Our Strange World

Our Strange World News and stories of the odd, weird and unexplained.

richardsenate-ghosthunter:

Virginia City, Nevada, one of the wildest places in the old west.  More ghosts there than you can shake a stick at.   I have had some really wild things happen there. The old Forth Ward School has ghosts as does the St. Mary’s Hospital (now an art school)  Almost every other building as at least one ghost. Looking forward to my expedition to this ghost ridden community in September. Did you know the Beatnik movement started here in the late 1940s?  That was before it moved on the San Francisco? We will be looking into ghosts and even hold a seance here!

Reblogged from richardsenate-ghosthunter

richardsenate-ghosthunter:

Virginia City, Nevada, one of the wildest places in the old west.  More ghosts there than you can shake a stick at.   I have had some really wild things happen there. The old Forth Ward School has ghosts as does the St. Mary’s Hospital (now an art school)  Almost every other building as at least one ghost. Looking forward to my expedition to this ghost ridden community in September. Did you know the Beatnik movement started here in the late 1940s?  That was before it moved on the San Francisco? We will be looking into ghosts and even hold a seance here!

The Ghosts of Edinburgh Castle

Reblogged from fuckyeahnightmares

fuckyeahnightmares:

Edinburgh Castle is reputed to be one of the most haunted spots in Scotland. And Edinburgh itself has been called the most haunted city in all of Europe. On various occasions, visitors to the castle have reported a phantom piper, a headless drummer, the spirits of French prisoners from the Seven Years War and colonial prisoners from the American Revolutionary War - even the ghost of a dog wandering in the grounds’ dog cemetery.

The castle (you can get a tour here) standing magnificently between sea and hills, is a historical fortress, parts of which are more than 900 years old. The cells of its ancient dungeon, the site of uncounted deaths, could very well be an eternal place of unrest for numerous spirits. Other areas of Edinburgh also have ghostly reputations: the subterranean vaults of South Bridge and a disused street called Mary Kings Close where victims of the Black Death plague were sealed up to die.

Read More

Reblogged from theparanormalblog

theparanormalblog:

Bigfoot Caught on Tape Hiding from Camera’s View?

…Can we all just take a moment to take a big sigh of frustration right now? It’s not so much the video but the guy behind the video. He’s so nutty he make the “Finding Bigfoot” guys seem sane. Oh and did I mention he has a beef with those guys? All this will be talked about in today’s post, so let’s get to it! So the video was shot in I’m guessing fall 2009 (There’s no official date I could find) and the location is also unknown (somewhere with mountains…which could be almost anywhere). So the video is VERY short and almost shows nothing. All you can see is a Bigfoot-like creature ducking from the camera’s view and then the video loops while Todd Standing talks about Bigfoot. That’s all there is in the information department, now let’s get to my thoughts where we’ll uncover some info that is no longer available.

I have a lot to say, a LOT. This Todd guy is nuts, right off the bat you can tell. He’s one of those guys that gets really butt-hurt when you don’t agree with him and he basically says “screw you”. He and his team of goons are supposedly dedicated to discovering the truth and preservation of Bigfoot. This video is number 2 of like 3 videos he and his team shot of Bigfoot. Video 1 is lost in freaking time, this is video number 2, and number 3 was where the real controversy about this guy took place. At the time when these videos where being released, he wanted people to pay something like $19.95 for the third video! Are you joking? Nobody would (and nobody did apparently) pay ANYTHING for a video of Bigfoot without seeing it first! Do you think if I were to go to TMZ with a picture of what I would say is of Lindsey Lohan snorting crack but said, “Pay me first before you can see if it’s what I say it shows.” Do you think they’d pay me? No they wouldn’t. You need to see what you pay for first, otherwise you could be getting scammed and instead of Bigfoot in a forest, you get some weird video of this Todd guy dressed in a Bigfoot costume doing the freaking running man or whatever. The fact that he even offered this video for $19.95 should prove that he’s a fraud, but wait, he’s not done yet!

