PPP Investigations

PPP Investigations Paranormal Investigations

04/06/2026

I’ve been seeing a lot about the proposed Annabelle exhibit and Warren-style museum, and I want to give my take on it from my own perspective. I understand and respect why people are concerned about protecting Salem’s history, especially when it comes to 1692. That history matters, and it should always be treated with respect. But at the same time, I think we need to be honest about what Salem already is today. Salem is not just a historical city, it’s also a destination built around the paranormal, the unexplained, and yes, horror. That’s not an insult, that’s reality. Between ghost tours, haunted attractions, witch-themed shops, and the overall atmosphere the city promotes, we’ve already blended history with entertainment for a long time now. That’s why I don’t agree with the idea that something like the Annabelle doll or anything connected to the The Conjuring universe suddenly crosses a line that hasn’t already been crossed. Nobody is going to walk into an exhibit like that and think it’s part of Salem’s actual history. People know the difference between real events and modern horror. We give visitors way too little credit if we think they can’t separate the two. Also, if the argument is about being disrespectful to the victims of 1692, then we have to be consistent about that. Salem already profits from tours, attractions, and experiences that are built around those events. You can’t say one thing is unacceptable while ignoring everything else that already exists.
To me, this doesn’t come down to whether Salem should have non-historical attractions. It already does, everywhere you look. The real question is why this particular one is being singled out while others are accepted. At the end of the day, I don’t see this as something that erases history. I see it as another attraction in a city that has long balanced education, tourism, and entertainment. As long as Salem continues to preserve and respect its real history, I don’t think adding something like this takes away from that.

02/16/2026

Part 4: Seriousness problem in the paranormal

There’s this idea that respect equals solemnity. It doesn’t. Respect is about intent. There’s a difference between mocking and building rapport. Treating spirits like fragile porcelain dolls who can’t handle a joke might actually be more insulting. People joke. People tease. Death doesn’t automatically turn everyone into a Victorian ghost who faints at sarcasm.
Humor is also a survival tool. Without it, investigators convince themselves everything is paranormal. Laughter keeps you tethered to reality. Sometimes the EMF spike is your phone. Sometimes the growl is your stomach. Sometimes the shadow is just you doing a convincing impression of doom.
Could humor shut things down? Sure. So could fear. So could seriousness. There’s no universal rulebook. Adaptability matters more than tone.
Worst case, nothing happens and you laughed in the dark.
Best case, you get a response you weren’t expecting.
Either way, that beats treating curiosity like a crime and humor like a sin.

02/16/2026

Part 3: Seriousness problem in the paranormal

Imagine someone barging into your house and immediately interrogating you nonstop. You’d ignore them. Now imagine someone saying, “Look, this is awkward for all of us, but if you’re here, now’s your chance to say hi before we start blaming each other for the noises.” That’s approachable. That lowers defenses.
Paranormal investigations fall into patterns. Same questions. Same tone. Same expectations. If something is aware, it might just be bored. Humor breaks the script. A question like, “Did you haunt this place just to mess with us, or are you working on commission?” sounds ridiculous, but it’s different. Different creates variables. Variables create data.
Nobody ever asks the goofy questions. Nobody asks if the spirit was annoying when they were alive. Nobody asks, “Be honest, do we look as dumb to you as we feel right now?” If something responds after that, maybe it’s enjoying the interaction.

02/15/2026

Part 2: Seriousness problem in the Paranormal.

PART 2:
Fear and tension mess with perception. When everyone’s wound tight, every creak becomes “evidence.” Every shadow is “peeking.” A floorboard might groan because it’s old… or maybe because a puffin wandered in and is judging your flashlight placement. Humor snaps that spiral. It grounds people. It reminds you that sometimes the building is just a building and the only thing lurking is your imagination… or the ghost of a judgmental cat.
Being playful doesn’t mean you’re not paying attention. It usually means the opposite. Relaxed investigators observe better. They stop confirming their own fear loop. A quick line like, “If that was a demon, it has the subtlety of a miniature elephant sneaking down the stairs,” doesn’t kill credibility. It resets perspective.
And here’s what most people miss: the humor isn’t just for you. If something intelligent is present, it might respond differently to someone who’s engaging instead of interrogating.

