“So yeah, some of my friends are ghosts. But most of my friends are alive and still in the physical, just clarifying that,” Rebekah explained.
How does one become friends with a ghost? Like, to me, that just seems mind-boggling.
“How did this happen? Well, I didn’t go looking for it, that’s for sure,” Rebekah said. “The reality is I’ve been interacting with ghosts from all over the place for most of my life. The reality is I was in denial of that for most of my life.”
“A few years ago, I moved to Wilmington, North Carolina. One of the most haunted places in the United States, by the way.”
“I was inundated; there were ghosts everywhere. I could not deny it anymore. What was even cooler was this place was so haunted that there are other people that are like, ‘yep, it’s haunted.'”
Now I live in a town in Wisconsin that is known to have several haunted places in the town. Like on top of our main landmark, The Big M, which is literally just a big M made out of white painted stones on an old mining mound.
One of the town’s original families had some mysterious things happen during a storm one night, and they were unexplained still to this day.
There are also several residents’ halls on the town university campus that are known to be haunted; even the old local lead mine is known to be haunted by the lives of miners who passed.
Though I am skeptical about becoming friends with ghosts, I won’t deny that they are spirits and ghosts that roam the country and world. Back to the ghost guide.
“So I was able to get that confirmation from other people as well,” Rebekah continued. “The first house I moved into was very haunted. And the woman that was regularly haunting it really wanted to communicate with us. So I was like, sure.”
“I got a job as a ghost tour guide, thought that be fun. And anyway, I started to meet other spirits. Two of them, George and Rupert, are actually spirits I have regular playlists on. I started to check out more historic places around here, and I started to meet more spirits. That’s how we picked up Jimothy.”