Apparently sometime in 2011, he shut down his website and then brought it back up, but some of his YouTube videos were set to private. Ever since then, no one has taken him seriously and he lost all credibility he had (wait, people believed him?) Enter “Finding Bigfoot”. Apparently they were considering the footage to use in an upcoming episode and were going to go talk to Todd and go back to the location of the were the footage was shot. Well Bobo thought the footage was real while Matt said it wasn’t. Well guess what Todd did. He basically stomped his feet like a child and said “Well Matt’s just jealous of the success we’re having with OUR investigations.” (I swear this is what he says! Go to this videos comment section and read it.) So now he basically says the show is shit (hey something I can agree with!) and won’t do the show. The fact that this Todd guy is still with his charade of his Bigfoot hunting squad (which by the way he give these weird code-names to each team. Like he calls the day team “sentinels”. This isn’t the covert-ops dude, it’s Bigfoot) is just sad at this point. And even more sad, people still think he’s legit! I don’t understand how they still believe him, but they do. But in the end, it’s up to you what/who you want to believe, I’m not going to cry because someone thinks differently about someone/thing than I do. All I’m going to say is be wary of what this guy says, that’s all.

So what do you think about this footage? I think it’s Todd in a suit. Do you think it shows a real Bigfoot? What do you think about Todd? Can you believe him or not? DO you think these questions sound like those on a 1st grade assignment asking kids what they think about what they just saw?

——————-

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Reblogged from findingbulletville

findingbulletville:

In 2008, a CCTV video of a ‘stick person-like’ creature walking through a San Diego, CA residential yard was recorded and went viral on YouTube. It was dubbed ‘The Nightcrawler’ and was investigated by at least 2 parties (each with an opposite opinion as to authenticity). Now a recent sighting in Fresno, CA has raised more questions, including…has ‘The Nightcrawler’ returned?

 retired couple was having trouble with break-ins in their Yosemite private property and aimed theirsecurity camera at the driveway to video visitors. They caught these things on their security camera and called me over to see because they know I am interested in the paranormal. They gave me this digital copy but I can’t figure out what the crap they are! They remind me of the Fresno Stick-like creatures but they seem to transfer weight and there are two here. Is one a baby? What are these!? Nightcrawlers? Stickmen? Something new? What?

(Source: stumbleupon.com)

THE RIDGES CEMETERIES & STATE MENTAL HOSPITAL
Originally called the Athens Asylum for the Insane, this massive institution first opened its doors on January 9, 1874.  The Ridges stands today as one of the few massive hospitals converted to new use. The sprawling complex once housed over 500 patients. 
Paranormal activity at this haunted insane asylum centers on the death of one patient, a woman named Margaret Schilling. In December 1978, hospital workers found her corpse in abandoned Ward 20. The room was locked from the inside, and Margaret’s body was nude. She had been dead for several weeks. The death was ruled an accident with the prevailing theory that Margaret locked herself into the room to hide from nurses.

THE RIDGES CEMETERIES & STATE MENTAL HOSPITAL

Originally called the Athens Asylum for the Insane, this massive institution first opened its doors on January 9, 1874.  The Ridges stands today as one of the few massive hospitals converted to new use. The sprawling complex once housed over 500 patients. 

Paranormal activity at this haunted insane asylum centers on the death of one patient, a woman named Margaret Schilling. In December 1978, hospital workers found her corpse in abandoned Ward 20. The room was locked from the inside, and Margaret’s body was nude. She had been dead for several weeks. The death was ruled an accident with the prevailing theory that Margaret locked herself into the room to hide from nurses.

Reblogged from hrimfaxi-thenight

(Source: hrimfaxi-thenight)

lincolncountyparanormal:

