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F. P. Dorchak

Speculative Fiction (New Weird) Author

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Paranormal

The Twilight Zone — An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge

August 23, 2012 by fpdorchak

“An Occurrence at Owl Creek” is a 1962 French short film (La rivière du hibou, directed by Robert Enrico and produced by Marcel Ichac and Paul de Roubaix) that was based on a story by Ambrose Gwinett Bierce, aka “Bitter Bierce.”  The story was originally published by the The San Francisco Examiner in 1890, and was first included in Bierce’s 1891 book Tales of Soldiers and Civilians. The story, set during the Civil War (during the war, Bierce served as a First Lieutenant, in the Union), is about the execution of a spy by hanging. Very creepy atmosphere—love it!

I recommend watching the 28-minute short before reading the wiki link, since it gives away the ending.

This episode was incorporated into the Twilight Zone compendium, in Season 5, episode 22, on Feb 28, 1964, apparently, from what I can find, as-is. Well, with the addition of Rod Serling doing his usual monologue.  According to Wikipedia, “…this episode’s introduction is notable for Rod Serling breaking the fourth wall even more than usual, as he explains how the film was shot overseas and later picked up to air as part of The Twilight Zone.”

So, enjoy—it’s packed full of cool, creepy, Civil War atmosphere!

Related articles
  • Twilight Zone – My 25 Favorite Episodes! (fpdorchakrealitycheck.wordpress.com)
  • “Write it Right” by Ambrose Bierce (larryfarlow.com)

Filed Under: Dreams, Just Plain Weird, Paranormal Tagged With: Ambrose Bierce, American Civil War, An Occurrence at Owl Creek, The Twilight Zone

Twilight Zone—My 25 Favorite Episodes!

August 9, 2012 by fpdorchak

1959 Series Logo
1959 Series Logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Well, I’ve been putting this off for years, but after visiting some recent Twilight Zone-related blogs (here and here) and being asked the question–and seeing an actual list from one of the sites—I decided, okay, I really should put down a list of my favorite episodes. So, here they are—in no particular order (except the top 4 really are my top four):

  1. And When the Sky was Opened
  2. Judgment Day
  3. The Arrival
  4. The After Hours
  5. Mirror Image
  6. King 9 Will Not Return
  7. The 7th is Made Up Of Phantoms
  8. Nightmare at 20,000 Feet
  9. The Thirty-Fathom Grave
  10. Will The Real Martian Please Stand Up
  11. A Game Of Pool
  12. Long Live Walter Jameson
  13. Death Ship
  14. The Passage of the Lady Anne
  15. Nothing In The Dark
  16. A Passage For Trumpet
  17. Ring-A-Ding Girl
  18. Perchance To Dream
  19. The Last Flight
  20. The Changing of the Guard
  21. A Stop at Willoughby
  22. A World Of His Own
  23. Trouble With Templeton
  24. The Passersby
  25. The Hunt

I’m a fan of ATMOSPHERE, which can clearly be seen in some of my selections, like Judgment Day, Lady Anne, Martian, etc., and there are some others missing, like I Am The Night, Color Me Black. And in my review of episodes, I think I actually found one I have never seen:  An Occurrence At Owl Creek. How did I miss this? Must also be another rare episode. I mean, thanks to Shadow & Substance, but I even caught the rare George Takei episode, The Encounter, a powerful and polarizing episode rarely aired. But you can also see the ex-military side of me, and my love of ships, subs, and aircraft. But I also love the reincarnational and paranormally weird. But, hey, I’m a Twilight Zone fan, right?

Will this list change? Just like the Twilight Zone is a state of mind, so this list is a result of my state of mind at any one moment in time….

But, oh, how these bring back such wonderful images, emotion, and atmosphere!

Related Article:  John-Boy Wrote For The Twilight Zone

Filed Under: Dreams, Just Plain Weird, Paranormal, Philosophical, Reincarnation, Uncategorized Tagged With: Rod Serling, Television, Twilight Zone

Sleepwalkers Are Among Us….

