Ouija Boards

Author
Discussion

Upinflames

Original Poster:

1,724 posts

179 months

Monday 20th March 2023
quotequote all
A friend caught his kids with one recently, he's gone batst over it.

What do you think? What happens if everyone is blindfolded and a camera records it?

colin_p

4,503 posts

213 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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Zoon

6,722 posts

122 months

Monday 20th March 2023
quotequote all
Upinflames said:
A friend caught his kids with one recently, he's gone batst over it.

What do you think? What happens if everyone is blindfolded and a camera records it?
Have you asked the fairies at the bottom of the garden?

guitarcarfanatic

1,615 posts

136 months

Monday 20th March 2023
quotequote all
Upinflames said:
A friend caught his kids with one recently, he's gone batst over it.

What do you think? What happens if everyone is blindfolded and a camera records it?
I read about a Dad who heard his kids upstairs playing with one during a sleepover. He had some fun by flipping the upstairs lights on and off a few times using the fuse board biggrin

spookly

4,025 posts

96 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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Your friend is mental. Unless you're a tub thumping dyed in the wool bible basher then why would it cause you the slightest concern?

K87

3,663 posts

100 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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The 16 year old brother of a friend of mine used a ouija board, sent him completely and dangerously insane.

Upinflames

Original Poster:

1,724 posts

179 months

Monday 20th March 2023
quotequote all
K87 said:
The 16 year old brother of a friend of mine used a ouija board, sent him completely and dangerously insane.
Yeah its this kind of thing he's worried about rather than actual bogey men

J4CKO

41,692 posts

201 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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K87 said:
The 16 year old brother of a friend of mine used a ouija board, sent him completely and dangerously insane.
Hmm, there is always a story like that with Ouija boards, remember messing about with one as a kid and it directed us to go tot he local graveyard and the grave of some bloke, and to be fair, it existed but we did all walk past it daily so suspect we had subconsciously clocked the name as unsurprisingly it was one of the ones at the front, not six graves deep.

Alorotom

11,965 posts

188 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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K87 said:
The 16 year old brother of a friend of mine used a ouija board, sent him completely and dangerously insane.
Well, no it didn't really did it. I expect if there was a major shift in behaviour there was something real and actual that caused the change, else it's just a convenient excuse.

I remember as kids (probs 13/14ish) we messed around with a Ouija board after pooling monies and buying a board and planchette from Durham Book Store in Sunderland (now there's a blast from the past!) ... utter bks but I do remember out parents going collectively ape-st when they found out (and none of them at all were remotely religious!)

MesoForm

8,912 posts

276 months

Monday 20th March 2023
quotequote all
Upinflames said:
A friend caught his kids with one recently, he's gone batst over it.

What do you think? What happens if everyone is blindfolded and a camera records it?
It's self-hypnosis, I know it was big when I was in college and some people would swing pendulums around asking themselves questions. It's similar to divining for water where your subconscious thinks there's water there and the sticks cross.

Charlie Foxtrot

3,046 posts

216 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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I used a Luigi Board when I was younger, was only good for getting in touch with dead Italians though...

WelshChris

1,179 posts

255 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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Charlie Foxtrot said:
I used a Luigi Board when I was younger, was only good for getting in touch with dead Italians though...
hehe

dundarach

5,100 posts

229 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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Whenever I explain I'm a Christian on here, people always pipe up with 'sky fairies'

Where's all the 'board fairies' then?

It's either all bullst, or we just can't be sure.

Dan_1981

17,420 posts

200 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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dundarach said:
Whenever I explain I'm a Christian on here, people always pipe up with 'sky fairies'

Where's all the 'board fairies' then?

It's either all bullst, or we just can't be sure.
Post 3 I think.

Zoon

6,722 posts

122 months

Monday 20th March 2023
quotequote all
dundarach said:
Whenever I explain I'm a Christian on here, people always pipe up with 'sky fairies'

Where's all the 'board fairies' then?

It's either all bullst, or we just can't be sure.
Don't forget garden varieties!

bigpriest

1,615 posts

131 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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Wasn't Ouija Board originally a game for all the family to play? Also a poor choice of single by Morrissey.

cheesejunkie

2,684 posts

18 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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I had a Christian upbringing. I vaguely remember the fear of the forbidden when it comes to ouija boards.

Vaguely as I’m an adult now and don’t fall for it any more.

Honestly, if someone is going to believe in something with no evidence to back it up you’re not going to win the argument with facts.

Ouija boards are silly. Fear of them is very silly. Some will still believe however.

Milkyway

9,491 posts

54 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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I knew a few people who used them & got in ‘contact’ with some nasties... was advised to steer well clear of them. rolleyes
It must be really difficult if the ‘contacted’ have spelling difficulties though.. Apart from just answering ‘ Yes or No’.

MikeM6

5,020 posts

103 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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Considering that the dead are just that and that you can not more contact a dead person than you can teach a table to speak English, it does seem odd to be fearful of Ouija boards.

However, they are dangerous in the sense that if someone can convince themselves they experienced something through them, which is entirely likely for anyone gullible enough, they might go on to believe in any number of things. So it might reinforce stupidity, and that is dangerous.

Pitre

4,612 posts

235 months

Monday 20th March 2023
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MikeM6 said:
.... they are dangerous in the sense that if someone can convince themselves they experienced something through them, which is entirely likely for anyone gullible enough, they might go on to believe in any number of things. So it might reinforce stupidity, and that is dangerous.
Like religion generally, then. silly