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F. P. Dorchak

Speculative Fiction (New Weird) Author

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fpdorchak

California Ghost Huntin!

March 22, 2010 by fpdorchak

F. P. Dorchak and Friends...

This past weekend, one of my brothers and I took the San Francisco Ghost Hunt tour, hosted by Jim Fassbinder, out of the exquisite four-floored Victorian Queen Anne Hotel. What the Queen Anne website does not tell you, however (at least I didn’t find it on their site), is that the hotel is…haunted. By one very deceased Mary Lake. Now Mary, Mr. Fassbinder will tell you, makes her way around the hotel pretty regularly, creating cold spots and occasionally tucking in guests. Orbs have also been captured in photographs.  Well, the whole group of us, which had to be some 30-odd people (Fassbinder had said it was one of his larger groups), had pretty much free reign of the hotel—short of actually entering guests hotel rooms. After Mr. Fassbinder’s charming little Get-to-Know-Him presentation in the main lobby (he is quite charming and practiced in his presentation), he herded us all up to the fourth floor, and shortly after another presentation in the hallway to the amused surprised of several sets of guests trying to exit their rooms into a hallway full of people, herded us into “Mary Lake’s suite,” room 410. Room 410 is reputed to be haunted. I don’t know that anyone found anything, though one very adorable little blonde child was quite the animated and inquisitive little future ghost hunter! She kept asking Mr. Fassbinder about a haunted chair (among other things) and Mr. Fassbinder said he’d tell her privately later, but I never found out the outcome of their tête à tête. I’d heard nothing out of anyone else in our group about discovering any manifestations, however Mr. Fassbinder told us that on his way up to meet us on the fourth floor, he’d talked with a gentleman who had sat down in a chair in the hotel and had experienced cold spots (and/or other extreme relaxation—I think I’m mixing up two different stories about the ghost and chairs, now…). Also in 410 Mr. Fassbinder had told us about a guy who came in one night and immediately plopped himself into bed without taking off his clothes or getting under the blankets. This man had then awoken the next morning to find himself covered in a blanket he had not placed on himself, and what’s more—had been totally tucked in all the way around himself.

What that meant was that someone (not him) had used their hands and “speared” the blanket snuggly underneath him entirely around the perimeter of his body.

Okay—that’s service!

After the relation of other stories, we were set free for ten minutes to check things out on our own. My brother had a camera and took pictures. Neither of us found anything (well, not entirely true—I had found a rest room…).

We then set out for our evening trek around several blocks of San Francisco, bordered by Sutter, Octavia, California, and I think, Gough, Streets. It was a beautiful night and was kinda cool walking around the night with a bunch of people we didn’t know, hearing ghost stories, and enjoying a rather pleasant evening. In talking with Mr. Fassbinder, I found that he had been a steel/aluminum worker in Chicago and (the long and short of it) come to San Francisco to ply his trade as a Ghost Hunter Paranormal Dude. He felt he could do ghosts one better, and has been doing these tours 6 days a week, since 1998. He says all his stories are thoroughly researched, he’s part of several paranormal organizations, and has had paranormal experiences his entire life. He is frequently on the Travel Channel’s Haunted Hotels, and has even been used, he says, as a source in books. He was most recently on a March 3rd 2010 episode of TAPS. In that episode they had gone to Alcatraz and validated the presence of ghosts. My brother, Chris, and I’d also been there (in 2007), but we hadn’t experienced any ghosts, though I certainly picked up on all the gloom and despair there.

On our pedestrian ghosting excursion Mr. Fassbinder informed us about hauntings involving Buddhist temples and SF townhomes. About the rich and well-to-do. About Pacific Heights’s (the neighborhood where we were) rather bawdy reputation. About a once-woman named Flora who apparently still wanders California Street (as we stood out on the corner of California and Octavia, a passerby in a car leaned out the window and loudly gave us all a scary “wooo-hooo!” as they drove by!). A long-gone Voodoo heiress, Mary Ellen Pleasant, who thumps ne’er-do-wells with gum nuts from the eucalyptus trees that cover the sidewalks in the area where her home once was, and of a couple people, including an LAPD homicide cop who was temporarily overcome by an apparently  never proven murder victim. And at this location where the LAPD cop was overcome, a duel-turreted building, Mr. Fassbinder, showed us…a “haunted key.”

