stoogefreaky wrote:(sigh)
Sorry if I have upset you, it was certainly not my intent. As you probably have noticed, I strongly don't believe in ghosts. I have been "attacking" more your biased way to tell things than your actual beliefs. Astro Forever has told a very similar story about a "ghost" appearing in her bedroom, however she presented the phenomenom as it really is: a perceived fact. She didn't jump to conclusion to claim it was actually a ghost.
Now a bit about perception...
<turning on doubt-o-matic phsycho-philosophical rambling>
I don't trust my earsI have
tinnitus, and because of this I have a permanent background noise in which I can hear sounds that don't exist (even though despite of that I hear very well). When I surf the web, I usually play music on my computer. It has happened once that I had forgotten to start the software. The problem was that I had heard music anyway

When I realized the software was not started and there couldn't possibly have music, I also realized that in fact I heard nothing, I really had only imagined it, the tinnitus allowing the background noise to look like music until I really pay attention.
I don't trust my noseI have chronical nasal irritations (like some kind of light hay fever that lasts all year). Because of that I have troubles smelling correctly. But I can smell odors that don't exist too.
I don't trust my eyesAlthough I have a good sight, I sometimes see things that don't exist, especially in darkness. If I am in complete dark and I begin to think about ghosts, I will see movements. If darkness is only partial, I will still see movements on the extreme side of my sight, never on front of me even if I move quickly. I will occasionally see moving shadows on front of me, but will eventually realize it is for example the shadow of a tree moving before a city light, unless it is a pile of CDs and paper

As you may have seen in a recent post, shadows can have very realistic shapes
I don't trust my mindWhat's that? If we can't even trust our very selves, we are all doomed!

But it is true nevertheless. The mind can work in many, many modes: normal, happiness, sadness, fear, anger, drowsyness, simple lack of attention; many states that have a direct impact on reasoning. Just think about how you think in all these modes, the dramatic difference between normal thinking and thinking in dreams with its twisted logic. How reliable can be the mind when one is trying to sleep?
After more than a decade of
introspection, after having analyzed my thoughts, dissected them, investigated where they come from, what are their motives, I finally concluded that the mind is not very reliable. By the way, how reliable can be considered such a conclusion done by a mind that is unreliable according to this very conclusion?

If I am sad, I will look for more thoughts that make me sad. If I am happy, I will look for more thoughts that make me happy. If I am angry, I will look for more thoughts that make me angry. And so on... Even in a "normal mode", I know that my mind is very likely to find proofs of what I believe, even if it's false. Finally, the mind is more like a vast land whose only a small part is known. The vast majority of the land is inaccessible, or very difficult to access: high mountains, vast oceans, dark forests, deep caves... Is there something beyond/within them? Many thinking processes, if not most, occur in those unexplored areas. The perceived thoughts are nothing else than the tip of an iceberg.
It is worth nothing though that I know when I can decently trust my senses: if what I can perceive is above a kind of threshold, I know it is real. And so far, I never saw/heard/whatever anything unusual that was above that threshold

The real sign that someone has become a fanatic is that he completely loses his sense of humor about some important facet of his life. When humor goes, it means he's lost his perspective.
Wedge Antilles
Star Wars - Exile