base haunted by the ghosts of
some Nuclear past. Anyway, that was the beginning of some strange
hauntings that never ended... Could have been the bad food we
ate. Could have been the bad gas in the middle of the night.
But we think it was the child killer ghost.... there was a death
after all... the car into the lake...
sata> removed
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6.
Ghosts of Scotland:
When it comes to ghosts and the supernatural, children are far
from under- represented in Scotland. Houndwood House is the
home of an always-weeping ghost nicknamed "Chappie"
who repeatedly knocks on doors and windows, crying the entire
time. Chappie is believed to be the ghost of the victim of a
murder committed there by a party of soldiers during the 16th
century.
Conforming to her history of having been involved with undisputedly
the largest number of Scottish hauntings, Mary Queen of Scots
is also believed to be connected with the mischievous spirit
who haunts Glamis Castle. The apparition, that of a dark-skinned
young boy, is believed to be that of one of Mary's servants,
who was unkindly treated at Glamis in the mid-18th century.
In his most common manifestation, he his felt and not seen;
many who have slept in Glamis have reported their bedclothes
being pulled off their beds during the nights with no apparent
cause.
Glamis is home to more to one child ghost, the second being
a reportedly hideous monster. Some have suggested that he is
the restless spirit of a deformed child born to the Glamis line.
Leith Hall can also lay claim to it's own pre-adolescent ghost,
an unidentified young child with its governess (gender is not
known).
Unfortunately because some of the records of the time on children
are less-than thorough, the identity of many child-ghosts is
not known. But although they are slightly less numerous than
their adult counterparts, young ghosts in Scotland are by no
means scarce.
SBB, October, 1999
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7.
Ghost children of Asia
THE OCCULT: When a monk in Saraburi was arrested three years
ago for stealing the corpse of a child and roasting it, the
concept of 'kuman thong' came under the spotlight. The monk's
ghoulish attempt to conjure up the protective child spirit was
an extreme expression of a widespread Thai belief inspired by
a 19th-century
Story and pictures-Suthon Sukphisit
Do Thais believe in the occult? Ask someone in the market, where
the average level of education is likely to be low, if he believes
in the supernatural and the answer is almost certain to be yes.
Thais who studied to a more advanced level will probably answer
that the believe in some occult phenomena and not in others.
A politician will most likely deny holding any superstitious
beliefs. But should he be appointed to head a ministry, observe
that he will still be very careful to pay respect the appropriate
spirit house before assuming his new post.
The occult Thai tradition of the kuman thong, or golden boy,
is interesting in that it has its origins in a work of literature
- the 19th-century poet Sunthon Phu's long novel in verse, Khun
Chang, Khun Phaen. The character of Khun Phaen, central to the
story, is a high-ranking soldier of the Ayutthaya period. It
is he who creates the child-ghost called Kuman Thong.
The plot elements of Khun Chang, Khun Phaen are derived largely
from the oral literary tradition of the Ayutthaya period, from
old regional folk tales, and from certain historical events.
Many aspects of the narrative indicate that its setting is the
Ayutthaya of King Ramathibodi II's reign (1491-1529 A.D.).
Khun Phaen (more likely a title indicating position than a personal
name), is a soldier close to the king whose unusual duties set
him apart from other soldiers. He is what might be called the
army's soldier-magician, a post which was considered extremely
important. In those days, soldiers fought hand to hand with
edged weapons, so courage and confidence had to be kept at a
high pitch, and the use of supernatural forces played an essential
part.
Capable as Khun Phaen was, he knew that he couldn't afford to
make a mistake, and recognised the need for a protective spirit
that would watch over him and alert him to important events
coming his way. He also realised that there was no one who was
more honest with him than his own little son, but that since
a son in human form couldn't guard his own father in the way
that was needed, it would be necessary to transform him into
a ghost.
Khun Phaen had become a father as a result of a journey he had
made from Ayutthaya to another city whose ruler had a deep knowledge
of the occult. At first this magician took a great liking to
Khun Phaen - so much, in fact, that he presented the newcomer
with his daughter, whom he married. Khun Phaen remained in the
city until his wife became pregnant with a child that he knew
would be a boy.
