Moved to www.robgutro.com /I am an author, paranormal investigator & medium with Inspired Ghost Tracking. I can receive messages from ghosts or spirits (who have crossed over). As a scientist, I explain the paranormal with energy. Known as a Pet Medium; but work with human ghosts and spirits, too. My books teach you how to recognize signs from spirits.* AWARD-WINNING - 2021,2022 and 2023 BookAuthority Best New Grief Ebook for Pets and the Afterlife 3
Rob's Books, Medium Readings, Animal Rescue Fundraisers
BOOKS: Pets and the Afterlife, Pets and the Afterlife 2, Pets and the Afterlife 3, Pets and the Afterlife 4, Lessons Learned from Talking to the Dead, Ghosts of England on a Medium's Vacation, Ghosts of the Bird Cage Theatre on a Medium's Vacation, Kindred Spirits: How a Medium
Befriended a Spirit, Case Files of Inspired Ghost Tracking and Ghosts and Spirits Explained
BEST SELLERS: All of Rob's books have reached "best-seller" status on AMAZON.com in various paranormal categories. PET SPIRIT READINGS: Now offered via email and done on weekends. Reserve a spot thru Paypal. Email me at Rgutro@gmail.com Send 1 Photo of your pet, their name, and any questions.ANIMAL RESCUE FUNDRAISING LECTURES : Rob is a dog dad, volunteers with Dachshund and Weimaraner rescues and does fundraising lectures for dog and cat rescues.
My 3 #paranormal
books are #Amazon#bestsellers
in supernatural category (1 now retired) Find them: http://amazon.com/author/robgutro -Please write a review and let me know if they've helped you understand how your loved ones communicate from the other side.
Find them here: Amazon Author Page: amazon.com/author/robgutro
Our friend Ruthie Larkin, known as the "Beantown Medium" in the Boston area recommended that we read a book about the life of a clairvoyant from Holland named M. B. Dykshoorn called "My Passport Says Clairvoyant." The book was amazing.
Mr. Dykshoorn had an amazing ability to see things beyond the visible.
The book explains how he struggled with his gift as a child - as people
didn't believe him, questioned him, and he was even thought a
troublemaker because he could "see" things that happened elsewhere in
people's lives. Children today with this gift or a gift of mediumship
are also often mistreated or reprimanded when they're simply telling the
truth in what they see, hear and feel beyond the realm of the physical.
People can learn from this and acknowledge their children's gifts. Mr. Dykshoorn worked with police in
Europe and America to find missing persons, re-enact murder cases
(where he could see what happened to victims from their perspective -
including the layout of the rooms they were in when murdered) , and tell
people about how their life would turn out. Mr. Dykshoorn became famous throughout Europe in the late 1940s and 1950s.
He and his wife moved to Australia and finally to the U.S. In fact, he
was so amazing that he was awarded a police badge in Raleigh, N.C. for
helping solve murders. (Holland actually stamped his passport "Clairvoyant," - thus the name of the book). What's fascinating is that in the Netherlands, being a psychic was believed and welcomed. Once he moved to Australia and the U.S., people doubted him. However, he persevered and showed them his amazing talent. He was a psychic and clairvoyant (That's
different from what Rob does- talking with dead people and pets). He
actually cured people of diseases by taking on the symptoms and purging
them from himself (I think it has to do with energy transference).
He and his wife passed in October 2011 in a fire. Although her father’s
gift remained intact until his death, their daughter Helga
Dykshoorn said he had difficulty making predictions about those closest
to him. For this reason, she said that he could
not have foreseen the fire that ravaged his apartment. An article in the NY Times in October, 2011, contained some stories from people Mr. Dykshoorn had met. Here's a paragraph from the article: He had even performed medical miracles, guests were told. One man spoke
of the creaky knee that Mr. Dykshoorn had remedied. Then there was the
woman with the brain tumor, given 10 years to live, she said, but still
plodding along 35 years later. After a visit with Mr. Dykshoorn, she
recalled, she returned to her doctors, who were perplexed to learn that
the tumor had virtually disappeared.
