INSIDER Spring 2019 | Page 9

Insider Culture Connecting the rea- son of the pairs exag- gerated role in the investigation is possi- bly key to the haunt- ing itself, that it’s a massive exaggeration of true events. While it would be easy, effortlessly easy, to describe any evidence of the fami- ly’s torments to be explained as two girls “making it up” or “messing around” as some sources say. It would of course be more interesting to suppose that the haunting is real. This haunting would be a good movie, this haunting would be a good book, I imagine plenty of writers or film executives have said it. It strikes a core of fear and in- trigue. Caused by the eternal Human que- ry: are ghosts real? Just as we might ask ourselves, are aliens real? With tales of flying chairs, demonic voic- es and the levitation of a London school- girl, how could some- one not find this intri- guing? Yet the saddest part of this story is not the apparent haunt- ing of the Enfield House but rather the nature of the two girls having grown up, maintaining the fact that they were truly haunted. So either they’ve at- tached their life to a compulsive lie or they’ve desperately appealed that this is true for their whole lives. As both Peggy Hodgson and Maurice Grosse have since died, it falls to Janet Hodgson and her sister who have the closest connection to the Enfield Poltergeist. While it would be nice to assume that no one would live with a lie this long it might be difficult to let loose a lie you’ve been telling for 42 years, you may even end up believing it. Janet Hodgson has re- peatedly shown up on interviews explaining her story, and no doubt has profited from it fi- nancially… could this be a possible motive to the hauntings possible fabri- cation? Nevertheless she has consistently told all reporters, interview- ers and any others that this haunting was real and as scary as you’d Janet Hodg- son, played by Madison Wolfe in the Conjuring 2. “Janet and Margaret really opened my eyes”, Madi- son Wolfe on meeting Janet and Margaret Hodgson. expect. But with any supernatural fasci- nation it turns from something with ele- ments of truth to something that has almost completely transformed into a type of mythology. While I myself like to believe that somehow ghosts might be real and while this view isn’t tied to religion or spirituality in any way, I feel it’s more because of a desire for it to be real, be- cause it would be more interesting if it was. To know that centuries of folklore and supposed sight- ings weren’t outright of lies or mistakes but just out of a de- sire to believe that life doesn’t just end with death! The College magazine online: sixthformmag.blogspot.co.uk