But his relationship with his father-in-law deteriorated, until
it reached the point where the older man wanted him killed.
He commanded his daughter to poison Khun Phaen's food. Khun
Phaen learned of this plan, and avoided being murdered. Instead,
he took his revenge by stabbing his wife to death while she
slept. After she was dead, he cut her stomach open and removed
the infant, which he took to a temple to undergo an occult rite.
He closed the door so no one could see what he was doing, then
built a fire and placed a grate over it. He wrapped the infant's
torso in pieces of sacred cloth written over with prayers, and
roasted him over the fire until his body had shrunk to a tiny
size and was completely dried out, with only the skin stretched
over the skeleton remaining.
Throughout this process Khun Phaen chanted prayers. When it
was complete, the child had become a ghost with whom he could
speak and communicate. He named the ghost-child Kuman Thong,
from that point on the newly-created supernatural being plays
an important part in the Khun Chang, Khun Phaen story.
This episode of Sunthon Phu's classic is the origin of a now
widespread belief in kuman thong, the protective child-spirit.
Although this type of supernatural being is only a literary
invention, many people believe in such infant ghosts and their
ability to warn those who nurture them of danger threatening
the household. If a stranger approaches the house intent to
cause harm, they maintain, the kuman thong will hurt him or
frighten him away.
Evidently, belief in the power of the kuman thong is extremely
common in Thailand, and includes most people who give any credence
to supernatural phenomena. The shops at Tha Phra Chan and behind
Wat Rachanadda that sell occult objects usually display images
of him in the form of a statue of a child with a topknot, sitting
with his hands held in a wai gesture and dressed in traditional
Thai costume, and they are hot sellers.
Old or damaged kuman thong images which have been abandoned
by their owners at Wat Saket.
In mid-1995 the press reported that the police in Saraburi province
had arrested a monk at a local wat who had performed Khun Phaen's
ceremony on the body of a dead child. During questioning at
the police station, the monk stated that his name was Haan,
and that he had been in the monkhood for 35 years. He was known
in the area as "Nain Ae", a nickname he retained even
though he had long since become a monk and left his nain, or
apprentice, status behind him.
He explained that he had always been very strongly drawn to
the occult, and possessed great powers of black magic. To create
his kuman thong, he had stolen the corpse of a child that had
been left at the temple by its parents. Mr Haan was forced to
leave the monkhood, and was put in jail for stealing and harming
the corpse.
This incident actually took place, although it isn't clear whether
Mr Haan's actions were the result of the influence of literature
or of a deranged mind.
For those who believe in the powers of the kuman thong but don't
want to resort to the extreme measures employed by Khun Phaen
or Mr Haan, there are other ways to conjure up the protective
child spirit. Sit Prasertsak, who lives in the community located
within the walls of Wat Saket, or the "Golden Mountain",
is well informed on the subject.
He creates kuman thong to order for those who desire them, carving
them from pieces of wood.
The wood he uses is old, and was once part of the ubosot or
vihaan of a demolished Buddhist temple, he explained. He believes
that every part of the temple building is sacred, since monks
sit within them and chant prayers every day, those prayers themselves
contain sacredness within them.
He stressed that, while sitting and carving the kuman thong
images, one must achieve total concentration, and recite prayers.
Then, the person who receives the image must feed and care for
it properly. It must be placed on a shelf, but not on one as
high as the one used for Buddha images. To feed it, the image
must be offered cups of milk and sweet beverages.
If the kuman thong is cared for properly, it will remain with
the household for a long time. Nowadays, people believe not
only that the child spirit protects its owner's home, but that
it brings good luck as well, although this may well have originated
as part of a sales pitch.
Should someone no longer be able to care for a kuman thong properly,
perhaps because they are moving house, or because the image
deteriorates physically, they will take it to a wat. There it
will be abandoned among components of old spirit houses and
headless or otherwise damaged Buddha images.
Mr Sit said that everyone knows that the tradition of the kuman
thong originated in Khun Chang, Khun Phaen, but that nobody
would imitate Khun Phaen's technique for creating one. Nain
Ae's attempt to do it just showed that he was crazy, he said.