One January afternoon in 1897, Erasmus (aka Edward) Shue, a blacksmith, sent his neighbor’s young boy to see if Elva, Shue’s wife of three months, needed anything from the market. When the neighbor boy walked through the front door of the Shues’ rural Greenbrier County, West Virginia, log house, he found Elva’s lifeless body at the foot of the stairs. The boy stood for a moment looking at the woman, not knowing what to make of the scene. Her body was stretched out straight with her legs together. One arm was at her side and the other rested across her chest. Her head was tilted to one side.
At first he thought that the woman was simply asleep on the floor. He stepped toward her, quietly calling, “Mrs. Shue?” When she didn’t respond, he panicked and bolted from the house. He told his mother what he had found and she summoned the local doctor and coroner, George W. Knapp.
Knapp didn’t get to the Shues’ house for almost an hour. By the time he arrived, Shue had already gotten home, carried his wife’s body up to the bedroom, washed and dressed her, and laid her out on the bed. He’d prepared her body for burial in a high-necked dress with a stiff collar and placed a veil over her face. Knapp went about examining the body, Shue cradling his wife’s head and crying the whole while. When Knapp attempted to examine Elva’s neck and head, Shue became agitated. Knapp didn’t want to provoke him any further, so he left. He’d found nothing amiss with the body parts he had examined and had also been treating Elva for a few weeks prior, so he listed the cause of death as “everlasting faint” and then changed it to “complications from pregnancy.”
Elva’s body was taken to her childhood home of Little Sewell Mountain and buried, but not before a bizarre funeral where her widower acted erratically. He paced by the casket, fiddling with Elva’s head and neck. In addition to the collar and the veil, he covered her head and neck with a scarf. It didn’t match her burial dress, but Shue insisted that it was her favorite and that she would have wanted to be buried in it. He also propped her head up, first with a pillow and then a rolled up cloth. It was certainly strange, but most guests likely chalked it up to the grieving process. Shue was generally liked and regarded without suspicion by everyone in town.
Mother-in-Law’s Intuition
Everyone, that is, except Mary Jane Heaster, Elva’s mother. She had never liked Shue, and even without evidence, she was convinced that he had murdered her daughter. If only Elva could tell her what happened, she thought. She decided to pray for Elva to somehow come back from the dead and reveal the truth about her death. She prayed every evening for weeks, until finally her prayer was answered.
Heaster claimed her daughter appeared to her in a dream four nights in a row to tell her story. Supposedly, the spirit appeared first as a bright light, gradually taking a human form and filling the room with a chill. Elva’s ghost confessed to her mother that Shue cruelly abused her, and one night attacked her in a rage when he thought that she hadn’t made any meat for his dinner. He had broken her neck, the ghost said as it turned its head completely around. Then the ghost turned and walked away, disappearing into the night while staring back at her mother.
Heaster went to the local prosecutor, John Preston, and spent the afternoon at his office trying to get him to reopen the case. Whether Preston believed her story about the ghost, we don’t know, but Heaster was persistent and convincing enough that he began asking questions around town. Shue’s neighbors and friends told Preston about the man’s strange behavior at the funeral, and Dr. Knapp admitted that his examination had been incomplete.
It was enough for Preston to justify an order for a complete autopsy, and a few days later, the body was exhumed despite Shue’s objections. Knapp and two other doctors laid the body out in the town’s one-room schoolhouse to give it a thorough examination. A local newspaper, The Pocahontas Times, later reported that, “On the throat were the marks of fingers indicating that she had been choken [sic]; that the neck was dislocated between the first and second vertebrae. The ligaments were torn and ruptured. The windpipe had been crushed at a point in front of the neck.”
It was clear Elva’s death was not natural, but there was no evidence pointing to the killer, and no witnesses. Shue’s strange behavior since Elva’s death stuck in Preston’s mind and cast some suspicion on him. At the same time, Elva’s mother had described exactly how her daughter was killed before the autopsy was performed. Maybe she’d done it, and the ghost story was an elaborate plot to frame Shue.
Skeletons in Shue’s Closet
Preston continued to investigate and began looking into Shue’s past. He learned that Shue had been married twice before. The first ended in divorce while Shue was in prison for stealing a horse. That wife later told police that Shue was extremely violent and beat her frequently while they were married. His second marriage ended after just eight months with the mysterious death of the wife. In between these marriages, Shue boasted in prison that he planned to marry seven women in his lifetime. The previous wife’s mysterious death and Shue’s history of abuse were circumstantial, but enough for Preston to bring him to trial.
Mary Jane Heaster was the prosecution’s star witness, but Preston wanted to avoid the issue of her ghostly sightings, since Elva’s story as relayed by her mother might be objected to as hearsay by the defense. Perhaps hoping to prove her unreliable, Shue’s lawyer questioned Heaster extensively about the ghost’s visits on cross-examination. The tactic backfired, with Heaster refusing to waver in her account despite intense badgering by the lawyer. Many people in the community, if not the jury, seemed to believe Heaster’s story, and Shue did himself no favors taking the stand in his own defense, rambling and appealing to the jury “to look into his face and then say if he was guilty.” The Greenbrier Independent reported that his “testimony, manner, and so forth, made an unfavorable impression on the spectators.” The jury deliberated for just an hour and ten minutes before returning a guilty verdict.
Shue was sentenced to life in prison, but died soon after as epidemics of measles and pneumonia tore through the prison in the spring of 1900. Mrs. Heaster lived until 1916, and never recanted her story about Elva’s ghost. Maybe her story swayed the jury and won the case. Maybe it didn’t. Maybe her daughter spoke to her from beyond the grave, maybe the ghost was all in Heaster’s head, or maybe it was a strategic lie. But no matter who saw or believed what, without the ghost story, Heaster may have never gone to Preston, and Shue might not have gone to trial.
A historical marker in Greenbrier County commemorates Elva’s death and the unusual court case that followed, noting that this was the “only known case in which testimony from [a] ghost helped convict a murderer.”
Read the full text here: http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/120530#ixzz1uTw9Unet —brought to you by mental_floss!

