Showing posts with label ghosts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ghosts. Show all posts

Friday, February 21, 2025

Apologies to the Ghost (a true story)

by Sarah Raplee

(First posted in October 2012)

Last summer, my husband and I decided to explore parts of southeastern Oregon. We’d read about a State Heritage Site called the Frenchglen Hotel at the base of Hart Mountain. With the Hart Mountain Antelope Refuge straight up the fault-block mountain to the rear and the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge wetlands across the road, the remote Harney County inn seemed the perfect base camp for our explorations of this rugged, sparsely-populated landscape. 

A few years back, the Oregonian newspaper ran a travel article about the hotel and the surrounding country. Built in 1924 on hardpan so thick it took dynamite to plant shade trees, the eight-room American four-square inn offers rustic accommodations and gourmet dining. Bonus: there were rumors hat the Frenchglen Hotel is home to at least one ghost.

For us the idea of staying in a haunted hotel (Do-it-yourself appendectomy is definitely ghost-worthy by Richard Cockle, The Oregonian) only added to the hotel's charm. An innkeeper had died in the nineteen-seventies when he tried to remove his own appendix. (Did I mention how isolated this place is? Population 11.) Strange goings-on had been reported by employees and guests over the years. They felt the innkeeper's spirit continued to watch over the Frenchglen Hotel he so loved from the Other Side.

Or was it someone else?

I made reservations for us at Frenchglen.

HOTEL AT FRENCHGLEN
You have to understand that my husband has a quirky sense of humor. He claims to have a Bucket List which he’s never written down. Until we stayed at Frenchglen, he’d always claimed one of the items on his Bucket List was to see a ghost. (Another is to be abducted by aliens, LOL.) We’d accompanied a ghost hunting group in Iowa years ago, and he’d heard voices, but he’d never seen an apparition. 

Over the years, we’d watched various ghost-hunting reality shows. He’d always laughed at the guys who challenged ghosts to make themselves known and then screamed like little children when the ghosts did what they asked. He figured if a spirit appeared to him at Frenchglen, he’d enjoy the experience.

Our first night was relatively uneventful. We heard a few strange noises, but nothing we couldn’t write off as the creaks and groans of an old building or noises caused by the evening wind. 

The next day was amazing: exploration, unbelievable vistas and glimpses of the rare Kiger mustangs that are direct descendants of Spanish horses that escaped in the fifteen-hundreds. We fell into our Frenchglen Hotel bed exhausted and ready for a good night’s sleep, or so I thought.
KIGER MUSTANGS
I awoke when my spooning husband shook my arm and then whispered into my ear from behind. “Wake up.”

His hand was ice cold. “I’m awake,” I whispered back, wondering why we were whispering. 

“Do you see a woman walking around the bed?”

I peered around our tiny room. There was barely room to walk around the double bed. Nothing moved in the dim starlight from the open window. Then the floor creaked between the foot of the bed and the door. Every hair on my body lifted. “Where is she?”

“At the foot of the bed. She’s talking in a foreign language and walking back and forth around the bed. She stops to pat the bed every once in a while. You don’t see her?” 

I didn’t. But the wooden floorboards creaked in a pattern as if someone slowly paced around the foot of the bed, then back the other way.Creak, creak, creak. I wondered if the ghost could hear my thundering heartbeat.“I don’t see her, but I hear her walking.”


“I can’t believe you don’t see her or hear her talking.” A shiver wracked him, shaking us both. “I’m cold to the bones. That’s the first thing I noticed when I woke up. Then she appeared. Are you cold?”

I wasn’t. The room had barely reached tolerable after a scorching day. My fingers found his cold forearm, cold shoulder, cold thigh. “I’m not cold, but you’re freezing.”

“I never thought I’d be afraid to see a ghost, but I’m scared shitless!”

“It just feels so bizarre,” I said, “so unreal. Maybe that’s why it’s scares people.” 

We lay in silence. I listened to the ghostly footsteps circle the bed and then reverse several times. I wished I could see her. “What does she look like?”

“An older woman, short and a little plump, with her hair pulled back in a bun. She’s wearing a white blouse and long dark skirt, like from the eighteen-hundreds or early nineteen hundreds. And no color, like a black-and-white movie.”

“Can you make out her features?”

“Not clearly.”

I thought over everything he’d told me. “What language is she speaking?”

“I don’t know. It’s not Spanish or French.”

“Does she seem upset?”

He hesitated. “No, I think she’s showing off the room and the bed. She jabbers and then gestures at the wall and pats the quilt.”