02/15/2026

PART 1: of 4
The paranormal community has a “seriousness” problem, and it’s killing our results.
Why Humor Belongs in Paranormal Investigation (Yes, Even the Wiseass Kind)
One thing you almost never see in paranormal investigations, especially on TV or online, is humor. Everything is treated like a funeral procession. Whispering voices. Dramatic pauses. Tense stares. The same recycled questions over and over like they’re reading from a haunted teleprompter. “Is anyone here?” “How did you die?” “Can you make a noise?” You’d think humor was banned by some ghostly HR department and if you even smirked you’d be fined in spectral currency.
But if spirits are people who once lived, were they all this serious when they were alive? Most people had a sense of humor. Dark, ridiculous, eye-roll worthy. Why would that vanish the second their heart stopped? If we ignore that, aren’t we turning the unknown into horror props instead of personalities?
Humor during an investigation isn’t disrespectful. It’s human. And it might be the most underused tool we have.

02/07/2026

THE LINE BETWEEN INVESTIGATION AND DISRESPECT

PART 3

Ethical investigators operate with some simple principles. Intent matters. Are you testing claims or performing for drama? Target matters. Human spirits deserve care, while alleged hostile entities may require firm boundaries. Transparency matters. Make it clear why you’re doing what you’re doing, especially when content goes public. Respect matters. Respect the history, the environment, and the living people connected to the location. You’re there to observe, document, and understand, not disrupt.
Humor also plays a surprisingly important role. Paranormal investigation can be tense. Hallways creak, shadows flicker, and every bump or squeak can make your heart jump. Light humor helps you stay human and keeps perspective. Maybe someone yelps when a branch taps a window, thinking it’s a spirit. Maybe your EMF meter spikes when someone sneezes, and everyone blames it on a poltergeist attack. Laughing at those moments doesn’t invalidate the work. It signals that you’re grounded and able to separate absurdity from investigation. Humor builds credibility.
Testing claims is key. Many “evil” spirits have mundane explanations: suggestion, environmental factors, misinterpreted noises, or psychological priming. By calmly asserting yourself with a hostile entity claim, you create a controlled test. If nothing happens, that’s significant. It doesn’t mean disrespect. It means logic and observation are guiding your approach. That’s the difference between professional investigation and theatrics. One produces knowledge. The other produces clicks.
Criticism will always exist. Some investigators deserve it. But painting the entire field with the same brush is unfair. Ethical paranormal investigation balances curiosity, respect, skepticism, and caution. Explore responsibly. Document carefully. Assert boundaries when necessary. Separate skepticism from disrespect. And yes, laugh at yourself when a shadow turns out to be your own reflection, or when your recorder captures a “voice” that turns out to be a stray pigeon outside. Curiosity is great, but respect and humor keep us human, keep us credible, and keep the community alive.

02/07/2026

THE LINE BETWEEN INVESTIGATION AND DISRESPECT

PART 2

Then there’s the criticism about antagonizing spirits. Yes, some investigators do provoke, taunt, or shout at entities in ways that lean more toward theater than research. It looks bad to outsiders. But intent is everything. When I challenge what’s claimed to be a hostile entity, sometimes called a demon, I’m stress-testing the claim. I’m not mocking or harassing human spirits. I’m not seeking a reaction for clicks. I’m asking, “If this truly is a malevolent, intelligent entity, do the claims hold up under pressure?”
Classic claims around demons include retaliation, attacks, oppressive feelings, or escalation when disrespected. If that were true, asserting myself calmly and firmly should produce something measurable. When it doesn’t, that’s data. That’s an investigation. That’s skepticism in action.
Critics tend to flatten all spirits into one category. Anything paranormal is assumed to be vulnerable and deserving of delicate treatment. From that perspective, even boundary setting looks like abuse. But there’s a huge difference between asserting boundaries with a hostile entity and antagonizing confused human spirits. The former is careful, evidence driven, and intentional. The latter is unethical. Most outsiders don’t notice that nuance.

