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Did any of your parents believe in demons? My mom always talked about them. "There's a demon sitting next to your dad on the couch." I'd have a bad dream about wolves and she tell me they were demons. I thought of this because my wife and i have a santa figurine that we just pulled out for Christmas and thought back to one my mom received as a present that she decided had a demon in it. She had a super spiritual friend come over and cast the demon out of it. She left it on the porch and said, "I'm still not bringing it inside." She regifted it to someone.

Bosshaus 4 Nov 25
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No one in my family but about 3yrs ago I worked teaching GED in a juvenile prison. One of the guards mentioned he believed one of the kids was possessed by Satan. I couldn't believe it and when I asked him if he was serious, he was, he must of been insulted because he never worked in the GED classroom again though he still worked at the prison.

That's pretty funny. Maybe not at the time. I train people ona computer system and had a lady the other day say she is tocuhed and has the gift to see spirits around. She says she didn't choose this life, she just has the power. She's lucky I'm not in charge of hiring...

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Yes, my mother did and still does, at 90. She thought things could be possessed, so she was very careful about buying or inheriting old things, like pictures or paintings. I guess she hadn't bought into the "evil corporations" thing and didn't think a demon could possess something store bought. When I was around seven years old, my father, who I don't think believed in demons, brought home a portrait of his father and placed it on the wall above my older brother's bed. My brother told my mother that he heard voices coming from the portrait at night, so my mother had the portrait taken down (not sure what happened to it, though).

I had nightmares about demons for years as a child. I never experienced any demons while awake, though, and kind of felt left out. Once, around the age of twelve, I was thinking about demons and decided I would perform an experiment to test whether they existed. I had this old wooden shoe shine box and placed it on the floor in front of me. I decided to stare at it for about ten minutes. After a few minutes, it appeared to move, which scared the bejesus out of me. Later, as an adult, I learned that my staring experience was normal and explains something about how our sense perceptions work.

Good to hear other people had parents that put the fear of the made up good in them. I definitely looked for demons everywhere. Your mind can convince you of a lot of things, especially as a kid. It doesn't help when the one who should be telling you it's okay and there is nothing there, is instead saying, it's a demon,let's pray it away.

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Isn't seeing things that aren't there pretty much a form of mental illness? My condolences. Seems you were able to "transcend" your weird childhood.

Yep, more and more I find myself going... What the hell were we thinking of back then? And thank goodness I don't still believe. I can truly tell my kids there is nothing hiding in the shadows in their room.

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No. This seems to be more the province of pentecostals and charismatics, and my parents were neither. It isn't unknown outside those sub-communities, however.

My first wife explored the charismatic movement for a time via an Assemblies of God church, and one of the deacons there was into "deliverance ministry". He tried to get us to throw away a set of coasters in our house that were in a frog-shaped holder -- on the basis that frogs are symbols of the demonic and somehow constituted a household invitation thereto. I told him what I've told every such person I've ever encountered: "You seem way more impressed with the power of evil than with the power of good. Maybe you should change your focus".

You are correct, my mom's side leaned on the charismatic Pentecostal side for sure. We went to a few of those types of meetings where they would cast out demons and whatnot. I had people push me in the head a lot but I never went down. Felt pretty evil for it. But your story is dead on, some of those pastors that are obsessed with demons would probably be horror movie buffs in another life.

@Bosshaus Lol ... well being slain in the spirit is not usually conflated with exorcism but I suppose those metaphors could be productively mixed. I once attended a meeting where this "slaying in the spirit" thing was going on and in an unusual fit of irritation I decided to go up and see what would happen to me. The evangelist pushed very suggestively on my forehead as a "catcher" stood at the ready behind me, but I felt nothing. He tried, again, harder. Then he shrugged and moved on to the next person. I was the only one standing out of some twenty five or so persons.

@mordant that was exactly my experience. You turn around after he's passed you by and the whole room is on the floor. Yeah, I was mixing stories there earlier. I wasn't saying they were trying to exercise me. There are just so many good ones. People running around like they're on fire, speaking in tongues, flopping on the floor like a seizure and we had blakets specifically for that in case a lady in a skirt fell over we could cover her up.

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not my folks. i never even found out whether they believed in a god until i was well into my 20s and had left home. they weren't sure even then. my mom thought maybe she did. my dad thought maybe he didn't. i got the impression they hadn't given it a lot of thought.

g

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No. My parents weren't quite that off the deep end. My mom prayed to angels and saints though and would always suggest that if I wanted something, I should say a prayer to some saint or another.

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Yes, my parents believed in demons, angels, gods and other spiritual beings. It really messed me up for a while, but I finally figured out that they were as fictitious as the Tooth Fairy, the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus.

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Good story....interesting chilidhood for you, No, I have no such tales to tell about my parents, both were down to earth Scots and sceptics from their heads to their toes....no flights of fancy or talk of “ghosties and ghoulies or things that go bump in the night”

Down to earth Scots.. that sounds nice. Side note, my Scottish accent is terrible. My wife says I sound like a drunk person having a stroke. I'm from Michigan so...

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