I thought about that. “Do you think she knows we’re here? Maybe she’s residual energy, not intelligent—like a recording that plays over and over.”

“I’m not sure. But whenever she pats the foot of the bed, she goes on either side of my feet.”

This continued for a few more minutes, and then my husband reported she faded away. The creaking pattern of footsteps also stopped.

After a few minutes of silence, my husband cleared his throat. “Since it’s our last night here, when we went to bed I mentally invited any ghosts that might be around to visit. I really thought it would be cool to see one. But she scared the crap out of me. Now I’m embarrassed at my reaction. She seemed friendly.” 

He sighed. “Wish I could apologize.”

“Do it in your head,” I said. “If she heard you the first time, she’ll hear you the second.”

We lay awake for a long time with our senses on high alert. The only other occurrence of note happened when we finally started to drift off. A bang so loud that the floor and bed shook and I let out a little screech scared the living daylights out of both of us. 

I guess we’ll never know what it meant
.
This is a true account of a recent experience. I wrote down the details right after it happened so I’d remember them. Have you had an encounter with the Unexplained? If so, how did you react?    ~Sarah


© 2012 Sarah Raplee

Friday, October 13, 2023

Friday the 13 th?

 by Diana McCollum

Well, here it is, one of the most superstitious days on the calendar. I have never taken it seriously. Have you?

I'd like for you all to comment in the comment section as to your feelings on Friday the 13th. Is it good, bad or do terrible things really happen on Friday the 13th?

Do black cats crossing your path signify bad luck? What about walking under a ladder? Spilt salt? Spilt milk?

A portion of harvested pumpkins.

Husband grew 15 pumpkins, all shapes and sizes to celebrate October, even Friday the 13th.



Paradise, CA sunset (Just threw this in because, well Pretty!!

Scary lights?

Old haunted cabin in northern CA

Do you believe in ghosts? Have you an experience with a ghost you'd care to share?

And what pray tell are your thoughts on Friday the 13th???

Have a wonderful fall!!!

Monday, October 17, 2022

Jumbie Leggo - Real or my Imagination?

 





By: Marcia King-Gamble
www.lovemarcia.com 

In the part of the world that I grew up, there was no such thing as Halloween. What we did have was Guy Fawkes, All Saints Day and All Soul’s Day. Three completely different celebrations, if you can call them that that.

So, who is Guy Fawkes AKA Guido Fawkes? He was an English conspirator whose failed attempt to kill King James and blow up the house of parliament in the 17th century, is celebrated on November 5th.   The day is celebrated with bonfires and effigies of the man himself. These are usually made of straw or cloth and are thrown on the fire. My recollection of this day is that much alcohol is involved.

All Saints Day and All Souls Day, run from October 31st through November 02nd. All Saints Day is celebrated on November 01st. It is a Catholic holiday commemorating the saints. People celebrate by lighting candles and going to church. It is also a day that many clean up the graves of loved ones and bring flowers to cemeteries. Many spend the day conversing with the dearly departed.

All Souls Day is probably the closest day to Halloween that I recollect. Devout Catholics believe that on November 2nd we celebrate the dead; those who committed lesser sins and linger in purgatory (a place not exactly hell or heaven.)    

November 01st and 02nd are also days of Jumbie Le Go (Jumbie Let go); days that struck the fear of God into both children and adults on the island where I grew up. Hearing the name ‘jumbie” still strikes the fear of God in me. Allegedly, the one sure way to keep theses ghosts away is to sprinkle salt around your home.  

What is a “jumbie?” These evil spirits are known by many names. Some are called Duppies, Anansis or Soucouyants. Many are described as headless creatures with goats’ hooves. They appear to people walking by themselves on dimly lit streets. Stories about these non-beings were one sure way to keep mischievous children like me, behaving, at least for a day or two.

Given all the above, I look forward to celebrating Halloween and seeing all those fun/scary costumes. Calls of Trick or Treat, will be fun in comparison to wondering whether a jumbie will appear from under my bed the moment the lights go off.

Happy Halloween! 

About Marcia King-Gamble

USA bestselling romance writer, Marcia King-Gamble originally hails from a sunny Caribbean Island where the sky and ocean are the same mesmerizing shade of blue. This former travel industry executive has spent most of life in the United States. A National Bestselling author, Marcia has penned over 34 books and 8 novellas. She has contributed to Michael Fiore’s DigitalRomanceInc and served as a moderator on the now defunct eHarmony advice boards.  Having witnessed the bad, the ugly, and the not so good in relationships, she still prefers to write about happily ever after. Caring for her animal family keeps her grounded and sane.

