lemon jelly
New Member
What do you make of it?
If the figure was indeed completely "slate grey" from head to toe as Morrissey states i'd say it was definitely a ghost. Though, erm, i've never seen a ghost so i'm not really qualified to say..So maybe i should stop here. But the gut feeling i get from the story is it was indeed a ghost. Or maybe i just want to believe it was a ghost to make the story interesting and worth telling.
I'm of the opinion it takes some sort of awareness of the pysche to see ghosts or spirits. My mind isn't and never really has been tuned in to a state where i may see something ghostly.Spending an hour or so in the surroundings of Saddleworth Moor on a dark bleak night miles from civilisation may have tuned Morrissey and friends' minds to a state of becoming able and aware of seeing something paranormal. They would have unwittingly "tuned in" as a result of their surroundings?
Morrissey could have been fooled by his imagination, but then all of them saw the figure . Could a group of three or four people all have been fooled by their imagination at the same moment?
Found since reading the book that Morrissey has recounted the story on more than one occasion in the past but it was new to me
If the figure was indeed completely "slate grey" from head to toe as Morrissey states i'd say it was definitely a ghost. Though, erm, i've never seen a ghost so i'm not really qualified to say..So maybe i should stop here. But the gut feeling i get from the story is it was indeed a ghost. Or maybe i just want to believe it was a ghost to make the story interesting and worth telling.
I'm of the opinion it takes some sort of awareness of the pysche to see ghosts or spirits. My mind isn't and never really has been tuned in to a state where i may see something ghostly.Spending an hour or so in the surroundings of Saddleworth Moor on a dark bleak night miles from civilisation may have tuned Morrissey and friends' minds to a state of becoming able and aware of seeing something paranormal. They would have unwittingly "tuned in" as a result of their surroundings?
Morrissey could have been fooled by his imagination, but then all of them saw the figure . Could a group of three or four people all have been fooled by their imagination at the same moment?
Found since reading the book that Morrissey has recounted the story on more than one occasion in the past but it was new to me