This being the only Friday the 13th of 2025, I couldn't pass up the opportunity to muse a little about the spooky stuff I grew up with during my childhood in the 1970s, things that no doubt informed my continued fascination with the uncanny even today.
Back then, the world still seemed full of mysteries – or at least it was easy to imagine that it was. Stories of haunted houses, UFOs, Bigfoot, the Loch Ness Monster, and all manner of cryptids and bizarre phenomena were staples of popular culture. They filled the pages of supermarket tabloids, popped up in solemnly narrated TV specials, and circulated in schoolyard whispers. Even if few people truly believed in them, almost everyone enjoyed talking about them. The possibility alone was enough.
Looking back, it’s striking how pervasive the weird was in everyday life. I vividly recall garish paperbacks detailing “true” encounters with the unknown, cartoons and comics riffing on paranormal themes, and, of course, the ever-present influence of movies and television shows like In Search Of..., Project U.F.O., Kolchak: The Night Stalker, and The Amityville Horror, among many, many more. These stories occupied a curious space in the cultural imagination – not quite believed, not quite disbelieved either, and all the more compelling for it. They invited speculation, encouraged imagination, and cultivated a sense of wonder tinged with dread.
Even as a kid, I never bought into most of it. I didn’t spend my nights scanning the skies for flying saucers or lurking in the woods hoping to glimpse Sasquatch. But I wanted to believe, at least a little. The world felt more interesting, more alive, with those possibilities lurking just beyond the edges of certainty. What if there was something out there? That question alone was enough to fire my imagination.
And fire it did. By the time I discovered Dungeons & Dragons and, through it, other roleplaying games, I was already primed for them. After all, I’d spent years immersed in tales of mysterious creatures, unexplained lights, and restless spirits. RPGs gave me a new framework to explore those ideas, one where I wasn’t just reading or hearing the stories but helping to create them. I could conjure new monsters, new haunted places, new eerie events, and imagine how I or others might respond if the strange and uncanny ever crossed into our reality.
Today, that world of half-believed wonder seems distant, if not entirely gone. The Internet, with its unblinking capacity to record, debunk, and explain, has driven much of the weird to the cultural margins. Cell phone cameras are everywhere and the lack of blurry, ambiguous evidence speaks louder than all the old rumors ever did. Of course, being middle-aged hasn’t helped my credulity either. I’m more skeptical now, more prone to roll my eyes than widen them, but I still feel a twinge of wistfulness. There was a magic in those stories – the giddy unease, the delighted fear, the sense that the world might be stranger than it appeared and that something astonishing might be hiding in plain sight.
I don’t miss the bad haircuts or the shag carpeting, but I do miss that feeling, that delicious tension between belief and disbelief, the sense of possibility that once seemed to shimmer in the air. Maybe that’s why, even after more than forty years, I’m still rolling dice and spinning yarns of my own. I’m chasing that feeling, the thrill of stepping into the unknown, of turning the corner and finding that the world is bigger, weirder, and more mysterious than we’d dared to imagine.
So true! I remember when, about 25 years ago, a dying man finally confessed to having staged that iconic, blurry B&W photo of the Loch Ness Monster (referred to as 'the Surgeon's photo' in Britain). He went further to explain the context and why it was done and the others involved. By that time, of course, innumerable sonar scans of the loch had been done and found nothing, and a myriad of scientists had explained how the loch could never sustain a creature of that size - and how, of course, there would have to be at least a breeding pair, at a minimum. Nonetheless, when I first read these revelations about exactly what happened from a man involved, a little bit of my childhood died.
ReplyDeleteI would not say the internet has curbed peoples desire and capacity to believe in weird nonsense!
ReplyDeleteTrue. You could even argue that the exact opposite has happened, where anyone can post anything they want, and people believe it all just because they read about it on the internet: "You cannot fool me ! I actually looked up cryptids, and it's all there ! You cannot fool me and I'm not crazy, I know what I read ! It's all true ! I found it all on the internet !"
DeleteYeah, belief in nonsense is stronger than ever - it's just different nonsense. Less fun nonsense.
DeleteConcur. There is plenty of new and old weirdness and nonsense still extant, and the internet lets Flat Earthers and worse find each other and support each other's delusions, alas.
DeleteThough I think James is right that some were products of their time and have fallen out of fashion, like Bigfoot.
>
ReplyDelete> Cell phone cameras are everywhere and the lack of blurry,
> ambiguous evidence speaks louder than all the old rumors ever did.
>
But that's just because the Aliens/Cryptids/Nessy/etc figured out that we all have camera's these days, so they are just more careful about accidentally exposing themselves. They've gotten smart.
More time than ever sitting in front of computer screens and heads-down on phone screens... who'd see anything worth seeing out there these days? And who goes now into the darkest of the hillside thickets, beyond the comfortable reach of cell range and beyond the ken of Wikipedia, where all truths are revealed and everyone is an expert on every possible subject?
DeleteOld rumors indeed.
Anonymous echoed what I was going to offer: society doesn't allow kids to creep deep into the woods and spend the night there. Thirty minutes at two in the morning in the alldark of a forest will stay with you. The night breathes. Eyes move. Everything creeps. The sound(s) is genuinely unnerving. Add rain.
