Plumbing the Dark Side of the Paranormal with Rosemary Ellen Guiley

My work in the paranormal as an investigator, researcher and author has brought me face to face many times with its dark side: nasty entities, weird phenomena, curses, hexes, parallel worlds and strange experiences that seem straight out of a fiction writer’s head.  Paranormal themes are indeed hot in romantic fiction, but here’s the bizarre twist: the truth really is often stranger than fiction!  Sometimes my real life seems more like an episode of Supernatural or Fringe.

All of the exotic, compelling and wonderful characters and circumstances in paranormal fiction have a basis in reality: experiences that have happened to people over and over again throughout history.  We have always bumped up against other worlds, some of them uplifting and some of them dark and creepy.  The dark side lures us the most in a push-pull of morbid fascination countered by fear and aversion.  When Sharon invited me to write for her blog, I knew I wanted to talk about the real dark side of the paranormal.

First, a bit about my background.  When I set out in my career to write about the paranormal (and the metaphysical) in the early 1980s, I had no intentions of becoming an expert on the dark side.  I have been interested in the unseen since I was a kid, fueled by childhood experiences of fairies and angels, psychic abilities in my family, and a voracious reading habit that embraced science fiction, fantasy, and horror.  My far-ranging interests made me curious about everything, and so when I set out on my writing career, I cast a wide net over many subjects.  I have put more than fifty books under my belt covering topics from A-Z in the paranormal, angels to zombies and everything in between.  My generalist bent has served me well, for the paranormal overlaps from one arena to another, and from the light to the dark; everything is entwined and interconnected.

I believe in getting out into the trenches, so I have conducted as many field investigations of haunted and mysterious  locations as possible, and I have interviewed hundreds of witnesses about their experiences.  And, I have had plenty of my own experiences along the way.  Over the course of time I discovered that I had a stomach for probing the dark side, much more than most people in the field, and that there are a lot of folks who have troubling experiences who need guidance and help.  Those factors prompted me to go even deeper into dark territory involving demons, Djinn, real vampires, abducting ETs, Shadow People, black magic, negative hauntings, possession, and unknown but hostile entities.

I engage with this heavy energy often, and while I have never run screaming like the scripted “reality” shows, I have occasionally made what I call “prudent exits” when up against something that is too powerful, too determined, and too unpredictable to take on.  I invest a lot of energy in keeping my home my sanctuary, but sometimes I have breaches in which a negative entity gets through and creates some havoc for a short time.  I also invest a lot of energy in keeping my own energy field as strong as possible as a buffer.  Working in the paranormal, especially the dark end of it, is akin to walking through cobwebs – “stuff” clings to you.

I receive so many inquiries about paranormal problems that I put together a Guide to the Dark Side of the Paranormal as an educational introduction to the realities that are “out there.”  Here are some short takes on some of them, all of which are useful in fiction:

Curses

Curses work, even if the victim does not know about them.  It takes a great deal of energy and skill to curse effectively.  Deathbed curses are among the strongest, and can affect generations.  People have had differing moral positions on curses in the past.  For example, the Romans hired professional cursers as a matter of doing daily business, to gain an edge in business, love and sports.  Now there’s an interesting character – the professional curse-layer!

Dream Invasion

Some entities and magically skilled people have the ability to enter a person’s dreams.  Sometimes it is for messages and manipulation – and sometimes for psychological upset, psychic attack,  and even possession through nightmares.

Possessed Objects

Objects hold energy and even entities themselves.  Objects can retain energetic properties of owners and events.  When energized objects fall into the hands of the right person, those energies are released and can affect both people and environments.  There may be poltergeist activity, apparitions, dream invasions, and psychological and mood changes.  Metal retains energy imprints the best, followed by stone and wood.  The ability of objects to hold a psychic charge is the principle behind amulets and talismans.

Houses With Attitudes

Similarly, houses themselves can take on an animating “atmosphere” from previous occupants and events.  In the Guide to the Dark Side of the Paranormal, I describe such a house that I lived in myself.  It had no ghosts of people, but it had its own phantom presence that watched and reacted – and it became very unhappy when we tried to move.