Reblogged from lincolncountyparanormal

lincolncountyparanormal:

One January afternoon in 1897, Erasmus (aka Edward) Shue, a blacksmith, sent his neighbor’s young boy to see if Elva, Shue’s wife of three months, needed anything from the market. When the neighbor boy walked through the front door of the Shues’ rural Greenbrier County, West Virginia, log house, he found Elva’s lifeless body at the foot of the stairs. The boy stood for a moment looking at the woman, not knowing what to make of the scene. Her body was stretched out straight with her legs together. One arm was at her side and the other rested across her chest. Her head was tilted to one side.

At first he thought that the woman was simply asleep on the floor. He stepped toward her, quietly calling, “Mrs. Shue?” When she didn’t respond, he panicked and bolted from the house. He told his mother what he had found and she summoned the local doctor and coroner, George W. Knapp.

Knapp didn’t get to the Shues’ house for almost an hour. By the time he arrived, Shue had already gotten home, carried his wife’s body up to the bedroom, washed and dressed her, and laid her out on the bed. He’d prepared her body for burial in a high-necked dress with a stiff collar and placed a veil over her face. Knapp went about examining the body, Shue cradling his wife’s head and crying the whole while. When Knapp attempted to examine Elva’s neck and head, Shue became agitated. Knapp didn’t want to provoke him any further, so he left. He’d found nothing amiss with the body parts he had examined and had also been treating Elva for a few weeks prior, so he listed the cause of death as “everlasting faint” and then changed it to “complications from pregnancy.”

Elva’s body was taken to her childhood home of Little Sewell Mountain and buried, but not before a bizarre funeral where her widower acted erratically. He paced by the casket, fiddling with Elva’s head and neck. In addition to the collar and the veil, he covered her head and neck with a scarf. It didn’t match her burial dress, but Shue insisted that it was her favorite and that she would have wanted to be buried in it. He also propped her head up, first with a pillow and then a rolled up cloth. It was certainly strange, but most guests likely chalked it up to the grieving process. Shue was generally liked and regarded without suspicion by everyone in town.

Mother-in-Law’s Intuition

Everyone, that is, except Mary Jane Heaster, Elva’s mother. She had never liked Shue, and even without evidence, she was convinced that he had murdered her daughter. If only Elva could tell her what happened, she thought. She decided to pray for Elva to somehow come back from the dead and reveal the truth about her death. She prayed every evening for weeks, until finally her prayer was answered.

Heaster claimed her daughter appeared to her in a dream four nights in a row to tell her story. Supposedly, the spirit appeared first as a bright light, gradually taking a human form and filling the room with a chill. Elva’s ghost confessed to her mother that Shue cruelly abused her, and one night attacked her in a rage when he thought that she hadn’t made any meat for his dinner. He had broken her neck, the ghost said as it turned its head completely around. Then the ghost turned and walked away, disappearing into the night while staring back at her mother.

Heaster went to the local prosecutor, John Preston, and spent the afternoon at his office trying to get him to reopen the case. Whether Preston believed her story about the ghost, we don’t know, but Heaster was persistent and convincing enough that he began asking questions around town. Shue’s neighbors and friends told Preston about the man’s strange behavior at the funeral, and Dr. Knapp admitted that his examination had been incomplete.

