Paranormal
sleuths specialize in a sixth sense
BY
DANIELLE MEDINA
Correspondent
BRICK
- For Brick Township resident Desirae Wojtanowski, the things that go bump in
the night are all part of a day's work.
As
the founder and lead investigator for Paranormal Visions, Wojtanowski and her
team travel throughout New Jersey studying paranormal phenomena in private residences,
business and cemeteries.
"Some
people don't know what they're experiencing and they think they're going crazy,"
Wojtanowski said. "When we're done, many residents feel comfort in knowing
that they're not going insane."
Wojtanowski
said that people report strange occurrences such as unexplained noises or items
disappearing or moving in their homes and businesses. Some-times they feel like
their house has a bad energy in it.
"Some
spirits don't leave a house," Wojtanowski said. "They've lived there
all their lives and they're very attached to the physical life that they lived.
Even after their family has left the house, they'll stay in the house or come
and visit on holidays, birthdays and anniversaries."
When
the Paranormal Visions team members conduct an investigation, they rely on a variety
of equipment, along with information from the owners and the intuition of the
team members.
"We
really approach an investigation in a scientific way," Wojtanowski said,
"And we use senses to guide us."
Camcorders
with infrared lighting and digital cameras help to detects orbs and balls of energy
that are believed to contain the spirits of the deceased and spirit energy that
shows up in the form of a white vapor.
The
group uses a digital voice recorder and a hand-held tape recorder to pick up electronic
voice phenomena (EVP), when a spirit tries to audibly communicate with the living.
Electromagnetic
field meters measure the magnetic field around it, looking for spikes of spirit
energy. Infrared thermometers are used to find cold spots where a spirit is trying
to manifest itself, either in the form of an orb or apparition.
While
the goal for Paranormal Visions is to catch the spirits on tape, sometimes they'll
simply go to a house to cleanse it, telling the spirits they're unwanted there
and asking them to leave.
For
Wojtanowski, that sixth sense has been passed down in her family. It manifested
itself in her at a very early age.
"When
I was 18 months old, my mother was in the kitchen washing dishes and I was playing
in the living room," she said. "She heard me talking to someone and
when she came in, I said, 'Where'd he go?'"
Both
Wojtanowski and her mother believe it was her grandfather, who died just before
she was born.
When
she was five, Wojtanowski saw apparitions of her grandmother and grandfather standing
in the doorway of her bedroom.
"As
a child I was terrified," she said. "But as I've gotten older, I've
come to accept it and enjoy it."
Fellow
team member Hannah Knueppel said that her visions also began when she was a child
and have continued throughout her life.
"It
seems like every house I go to, there's something there," Knueppel said.
Knueppel
recalled a time when she was 18 and living in Ocean Gate. She was leaning out
of a window smoking a cigarette when she looked down and saw her father, who died
earlier that year, walking out of a tavern below her.
"When
I looked back, he was gone," Knueppel said.
Most
people will write off what they're seeing as tricks of the mind because they are
afraid, Knueppel said.
"We
are interested in it, so we notice it more," she said.
Spirits
know which people are more receptive to them, Wojtanowski said.
Wojtanowski
formed Ocean County New Jersey Paranormal Investigators in October 2005, with
a group of close friends and her brother, Don, and began conducting investigations.
Earlier
this year, Wojtanowski changed the group's name to Paranormal Visions, launched
its Internet Web site and expanded its membership.
Since
then, Paranormal Visions has studied paranormal phenomena at a number of private
residences in New Jersey, most recently at Magee's West Side Tavern in Point Pleasant.
The
156-year-old tavern is haunted by the ghost of "Captain John," who kept
his daughter locked in the attic, according to local legend.
"Pots
and pans in the kitchen will fall down," Knueppel said. "There are more
noises. Glasses get moved."
In
earlier times, the tavern was a restaurant and a morgue for 39 victims of the
John Minturn shipwreck in 1846.
When
the paranormal investigators descended on the tavern last month, both Desirae
and Don Wojtanowski sensed the spirit of a little girl cowering in a corner and
tried to coax her out.
And
Knueppel said she heard something breathing behind her and moving closer to her.
"No
one else could hear it, but it was there," Knueppel said.