But through all this neither my brother nor I ever saw anything strange. Somehow I’d had the expectation that we were to be going inside buildings, but that never…materialized. Perhaps this was mentioned up front and we’d missed that little announcement, perhaps I’d made it up, since we’d arrived a few minutes late for the 7 p.m. start time? Throughout the tour, Mr. Fassbinder frequently mentioned actually taking people inside buildings, but we never entered any, except for the Queen Anne. But overall I found Mr. Fassbinder an outgoing, amusing, and charismatic character, and really enjoyed the “ghost hunt” experience, even if no one saw anything….

The next day, Sunday, I’d found a cemetery near where I was staying, so I went out to investigate. It’s called the Laguna Cemetery. See also this link. It’s part of the Ed R. Levin Park. One can either enter the park entrance off Route 237, go left after passing the booth and continue driving around to the left, and park across from some horse stables there to take a short foot path (and go left, not to the right, where the trail marker sign is)…or one can bypass the park entrance altogether and drive up a little ways still on Rt 237 around a bend and pull off the road on your right. That was a long sentence! There’s really no parking by the cemetery, it’s just a little pull-out alongside 237. Anyway…I came to the cemetery’s entrance only to find that it is indeed, off limits to everyone. The “renovation” was a stone with a historical presentation of the history of the cemetery. Apparently too much vandalism over the years has caused it’s area to be fenced off, and those gravestones that did remain to be removed for preservation. I saw no remaining gravestones—only one possibly scared wild turkey hiding among the trees from circling hawks above. I did find the location calm, peaceful, and quiet—but no ghosts. I found the fence cool looking.

One other curious thing happened on the way up to San Francisco Saturday. As I drove up 101, off to the left I spotted a really cool object in the hazy sky—a Zeppelin. I’d read earlier in the day about Zeppelin rides, so it was quite synchronistic to actually see one, especially since all the times I’ve driven up to SF over the past 7 years, I’ve never seen one before. So, as I drove 101 that afternoon, it was very Twilight Zoney, like I was in another time watching it through all the bay haze. It was kinda ghost-like itself…partway in this time, partway in another….

So, had either my brother or I experienced any ghosts?

Negative.

Do I believe in ghosts?

Without a doubt—I’ve seen two of my dead dogs as ghosts. But no matter, because it was a great weekend, I did get to spend time with one of my siblings, see some cool stuff, hear some weird stories, and meet some interesting people. We have some photos, but I’m having issues trying to figure out how to not only add them to this blog, but pull them from a drop site. Once I figger this out, I’ll post them.

And such was my ghost hunting experience for the weekend!

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Progressive! The Commercial Tryouts!

March 15, 2010 by fpdorchak

Okay, you gotta check this out. It’s a commercial try-out to find someone good enough to be put into a Progressive commercial. Here are the details. I laugh at this every time I watch this!  It’s not just funny, it’s FRICKIN funny!

Yeah, he’s one of my brothers…but make your own judgment—then post a comment!

Filed Under: Uncategorized

The Independent Book Festival – For the Self-Published

March 4, 2010 by fpdorchak

A friend of mine, Curry Walls—a real Go-Getter—has taken it upon himself (with the help of others) to put on an “independent book festival,” September 23 – 25, 2010, in Studio City, California, to help the self-published writer.  Curry, along with René Ashton and Jackie Olson, have put together this conference/convention to allow those not traditionally published to sell and network and have their books entered into a contest and be judged by some big names.

The IBC’s stated mission is:  “…to enhance the personal and professional realms of self-publishers everywhere, regardless of age, gender, culture or economics. Through multi-media sources, we are here to encourage, inspire, and educate and to help further an evolving community that supports the creativity and passion of writers everywhere.”