Problem Mirrors

Mirrors are well-known as portals or doorways to the spirit world.  In many problem home hauntings, there are likely to be one or more badly placed mirrors involved.  They are especially problematic in bedrooms, where people are at their most vulnerable to unsolicited spirit visitations.  Above all, mirrors should never look into one another – a strange warping of space takes place that seems to cut through dimensional barriers.

Sex With Entities

Our sexual activities with the dead and supernatural beings have been documented since ancient times.  There are numerous accounts in mythology and folklore, both of which contain the kernels of real experiences.  Some of our sexual liaisons are good, such as with gods and goddesses and the semi-divine, while others are horrific, such as with demons and hostile aliens.  Historically, we have considered most of the hybrid offspring undesirable to downright abominations.  Sex with entities goes on today and it is not just a product of the imagination.

The Hidden Djinn

The Djinn are a race of supernatural entities known only in the West for being the origins of the genie in the bottle – a creature we usually dismiss as humorous fantasy.  They are quite real, very powerful, and not always kindly disposed toward human beings.  Their name means “the hidden ones.”  Years of research has convinced me that the Djinn are behind much of our paranormal activity, for they are superior shape-shifters and masqueraders.

The Evil Eye

The ability to harm and even kill by looking is a global and ancient belief.  “Overlooking,” as it is also called, can be learned as a magical skill.  Some people are believed to be born with the ability, which gives them an unfortunate life.  People shun them, fearing that the rays of their lingering gaze will bring ruination of health, luck, and life.

Drive-by Demons

“Drive-by demons” is a term I coined to describe opportunistic entities who home in on people and create problems from minor to major in impact.  They are drawn to us by the spiritual energy we generate, which is like a light on the spiritual planes.  Negative entities are drawn to the lights of emotional turmoil, addiction, and the low energy of immoral, unethical and deceitful living.  Sometimes people going through a major upheaval in life will sink into depressed states that invite entity interference.  “Drive-by demons” usually do not linger – they seize advantage, make the most of it, and cruise on to another target.

Details about these and more fascinating dark side topics – twenty in all – are in my Guide to the Dark Side of the Paranormal, which is available as an e-book from Kindle and in paperback print from my website, www.visionaryliving.com.

As for protection, daily mediation is the best preventive medicine against the effects and influences of the dark side.  Meditation builds up the aura, strengthens grounding, improves the psychic faculty, and enhances the connection to the spirit realms, including the benevolent beings who come to our aid and protection.  Periodically I see my acupuncturist (who is a Taoist exorcist) and get a Qi Gong tuneup, which cleanses the aura of that cobwebby stuff and bolsters the aura’s strength and vitality.

People often ask me about the effectiveness of crystals, medallions, religious symbols and so forth as amulets.  They can be quite useful, and everyone must find the one or ones that personally work.  You have to resonate with the energy of an amulet for it to elicit the right energetic response from your consciousness.  However, it is also wise to develop inner protection, which is always with you.

That’s my nutshell on the dark side.  I do spend a lot of time on the other side of the fence, dealing with angelic presences, guides, and “ethereals” who are involved in spirit communications and certain channelings.  All in all, it is never a dull day in my world – or worlds!

I hope you’ll visit my website, www.visionaryliving.com, to browse my library of articles on a variety of topics, and check out my other books – including my encyclopedias, which many fiction and script writers find to be useful references for their work.  In addition, I have a complimentary monthly e-newsletter, Strange Dimensions, which features articles as well as my professional activities.