Visit Marcia at www.lovemarcia.com or “friend” her on Facebook: http://bit.ly/1MlnrIS

Be sure to join her newsletter mailing list.

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Saturday, October 10, 2020

A Little Spirit Paranormal by Paty Jager

I'm at the blog today to talk a bit about light paranormal in a book.  I don't know if someone before me went over the difference between dark and light paranormal but I'll do a brief overview. 

Dark paranormal is usually vampires, demons, werewolves, zombies and books with a darker almost Gothic theme. 

Light paranormal is usually witches, spirits, ghosts, with lighter themes than the dark paranormal. 

I write light paranormal. Mostly spirits and ghosts. Though I have enjoyed reading books about witches from authors like Nora Roberts, Mary Stewart, and Diana McCollum. 

My Spirit Trilogy ( I think you figured out this is a paranormal), is first and foremost a historical Native American romance. But because I have three Indian spirit siblings who are main characters in the books, that makes the books also light  paranormal. I say light not only because of the spirit element, but because that element of the story is key to the story, but it isn't dark. It is just in how they help the mortals in the books. 

Three books about the Wallowa Band of Nez Perce or Nimiipuu. Three sibling Nimiipuu Spirits fall in love with mortals as they work together to help the People.

Spirit of the Mountain

Evil spirits, star-crossed lovers, and duty…which will prevail?

Wren, the daughter of a Nimiipuu chief, loves the mountain and her people. When an evil spirit threatens Wren’s life, Himiin, Spirit of the Mountain, rushes to save her. But to leave the mountain means he’ll turn to smoke…

https://www.books2read.com/u/4Ek6A3

Spirit of the Lake

Can a spirit set upon this earth to watch over the Nimiipuu stay true to justice when revenge burns in his heart? On their quest for justice, Dove reveals spiritual abilities, ensnaring Wewukiye’s respect and awe. But will these abilities seal their future or tear them apart?

https://www.books2read.com/u/m2R9km

Spirit of the Sky

Can enemies not only work for peace but find love?

Sa-qan, a Nimiipuu eagle spirit, must take human form to save her mortal niece when the Nimiipuu are forced from their land by the U.S. Army. Trying to remain true to her spirit world and her people becomes hard when a Cavalry Officer captures her heart.

https://www.books2read.com/u/b5D814

These books are what I call the "books of my heart." I grew up in Wallowa County where the Nimiipuu summered and wintered, yet I never knew more about them than they rode in the Chief Joseph Days parade and Rodeo. They set up teepees and that was it. When I became an adult I learned how they were pushed from their land and how they suffered. That is what is in these three books. I'm happy to sat that today, they own land in Wallowa County and hold a Powwow there every July. For many years they weren't allowed to set foot in the county.

 My other light paranormal series is my Shandra Higheagle Mystery series. In these books it is a ghost or spirit of my main character's grandmother who comes to Shandra Higheagle in dreams and helps her solve the murders. 

This story started out with my wanting to have a Native American protagonist and coming up with a way to have her involved in the art world because my brother, an artist had given me a great idea for how to hide a weapon on a bronze statue. With is idea, I came up with Shandra being a potter who sold her vases as art and goes to art shows.  The idea of her grandmother coming to her in dreams came from my research of the Nez Perce who live on the Colville Indian Reservation in Washington State. The Nez Perce who live at Colville are descendants of the Non-treaty Nez Perce (the ones who followed Young Chief Joseph to Montana trying to get to Canada-you can learn all of this in my Spirit trilogy) who were first sent to Oklahoma after they were captured and then banned from being with the treaty Nez Perce in Lapwai in Idaho. These Non-treaty Nez Perce also practiced the Dreamer Religion of their ancestors. And this little tidbit, sent my mind spinning and I came up with the idea of Shandra's deceased grandmother coming to her in dreams. 

Although the grandmother comes to her, she doesn't just tell Shandra everything. Shandra has to decipher the dreams to help her catch the killers.

This only shows seven of the fifteen books in the series. 

You can find these books at my website: https://www.patyjager.net/shandra-higheagle-mystery-series/  most of these books are available in ebook, print, and audio. 

I prefer reading and writing the lighter paranormal books, what about you? Do you like lighter or darker paranormal reading? 