Though I’ve self-published (Sleepwalkers, AuthorHouse, 2001), I don’t follow the self-publishing circuit, so don’t really know much about it, but Curry and company’s effort looks impressive.  In fact there are some well-known names as IBF judges: Lori Perkins (at least I thought she’d been around for a while, but her blog said “another new agent”…), Paul Levine, Andrea Somberg, Michael Larsen, Nancy Ellis, as well as a host of publishers, like Dragon Moon Press, and other media organizations, like The National Book Examiner. Authors select a Gold, Silver, Bronze package, or the less expensive Al La Carte package, to attend. Agents, producers, and publishers, oh my, are attending, Curry tells me. It should be quite an interesting get together, and I applaud those who are attending and giving the time of day to the self-published author. They need it.

Self publishing really has gotten a bad rap over the years, whether or not some can justify that rap—but bullying is, well, bullying, whether high-brow or not. Many have chosen to self-publish for whatever reason. Some have been extremely successful by it, but most…have not.

Same could be said of traditional publishing.

The fact is writing is writing…and as many people and organizations are finding, the traditional writing model is changing. There’s a lot more self-publishing going on, and lot more media upon which to put those books. Yes, perhaps more self-published books are not as good as the traditionally published, but perhaps Curry and the IBF can help change some of that. Perhaps it can give self-published writers a better standing in the community, instill a better sense of responsibility in them for their work, the role of better editing (or at the very least, another set of eyes), better cover design. Et cetera. There isn’t one book out there that could not benefit from professional editing, cover design, or any other facet of publishing that traditional publishers use. Maybe in self-publishing it’s harder to find those things, or trust the outlets pushing their services, because, really, no one is looking out for you. But there are places you can go to, like AuthorHouse.

And, now, perhaps, the IBF. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: IBF, International book festival, self publishing

The Science Behind UFOs?

February 21, 2010 by fpdorchak

Interesting how every now and then we get a story about the science behind UFOs…getting closer and closer to what the actual propulsion systems might be aboard these types of crafts being sighted. The latest Bing clip is talking about electromagnetism…but from what I’ve read, close but not quite a cigar. Read The Secrets of Antigravity Propulsion, by Paul LaViolette, Ph.D. This somewhat difficult reading (because of the physics—but that can be skimmed over for other fascinating reading) talks about Tesla, and a little known figure-to-the-public, T. Townsend Brown. This book discusses subquantum kinetics, and Electrogravitic propulsion, the apparent science behind UFO-like craft sightings.

Fascinating reading.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Past Life – The New TV Series

February 16, 2010 by fpdorchak

I just watched the first two episodes to this new series, called Past Life, and just between the first and second shows, I’ve seen an improvement.

In watching the first episode, I had mixed—though generally positive—feelings about it. On the one hand, yes, it has lots of previously used  tropes and such, but, really, in its defense, how else you gonna portray this stuff in a hour? You gotta keep things like this moving, and for attention-deficit viewers and those perhaps already “up to here” with this kind of plot/story idea, it’d be hard to do. But I liked that it tried.

And though I liked the first episode, things seemed a bit rushed to arrive at the conclusion. As I’d mentioned before in my first post on the topic, I sincerely hoped that the stories would be well done, even if not all that much of a surprise, because how much of a surprise can you make something like this within the structure of an institute that investigates past-life issues? The entire show’s about finding past lives, so unless they do progressions v. regressions, and even once they’ve done that—what next?  Alien lives? The second episodes was much better and didn’t feel rushed at all. Without sitting down and thinking through how to do something like this, it will be interesting to see how they keep things “fresh.”

One thing of note is that in most of the research I’ve found is that reincarnational material usually—but  not always—seems to make itself known before the age of six, and so far it’s all manifesting in the teenage and adult years. I guess that, too, would be problematic for a weekly TV show aimed at an adult audience. But I really like how it tackled drug use. I like it because it shows the program is trying to show how past lives may affect current lives to an individual’s detriment. It might help in giving a different point of view to illnesses, instead of treating everything solely through use of medication. I’m not saying that all illnesses are a result of this kind of thing, but I am saying that there may be other issues and methods that might better deal with some problems.  But it can also give clues as to why we have certain inclinations and thoughts…why some things might unnerve us and why other things (and personalities and people!) might, for no seeming reason, turn us “on” or “off.”