It was enough for Preston to justify an order for a complete autopsy, and a few days later, the body was exhumed despite Shue’s objections. Knapp and two other doctors laid the body out in the town’s one-room schoolhouse to give it a thorough examination. A local newspaper, The Pocahontas Times, later reported that, “On the throat were the marks of fingers indicating that she had been choken [sic]; that the neck was dislocated between the first and second vertebrae. The ligaments were torn and ruptured. The windpipe had been crushed at a point in front of the neck.”

It was clear Elva’s death was not natural, but there was no evidence pointing to the killer, and no witnesses. Shue’s strange behavior since Elva’s death stuck in Preston’s mind and cast some suspicion on him. At the same time, Elva’s mother had described exactly how her daughter was killed before the autopsy was performed. Maybe she’d done it, and the ghost story was an elaborate plot to frame Shue.

Skeletons in Shue’s Closet

Preston continued to investigate and began looking into Shue’s past. He learned that Shue had been married twice before. The first ended in divorce while Shue was in prison for stealing a horse. That wife later told police that Shue was extremely violent and beat her frequently while they were married. His second marriage ended after just eight months with the mysterious death of the wife. In between these marriages, Shue boasted in prison that he planned to marry seven women in his lifetime. The previous wife’s mysterious death and Shue’s history of abuse were circumstantial, but enough for Preston to bring him to trial.

Mary Jane Heaster was the prosecution’s star witness, but Preston wanted to avoid the issue of her ghostly sightings, since Elva’s story as relayed by her mother might be objected to as hearsay by the defense. Perhaps hoping to prove her unreliable, Shue’s lawyer questioned Heaster extensively about the ghost’s visits on cross-examination. The tactic backfired, with Heaster refusing to waver in her account despite intense badgering by the lawyer. Many people in the community, if not the jury, seemed to believe Heaster’s story, and Shue did himself no favors taking the stand in his own defense, rambling and appealing to the jury “to look into his face and then say if he was guilty.” The Greenbrier Independent reported that his “testimony, manner, and so forth, made an unfavorable impression on the spectators.” The jury deliberated for just an hour and ten minutes before returning a guilty verdict.

Shue was sentenced to life in prison, but died soon after as epidemics of measles and pneumonia tore through the prison in the spring of 1900. Mrs. Heaster lived until 1916, and never recanted her story about Elva’s ghost. Maybe her story swayed the jury and won the case. Maybe it didn’t. Maybe her daughter spoke to her from beyond the grave, maybe the ghost was all in Heaster’s head, or maybe it was a strategic lie. But no matter who saw or believed what, without the ghost story, Heaster may have never gone to Preston, and Shue might not have gone to trial.

A historical marker in Greenbrier County commemorates Elva’s death and the unusual court case that followed, noting that this was the “only known case in which testimony from [a] ghost helped convict a murderer.”


Read the full text here: http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/120530#ixzz1uTw9Unet
—brought to you by mental_floss!
paranormalexpresso:

This interesting photo was taken sometime around the year 2000 in Manilla, Republic of the Philippines. According to The Ghost Research Society, two girlfriends were out for a walk one warm night. One of them entreated a passing stranger to photograph them using her cell phone’s camera (hence the low-resolution picture). The result is shown here, with a transparent figure seeming to tug on the girl’s arm with a firm if friendly grip.
Without further information on this photo, we have to admit that the ghost could have been added with image processing software. But if it’s genuine and untouched, it certainly qualifies as one of the best ghost photos.

Reblogged from paranormalexpresso

paranormalexpresso:

This interesting photo was taken sometime around the year 2000 in Manilla, Republic of the Philippines. According to The Ghost Research Society, two girlfriends were out for a walk one warm night. One of them entreated a passing stranger to photograph them using her cell phone’s camera (hence the low-resolution picture). The result is shown here, with a transparent figure seeming to tug on the girl’s arm with a firm if friendly grip.