BIO:

Rosemary Ellen Guiley is one of the leading experts on the paranormal with more than 50 books published by major houses on a wide range of paranormal, spiritual, and mystical topics, including nine single-volume encyclopedias.   Her work is translated into 15 languages.  She has worked full-time in the paranormal since 1983, researching, investigating, writing, and presenting, and teaching.   Her present work focuses interdimensional entity contact experiences of all kinds, technological and mediumistic spirit communications, spiritual growth and development, problem hauntings, and “portals,” or geographic areas of intense paranormal activity.  She spends a great deal of her time out in the field conducting investigations and research.  She has done ground-breaking research on Shadow People and the Djinn. Rosemary lives in Connecticut.  Her websites are www.visionaryliving.com and www.djinnuniverse.com.

NEWS Flash! Desire and Deception Earns 3 stars from RT Book Reviews

Desire and Deception earns 3 stars: “Enjoyable, pleasant read” from RT Erotica Book Reviews, August 2011.  Desire and Deception is now available to spice up your life on Amazon Kindle at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0058OIY2E

Finding the “Perfect” Critique Partner(s)

In 2004, three years after passing the half-century mark, I took stock of my life and realized that I had abandoned my first love, writing fiction. With a grown son, a teaching job, and the summer beckoning me, I told my husband that I was going to Florida for a month to write. Dumbfounded, he nodded acceptance—then realized that meant he would be alone in Maryland for an entire month. After negotiations, we agreed on a schedule that would enable him to be with me for fifteen out of the thirty days I would be away. Not the life of a writing recluse, but the space I needed to begin.

My sister and friends in Florida greeted me with open arms—and an open bar. At five in the evening, on the third day of my feverish clacking away at the keyboard, I read them my first chapter. They laughed, they clapped, they asked for more. They, along with my patient husband, became my first critique group.  At this point in my new adventure, I needed the kind and gentle reinforcement of family and friends to keep me away from the whirling eddies of self-doubt and the undertow of my internal editor screaming “YOU SUCK!” At the end of the month, I returned to Maryland, the start of a new semester and the routine of the day job. The cheering section from Florida continued to send me emails asking for chapters, giving me the encouragement to continue to write. I began an email list with my founding “members,” then added others as more of our friends began to read my work. After a year, I completed the first draft of my novel, which was subsequently rejected by eighty-two agents and several publishers. The only agents and publishers interested in my “baby” were ones who were denounced in large red print on numerous websites.

Discouraged, I asked my textbook publisher for assistance, and he referred me to a professional editor. I spent a good deal of time and money on this avenue, and while the comments and suggestions she made were extremely useful and educated me very quickly on the first round, I received diminishing returns on my investment on subsequent exchanges. My last letter from this editor was clearly cut and pasted from another author’s critique, signaled by a sentence that began, “As you know Nancy.”  Needless to say, I walked away from that relationship.

I attended a state-wide writers’ conference hosted at my former university and signed up for a writing group in my area. Shortly after the conference, I received an email from another attendee inviting me to join a mystery writing group in a local retirement community. Yes. You read that right. The leader of the group was a retired women’s studies professor and self-published author of several books. A witty and fun octogenarian, she gathered the little group of six around her chair at her apartment and regaled us with her experiences in the National Organization for Women, the marches, and the fights for equality. We drank tea, and reviewed each others’ work in twenty-page chunks and looked for opportunities for improvement. Then, we began to dwindle. One had an elderly parent and child issues; another had a spouse who was ill, another moved away—and the biggest blow: our fearless leader fell in love! Swept off her feet by an older man, romance, travels and new adventures beckoned her. While I still hear about her adventures, we do not meet any more.

Lollygagging around, I wrote in a vacuum until I was invited to join a different online writing forum by an online friend in the UK . This one had rules and protocols, public sections, and private sections open only to dedicated critique partners, aka, “critters.” It also had a firm, but gentle owner. Was this a romance writers’ forum? No. It was a dark fiction group, Café Doom, where horror, mystery, supernatural events, vampires, werewolves, and zombies reign. But, they were willing to critique romance, and were enormously helpful as an additional “set of eyes” for my short stories. While I don’t spend as much time there as I used to, I know they are always available and valuable.

