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Ghost stories: Residents share experiences with the paranormal

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Atala Toy owns the Crystal Life shop on Third Street. She is an interdimensional communicator with spirits. She sees the spirit energy of the Rev. Augustus Conant, who served the Unitarian Universalist Church congregation from its inception in 1842 until 1857. He is a spirit of place, Toy says, still looking after his church. (Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com)

Telephone repairman Bill Olsen of Sugar Grove was working on phone lines in the basement of a house in Naperville some years ago, and he said he encountered a ghost.

“I heard footsteps come out of the door behind me. I heard heels on the floor. And as I turned to see who it was, they stopped,” Olsen said. “They started again and continued from where they left off. Then I felt somebody breathing on my back. I went back upstairs and told the lady. ‘It’s working OK, see you later.’ ”

Though people enjoy ghost stories – as evidenced by the popularity of ghost tours, books about haunted places and cable shows about paranormal activity – many also have personal ghost stories to tell. Olsen and other readers agreed to talk about these personal paranormal experiences for the Halloween edition of the Kane County Chronicle.

All Hallows E’n – based on the Celtic festival of Samhain – states the door between the worlds opens up and ghosts of the dead visit the living.

Among readers who agreed to share their personal ghost stories was Elburn Trustee Bill Grabarek. It all happened, Grabarek said, in Willow Springs, in a house in which he lived for six months before moving to Elburn in 1978.

“We had all these strange happenings in the house,” Grabarek said. “In one bathroom off our bedroom, voices were coming out of the heating vent. You could hear people talking.”

Another time, when Grabarek’s wife was asleep in bed and he was reading, crystal pendants on the bedside lap began swinging back and forth. He said there was no breeze and everything was quiet except for the persistent and unexplainable clink of the pendants.

But the strangest event was the sighting of a glowing ball floating up the stairs.

“It was a glowing, pulsating ball coming up from the stairs,” Grabarek said. “It was the size of a basketball, reddish-brown-yellowish in color. It floated up and disappeared. ... It was truly, what I considered, a haunted house.”

The house since has been torn down.

“I believe in that stuff,” Grabarek said. “I’m not a ghost hunter or anything. I think it’s almost like there is a plane we are not fully aware of sometimes.”

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