Saturday, March 14, 2015

Two Native Americans Spot Headless Humanoid in Texas

A 40-year-old Native American woman and her niece claim they saw a ghostly humanoid entity in southeast Texas.

K. Celestine says she and her 8-year-old niece, Mikayla Sudduth Diboll, were sitting inside their vehicle, parked on Bragg Road, when they spotted the alleged being late in the evening.

“Night had fallen by the time we arrived, so after traveling a mile or so, we parked the car and just sat there a few minutes,” she told Cryptozoology News about their 2005 encounter. “I guess we had sat there around 20 minutes or so.”

Suddenly, she explained, she noticed a “dense green light” coming from the distance and “slowly moving” toward them.

“We were looking South. I adjusted my glasses to my face and closed my eyes, then opened them again. I could make out that it was an apparition of a man, dressed in overalls, like an old timey train worker. He was carrying a lantern in his right hand that was glowing green,” said Celestine. “I didn’t pay any attention to what kind of footwear, if any, that he was wearing, because I was too shook up to say anything. I glanced over at Mikayla, and she was frozen with fright, her little eyes as big as saucers. The main reason neither of us could speak is because he didn’t have a head on his shoulders!”


The “entity” reportedly walked about 12 feet before vanishing into thin air.

“I screamed ‘look! he ain’t got no head!’ Mikayla just sat there in a silent daze for a few minutes.”

The woman said they waited inside the car until they was “able to calm down” and drove away. On their way home, she claims, they observed a similar light, which promptly disappeared when they “reached the end of the road”.

Celestine is not the first person in the area to report about the peculiar apparition. The Light of Saratoga, also dubbed the Bragg Road Ghost Light, is a legend well known among the locals. Eyewitnesses reports describe the purported headless human-like being randomly appearing and disappearing in a fog of green light. Critics and investigators have attributed the legend to the ignis fatuus phenomenon. Similar occurrences, such as the Maco Light and the Dog Meadow Light, have reportedly taken place in North Carolina and Michigan, respectively. A parallel phenomenon is the case of the Bodiless Legs on the A-457 road in southern Spain.

Back in January, a man in Pennsylvania said he had come face to face with an astronaut-looking humanoid and his deer-dog hybrid companion.

Last year, the Espanola police department in New Mexico posted a YouTube video claiming a ghost could be seen in it. Some of the officers added that the alleged entity was, occasionally, “breathing down their necks”.

Celestine, who claims she wasn’t under the influence of any drugs, says she is certain that the sighting she witnessed that night was not a prank.

“I’m a proud Native American woman, and I know what I saw was real,” she said.

Source

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