Paty Jager is an award-winning author of 47 novels, 8 novellas, and numerous anthologies of murder mystery and western romance. All her work has Western or Native American elements in them along with hints of humor and engaging characters. Paty and her husband raise alfalfa hay in rural eastern Oregon. Riding horses and battling rattlesnakes, she not only writes the western lifestyle, she lives it.

blog / websiteFacebook / Paty's Posse / Goodreads / Twitter / Pinterest   / Bookbub

Top photo purchased from DepositPhoto

Sunday, August 23, 2020

A Work in Progress is Hard Work

By Courtney Pierce

Do you believe in ghosts?

When I've been asked that question in the past, I offer a hesitant nod, followed by a wink and a smile. I didn’t really believe in ghosts beyond the normal psych-out from watching a scary movie. Being alone in the house can get me going, too, with a sudden unfamiliar noise, a flicker in the reflection of a darkened window, or ethereal images in flashes of lightning. However, my research for my latest work-in-progress, Big Sky Talk, led me down an interesting path through the ghost department.

Big Sky Talk is part Montana ghost story, part Native-American folklore, and part love story for those of us who have a few miles on our shoes. The story’s fuel is a grown woman’s grief over the loss of her elderly father. She starts life anew, but she can't hide.

Here’s a quick run-down of the premise:

“A wounded grizzly bear is on the loose in the sleepy suburb of Many Lakes in Kalispell, Montana. The mauled remains of its shooter, a known poacher, lay on a slab in the morgue under the scrutiny of Russell Knowles, the Sheriff of Flathead County. With one month to go before his retirement, Russ hopes this case will be one of his last.

Professional photographer Aubrey Cenderon is a new resident of Many Lakes. After the death of her father, the move to Montana will renew her passion for the outdoors and fulfill her father’s unrealized dreams. She looks forward to capturing wildlife with her camera lens, hiking the mountain trails, and sitting by the wood stove to finally grasp that she’s a 62-year-old orphan. But the bloody paw print on the lake shore behind Aubrey’s house is the size of a serving platter . . . and it’s fresh. Aubrey has a lot to learn about the dangers of living in Big Sky Country, and she’s about to get a crash course.

A knock on the door from Sheriff Knowles will change Aubrey’s life. Living in Montana is suddenly full of complications, and Russ’s concern for Aubrey’s safety comes with two serious ones–their instant mutual attraction and his insistence that she buy a gun. But using a gun won’t be an easy decision when Aubrey finds out why the injured grizzly-on-the-run is hunting specifically for her.”

It's an emotional dive into the fantastic.

I’m only at the fifty-percent mark into my first draft of Big Sky Talk, but the story is already rich in layers. My editor is licking her chops for the manuscript, but the more I research Native American folklore the deeper those layers become. Now that I live in northwest Montana, I’m in a unique position to tap into the wisdom of the Blackfeet and Salish tribes. I have access to almost too much information. I’m only a 40-minute drive from Glacier National Park, where thousands of years of Native American spirituality wrap around me like a blanket. 

There are several stories that are recounted in Glacier Ghost Stories by

Karen Stevensa local Indie book that I gobbled up in one sitting. Spirits really do call Glacier National Park home. According to the real-life testimonials of the staff who work in the Park's historic lodges, campgrounds, and on the trails, ghostly run-ins are not only documented, but the stories are also corroborated by visitors and guests. 

The strangest stories are relayed from the housekeeping staff and caretakers of the Park's grand lodges built by the Great Northern Railway in the early 1900s. Be prepared for an eerie experience in Room 30 at Belton Chalet. Guests consistently report consistent details of a woman weeping all night in the room. Also, a little Indian girl in buckskins has been seen walking the halls at night and knocking on doors. If followed, she leads guests to the stairway, where she suddenly disappears.

Glacier Park Lodge
Glacier Park Lodge is host to several spirits, most of which are Native American. The hotel sits on what used to be Blackfeet territory, which was the site of a particularly violent battle. There are regular reports from the housekeeping staff about a light female voice responding, "I'm in here" to a knock on the door. A double check of the schedule reveals the room is listed as unoccupied. A second knock produces no response. Upon entering the room, no one is there. Bellmen frequently pass women in old-fashioned garb on the stairs, only to have them disappear into thin air. In the Moccasin Room, the bar located in the Lodge's basement, bartenders and visitors alike have frequently seen two ghostly men sitting at the counter. The gift shop sports a life-sized carving of an Indian, whose gaze appears to follow shoppers.  