In between my forays into various critique experiences, my friend and Mistress of the Paranormal, Rosemary Ellen Guiley, recommended that I join RWA and the Maryland Chapter, MRW in 2005. After publishing a story with the Wild Rose Press, I had a subsequent one returned to me by an editor with the strong recommendation that I find a critique group. I put a call out on the MRW loop: “MF ISO RWCP: That’s right. Married female in search of Romance Writing Critique Partner. Willing to share housekeeping duties on partner’s manuscript. Able to spot problems with others’ writing–but myopic when it comes to my own. Constructive criticism gratefully accepted. Interested? Email me at…”

Three people responded to my posting, and we agreed to work on our critiques by email. My preferred mode was to include a cover email with general comments and observations, beginning with something that I really liked about the manuscript: characters, descriptions, dialogue, concept, etc. I liked to include resources as attachments that I have found to be helpful. Whether it’s an article on formatting, a link to the twelve steps of intimacy, or a listing of great online courses I have taken, I think it’s important to share what I have discovered along the way.

Last year the Maryland Romance Writers began a critique group, the MRW Critters. Skillfully organized and run by Joya Fields, twelve of us meet monthly to critique four submissions. Each critter has 5 minutes to discuss one submission. Four hours fly by! The face to face sessions provide us an opportunity to learn from each other and hear different perspectives. More importantly, when my work is being critiqued, I have the benefit of the wisdom of eleven experienced romance readers and writers, who often agree on what works–and what doesn’t work in a manuscript.

So what’s the bottom line? Publication. I know for a fact that if I hadn’t put my work out there for feedback from fellow writers, my second novel would be languishing in a drawer alongside my first one. Instead, I am happy to report that after connecting with my romance writing critique partners, I had five stories (3 short and 2 novellas) accepted by the Wild Rose Press, including the one (now much revised) which had been returned by the editor. And, this week my first full-length novel, Desire and Deception is being released by Red Sage Publishing. What better proof do I need that having good critique partners works?

I do not regret the wandering route I have taken to find the “perfect” critique partners. Each experience has brought a new lesson. Along the way I have made friends across the genres, discovered what to do, as well as what not to do.  In a nutshell, here are my lessons learned in my search for the “perfect” critique partners:

  • Do you homework and work at your craft.
  • Be willing to ask for help.
  • Be open to trying new approaches.
  • Give as much as, or more than, you receive.
  • Be kind, honest and constructive.
  • There is no one, true way to tell a story.
  • Have a good sense of humor. No whining!
  • Say thank you for the time and effort invested.
  • Know when to walk away when it’s not working.

While it can be challenging to keep up with reading and reviewing other people’s work, plus continuing to write your own, I have found it is an exchange well worth the effort. As my writing has improved, I’ve increased my network of acquaintances, and have discovered some true friends. May you have good stories to write, honest and kind critiques to read, and many HEAs on your path to finding the “perfect” critique partner(s).

PS: Join me at the Latte Lounge at Coffee Time Romance on March 31, 2011 for an all day chat with Red Sage authors. Get the inside scoop on exciting stories–and backstories!

Interview with Djinn Researcher and Mistress of the Paranormal: Rosemary Ellen Guiley

It is my great pleasure to have Rosemary Ellen Guiley here with us today to chat about her work and great range of nonfiction writing in the realm of the paranormal. One of the leading experts on the paranormal with more than 45 published books on a wide range of paranormal, spiritual and mystical topics, including nine single-volume encyclopedias, Rosemary’s work has been translated into 14 languages and has approximately one million copies in print.  She has worked full-time in the paranormal since 1983, researching, investigating, writing and presenting at conferences and seminars.   Her work focuses on history, psychical research, folklore, metaphysics and anecdotal experiences of interdimensional entity contact.

