Wednesday, December 28, 2011

The Tower of Terror

Situated on the fringes of the creature-infested woods of central England's Cannock Chase, is a large structure called the Pye Green BT Tower (about which, you can find more at this link).

But, what makes the tower stand out - aside from its size and height, of course - is that in the immediate vicinity of the tower there have been numerous sightings of everything from werewolf-style entities to Bigfoot-type beasts, large black cats to fierce-looking black dogs with glowing red eyes, and ghosts to aliens.

Are we looking at a classic window-area of a type that many Forteans believe exist?

Does the tower itself play a role in the events and encounters?


Or, are those theorists correct who believe that localized electromagnetic pollution may be provoking bizarre hallucinations in certain receptive people who stray too close to the tower?

Thoughts anyone???

2 comments:

  1. This post really gets the imagination working full throttle.

    If the tower's emitted electromagnetic interference were to somehow induce hallucinations, why are they hallucinations of specific entities within the context of the tower's natural setting and not within some florescent orange tropical rain forest landscape? That's to state that it makes no sense that induced hallucinations would superimpose specifically fantastic iconic paranormal figureheads within a typical setting. Why not Groucho Marx, Abe Lincoln, the Queen, Satan, or great big green canaries?

    In fact, why even "entities" at all? Why not hallucinate that the tower itself, or the surrounding area was on fire?

    I am thoroughly perplexed by the exact same question as it relates to alien abduction. Why not be abducted by Bozo The Clown instead of the hypothetical Grey if it's a matter of natural brain induced hallucinations?

    All this begs the question of whether certain specific images might be somehow inherent to us wherein they are cued or drawn from a preexisting genetic memory index.

    If electromagnetic interference were to be found responsible, what, if anything, could be found within the mind or the interference that would be so specific as to cause superimposed iconic hallucinations?

    Is there a third component involved?

    Fascinating Nick!

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  2. >"I am thoroughly perplexed by the exact same question as it relates to alien abduction. Why not be abducted by Bozo The Clown instead of the hypothetical Grey if it's a matter of natural brain induced hallucinations?"

    I take it you haven't read Dan Mitchell's terrorific accounts with an entity he calls... The Harlequin ;)

    >"Is there a third component involved?"

    Maybe the geomagnetic properties of the location, coupled with how 'sensitive' the witnesses turn out to be.

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