A trickster ghost haunts the gift shop at St. Mary Lodge. Upon opening the shop in
St. Mary Lodge
the 
morning, the staff frequently find that items have been pulled from the shelves and strewn across the floor. Dreamcatchers have also been removed from their boxes. And when the Lodge closes for the winter, the staff hears voices and "non-paying" guests moving around the empty hotel. It's no wonder. For hundreds of years, the trails of the St. Mary Valley were home to Native Americans, trappers, and hunters. Mountain men apparently make a lot of noise.

Lake McDonald Lodge
Lake McDonald Lodge sits on land that was deemed the "Sacred Dancing Place" of the Kootenai tribe. Could the spirits from these ceremonies be the cause of strange odors that grace the air and disappear? What about the complaints of noise from a loud party in Room 308 when the employees know the room is unoccupied?

And what about the ghostly pets that crawl into guests' beds at the

Many Glacier Hotel
Many Glacier Hotel? When the hotel closes down for the winter, a man in a top hat is frequently seen in the upstairs halls. In an interview with the hotel's caretaker, he was asked by reporters whether the incidents were true. The caretaker said, "If I say yes, then I'm crazy. If I say no, then I'm a liar."

It's hard to deny that something otherworldly is going on in these grand ole' dames of Glacier National Park. Maybe I'm gullible, but I want to believe, so I do. It's like method acting, I guess. To write about magical events, I have to be an "all in" believer, not just a "Daydream Believer."

While the majority of my research has been centered around the reincarnation beliefs of the Native-American tribes, the story is infused with personal details. They say that the most important people in our lives remain with us in various forms. In every culture there’s a unique bond between fathers and daughters—good and bad—and a father’s loss is life-changing for a daughter. The grief process can be filled with heartache, anger, regret, or unfinished emotional business. The last is at the heart of Big Sky Talk

My goal is to be both factually authentic and personal, but the two don’t always seamlessly meld together. An author can’t fudge on details to make the story fit together. It would be like trying to shove a marshmallow into a piggy bank.

Reincarnation beliefs vary among North American tribes, but there are a few universal principals: nature and the spirit world are intimately linked, the "spirit road" for the dead leads to the Milky Way, and that reincarnation, in either human or animal form, provides continuity to the soul. I chose to make one of my secondary characters of Blackfeet or Salish descent. I haven't settled on which tribe my character will be from yet, but my continued research will certainly guide me to make a choice.

As in my first three books, Stitches, Brushes, and Riffs, I’m thrilled to be back in the world of magical realism. I’ve always wanted to write a ghost story and to explore all of the exaggerated emotions that go along with creating one.  

Using reincarnation as the heart of my story allows me, the author, the supreme indulgence to button up all that unfinished business after the loss of my own Dad. Like my character of Aubrey Cenderon, I sense that he's still around in spirit. I'm sure he'll be reading over my shoulder as I write my character's conversation with a reincarnated grizzly bear, a dialogue of all the things I'd wished I would've said to him in those final days of his life. 

On second thought, forget the over-the-shoulder stuff. Dad would've wanted me to read it to him aloud. 

And so I will.


Courtney Pierce is a fiction writer living in Kalispell, Montana with her husband, stepdaughter, and their brainiac cat. Courtney writes for the baby boomer audience. She spent 28 years as an executive in the entertainment industry and used her time in a theater seat to create stories that are filled with heart, humor, and mystery. She studied craft and storytelling at the Attic Institute and has completed the Hawthorne Fellows Program for writing and publishing. Active in the writing community, Courtney is a board member of the Northwest Independent Writers Association and on the Advisory Council of the Independent Publishing Resource Center. She is a member of Willamette Writers, Pacific Northwest Writers Association, and Authors of the Flathead. The Executrix received the Library Journal Self-E recommendation seal.

Print and E-books are available through most major online retailers, including Amazon.com.
Check out all of Courtney's books: 


New York Times best-selling author Karen Karbo says, "Courtney Pierce spins a madcap tale of family grudges, sisterly love, unexpected romance, mysterious mobsters and dog love. Reading Indigo Lake is like drinking champagne with a chaser of Mountain Dew. Pure Delight."

Coming in 2021!

When Aubrey Cenderon moves to Montana after the death of her father, the peace and quiet of Big Sky Country becomes complicated with a knock on the door from the sheriff. An injured grizzly bear is on the loose and it must be eliminated before it kills again. The sheriff's insistence that she buy a gun for protection will present Aubrey with some serious soul-searching, because the grizzly-on-the-run is hunting for her too . . . for a different reason.

Saturday, August 4, 2018

Canadian Author of Mystery, History and Romance


By Alison Bruce

Although I know what defines a "romance novel", I can never seem to stick to the rules. Dead bodies keep showing up!

