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My name is Jewel. Welcome to my blog!

As a young girl growing up in the Philippines, I always hoped for storms so ferocious that school would have to be cancelled. And when it was cancelled, my siblings and I got to stay home. Usually there was no electricity, which we called "black out".

Who cared about the storm outside when we had wax from the candle, to mold into a human shape and stick pins in...just kidding, we weren't really into voodoo. Anyway, along with the wax sculpting, we exchanged suspenseful stories, of ghosts and aswang and the mananaggal.

This blog is dedicated to that spine-tingling story, of things imagined or real. Come on in, grab a blob of wax and join me around the table.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Haunted?

This past Friday, my family and I went to see a house built in 1907. (We are looking for horse property, and this house sits on nearly two acres in the old section of our small town.)

I held no high hopes for this light-yellow two-story house. The brick around the foundation looked like it was crumbling or sagging. A lone, overgrown pine tree was its only front yard accent. A black cat provided color and life in an otherwise bland facade. We walked around the grounds first as another realtor was showing the house, and peered into the crawl space towards the back of the house. (A perfect place for a child to hide and discover something terrifying.) There was a shed labeled "Danger: Chlorine Gas" with a metal container for "Gas Masks".

But inside was something else. It made me think of pioneer houses in the memorial parks in downtown Salt Lake City. Lovely and possibly - with the help of my overactive imagination -haunted.

***
There was a spacious entry with hardwood polished to a high sheen. There were french doors on both sides. To the right was a front room with a carved fireplace mantle in gorgeous wood and framed with painted tile. To the left was a dining room with a built in china hutch and another ornate fireplace. From the dining room, you go into the kitchen, which, for an older home, felt spacious, with modern-day amenities; no original wood stove.

To the back of the house, a more recent occupant added onto the building with a rectangular family/work room which is probably where they did laundry because there were water hook-ups. The room smelled of turpentine because of the various paints and stains being stored there. (Mmm, or maybe there was a former occupant who painted at the first light of dawn or late into the evening by candle night?)

There was one bedroom downstairs. I loved the bathroom, with its clawed bathtub and tall ceiling. It reminded me of a bathroom we had in the Philippines when we rented this old Spanish house.

As we went upstairs through this narrow stairway, a musty smell overpowered me and gave me goose bumps. There was a plant ledge at the turn of the stairs in front of a window. The three bedrooms upstairs all had interesting shapes that followed the sloping roof line. There was also an attic, where one could keep an insane relative under watch from a servant (a la Jane Eyre). One door led to the house addition's roof, which was spongy under our step and led to an unrailed edge which was a good drop to the lawn below.

Okay, so maybe it wasn't really a haunted house, but I already decided I want this house as a setting for a ghost story someday.