Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Haunted Shadows

© Photographer: Edd Boyer
We must travel in the direction of our fear.
~ John Berryman


The flickering shadows cast by jack o'lanterns are part of the great fun of Halloween. The gorgeous image above of a local pumpkin carving competition captures the spirit of this wonderful nighttime holiday, where children are suddenly free to explore vast, new spaces in their own neighborhoods. They fan out, intrepid and costumed, finding both treasure and the opportunity for mischief.

As they move through the shadows, there is always the chance that they might encounter a ghost or other supernatural being, or so they might imagine. Whether the shadow might have a substance of its own, they don't consider, which is probably for the best.

But what happens when we brush up against something, or someone, in the dark? Here's a video of a true ghost story, as told by Nathaniel Thomas Powell, who describes the event:



Level-headed Boo's account couldn't be denied - someone met her on the stairs in that darkened house. Unable to depend on her sight, her sense of feeling informed her of another presence.

I think it's the same way when we become aware of the shadow within. Our conscious mind, like our vision, is what we usually rely on, the default method for taking in and processing information. But neither of these methods can help us understand the shadow, a void that we fear, imagining that it contains any number of terrors. But in reality, it holds the parts of ourselves we have rejected and buried. These fragments wait patiently to be acknowledged and brought back into our larger selves as we move, in fits and starts, toward wholeness.

It takes special days like Halloween to remind us of the reality of the shadow. They invite us to explore the dark, holding out an offer of not just tricks and treats, but of a new view of ourselves and reality.

Monday, October 29, 2007

Halloween Thoughts, and a Real Ghost Story



What is it about the night that enchants children? So many children's books show their characters going out into the night for a great adventure (and almost always leaving their parents behind).

The great fun of Halloween isn't just the candy. It's a chance for children to roam their neighborhoods in the dark, to confirm their suspicions that things really are different at night. That's when the imagination can take over, filling in the gaps left by the absent light.

The origins of Halloween go back to the Celts, who celebrated Samhain, a harvest festival, in the late autumn. They believed it was a night when the boundary between the physical and spiritual worlds became very thin. This allowed spirits into the world to cause problems for humans. To confuse the spirits, people dressed as ghosts and ghouls, hoping to trick the spirits into moving away from their village.

Ghost stories are still with us, of course. A 2003 poll found that 51% of US adults believe in ghosts. Some people have speculated that ghosts are actually time-space anomalies, or some sort of electromagnetic residue. Others view ghosts as psychological projections of our fears.

In celebration of Halloween, take a look at the above video, which is an actual account of an encounter with a ghost known as the Ada Witch. It takes a while to get to the story, so be patient. For more information on this particular ghost, follow
this link and have a Happy Halloween!