Take my first novel, Under A Texas Star, recently re-released by Deadly Press. I started writing it as a Historical Western Romance.

Then my characters rode into the town of Fortuna, Texas and the next thing you know, they’re sticking around to solve a murder mystery. I knew I needed to put an obstacle in their path and I decided it would be a dead body.

A couple of years later I went back to the romance well and wrote half of Hazardous Unions with Kat Flannery. (To be re-released by Deadly Press in August.) Notwithstanding the Civil War politics, race ethics, and dark humor, I managed to hit the Historical Romance mark, but it was a near thing. If I had needed to write another 10,000 words, I’m sure it would have included murder.

In A Bodyguard to Remember, released by Lachesis Publishing, my heroine finds a dead spy in her living room. In that case I set off to write a mystery but couldn’t resist adding a romance. In fact, I added three potential love interests, but my editor thought that was overkill so one of them ended up on the figurative cutting room floor (not the living room floor).


My most recent book, Ghost Writer, combines romantic suspense with a thirty-year old mystery, Canadian-US tension and ghosts. It includes my favorite romantic hero. It’s sad but true that for a while I was jealous of my own heroine.



As an author, I have no problem mixing mystery and romance with whatever other genre I’m writing. As a reader, that’s what I prefer. I grew up reading Georgette Heyer’s historical romances. My favorites were also mysteries, comedies or both. My favorite mysteries and thrillers included a romance. To me, the genres go together like bread and butter, or butter chicken and naan. Sure you can have one without the other, but it wouldn’t be as satisfying.

Alison Bruce writes history, mystery and suspense. Her books combine clever mysteries, well-researched backgrounds and a touch of romance. Her protagonists are marked by their strength of character, sense of humor and the ability to adapt to new situations. Four of her novels have been finalists for genre awards. Find all her books on Amazon.com.

Twitter: @alisonebruce

Monday, October 10, 2016

Things that go Bump in the Night!



 By: Marcia King-Gamble
www.lovemarcia.com

Here I am celebrating Florida Romance Writers 30th Birthday  with fellow, Generista, Kristin Wallace and author, Carol  Stephenson !
  
I digress. This month’s topic is supposed to be why we read scary stories,  and watch movies making you want to cover your eyes and check under your bed.   

Honestly, I’m hardly a fan of scary movies or books. Ghosts, goblins and things that go bump in the night do nothing for me.  Give me a good comedy, drama or sweet romance.  Anything associated with the supernatural just makes me want to retch. Yes I am a scaredy cat. Living in today’s world is scary enough.



Scary to me is the absence of good manners. People who don’t have the decency to RSVP to a wedding,  or thank you for a gift. I abhor those with a sense of entitlement.



Upsetting and scary to me are millennials attitude toward marriage.  Beta marriage was not something promoted in my day. Marriage isn't something you try on for size,  and if  after two years it doesn’t fit, you dissolve minus paperwork. This Real Estate approach to marriage, with option to renegotiate terms every five years, is for the birds.

Equally scary is casual sex with multiple partners; not that that's anything new, except the stakes are much higher these  days. Today, getting under the covers with a stranger may result in the gift that keeps giving. The diseases making the rounds need more than penicillin to cure. 



Troubling and scary are innocent lives being taken by rogue cops who let power go to their heads. Rather than choosing the option to use a Taser, they simply shoot and then cover it up.

Scary are the number of mentally challenged walking the streets, abandoned by family,  and released by overcrowded institutions. These people harass  drivers at every stoplight, badgering you into giving them money rather than food. They need our help. 

What about the young men and women who are caught up in the illegal business of human trafficking? These are usually runaways used to perform domestic duties and the basest of sexual acts.



Scary are today's role models - barely articulate and tabloid fodder.  And not because they are do-gooders, but because the latest sex tape has been uncovered, and the size of their butts make enthusiastic cocktail party chatter.

Race relations are at their very worse. For me a child of the seventies, I find this very sad.

Addiction issues run rampant and rehab centers have huge waiting lists. Not all on that waiting list fit the sixteen to twenty-one age bracket. 





But scariest of all is the upcoming election, and where this country may be heading.  As citizens of the United States, it's up to us to vote responsibly, or there may be even scarier times ahead!

Every vote counts!

Like me on Facebook here: http://bit.ly/1MlnrIS


 Marcia King-Gamble is a National Bestselling author. She has penned 34 books and 6 novellas. Her free time is spent at the gym, traveling, and with her animal family.