Yes, the shows has so far been rather “cookie cutter,” but I’m willing to give it time and a chance to see how it develops and gets its “sea legs.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Matt Bille and UFOs

February 12, 2010 by fpdorchak

This post is in reply to a comment Matt Bille had made regarding UFOs. I had mentioned them while reviewing First Man: The Life of Neil A. Armstrong. Matt’s comment is reproduced, below (I have corrected misspellings):

“Frank, a good review, for the most part, of a great book. The reason the UFO angle is dismissed is that all the astronaut UFO/conspiracy tales have been long since shot down by the astronauts, NASA, and/or James Oberg. I don’t discount UFOs, but none of the alleged astronaut stories intrigues me.”

The problem I have with statements like this are on many levels, not to mention entire books have been writing for and against your position!  :-]  1) First, it’s an absolute. I know of very few absolutes in the world. Or the universe. The long and the short is that just because a theory or postulation or observation may have been “proven”… doesn’t mean it’s a law. Only an observed phenomena. Sure, some may be repeatedly reproduced, but it’s still only based upon specific observations that don’t necessarily preclude opposing theories or observations. The classic example I always use is wave particle duality. “I see a blue jay,” doesn’t mean all birds are blue jays. Just because I see a blue jay does not mean there are no cardinals nor finches nor chickadees nor…. 2) Based on statistics alone—I’m talking pure number crunching here—there is the possibility of extraterrestrial life elsewhere. The different rabbit holes we could travel down here are far too numerous to even attempt in a post reply. And as anyone who’s ever worked with numbers can attest, the same set of numbers in anything can be used as pros or cons. 3) I’m going to see if I can present a reading list (and yes, I did read every one of them!) in this reply to your post, Matt.  If not, I’ll make a separate post of it. In any case, these will be my rebuttal about UFOs, because so much has already been written about both sides of the argument. I know you say you don’t discount them, but you also seem to believe (though you state your position in third person, distancing yourself from directly saying “I believe what the gov’t is telling me…”) what the government tells you, that they don’t exist—which to me seems contradictory. In any event, to me, it really seems that discounting the possibility or probability of extraterrestrial life seems based upon beliefs. I’ve met and talked with Stanton Friedman, and he makes the best, most down-to-earth argument for them. Read his bio. An ex-nuclear physicist who worked classified projects for the government. Geesh, what more can I say, Matt? 4) Now, given the view in #3, I’m just going to cite one reference here (but see my suggested reading list, below), because there are so many, but  read Body Of Secrets, Anchor Books, 2002, by James Bamford, ISBN 0-385-49908-6. A book about the National Security Agency. Written by interviewing people who were (and are?) a part of NSA. It talks of what that organization does, about ferreting out secrets, of keeping secrets…but also of the out-and-out deceit. How people purposely lied in the interests of national security—and other reasons. Whether one lies to serve a national interest or not, people do it for reasons they feel compel them to do so, mental issues notwithstanding, etc. And in the instance of UFOs, if the government really knows anything, and feels compelled to keep what they know a secret—for whatever reason—of course they’re not going to say anything in favor of extraterrestrial life. Of course they’re going to deny. Again whole books have been written about this, too, but you can read Roswell: Inconvenient Facts and the Will To Believe, Prometheus Books, 2001, Carl T. Pflock, ISBN 1-57392-894-1 as a counter to the belief in UFOs (also on my reading list). And as a counter to Mr. Pflock’s book, read any of Mr. Friedman’s books, or the tome UFOs And The National Security State, Hampton Roads Publishing Company, 2002, by Richard M. Dolan, ISBN 1-57174-317-0 (volume two has just come out, too), if you want to pick “just one book” to get a feel for the subject.  5) BTW, didn’t Mr. Oberg abandon his attack on UFOs at some point? Haven’t the time this morning to look into that. 6) And lastly, you wanna “talk NASA”?   Read DARK MISSION:  THE SECRET HISTORY OF NASA, BY Richard C. Hoagland and Mike Bara, Feral House, ISBN 978-1-932595-26-0

So, it’s cool that you don’t discount ET life, Matt, but I really have to take issue with your “…all the astronaut UFO/conspiracy tales have been long since shot down by the astronauts, NASA, and/or James Oberg…” statement.  Just my humble-or-not-so-humble opinion. But thanks for reading and taking the time to respond!

