• You Don’t Leave Empty—the Lizzie Borden House
    Apr 29 2026

    Most investigations start at the house.

    This one didn’t.

    Before stepping inside the Lizzie Borden House, we went somewhere quieter first.

    The graves.

    No cameras.
    No questions.
    No attempt to provoke anything.

    Just acknowledgment.

    Because whether you believe the story or not…
    what happened here never separated itself from the place it left behind.

    And that matters more than people think.

    By the time you walk into a location like this,
    your brain isn’t neutral.

    It’s already working.

    Filling in gaps.
    Reconstructing moments.
    Turning fragments into something that feels complete.

    And that’s where the investigation actually begins.

    Not when something moves.

    Not when something responds.

    But when your awareness changes.

    Inside the house, nothing happens.

    No immediate reaction.
    No voice.
    No presence announcing itself.

    Just silence.

    And that silence doesn’t behave the way it should.

    Because your brain doesn’t accept empty space for long.

    It scans.
    It builds patterns.
    It creates meaning where there isn’t any.

    And when it can’t find something…

    it gives you something worse.

    We documented the rooms.

    The locations.

    The history tied to each space.

    Where Andrew Jackson Borden was found.
    Where Abby Borden was killed.

    Not as distant events.

    But as something your mind begins to replay… whether you want it to or not.

    We asked questions.

    We waited.

    Nothing.

    Until something did.

    A cat ball lit up.
    Movement where there shouldn’t have been any.

    But that’s not what stayed with us.

    Not really.

    Because at some point, everything gets turned off.

    No equipment.
    No voices.
    No distractions.

    Just the house.

    And that’s when it shifts.

    That moment where you stop asking:

    “Is something here?”

    And start asking:

    “Why does it feel like something knows I’m here?”

    This episode isn’t about proving anything.

    It’s about understanding what happens
    when your brain is placed in an environment it can’t fully explain.

    How quickly “nothing” stops feeling empty.

    And how easily your mind fills that space with something you can’t dismiss.

    We started at the grave out of respect.

    We ended inside the house…

    realizing something uncomfortable:

    You don’t walk into places like this to find something.

    You walk in…

    and the experience makes sure you don’t leave empty.

    ⚠️ Listener Advisory

    This episode explores psychological responses to silence, perception, and environmental awareness inside historically violent locations. Some listeners may experience heightened anxiety or unease.

    🧠 What This Episode Explores

    • Why your brain refuses to accept silence as “empty”
    • How context (history, environment, expectation) shapes perception
    • The moment awareness shifts from observation… to participation
    • Why you can feel a presence without seeing or hearing anything
    • The line between external phenomena and internal reconstruction

    🔗 Follow & Listen

    Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.

    Follow Paranormal Recon for more investigations that don’t just ask what’s there

    but what it does to you.

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    13 mins
  • You Heard Your Name… Didn’t You?
    Apr 22 2026

    Don’t answer right away.

    You’ve heard it before.

    Your name.

    Clear enough to stop you. Close enough to feel real.
    You turn—
    and there’s nothing there.

    But for a second… you still wait.

    Because part of you is convinced someone should be.

    In this episode of The Dreadful Truth, we step into one of the most personal—and unsettling—experiences the human brain can produce:

    Hearing your own name when no one is there.

    Not a noise.
    Not random.

    Targeted.

    🧠 What You’ll Hear in This Episode

    Why your name is one of the strongest signals your brain recognizes
    How your brain stays tuned to it—even when you’re not paying attention
    What happens when that signal is triggered without a clear source
    Why your body reacts before your mind can question it
    And how something can feel intentional… even when it may not be

    🎬 Film Breakdown: The Invisible Man

    Written and directed by Leigh Whannell and starring Elisabeth Moss, The Invisible Man builds tension around something you never fully see.

    A presence that isn’t confirmed.
    Spaces that feel occupied—without proof.
    Reactions that happen before anything is visible.

    The fear doesn’t come from what’s shown.

    It comes from what your brain thinks it detected.

    🛌 Case Reference: Sleep Paralysis

    Across documented reports of sleep paralysis, one detail shows up repeatedly:

    People hear their name being called.

    Not faint.
    Not distorted.

    Clear. Directed. Sometimes familiar. Sometimes not.

    And when they respond—
    there’s nothing there.

    No continuation.
    No source.

    Just silence.

    🧬 The Psychology of Hearing Your Name

    Your brain is constantly filtering the world.

    But your name?

    It never gets filtered out.

    It stays active. Always.

    Because it’s tied to identity, attention, and survival-level awareness.

    Which means something important:

    Your brain isn’t just recognizing your name…

    It’s waiting for it.

    And under the right conditions—fatigue, distraction, isolation—

    It can generate that signal itself.

    With precision.

    With clarity.

    With meaning.

    ⚠️ The Part That Stays With You

    It’s not just the sound.

    It’s what the sound means.

    Because your name isn’t random.

    It feels chosen.

    Intentional.

    Like something—or someone—knew exactly what would get your attention.

    And whether that signal came from your brain…

    or somewhere else…

    It feels exactly the same.

    🎧 Final Thought

    Next time you hear it—

    Don’t answer right away.

    Just pause.

    Because your brain already reacted before you had time to question it.

    And once that moment happens…

    You don’t take it back.

    🎧 Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get your podcasts now.