April 12, 2012 by fpdorchak

Do you wonder about your dreams, stray thoughts, and alternate realities? What if they merged? Would you like to take a peek behind the curtain of life? See what might be running your life?

Tomorrow, in Longmont, Colorado, is the Longmont Public Library’s Colorado Authors’ Open House, Friday, April 13, 2 to 5 p.m. This is part of their “You Belong” Longmont Library Festival. There, among nearly 100 authors, you will find me and my novel, Sleepwalkers, a story (and some of my actual dreams!) of how and what may be going on in the background of our lives….

Related articles
  • The “You Belong” Anthology Read (fpdorchak.wordpress.com)
  • “Tail Gunner” accepted in Longmont Library Anthology (fpdorchak.wordpress.com)
  • The “You Belong” Anthology (fpdorchak.wordpress.com)

Filed Under: Dreams, Paranormal, Uncategorized Tagged With: Longmont Public Library, Sleepwalkers

Open Question to Ghost Hunters

March 5, 2012 by fpdorchak

Ghost Hunters
Image via Wikipedia

Question to all the ghost hunters out there:  what do you do with the knowledge that you’ve found a ghost?  Do you attempt to connect with it on a deeper level and get it to move on? Find out more about it? Ask deeper questions than “Are you here? Why are you here?”  Maybe ask what life on the “other side” is like for it? Do you attempt to release its energy from this realm? Do you attempt to do anything else with the newly discovered knowledge, other than just “find it”?

I ask, because it seems to me there’s so much more to do with finding this kind of energy than just (and I do not mean to be “dismissive” of your occupations–I’m sure the work is fun!) stamping a site as “haunted” and moving on. I also understand the difference between a “ghost hunter” and a “medium.” And, sure, it may be great for businesses, something declared as “officially haunted,” but what about the more far-reaching implications? That if the active haunting is actively communicating, communicating back to it that it should move on, “into the light,” as it were? I understand that some hauntings are more like tapings that just replay themselves over and over, but have investigators still attempted contact even with those sightings? Asking or projecting energy back to them to get them to move on? Perhaps it’s not so much even a case, in some instances, of a “haunting,” as some people (including the investigators) simply being more sensitive to certain energies that allows them to see “ghosts”?

Admittedly, I’m no expert in this area, but these kinds of questions have always intrigued me. I believe in ghosts, but it seems to me there is so much more to learn and probe, here, about all this paranormal activity, rather than just “finding” them, as I’ve mainly seen on TV (unless TV is not showing the whole investigation). I was impressed with one ghost hunter show in particular, about a year or so ago (not sure if it was Ghost Adventures, with Zak Bagans). It dealt with “poltergeist activity,” and the host impressed me with coming up with the theory that it most likely wasn’t “angry spirits,” but chaotic and confused energy of those “experiencing” said activity. I like that kind of thinking.

Anyway, thanks, in advance, for any comments!

Filed Under: Paranormal, Uncategorized Tagged With: ghost, Ghost Hunter

Miracle in the Sky – Guest Blog, by Karen Duvall

February 26, 2012 by fpdorchak

English: Skydiving Tequesquitengo Español: Par...
Image via Wikipedia

This post was originally posted on Karen’s blog, Feb 24th, 2012. I read it and thought, this is exactly what I’m looking for from others out there! The WEIRD that happens in our lives! Karen graciously agreed to allow my posting of her story here. Thanks for sharing, Karen!  Love your story! You’re my first guest blogger on Reailty Check!

Miracle in the Sky

Posted: 24 Feb 2012 01:13 PM PST

Skydiving is an exhilarating sport. It’s exciting, challenging, and a bit risky. Faulty parachutes, mid-air collisions, hard landings… I know because I jumped out of airplanes on the weekends during my freshman year of college. And in those days… I’m talking the late seventies… there was no such think as “tandem” jumps. Tandem jumps are for pussies. All 60 of my jumps were done solo and without a monkey on my back.