Suggested Reading

THE RIGHT STUFF, Bantam Books/Farrar, Straus, & Giroux, 1979/2001, Tom Wolfe, ISBN 0-553-38135-0

DEEP BLACK, Berkley Books, 1988, by William Burrows, ISBN 0-425-10879-1

DREAMLAND, Villard, 1998, by Phil Patton, ISBN 0-375-75385-0

LEAP OF FAITH, Harper Torch, 2002, by Gordon Cooper, ISBN 0-06-109877-9

BODY OF SECRETS, Anchor Books, 2002, by James Bamford, ISBN 0-385-49908-6

The Zeta Reticuli Incident (and Commentary), AstroMedia Corporation, 1976, Terence Dickinson

TOP SECRET/MAJIC, Marlowe & Company, 2005, by Stanton T. Friedman. MSc, ISBN 1-56924-342-5

CRASH AT CORONA, Paraview Special Editions, 2004, by Don Berliner and Stanton Friedman, ISBN 1-931044-89-9

ABOVE BLACK, OneTeam Publishing, 1997, 2006, by Dan Sherman, ISBN 0-9660978-0-7

UFOs AND THE NATIONAL SECURITY STATE, Hampton Roads Publishing Company, 2002, by Richard M. Dolan, ISBN 1-57174-317-0

THAT CRAZY LADY DOWN THE ROAD, Earth Star Publications, 2005, by Judy Messoline, ISBN 0-944851-14-2

ALIEN AGENDA, HarperCollinsPublishers, 1997, by Jim Marrs, ISBN 0-06-109686-5

COMMUNION, Beech Tree Books, 1987, by Whitley Strieber, ISBN 0-688-07086-8

TRANSFORMATION, Avon Books, 1988, by Whitley Strieber, ISBN 0-380-70535-4

BREAKTHROUGH, HarperCollinsPublishers, 1995, by Whitley Strieber, ISBN 0-06-017653-9

The works of Seth, Jane Roberts, and Rob Butts.

THE DAY AFTER ROSWELL, Pocket Books, 1997, by Colonel Philip J. Corso (Ret.) and William J. Birnes, ISBN 0-671-01756-X

SKY WALKING, Collins/Smithsonian Books, 2006, Tom Jones, ISBN 978-0-06-088436-9

DARK MISSION:  THE SECRET HISTORY OF NASA, BY Richard C. Hoagland and Mike Bara, Feral House, ISBN 978-1-932595-26-0

ROSWELL: INCONVENIENT FACTS AND THE WILL TO BELIEVE, Prometheus Books, 2001, Carl T. Pflock, ISBN 1-57392-894-1

THE ROSWELL LEGACY, New Page Books, 2009, Jesse and Linda Marcel, Jr., ISBN 978-1-60163-026-1

SECRETS OF ANTIGRAVITY PROPULSION, by Paul A. LaViolette, Ph.D., Bear & Company, ISBN 978-1-59143-078-0

FLYING SAUCERS AND SCIENCE, by Stanton Friedman, New Page Books, ISBN 978-1-60163-011-7

RULE BY SECRECY, by Jim Marrs, Perennial, ISBN 978-0-06-093184-1

FIRST MAN, by James R. Hansen, Simon and Schuster Paperbacks, ISBN 0-7432-5631-X

THE LAST MAN ON THE MOON, by Eugene Cernan with Don Davis, St. Martin’s Press, ISBN 0-312-19906-6

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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