In addition to her books, she is the consulting editor for Mysteries, Legends and Unexplained Phenomena, a line of nonfiction books for the young adult market (Chelsea House/Facts On File), and is a consulting editor of FATE Magazine.  Formerly, she wrote a column for TAPS Paramagazine and  was a blogger for the Arts & Entertainment website Paranormal Insider.  She makes numerous media appearances, and has been featured on the History, A&E, SyFy, Discovery and Travel channels.  She is a frequent guest with George Noory on Coast to Coast AM, and makes regular appearances on a wide variety of paranormal and metaphysical radio shows.  She is featured in documentaries and docu-dramas, and is a popular college and university campus speaker.

Rosemary  also is a board director of the Paranormal Source, Inc., a nonprofit educational organization, and is a past board of director of International Association for the Study of Dreams, and a past member of the board of trustees of the Academy of Religion and Psychical Research (now the Academy of Spirituality and Paranormal Studies).  She consults for numerous paranormal organizations. Her website is www.visionaryliving.com. Her most recent publication with co-author Philip J. Imbrogno is The Vengeful Djinn: Unveiling the Hidden Agenda of Genies.

Out of all things paranormal, how did you become interested in the Djinn?

I became intrigued by the Djinn (“The Hidden Ones”) in the late 1980s, when I was researching angels, demons, and Solomonic magic.  I came across material from “The Testament of Solomon” that described the entities enslaved by King Solomon as Djinn rather than demons.   This made them key figures in the roots of the Western magical tradition, and it was clear that there was a lot more going on with them than Arabian folk tale genies.  I consulted the Qur’an about them.  Over the course of time, the Djinn kept crossing my research radar.  The more I learned about them and their ongoing presence in the modern world, the more I saw them as fitting covertly into at least some of our paranormal activity.

When I joined research forces with ufologist and scientist Philip Imbrogno in 2008, I discovered he also had a strong interest in the Djinn, and thought the same about them as I did.  We both had cases that were “unexplained” – until we fit Djinn into the equation. That’s how our book “The Vengeful Djinn” was born.  The Djinn are virtually unknown to people in the West, and our book not only explains them as a complex supernatural race with an ancient history, but also demonstrates how they engage us in paranormal experiences while remaining hidden.

The Djinn figure prominently in desert lore and Arabian stories, such as “The Book of 1001 Nights.”  How would you compare the Djinn with other cultural icons? Are they demons, evil ghosts or their own entities?

The Djinn are often compared to demons, because they can act in demonic ways.  In Islam, their leader, Iblis, is often equated with the Devil, and his followers are called “devils.”  However, they are not demons.  They are their own race, and according to lore, they were created before humans and occupied the earth.  The Qur’an tells that Allah told the angels to bow before Adam when he was created, and they did so, but Iblis– who was a Djinni but was in heaven among the angels – refused, claiming humans were unworthy and inferior.  Iblis and the Djinn were cast out, but were granted until Judgment Day to prove their case. They live in what we would call a parallel dimension to this world.  Some of them torment humans for revenge, and would like to reclaim this world as their own.

But not all Djinn are bad.  We tend to assign uniformity to spirits and other beings – all angels are good, all demons are bad, etc. – but that is far from the case, and that applies to Djinn, too.  Some Djinn bear us no ill will and want nothing to do with us.  Some are fascinated by us and want to hang around for vicarious thrills.  Some do not like us and act out against us.

There is a significant body of literature that speaks to Djinn-induced illnesses and the casting out of deviant Djinn. How does that compare to other cultures’ ideas of possession and exorcisms?

The concepts of possession and entity-caused illness are universal, and every culture has its own methods for remedies.  Long before the Djinn were absorbed into Islam, they existed in ancient Persian, Arabian and Middle Eastern lore as beings who were feared, and who could possess humans and bring illness and bad luck.  Exorcism techniques were developed; however, Qur’anic commentaries note that the Djinn do what they want if they are powerful enough, and can resist attempts to get rid of them.  Sometimes it takes a Djinni to get rid of a Djinni.  There are exorcisms for summoning heavy duty Djinn to dismiss lower level Djinn.  Sometimes the Djinn are bargained out of possession and sometimes they are physically beaten out.   Western exorcism techniques developed in Christianity assume that invoking the power of God and the name of Jesus Christ are sufficient to overcome all evil or unwanted spirits.