I looked death in the face every time I stepped onto the strut, the heavy chute strapped to my back pulling me out of the plane, the icy wind thousands of feet above Earth blowing my screams into silence. I wasn’t screaming in terror. I screamed in triumph. Young and invincible, I dared anything bad to happen while I was having such a good time.

Mornings made the best time to jump because that’s when the winds were calm. I’d lie back on the grass beside the airstrip, my head propped against my packed chute, my hands shielding my eyes as I stared upward to watch my fellow divers fall from the jump plane. They looked like specs of sand that grew into small pebbles the closer they got to the ground. Sometimes they’d join hands to form circles in the sky, then shoot away from each other, their parachutes billowing off their backs and jerking them to a brief stop before floating them gently to Earth. A sky ballet without the music.

Parachute landings may look easy, but for me they rarely were. I’ve suffered bruises and broken bones from landing in trees, sugar cane fields, muddy cow pastures, and the center lane of a busy highway. But nothing can beat the day I landed on the beach.

It had rained early that morning and low clouds forced our plane to sit on the runway longer than usual. Leaning back against the bare metal sides of the Cessna, I closed my eyes and listened to the engine roar and the props spin, my heart quickening when we finally began our taxi down the airstrip. The plane’s wheels bumped over cracks in the tarmac, making the metal floor vibrate beneath me until we were airborne.

Our take-off was no different than any other.

A flash of red crumpled cloth interrupted the darkness behind my eyelids and I jerked my eyes open. Everything looked the same. The plane’s floor was bare, the passenger seats removed to accommodate jumpers, though it was only my jumpmaster, Byron, and me on this flight. The pilot and our spotter occupied the two seats up front. I blinked and breathed out a sigh.

“You all right?” Byron shouted above the engine’s roar.

I nodded, my helmet heavy on my head. “Thought I saw something,” I yelled back.

“What?”

I grinned. “I don’t know. It was just…” He must have thought I was an idiot. “Never mind. It was nothing.”

Byron, an ex-marine with the demeanor of Santa Claus, quirked an eyebrow before leaning back to enjoy the ride.

We needed to climb to an altitude of 15,000 feet to allow enough time for a thirty-second freefall. It took a while for the dense clouds above us to part and let us through. Excitement and anxiety warred inside me, but I felt comforted in knowing my jumpmaster would dive with me today.

The pilot nodded at the spotter, who opened the door. A blast of frigid air pushed me firmly into the wall at my back. The spotter hung his head outside to peer down at the miniature landscape below. He held up a thumb. The pilot cut the engine.

Time for us to go.

I climbed out onto the strut and faced forward with both hands gripping the wing. It wobbled slightly as the pilot glided the plane like a kite. I let go and arched my back, staring up at the plane that seemed to fly away from me, only it was me flying away. Falling away. Byron dived out to join me.

My body remained stable, belly toward the ground, as I plummeted at a velocity of 130 miles per hour. Byron’s strong hands grabbed my ankles and turned me around to face him, his gloved fingers now gripping my forearms. The wind pulled and pushed his face out of shape, his cheeks flapping like fish gills. He pointed at the altimeter mounted on the packed reserve chute strapped to my chest, then let me go.

I stared below me, not at the ground, but at the ocean. We had strayed off course.

Arching my back again, I yanked my ripcord free and the parachute popped from my back, caught the wind, and snapped open. The jerk was like slamming on the brakes. I gazed up at the full canopy of black, red and gold, and scanned the horizon for my jumpmaster. His red parachute, now a rumpled ball of nylon, landed in the blue water far below. Byron floated down after it, the circle of a white reserve parachute carrying him gently out to sea. A boat was already speeding out to greet him.

His main chute must have malfunctioned, but he seemed to be okay. I’d pulled my cord higher than usual, meaning I still had a ways to go before reaching the ground. While watching Byron, I’d neglected to pay attention to my own location. I saw water below, a strip of beach next to that, then the rooftops of houses beside a band of highway lined by a ribbon of power lines. The drop zone was miles out of reach.