The book "My Passport Says Clairvoyant" and was published in 1974 by Hawthorn Books Inc./New York and authored by
Russell H. Felton. This book is well worth the effort to track
down!
Thanks to the great Facebook called "Haunted Salem" - I'm republishing their story about the legend of the Flying Dutchman. I've always been fascinated by this legend, having grown up in the northeast, and wanted to share it with you, too. Please visit and like the Haunted Salem Facebook page, too! There are lots of interesting things from a town known for the infamous Witch Trials (which were all just false hysteria). Enjoy this legend! - Rob What is the Flying Dutchman Legend?
A ship that has been cursed to sail the ocean for eternity, The
Flying Dutchman is considered by sailors to be one of the worst possible
omens. In some stories anyone who sets eyes on it will die a horrible
death. In others the crew of The Flying Dutchman will try to give
letters to any ship that hails it. These letters are always addressed to
people who have long been dead and
touching any of the letters will bring you great misfortune. The captain
of the Flying Dutchman is believed to be Captain Benard Fokke who was
known for his impressive sailing speed, so much so it was believed that
he was in league with the devil.
There have been many
theories about the origin of The Flying Dutchman. In most cases the crew
and captain of the ship were guilty of a horrible crime which lead to
them being punished by condemning them to sail the sea forever. In other
tales it is a dutch ship that was lost off The Cape of Good Hope in
1641. Sightings of the ship date back to the 17th century but 19th and
20th century sightings claim that the ship was surrounded by a ghostly
light. One documented sighting was by Prince George of Wales when he was
teenager and on a three year voyage:
"At 4 a.m. the
Flying Dutchman crossed our bows. A strange red light as of a phantom
ship all aglow, in the midst of which light the masts, spars and sails
of a brig 200 yards distant stood out in strong relief as she came up on
the port bow, where also the officer of the watch from the bridge
clearly saw her, as did the quarterdeck midshipman, who was sent forward
at once to the forecastle; but on arriving there was no vestige nor any
sign whatever of any material ship was to be seen either near or right
away to the horizon, the night being clear and the sea calm. Thirteen
persons altogether saw her … At 10.45 a.m. the ordinary seaman who had
this morning reported the Flying Dutchman fell from the fore topmast
cross trees on to the top gallant forecastle and was smashed to atoms."
This is the final Tuesday Q&A of a question that I received via email, and my response.
5. I believe that, in the afterlife, there is no
"heaven" and no "hell". What we experience after death has
a lot to do with what we believe while on earth and, if at death, a person
believes in hell and that he or she belongs there that reality will be created
by that person.
I agree. "Heaven" and "Hell" are
man-made ideals. Joining the energies that run through the universe and
crossing that barrier from Earth (into the light) can be thought akin to a
"heaven" or paradise if you will."Hell" is actually being stranded on earth as a ghost, where
you can't communicate with the spirits- it's like torture for eternity.
You don't have to believe in a religion to believe in the afterlife. It's all about energy.
Energy cannot be destroyed only transformed, and our memories, personality and consciousness become an entity of energy after our physical bodies die. Then we make a choice to stay here on Earth as a ghost or cross into the light- passing the Earthly barrier to join the energies of the cosmos (you can call it heaven, paradise, valhalla, whatever you wish).
This is good advice to all - A Ouija board is NOT a game. It can open doors to dangerous things. Rob
Published by DorsetGhost: Published on Mar 11, 2015 -
Top 5 of the most scariest stories surrounding the Ouija board Gone wrong
Experiences where some have almost died when opening up the portal of
hell. The most creepiest Ouija Board video you will watch as all these
stories are supposed to be true, not fiction. This Shows you how dark
and scary the Ouija board really is. It's not a game, it's not meant to
be fun, and when you open up the portal, you will find out how dangerous
the Ouija board really is.