When you were researching this book, was there ever a time when you were afraid of the Djinn? If yes, what did you do?

I’ve had encounters with Djinn in investigations, and also as a result of writing the book. On one investigation in a remote area with no phone service, the Djinni manifested as a shadow person, and threw off a great deal of hostile energy.  The unpredictability of such situations can be alarming, but it is important not to cave in to fear.  Once aggressive entities know they’ve scared you, they have the upper hand.  So, I told it to back off, and it did – but I had a bleeding cut on my arm that I could not explain.  It was about two inches long and looked like a superficial razor slice.  Did the Djinni do it or was it a by-product of transdimensional shift?  I do not know.  The whole evening was permeated with intense, hostile energy, and I decided to end things early.  Sometimes you just have to pack up and get out.

You have to have a lot of fortitude to pursue work like this, as well as a hefty amount of respect for the entities you are dealing with.  Every now and then I have dream invasion – nightmares that are entity-perpetrated, and probably an intimidation tactic.  At first they were scary, but now they are annoying.

On the more benign side, I have had communications from Djinn via radio sweep real-time EVP (using a Frank’s box or ghost box as they are known), in which the Djinn simply wanted to identify themselves, and sometimes to pass warnings to beware of hostile Djinn.

What’s next on your to-do list of paranormal phenomena?

I always have multiple projects going on at once.  I am finishing a book on the Ouija (I think it gets a bad and undeserved rap), and have in development new projects on the Djinn, angels, and spirit communications.  I am revising my Encyclopedia of Saints.  And Phil Imbrogno and I are continuing our research of dimensional portals and entity contact experiences of a wide variety.

I have a new website, Djinn Universe, www.djinnuniverse.com, a site for information and discussion about the Djinn and how they interact with us.  My main website is www.visionaryliving.com.  I have a blog on that site, and a place where you can sign up for my free monthly newsletter of my activities and research.  Thank you Sharon!

Rosemary, thank you so much for being with us here today. I know my readers will enjoy your work and your interview.

Interview with the Mistress of the Paranormal: Rosemary Ellen Guiley

It is my great pleasure to have Rosemary Ellen Guiley here with us today to chat about her work and great range of nonfiction writing in the realm of the paranormal. One of the leading experts on the paranormal with more than 45 published books on a wide range of paranormal, spiritual and mystical topics, including nine single-volume encyclopedias, Rosemary’s work has been translated into 14 languages and has approximately one million copies in print.  She has worked full-time in the paranormal since 1983, researching, investigating, writing and presenting at conferences and seminars.   Her work focuses on history, psychical research, folklore, metaphysics and anecdotal experiences of interdimensional entity contact.

In addition to her books, she is the consulting editor for Mysteries, Legends and Unexplained Phenomena, a line of nonfiction books for the young adult market (Chelsea House/Facts On File), and is a consulting editor of FATE Magazine.  Formerly, she wrote a column for TAPS Paramagazine and  was a blogger for the Arts & Entertainment website Paranormal Insider.  She makes numerous media appearances, and has been featured on the History, A&E, SyFy, Discovery and Travel channels.  She is a frequent guest with George Noory on Coast to Coast AM, and makes regular appearances on a wide variety of paranormal and metaphysical radio shows.  She is featured in documentaries and docu-dramas, and is a popular college and university campus speaker.

Rosemary  also is a board director of the Paranormal Source, Inc., a nonprofit educational organization, and is a past board of director of International Association for the Study of Dreams, and a past member of the board of trustees of the Academy of Religion and Psychical Research (now the Academy of Spirituality and Paranormal Studies).  She consults for numerous paranormal organizations. Her website is www.visionaryliving.com.

Rosemary, what made you want to be an author?

I was literally born that way – I like to joke that I started writing as soon as I could pick up a crayon!  I was an avid reader as a kid and wrote about everything.  In fact, I was so prolific that in the third grade my teacher asked me to stop turning in so many reports and papers – on topics she had never assigned.

