
Happened again.
At midnight, I found myself awake, alone with my baby boy, staring at the figure of a bulky child who seemed to be a ghost.
An hour later we went to visit a friend and the lovely husband was driving around hoping to find a parking space, so baby boom went back to an empty apartment.
That's what I think.
I just closed the door and groped for the light, and my little arm disappeared from my strong arm, which had an obvious feeling than I had-I was not alone.
My bedroom is side by side with the baby's room and I'm pretty sure someone is standing in the nursery.
I'm not particularly afraid of this idea. -
My favorite place is the cemetery and the haunted place. -
But so far this supernatural thing is basically confined to the corridor outside our bedroom, so I was a little surprised to see a little shadow, which is no different from the child's shadow, stand in the middle of the room near the feet of the crib.
Within a few seconds, it disappeared, and the lights behind me flashed with knowledge.
Of course, I am not the first mother to witness ghosts wandering around the crib.
In a recent horrific incident in North Carolina, the mother of two young children killed them with an axe and then claimed that a ghost had her do so, which is undoubtedly an extreme example (
Although I did get stuck at the time, this terrible disaster happened when I was having dinner with my friends).
I insist that this is not only an unforgivable act of abuse, but also for all of our mothers --who-see-
Ghosts look crazy.
Offensive to parents and paranormal phenomena.
When I saw this fleeting nurseyroom Phantom, I remembered what happened when my mother, sister and her children visited.
When the haunted toothbrush incident happened, my niece slept in the same room in the nursery now.
The bathroom was just across the street from the nursery, so when my eight-year-old niece was woken up by the sound of her electric toothbrush falling off, she just got up from the bed and turned it off.
The toothbrush started before she pulled the lid back and settled it back.
This time, she was a little alarmed and woke up her grandmother who was sleeping in the room with her.
With a little encouragement from grandma, she went to turn it off for the second time.
She climbed back to the bed in time and asked it to open for the third time. Wide-
Sharp-eyed, she bravely took the toothbrush out of the bathroom, took it to the kitchen, and turned it off for the last time.
By then, the whole family woke up, so we surrounded the table in the early morning sun.
When I asked my niece what had happened, she kind of shrugged her shoulders and said she thought it was a ghost of a kid playing tricks on her.
The toothbrush has never been done before and has not been done since, although my niece reports that she has seen more than one ghost in her short life.
Shortly after they left, I happened to receive a copy of the review of a book called "Children who see ghosts. This book tells the story of how we adults see our children's supernatural experiences as fictional impulses.
Believe in their fears, or react to them.
I thought about how calmly my sister listened to her daughter's description of the incident and how that encouraged her brother to talk about the sound he had heard in my lobby the day before.
This led to a ghost marathon.
Story Exchange for breakfast.
It was, frankly, their most memorable visit.
Of course, my sister and I played Ouija board from an early age and had a picnic in the cemetery, which is no stranger to this stranger.
I am certainly not raised to be afraid of ghosts, but to embrace them. -
I would like to pass on this feature to the lovely little one who is currently napping in the haunted nursery.