Article by Jon Donnis
    Every year, as October fades and pumpkins begin to rot on doorsteps, the same old stories come crawling back. Haunted houses. Witchcraft. Curses. Ghosts. Halloween has always been tangled up with the occult, but what keeps these ancient superstitions alive   in an age that's supposed to be ruled by reason? The answer isn't found in the spirit world. It's found in the human mind.
    Many of Halloween's darker traditions stretch back centuries, to a time when fear filled the spaces that science hadn't yet explained. The Celtic festival of Samhain marked the end of summer and the start of the cold, dark months, when people believed the dead   could wander among the living. Without any understanding of infection, decomposition or changing weather, unseen forces felt like the most logical explanation. Fires were lit to keep spirits away. Faces were carved into turnips to scare them off. Disguises   were worn to blend in with the restless dead. These rituals weren't proof of ghosts, they were ways to make sense of an unpredictable world.
    From a scientific point of view, it's easy to understand why such beliefs endure. Humans are built to find meaning in chaos. Our brains constantly search for patterns, even when they don't exist. It's the reason we see faces in clouds or hear whispers in static.   Psychologists call it "agent detection", and it once helped our ancestors survive. Mistaking the wind for a wolf was safer than missing the real thing. The problem is that instinct hasn't gone away. It now fuels ghost sightings, possessions, and the odd Ouija   board story that gets passed around after a few drinks. When we expect to see something supernatural, our minds make sure we do.
    Modern Halloween rituals still play on the same tricks of perception. Haunted houses use darkness, sudden noises and tight spaces to make our bodies panic before our minds can catch up. The racing heart, the jump scare, the flood of adrenaline, it all feels   like proof that something real is happening. In truth, it's only proof of how easily fear can bend reason.
    The occult, from séances to spells, feeds on that mixture of doubt and desire. People want to believe that there's something more, that the dead might not be gone, that coincidence might carry meaning. Psychics and mediums know this, and many are skilled at   turning human vulnerability into business. Techniques like cold reading and suggestion create convincing results, but under proper testing they fall apart. Remove the cues and the emotional hooks, and the "spirit world" falls silent.
    Halloween is curious because it lets us indulge in all of this without shame. For one night, skeptics join the believers. We watch ghost films, light candles, and tell each other stories that make the skin crawl. It's not that we think any of it's true. It's   just fun to let the irrational side out for a while. Maybe it's even healthy to remember that our ancient fears are still there, humming quietly in the background.
    Science can explain every part of the Halloween myth, from why our ancestors feared the dark to why ghost stories still get under our skin. But it can't quite erase our appetite for mystery. That's the beauty of it. The real magic of Halloween isn't found in   spirits or spells, but in our strange, brilliant ability to invent them.
   
 