Without further information on this photo, we have to admit that the ghost could have been added with image processing software. But if it’s genuine and untouched, it certainly qualifies as one of the best ghost photos.

haveyoubeeninjured:

Following the 1986 Stirling City Library fire, a small number of photographs were recovered, including one that had been taken only a week earlier on June 1st, 1986. On this date 14 children disappeared, followed less than two weeks later by the disappearance of the photographer, Mary Thomas. Some theorists claim that the figure on the left in the photo is the Slender Man, although officials have stated that the apparent extra appendages on the character can be dismissed as film defects.
Five months later, the body of one of the children, four year old Joseph Pertman, was found in the Great Swamp Nature Preserve in Kingston Falls, NJ. Deputy Sherrif Jim Stolz told reporters from the Associated Press that the body was still in early stages of decay, indicating that he was alive for at least four months after his disappearance. It was also reported that the body was found in a state of “bizarre contortion,” although the cause of death was never officially established.
On April 21st, 1987 the Stirling City Post ran a story regarding a rash of animal mutilations in Stirling City, that the Butte County Animal Control Department were attributing to coyotes. As man as nine dogs and cat had gone missing since January, and had been found in various states of decay. many of the pets had been disemboweled, or otherwise seriously mutilated. Animal Control Officer Joel Driscol was quoted as saying that the wounds were “unusually precise” and that it was “rare that a wild animal would leave so much of the carcass uneaten.” Also quoted inn the story was a local man, David Elkins, who was the owner of the latest victim - a cat that had been disemboweled and mutilated.

Reblogged from haveyoubeeninjured

haveyoubeeninjured:

Following the 1986 Stirling City Library fire, a small number of photographs were recovered, including one that had been taken only a week earlier on June 1st, 1986. On this date 14 children disappeared, followed less than two weeks later by the disappearance of the photographer, Mary Thomas. Some theorists claim that the figure on the left in the photo is the Slender Man, although officials have stated that the apparent extra appendages on the character can be dismissed as film defects.

Five months later, the body of one of the children, four year old Joseph Pertman, was found in the Great Swamp Nature Preserve in Kingston Falls, NJ. Deputy Sherrif Jim Stolz told reporters from the Associated Press that the body was still in early stages of decay, indicating that he was alive for at least four months after his disappearance. It was also reported that the body was found in a state of “bizarre contortion,” although the cause of death was never officially established.

On April 21st, 1987 the Stirling City Post ran a story regarding a rash of animal mutilations in Stirling City, that the Butte County Animal Control Department were attributing to coyotes. As man as nine dogs and cat had gone missing since January, and had been found in various states of decay. many of the pets had been disemboweled, or otherwise seriously mutilated. Animal Control Officer Joel Driscol was quoted as saying that the wounds were “unusually precise” and that it was “rare that a wild animal would leave so much of the carcass uneaten.” Also quoted inn the story was a local man, David Elkins, who was the owner of the latest victim - a cat that had been disemboweled and mutilated.

Linda Vista Hospital, California


Linda Vista was a railroad hospital. Originally known as Santa Fe Coast Lines Hospital, it was constructed in 1905 to care for Santa Fe railroad workers who had been injured on the job. I found this file on top of a scattered pile on the third floor — it seems to be the admittance form for one Charlie S. Plunk, railroad conductor, born 1909, admitted October, 1972.

More and more rooms were added as the hospital grew and in 1937 it was renamed to use the current name, which means beautiful view. Around 1990, the Linda Vista hospital closed. There were rumors of patient deaths and abuse although none of those rumors have been proven or disproven. The building closed in a very odd way. According to those who have entered the building, it appeared to them that those who left simply walked away, leaving papers, jobs and other items as if they were abandoning a sinking ship.

There are, according to sources, multiple active spirits in Linda Vista hospital. They are a physician, a lady who is middle age, and and three patients who are also part of those who are active and walking.

Linda Vista Hospital, California

Linda Vista was a railroad hospital. Originally known as Santa Fe Coast Lines Hospital, it was constructed in 1905 to care for Santa Fe railroad workers who had been injured on the job. I found this file on top of a scattered pile on the third floor — it seems to be the admittance form for one Charlie S. Plunk, railroad conductor, born 1909, admitted October, 1972.

More and more rooms were added as the hospital grew and in 1937 it was renamed to use the current name, which means beautiful view. Around 1990, the Linda Vista hospital closed. There were rumors of patient deaths and abuse although none of those rumors have been proven or disproven. The building closed in a very odd way. According to those who have entered the building, it appeared to them that those who left simply walked away, leaving papers, jobs and other items as if they were abandoning a sinking ship.

There are, according to sources, multiple active spirits in Linda Vista hospital. They are a physician, a lady who is middle age, and and three patients who are also part of those who are active and walking.