DeleteI can still remember being in junior high in the 70s and reading the opening of Princess of Mars and having a glimmer of a thought that it was a true story! Different times indeed.
ReplyDeleteJim Hodges---
ReplyDeleteBest paranormal reminiscence column ever posted here! (Uh....)
Seriously, a fun read and you're spot-on.
I think my dad surely used to derirve pleasure from letting me watch In Search Of on Saturday nights with him down in the basement family room and then sending me up alone to bed on the top floor, all alone, that chilling music on the closing credits still ringing in my ears.
"And turn off your night-light," he'd say, "there's an energy crisis!"
With this in my childhood in the '70s, he had the nerve to ask me in the '80s why I was so weird as a teenager, eh?
Fun memories....
Plenty of us still have that feeling and are alive to the possibility that something weird, something hidden, something…more…may be lurking, just behind the veil.
ReplyDeleteI know I do. Been following paranormal stuff for over 30 years. The more you learn about the phenomenon, the more weird it gets. Like that picture of the flying saucer and a Sasquatch. That's why it's high strangeness.
DeleteIf you're ever in Boston check out the Greater Boston Bigfoot Research Institute.
ReplyDelete3035 Washington St.
Roxbury, MA 02119
https://826-boston.myshopify.com
It's actually a writing program for kids. The Boston location looks a bit like it's not long for this world, actually. Not much for sale on the store website.
The Brooklyn, NY location, aka "Brooklyn Superhero Supply Co" sells things like a gallon jug of Levitation. (https://www.superherosupplies.com/collections/superpowers/products/levitation)
But it's just a front, with a hidden door leading to the writing space. "Behind a secret door in the Superhero Supply Co. is a spacious learning center where students ages 6 to 18 participate in creative writing programs and get homework help."
Washington DC has "Tivoli's Astounding Magic Supply Company". Ann Arbor has "Liberty Street Robot Supply & Repair."
Alas Boston isn't the only location that seems to be cutting costs and/or moving away from the fun gimmick.
This is timely. A video popped up in my Youtube feed yesterday titled something like "Whatever happened to alien abductions?" I mean, growing up in the 70s and 80s, even into the 90s, that was a thing that you heard about with some regularity. Anyway, it got me thinking about such topics as well.
ReplyDeleteI think it’s just a common thing to be interested in such stuff when you are young. I had a cryptid phase as a kid. Kids today still like this stuff, as seen by creepy-pastas or the SCP foundation.
ReplyDeleteTrue. The golden age of weird mystery wasn't the 1970s.
DeleteThe golden age of weird mystery is 11 years old. (With apologies to Peter Scott Graham)
I recently finished reading Flint Dille's memoir The Gamesmaster, and in it as I recall he remembers being asked by Jack Kirby, "What is the Golden Age of Comic Books?", and the answer being "12".
DeleteJohn W. Campbell, the famous Astounding/Analog editor, was a firm believer in psychic powers, and later Dianetics/Scientology. Writers who wanted their work published would treat these ideas as scientific fact, which helped propagate those ideas for a couple of generations.
ReplyDeleteFrom the time I spend around Yoots, I don't get any sense at all that their mental worlds are any less saturated in the weird and speculative and wondrous than you describe _your_ youth being. The specific focuses of weird charm change over time, obviously. I'd go so far as to say it's not the decade you grow up in, but the decade spent growing up that this experience is specially, uniquely, and irretrievably fixed in.
ReplyDeleteYou and I seem to be close in age, and so I definitely remember my "weird" phase, mostly in 5th-7th grade, many of the same things you write about. Although, I remember more of the Bermuda Triangle than Kolchak.
ReplyDeleteI think I was growing up in the last era of it, the early to mid 2000s. I remember checking out all the books in the library about UFOs and cryptids and you still got stuff like In Search Of... (in fact, there was a one season run of it in this time period). I want to believe in it all, but I think that's really just me wishing for a more magical reality. But I still hold out hope for the chupacabra.
ReplyDeleteI love that little guy.
The things people around me tried to get me to believe when I was a kid were things like Michelle Remembers or, yeah, The Amityville Horror. It was always centered on American Protestant demonology, and I'd already thoroughly rejected the American Protestant worldview after experiencing it firsthand. Happily for me, I discovered adventure gaming and then the postmodern zeteticism of the Illuminatus! trilogy just a few years later. Much better weirdness than the dour cataloging of imaginary abuses the Christian kids were subjected to.
ReplyDeleteI had very similar experiences. I used to devour "urban legend" books, and loved the episodes of Unsolved Mysteries that dealt with monsters or lost treasures. Surely *some* of those lost treasures are really out there, waiting for an adventurous youngster to stumble upon them... right? :-)
ReplyDeleteI was under the impression the public interest in the supernatural, cryptids, and aliens had actually increased. Streaming and social media is filled with reality shows and feeds of ghost and cryptid hunters. Large conventions and gatherings are common. Skinwalker ranch is like a branded institution these days
ReplyDeleteGreat post. The thing that fascinated me the most as a kid was the Loch Ness Monster. I read every book I could find in the library about it. The classic "surgeon's photo" still stirs my imagination, even decades later and after being proven to be a hoax.
ReplyDeleteAdd pyramid power and Stonehenge (my senior thesis - complete with a bonus fictional intro combining every kooky theory into 250 words).
ReplyDelete