02/07/2026

THE LINE BETWEEN INVESTIGATION AND DISRESPECT

PART 1
If you spend any time in the paranormal community, you’ve probably heard it: “You investigators are disrespecting spirits. You’re taking advantage of souls trapped here, and profiting off their suffering.” And yeah, I get it. That criticism pops up a lot, especially with paid tours, monetized investigations, or viral content from supposedly haunted locations. On the surface, it sounds fair. People see someone holding a recorder, camera, or other detection gear and assume the worst, that we’re exploiting beings who can’t defend themselves. But like most things in this field, the reality is more nuanced, and sometimes, if you step back, it’s kind of funny.
Let’s start with the “profiting off spirits” argument. Critics often frame it like this: trapped, suffering, vulnerable souls, and humans charging money to interact with them. That definitely raises eyebrows. But here’s the nuance: charging a fee isn’t inherently exploitative. Most of the time, it covers legal access, equipment costs, insurance, or travel expenses. You’re paying the humans, not the spirits. Where the criticism lands is in presentation. The loudest, most visible examples online involve people yelling in hallways, waving gadgets around, or calling for a “demon” to appear for the camera. Sure, entertaining, but it makes the entire field look like thrill-seekers exploiting ghosts for views. And perception sticks. Once it takes hold, skepticism grows, credibility falters, and conversations about ethical investigation get drowned out by one viral clip.

02/04/2026

Abandoned hospitals, TB sanatoriums, and old institutions are fascinating. History, atmosphere, and mystery make them irresistible. But just because a place is abandoned doesn’t mean it’s free real estate and yes, sneaking in does have consequences, even if you’re hoping to catch a ghost on camera,recording or through detection devices.
Safety first. Old buildings are fragile. Floors can collapse, staircases can fail, asbestos and mold are real hazards, and leftover medical equipment can be dangerous. One wrong step and suddenly you’re the star of a viral video, not because of paranormal activity, but because you tripped over a gurney while yelling “Is anyone there?!”
Access disappears. Property owners and towns shut the door fast once break-ins happen. Permits vanish, future investigators and filmmakers get told “no,” and everyone who tries to do things responsibly suffers. That one late-night bolt-cutter adventure could make your favorite abandoned TB hospital off-limits for years and that’s no fun for anyone.
Evidence gets compromised. Disturbed buildings are full of human-made noises, moved objects, and altered spaces. Natural settling sounds, wind, or a raccoon dragging trash across the floor can suddenly look like poltergeist activity. Nothing ruins credibility faster than “EVP captured” footage that is just your buddy screaming because they dropped a flashlight.
Respect the history. These locations weren’t built as haunted playgrounds. They were real hospitals, sanatoriums, and treatment centers where people lived, suffered, and often died. Treating them like adventure spots or content fodder feeds the stereotype that paranormal investigators don’t care about the people or stories behind the walls and it’s also kind of a mood killer for actual ghosts.
It’s not about being better than anyone else. It’s about keeping access open, protecting safety, preserving evidence, and maintaining credibility. The last thing anyone wants is for “ghost hunting” to besynonymous with “criminal trespassing”,unless you want your LinkedIn profile to read “Professional Trespasser.”
Explore responsibly. Investigate carefully. Get permission when possible.
Because curiosity is great, but respect keeps the doors open literally and figuratively. And nobody wants to explain to the cops that the “haunting” was really just Dave tripping over a rusted wheelchair again.

While on vacation I came across this place The Key West Lighthouse is widely reported to be haunted by the spirit of a f...
01/24/2026

While on vacation I came across this place
The Key West Lighthouse is widely reported to be haunted by the spirit of a former female lighthouse keeper from the late 19th century. Visitors and staff have described sightings of a woman in a long dress on the staircase and near the lantern room. Additional reports include unexplained footsteps, flickering lights, and sudden temperature drops within the tower. Many believe the apparition represents a keeper who continues her duties long after death

01/17/2026

Breaking Paranormal News:

Police say a petite psychic escaped custody last night.
People should be on the lookout for a Small Medium at Large.
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