Most paranormal researchers advise against the casual use of the Ouija
board, it can lead to a doorway to unknown dimensions. The board itself
is not dangerous, but the form of communication that you are attempting
often is," says Ghost researcher Dale Kaczmarek of the Ghost Research
Society. "Most often the spirits whom are contacted through the Ouija
are those whom reside on 'the lower astral plane.' These spirits are
often very confused and may have died a violent or sudden death; murder,
suicide, etc. Therefore, many violent, negative and potentially
dangerous conditions are present to those using the board. Often times
several spirits will attempt to come through at the same time but the
real danger lies when you ask for physical proof of their existence! You
might say, 'Well, if you're really a spirit, then put out this light or
move that object!' What you have just done is simple, you have 'opened a
doorway' and allowed them to enter into the physical world and future
problems can and often do arise."
Dorset Ghost said : We personally received a lot of messages about a person's house being haunted and most times that house has only been haunted after a " fun" Ouija board session took place, so please be careful.
Some of our playlist of our ghost investigations containing some of the best paranormal evidence we have
caught during our ghost hunts. Please follow them on twitter at https://twitter.com/Dorsetghost
& like their facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Dors...
Music credit to:
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)".
Licensed under Creative Commons
Many of us do not want to live in a haunted house. Now there's a business in Canada that helps prevent that from happening and it's called "Diedinhouse.com"
Diedinhouse.com's website that tells you if someone died in your house
Some people are very keen on matters of the macabre especially death.
This sensitivity is so much that some buyers might eschew the rental or
purchase of a dwelling place if they knew someone had died in it. This
is particularly the case in places where a suicide or homicide have
occurred. However, the disclosure of a death on the premises is not
legally defined as a “material” fact which must be revealed to buyers as
is required with other issues such as mold or termite infestation. It
is possible for a heinous act to have been performed in a home only days before someone buys it unaware of its history.
For $11.99, a search on his website — which was a year in the making —
will dig through multiple sources to see if anyone spent their last
days at your address. Coast to Coast AM says the site scours millions of
records. (In Texas, for example, you might want to avoid the Fort
Worth home where a drunk woman hit a homeless man with her car and left
him to die in her garage.)
Realtors initially weren't fans of Condrey's business, since it's harder to sell so-called "stigmatized properties."
Condrey
says a death on-site can reduce a property's value by 15% to 25%. But
lately, he says, some realtors have been coming around, even using his
site to run their own searches.
Newser is
a USA TODAY content partner providing general news, commentary and
coverage from around the Web. Its content is produced independently of
USA TODAY.
Looking for a beautiful, and possibly haunted place? The
Banff Springs Hotel is a luxury hotel that was built during the 19th century as
one of Canada's grand railway hotels, being constructed in Scottish Baronial
style and located in Banff National Park, Alberta, Canada. The hotel was opened
to the public on June 1, 1888. Today, the Fairmont Banff Springs resort hotel
is owned by OMERS and operated by Fairmont Hotels and Resorts of Toronto.
Thanks to Haunted Salem for this post: Banff Springs Hotel
is a grand hotel in Canada that was built in 1888 and is still open today.
There are rumors that this is the hotel that inspired The Shining, but that has
been proved false. There are numerous ghosts that are said to haunt the place,
such as…
Sam, an employee who died in the 70’s. He supposedly talks
to guests and even helps them with their bags and on the elevator. However, he
vanishes if you try to tip him.
A bride who got married at the hotel. She died after a
candle lit her dress on fire; she panicked and fell down the stairs pictured.
She is said to be seen wandering the hotel in her wedding dress. Guests have
also reported feeling cold or chills while they are on the staircase.
A family who was murdered in room 873 by their father. Since
the murder the room has been closed but the ghosts still wander around there;
reports such as vacationers waking up in the middle of the night feeling
paralyzed as well as seeing fingerprints on their mirror that won’t come off
are supposedly the room 873 ghosts.