why we can't see ghost around us
Answers
Answer:
because ghost is only energy
we can feel energy but not seen
Answer:
Back
Psychology Today
Home
Find a Therapist
Get Help
Magazine
Today
Back
Find a Therapist
Get Help
Find a Therapist
Find a Treatment Center
Find a Psychiatrist
Find a Support Group
Find Teletherapy
Members
Login
Sign Up
Back
Get Help
Mental Health
Addiction
ADHD
Anxiety
Asperger's
Autism
Bipolar Disorder
Chronic Pain
Depression
Eating Disorders
Personality
Passive Aggression
Personality
Shyness
Personal Growth
Goal Setting
Happiness
Positive Psychology
Stopping Smoking
Relationships
Low Sexual Desire
Relationships
Sex
Family Life
Child Development
Parenting
View Help Index
Do I Need Help?
Self Tests
Therapy Center NEW
Recently Diagnosed?
Diagnosis Dictionary
Types of Therapy
Talk to Someone
Find a Therapist
Find a Treatment Center
Find a Psychiatrist
Find a Support Group
Find Teletherapy
Back
Magazine
September 2020 magazine cover
Love: What Really Matters
A loving relationship can be an oasis in uncertain times, but nurturing it requires attention, honesty, openness, vulnerability, and gratitude.
Subscribe
Issue Archive
Back
Today
News
7 Core Pathological Personality Traits
Does Sexual Harassment Raise the Risk of Suicide?
Do Children Make Their Parents Happy?
Essential Reads
Why Having OCD Does Not Prepare You for Covid-19
Teen Talk and Linguistic Evolution
3 Ways to Feel Better Right Now
What Is Geropsychology?
Trending Topics
COVID-19
Narcissism
Alzheimer's
Bias
Affective Forecasting
Neuroscience
See All
Find a Therapist (City or Zip)
Frank T. McAndrew Ph.D.
Out of the Ooze
Why Some People See Ghosts and Other Apparitions
There are potential explanations (even if some people won't believe them).
Posted Jul 09, 2015
Facebook iconSHARE
Twitter iconTWEET
Envelope iconEMAIL
87COMMENTS
Lario Tus/Shutterstock
Source: Lario Tus/Shutterstock
In the 2013 science-fiction thriller Gravity, Sandra Bullock plays an astronaut who gets stranded in a capsule in space following a catastrophe in which she is the apparent lone survivor. Cold, frightened, and alone, she resigns herself to her fate and shuts down the cabin's oxygen supply to commit suicide. As she begins to lose consciousness, she is visited (or is she?) by her fellow astronaut, played by George Clooney, whom she believed to be dead. He gives her a pep talk and a survival plan—and then he leaves. She eventually realizes that Clooney’s visit did not really happen, but the experience still gives her the strength to continue on. By following "his" plan, she is able to survive what seemed to be a hopeless situation