Sit Prasertsak, who lives in the Wat Saket community, holds
one of the kuman thong images he carves from pieces of wood.
Kraison Suksomsabai, an antique dealer, said that a kuman thong
is not always a ghost. Some of them are angels, or child-angels.
He explained that belief in them is not limited to Thailand,
and that there is also a Chinese version of this supernatural
being.
"At shrines to Mae Thapthim, the sea deity, kuman thong
can be found in both male and female forms," he said. "The
males are called kimthang and the girls ngeknueng. Both are
capable of highly enhanced kinds of perception. They can see
for a distance of 10,000 lee (one lee is equal to two kilometres)
and can hear sounds coming from the same distance."
Mr Kraison added that these kuman thong can also be found at
shrines to the Chinese goddess Kuan-yin.
"According to traditional belief, these kuman thong are
the children of angels," he explained. "Anyone who
wants to create an image of one must know khaathaa, a sacred
form of language, and must determine an auspicious time to so
do using old texts on the subject. Speaking in khaathaa, the
person creating the kuman thong will request the child-spirit
to enter the image and remain there. The image itself can be
made of cement, bronze, or carved wood.
"Once you have acquired a kuman thong, you have to place
it in an appropriate place. This should be a shelf that is placed
lower on the wall than the hing phra, or shelf where Buddha
images are kept. It should be offered portions of the food you
eat, placed in small cups, as well as sweet drinks. When the
offering is made, the spirit should be invited to eat it.
"Caring for a kuman thong is a way of helping to safeguard
the safety of the household. For example, if there is a short
circuit in the electrical wiring of the house while everyone
is asleep and it starts a fire, the kuman thong will awaken
the owner of the house. If a thief breaks in, the spirit will
both alert the household and chase away the intruder.
"But these kuman thong also have a tendency to be naughty.
Sometimes they tease small children, and the owner has to punish
them by striking them with a wooden rod. But it's important
to speak to the spirit in khaathaa while punishing it."
According to Mr Kraison, there used to be many genuine kuman
thong, but many of them have disappeared.
"This may be because the original owners have died, or
perhaps because the moved in with others who weren't able to
care for them properly. Or maybe they didn't want to look after
them and took them to a wat, where they were left them there
under a tree. Today there are a lot of fake ones being sold,
images that were made without performing the necessary ceremony.
These kuman thong don't have the ability to protect anything,
and their ineffectiveness has caused many people to stop believing
in the existence of real kuman thong.
Another man who knows a great deal about antiques is a jewellery
dealer named Virat who wants to remain anonymous. He said that
over 10 years ago he came into possession of a kuman thong that
had belonged to a man with a profound knowledge of the occult.
"At first I didn't believe in its power, and I stored it
away upstairs in a part of the house where no one lived,"
he recalled. "Then, when I was in bed downstairs, I hear
the sound of a child running around on the upper floor. This
went on for two or three nights, and I realised that the kuman
thong was playing up there.
"After that, I always took proper care of it. I started
by lighting five sticks of incense and offering it a sweet drink
and some milk. I said to it, 'Kuman, since we are living together
now, please watch over this house.' I did that because I believe
that the spirit can help protect my house. There are many workers
there, and some of them might try to steal things without my
realising it.
"I also learned that the kuman thong can help a business
to do well. Customers have come into my shop to buy things who
had actually intended to take their business somewhere else.
When I asked them why they had come to my stop, they said they
didn't know, it had been as if someone had led them there.
"And another thing: after some neighbours of mine moved
out of their house, people saw a child with his hair done in
a topknot walking around in it. On some nights I heard a knock
at the door, and when I opened it there was no one there. After
this had happened several times, I realised that a kuman thong
must have been responsible, and asked my neighbours either to
care for the spirit or, if they didn't want to, to leave it
at a temple. They did, and after that the knocking stopped."
After listening to stories like that one, you are left with
a choice of believing in kuman thong or rejecting it. Or perhaps
there's an easy way out - say you don't believe in the spirit,
but be careful to make sure that no one in the family brings
one home.