However, as a kid I took writing for granted because everybody had to write in school.  I wanted to be an astronomer.  I had to give that up by age 12, when I realized that math was not one of my good subjects.

I was 15 when an English teacher opened my eyes to the fact that I had an exceptional ability to write.  We were assigned to write an essay on something that was significant to us in life.  I wrote – completely off the top of my head — “the perfect essay,” which he photocopied and distributed to the class (much to my embarrassment).  It was perfectly constructed, something I had done without realizing it.  To this day, I am pretty much a first draft writer.  “Stuff” falls into my head as soon as I wake up, whole and entire.  I rarely revise except to polish, and I rarely have writer’s block (knock on wood).

I studied journalism in college, and it was great for teaching me more about structure, as well as research, interviewing, and writing the story right the first time under intense time pressure.  I spent several years as a reporter, but I always wanted to be my own boss.   Being an author is the perfect choice for me.

People often ask me how I write, and my answer is, I don’t know and I don’t want to know.  An artist should never question the Muse.

What do you like best about being a writer? What do you like the least?

The best: I am in a constant flow of words and ideas.  I love research and the act of writing itself.  I am lucky to be able to write just on topics that interest me, as opposed to having to write about boring things to make money (which I did in the past when I was getting my career going).  I live an incredibly rich and interesting life, and my time is my own.  I appreciate that my work has an enthusiastic audience, and that I am contributing to our current knowledge about the paranormal and related subjects.

The least: I have often been ahead of the curve on ideas and have not been able to sell them to publishers, who seldom have vision, but react to market trends that have already manifested.  Thankfully, delivery systems have changed, making it possible for authors to get their own work out in a more timely fashion.  I see a balance of self-publishing and traditional publishing for me in the near future.

When did you decide to write about the paranormal from a non-fiction perspective and how many books have you published?

My interest in the paranormal goes back to childhood and my voracious reading.

I launched my author career in 1983 and envisioned that I would become a novelist in the horror, occult and fantasy genres.  I wrote fiction and nonfiction and did “survival writing,” projects that generated income but did little else.  In 1987 one of my nonfiction editors asked me to write an encyclopedia on witchcraft.  I had never entertained the idea of doing a book like that, and when I said I did not know how to write an encyclopedia, she said, “Don’t worry, you’ll pick it up!”  In 1989 my Encyclopedia of Witches and Witchcraft was published by Facts On File.  I discovered that I had an aptitude for composing encyclopedias.  Since then, I have written seven more, plus an atlas, and some of the encyclopedias have been revised into multiple editions.

That launched my paranormal nonfiction career.  At the same time, the New Age market exploded, and mainstream publishers – who had turned up their noses at “occult” books in the past – could not get books out fast enough.  My life-long interest in the occult blossomed into one book after another.  At the time, I thought I was taking a brief detour from my fiction ambitions.  But here I am, decades later, and I have stayed with the nonfiction.  I cannot rule out fiction again, of course, but it seems my purpose as a writer is being served in nonfiction.  I think I have done at least 45 paranormal books to date, and well over 50 if I count everything.

Encyclopedias are incredibly complex, averaging about 200,000 words in length, and when I have one in progress, I keep most of the organization and structure in my head.  They do take a toll on me more than “regular” books, because I have to absorb and assimilate vast amounts of information for them.  Very brain taxing at times.

I know you travel a lot for your work. How do you manage to be so prolific and go to so many conferences? What’s your favorite time management tip?

I confess I am usually behind in my deadlines, but I seem to pull them off.  I take my laptop everywhere.  The writing I do on the road has to be stuff that I can get in and out of quickly.  Anything that requires prolonged periods of intense concentration has to be done at home.