I tapped the silent radio on my chest. Nothing. As a novice jumper, I depended on the ground crew to talk me down. Not a word came through the tiny speaker and I floated closer to the ground every second. The rooftops looked flat enough to land on, but if I missed I could get tangled in a power line. If I veered too far to the right I’d get dunked in the sea.

“Head for the beach.”

I heard the voice clearly and exhaled in relief. The ground crew. My saviors.

I steered my parachute toward the slim line of beach and touched down within minutes. I could have easily made the wrong choice, but the guardian angel who spoke through my radio had guided me in the right direction.

I tapped the radio again, listening for someone to say they’d come get me soon. Silence. I detached the radio from my reserve pack to give it a shake and was surprised by how light it felt. Flipping open the back, I checked the batteries. There were no batteries. The compartment was completely empty.

I stared at the nylon canopy spread across the sand. What had just happened? No batteries means no radio communication, yet I had clearly heard a voice tell me to head for the beach. Was it the wind? Or had I suddenly become schizophrenic? Whatever it was, it had possibly saved my life.

I never told anyone at the drop zone about my experience, least of all Byron. He arrived back at the airstrip with his bundle of soggy red parachute in his arms and a Santa Claus smile on his face.

“So how was it?” he asked me.

I frowned for a second as I tried to think of the best way to answer. Finally I grinned and said, “Miraculous.”

Filed Under: Just Plain Weird, Paranormal Tagged With: freefalling, miracles, Parachute, Parachuting, Skydiving

Ghost of Me

February 11, 2012 by fpdorchak

One of the weirdest things to happen to me occurred on September 20, 2010, at around 4 in the afternoon.

Actual names have been removed for privacy.

Two relatives were at our home with my wife, while I was at work. One relative was in the kitchen with my wife, the other outside. My wife and the first relative were making dinner. At about this time, both my wife and this person both heard the downstairs door to our living room open then close, and me shouting out (as I always do) “Hellooo!”  They both looked to each other and commented that I was home. The other relative then came inside, and my wife told this person I was home.  But after a few moments they wondered where I was, because I hadn’t yet shown my face. When one of them went to check on me, they only found one car in the garage–I had not yet returned home!

My wife looked to the one who’d been in the kitchen with her and asked, “Well, you heard it right?” to which the person replied, “Yeah, I heard it.”

But I was at the gym!

<cue Twilight Zone music….>

Okay, that’s a first–I’m a ghost while I’m still living!

After hearing this, I’d talked to all parties, and they all confirmed the above events. Every detail. To make it even more interesting, when I really did return home that night, my wife had me go to where she’d been standing and showed me exactly how it all went down by her going to the same door…opening then closing it. I then came down to her after she’d closed the door and shouted out my normal “Hellooo!” I asked her, “It sounded just like that?” She said yup.  She added that I even had that playful lilt to it I always do when I shout it out upon getting home.

Later, as I got ready for bed the next night, I think it was, it dawned on me that when I was running errands after work on the above day (the 20th), I was fully intending to head home to check on some flight reservations I’d made at work for a business trip. When I went to check on these reservations after having made them, our Internet and e-mail went down, and I really wanted these reservations, because I was flying home in the middle of a four-week biz trip. And up until the very last minute, I’d thoroughly intended on actually coming home, checking on them (or making them if they hadn’t gone through at work with our Interent down) then head to the gym–but changed my mind on the drive home and ended up going directly to the gym. So this all happened exactly when I would have gotten home if I hadn’t changed my mind and instead headed to the gym.

What do I think this was?  Well, it could be considered “suggestion,” some kind of telepathic link…or perhaps it was an alternate reality. I like to think of it as…a ghost of me!

Filed Under: Just Plain Weird, Paranormal Tagged With: Alternate Realities, Ghost of Me, Ghosts

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