Thursday, January 16, 2014
Black Eyed Kids
I really got into studying Black Eyed Kid reports a little while back. I was so obsessed I read all comments on all internet sites I could find. Black eyed kids are a new paranormal phenomenon. The stories all revolve around kids with all black eyes wanting to be let into your house. The reason I found them fascinating is I could not figure out what these things were. Theories run from, demons, alien-hybrids, extradimensional travels, and kids playing pranks. One of the internet comments fascinated me, it said, its almost like humans are programmed genetically to fear these creatures. I had a reaction of fear reading these stories. I am not fazed by anything, I have read it all. When I read BEK stories I radiate fear. Another odd thing that is reported concerns electrical equipment malfunctioning while reading BEK stories. I had a similar experience while researching bek stories. My google and youtube malfunctioned every time I typed in black eyed kids, yet worked fine on any other searches. What happens when you let a bek in? The 64,000 dollar question. I found four instances of people letting in black eyed kids. (My phone just stopped, a sec ago) The boy who let a bek into the back of the car and then got sick. The man who let two in, and felt like they were draining his soul when they touched him. The man who died after giving a bek a ride to a parking garage. Finally, from a comment, a neighbor watched her neighbor let beks in. He vanished. Bottom line is, don't let them in. I read some of these on Mysteriousuniverse but good luck finding them all. I noticed that bek stories have a lot in common with the vampire legend. They need to have your permission to enter. They ask if they can come in to feed. They make growling animal sounds. Some have fangs. They have the ability to hypnotize you into doing what they want. They have a tangible fear that people can feel. These things are not a modern myth and not a hoax as David Weatherly points out in his book The Black Eyed Kids. I think they may be the source for the original vampire legends. I studied story after story and I have no clue what these things are. One last note, one comment I read was a bek story where the person hit one with a baseball bat and said it was like hitting metal, robots? They do seem to be able to say only certain things and are incapable of answering questions. Food for thought!
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Three reasons why I don't believe the BEK stories are hoaxes. The first is timing. The first bek story claimed by the hoax theory was in 1998. The Brian Bethel story. David Weatherly talks about a case he found from the 1950s. Keep in mind before the internet these things did not have a name. The internet might not have created a hoax, but rather gave a name and a way to share true stories. Secondly, David Weatherly goes into great detail about how its not drugs or a disease. Lets talk about a hoax using very expensive lenses. The kids range in ages seen, some as young as eight. No eight year old is going to be out alone pulling off this prank. The beks have an affect on humans and animals radiating fear. A prank cannot possibly have this effect. Finally, one youtube woman studied one Bek story. She looked up this same story on multiple websites. The story was copied and pasted every time. In other words, it did not start off with a simple story and become embellished over time. It stayed consistent.
ReplyDeleteWhen David wrote his book he knew personally one of the bek witnesses. It was not someone from the internet. Just my two cents:)