Time management:  I have no routine for writing, and depending on deadlines and travel, I may spend days or even weeks at the keyboard and days or even weeks barely on it.  Generally, I like to write in the morning (the stuff that has fallen into my head), then do errands, miscellaneous things and the gym, and pick writing back up again in the evening.  I frequently write with the TV on in the background.  I go to bed usually between midnight and 2 AM, and get up anywhere from 5:30-7:30 AM.  I am quite comfortable spending long periods alone, but I don’t need to be alone to write.  One good thing about journalism, it teaches you to concentrate and write in the midst of a hubbub, and to take interruptions and then refocus.

Your work takes you up close and personal to a topic that gives most people goosebumps–or simply scares the daylights out of them. Have you ever been frightened when you’ve been working–either doing the research or writing your books? If yes, can you tell us about that–and how you dealt with it?

I do more field investigations of haunted places and mysterious phenomena than most “paranormal investigators.”  I have never run screaming, but there have been times when I have been confronted by presences emphatically negative and hostile, and I have decided to make what I call a “prudent exit.”  I seem to have a very high tolerance for exposure to the paranormal, and things that freak out many people sometimes barely give me a ripple.  I am doing the work I came into this life to do, and so I think I naturally have a better than average buffer, because the paranormal can be incredibly destabilizing.  Also, early in life, I began a practice of meditation and spiritual study, which is like acquiring an armor for this work.

That being said, I do not consider myself invulnerable, and I have a great deal of respect for what is “out there.”  Some of it is truly unsettling.  Evil things exist, and they do interfere with people.

There are topics and entities I do not write about or think about late at night, because what you focus on might come around, and the late night hours seem to be more permeable.  Demons, shadow people, Djinn, and ETs fall on my short list in this regard.

I should say a word about psychic ability.  It runs in my family and I use it in my field research. I have never considered my ability to be exceptional, but it is probably better than that of most people.  I took a variety of training methods to enhance it.  In the paranormal, much of what you are dealing with requires the subtle senses.  Everyone has psychic ability to some degree, and if you work in the paranormal long enough, your ability will sharpen.

Have you ever felt like you were being dictated to while your wrote a book–as if the words came of their own accord? If yes, which book did that happen with?

Perhaps because I am so prolific, people sometimes ask me if I channel.  I say yes – I channel myself!  It’s a facetious answer, but I am amazed at the people who think writers just sit down at their keyboards and some entity does all the work for them.  I put an enormous amount of study and research into my work, and I have spent many years refining my natural ability to write.

However, I also believe there are spiritual forces participating as well, and the creative process is probably beyond understanding.  I am seeded with inspiration and ideas, guided to put in legwork in certain ways, guided to say things in certain ways, and blessed with the opening doors and the meeting of people who become important to each and every project.  All of these things are a natural part of the process for me, not things that seem to be imposed on me.

My study of alchemy taught me to allow the process of unfoldment (sometimes I do it better than others, LOL!).  There are writers and artists who personify the spiritual forces guiding them, but that has rarely happened for me.  Yet I know they are present, whoever and whatever they are, whether we label them angels or ascended beings or ETs or the Higher Self.

Words flow out of me with ease, so it’s hard for me to separate anything that doesn’t come out of the center of my own being.  However, in the flow of writing, there are definitely different “vibes,” and some books write more easily – or differently — than others.  One of my books that truly puzzles me is Ask the Angels, which is still in print.  It is a spiritual study guide to working with angels.  I wrote it on a very tight deadline.  When I read the finished product, it seemed to have come from “somewhere else.”  Perhaps it was because of the deadline stress.  But I still feel that way every time I pick up the book.

Books are living entities, and they carry a spiritual vibration that readers sense, even unconsciously.

If you had one take away piece of advice for people about the paranormal, what would it be?

I would advocate being open-minded about the paranormal. We live in a multi-dimensional reality that has intersected with other dimensions since the dawn of our history.  Our paranormal and spiritual experiences are real, and are important to our spiritual advancement.  They do not conform to science and they cannot be controlled by religion.  The paranormal is but one facet of the mystical and part of the path to Truth.

Rosemary, thank you so much for being with us here today. I know my readers will enjoy your work and your interview.