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Why Are There So Many Ghosts In One House

Why are there so many ghosts in Japan?

Because in Japan they revere the dead, and that draws spirits. There is paganism — a multitude of deities or kami (spirits). Shinto followers believe that the spirits of their ancestors and kami can protect them. It is believed that some kami reside on earth, rather than in an other world, to look after their descendants and aid them when possible. I remember years ago when ravens and crows were a huge problem in Tokyo, attacking residents and — this is strange — known at strange moments to congregate around cemeteries. In one case a blaze was sparked when they picked up incense from a graveyard and dropped it on a forest nearby. There was even a report in the Los Angeles Times. We had it on Spirit Daily. About 21,000 of the birds had taken up residence in Tokyo, at least count, triple the number twenty years ago. Some believe crows and the netherworld are connected. Superstitious nonsense… correct?

Why are there so many angry ghosts?

interesting question! Ghosts who are happy pass on into the spirit world. However, ghosts, who have had a hard life, died in a horrific way, where murdered or feel that they have unfinished business generally feel they cannot move on. They stay on our earth plane grieving and they tend to want to show people how they feel by scaring them, causing poltergeist activity and, of course, they may scream or make a noise that relates to there emotions. The most common phenomena hearing ghosts may happen on the time of there death, for example, the person died at 2am, every night at 2am the person would be most likely to be heard. The spirit world is timeless so no spirit is forced to pass over when they are not ready.

Tv turns it's self on. Is there a ghost in our house?

We've had our vcr turn off when our neighbor uses his remote to open his garage, so maybe someone around you has a remote on the same frequency as your tv.

Why does China have so many ghost towns?

As described excellently by Paul Denlinger, the primary reason why "ghost towns" have popped up all over is because over the past decade plus there has been a strong incentive by local governments to finance real estate construction.  Another contributing factor to the real estate construction binge in China is the lack of investment options for the bulk of China's population [1] which creates inflated demand for real estate as a "store of value" beyond its intrinsic purpose as a shelter.As they say, "real estate is local" and that is no different in China.  The projects were sponsored by thousands upon thousands of local governments that spanned the entire spectrum of competencies, corruption levels, leadership personalities and local economies (i.e. supporting tax base).As a result, you end up with a wide variety of projects and outcomes.  Many projects were very successful, some less successful and others have (thus far) been fantastically unsuccessful.  The "fantastically unsuccessful" ones are the "ghost towns" you see and likely the result of high levels of incompetence and/or corruption as well as the occasional local government that is flush with so much cash that it can't find enough ways to spend it all (Ordos, deep in China's coal country, is an example of this).Notes:[1] Up until recently, middle class Chinese savers generally had three places to store their savings: the bank, the local stock market and real estate.  At a bank, the interest rate on deposits historically lagged behind inflation, which means your savings are slowly eroding in real terms.  With stocks, Chinese savers were restricted to investing in the domestic markets which many investors viewed as effectively gambling and not a suitable place to store one's life savings.  That left real estate.Under the Xi administration, the Chinese government has started to liberalize the finance sector, generally providing Chinese savers with more varied and more attractive investment options.

How do you get rid of a ghost cat?

A ghost cat is not so far-fetched as you think. I used to have one that manifested so strongly, my ex-husband would actually have an allergic reaction to it. It left on its own the same time our human ghost left.

I'm not sure how to go about expelling an animal's ghost or even why they stick around. Can an animal become so attached to its human that it keeps searching for him or her after it dies? We can usually get a human ghost to cross over just by telling it to go. Cats, to my knowledge, don't understand human language so telling it to go probably won't work.

It sounds like the cat maybe belonged to the woman ghost who was in your home in California (if I'm reading that correctly). If the woman hadn't crossed over, then you could simply ask her to take her cat away. But, since she has crossed over, don't try that. It won't be your lady ghost from Cali who comes to visit.

Burning sage has been recommended for cleansing your home of unwanted spiritual energy. You could try that. If you don't have sage, then a natural incense will usually work in a pinch -- something like sandalwood, not perfume scents.

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