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    8 mins
  • SINNERS, directed by Ryan Coogler - The Dreadful Truth
    Apr 15 2026

    In this episode of The Dreadful Truth, we dissect Sinners—a film that disguises itself as a vampire story but reveals something far more unsettling beneath the surface.

    Directed by Ryan Coogler and starring Michael B. Jordan alongside Hailee Steinfeld, this Warner Bros. Pictures production refuses to separate psychological horror from supernatural terror.

    Because it isn’t about what’s hunting them.

    It’s about what they’re becoming.

    🧠 The Core Theme: Transformation Through Choice

    This episode explores the film’s most disturbing idea:

    Evil doesn’t arrive all at once.
    It builds… decision by decision.

    Rather than focusing on spectacle, Sinners presents vampirism as:

    • A shift in identity
    • A slow erosion of morality
    • A series of rationalized choices

    What unfolds isn’t transformation.

    It’s justification.

    🎭 Performances That Anchor the Horror

    • Michael B. Jordan delivers a dual performance that isn’t about conflict—but revelation. Two versions of the same man shaped by different decisions.
    • Hailee Steinfeld (Mary) serves as the emotional compass—the line between humanity and descent. Her grounded reactions force the audience to confront the change rather than accept it.

    This episode breaks down why reaction—not action—is where truth lives in horror.

    🎬 Direction & Craft: Controlled Dread

    Ryan Coogler’s direction leans into restraint:

    • Silence used as pressure, not absence
    • Pacing that withholds chaos instead of delivering it
    • Framing and lighting that feel intentional, almost suffocating

    The result?

    A film where tension builds not from what you see…

    …but from what you expect to happen next.

    🧩 What the Film Gets Right

    • Blends psychological and supernatural horror seamlessly
    • Trusts the audience without over-explaining
    • Builds dread through implication rather than exposition
    • Grounds horror in human behavior, not fantasy

    ⚠️ Where It Divides Audiences

    This episode also explores the film’s biggest risk:

    • No clear answers
    • No hand-holding
    • No clean resolution

    Some viewers will sit with it.

    Others will reject it.

    And that tension? That’s part of the design.

    🏆 Awards & Industry Buzz

    • Best Actor consideration (Michael B. Jordan)
    • Best Director (Ryan Coogler)
    • Technical categories: Cinematography & Sound

    😈 The Dreadful Truth

    There’s a moment in Sinners where nothing feels wrong.

    No violence. No chaos. Just a choice.

    Then another.

    Then another.

    And by the time you realize what’s happening…

    it’s already too late.

    Because the monster was never hiding.

    It was forming right in front of you.

    🎧 Listen If You Want To Understand:

    • Why silence in film creates psychological pressure
    • How horror rooted in human behavior hits harder than monsters
    • The difference between transformation and rationalization
    • Why restraint is more terrifying than chaos

    🔥 Final Take

    This isn’t a comfort film.

    This is a controlled descent.

    A study in how people become something else—without ever noticing the moment it happens.

    📌 Full breakdown sourced directly from episode transcript

    Show More Show Less
    11 mins
  • That Feeling You Can’t Explain
    Apr 8 2026

    You don’t notice it right away.

    That’s what makes it worse.

    You’re already in the room. Already moving. Already comfortable.

    And then… something shifts.

    Nothing changes. Not in any way you can prove.
    No sound. No movement. No visual cue you can point to.

    But your brain reacts anyway.

    Not as a thought.
    As a signal.

    Something doesn’t match.

    In this episode of The Dreadful Truth, we break down the moment before fear—the point where your brain detects a pattern break long before your conscious mind can explain it.

    Not panic.
    Not imagination.

    Detection.

    🧠 What You’ll Hear in This Episode

    Why your brain pulls back before you understand why
    How pattern recognition quietly maps every space you enter
    What happens when reality doesn’t match your brain’s internal model
    Why discomfort shows up as hesitation instead of fear
    And why some moments never resolve… they just stay open

    🎬 Film Breakdown: Hereditary

    Written and directed by Ari Aster and starring Toni Collette, Hereditary doesn’t rely on constant action to create fear.

    It builds something far more unsettling.

    Rooms that look normal… but don’t feel normal.
    Moments that linger longer than they should.
    Silences that carry weight.

    What you’re feeling while watching isn’t just tension created by the film.

    It’s your brain recognizing that something is off—
    before it knows what.

    🏚️ Case Reference: Borley Rectory Haunting

    Investigated by Harry Price, one of the most documented hauntings in England didn’t begin with movement or sound.

    It began with something simpler.

    People reported certain rooms didn’t feel right.

    No evidence.
    No activity.

    Just a persistent awareness that something didn’t match.

    And that’s what stayed with them.

    🧬 The Psychology of “Something’s Off”

    Your brain is constantly comparing:

    What is
    vs.
    What should be

    When those don’t align—even slightly—it doesn’t explain it.

    It signals it.

    As hesitation.
    As resistance.
    As that quiet internal phrase:

    “This isn’t right.”

    Sometimes you eventually find the cause.

    A shadow placed wrong.
    A sound you didn’t register.
    A detail your brain caught before you did.

    And sometimes…

    You never do.

    ⚠️ The Real Question

    When something feels off…

    Are you detecting something real?

    Or is your brain generating discomfort because it can’t complete the pattern?

    The problem is—

    Those feel exactly the same.

    🎧 Final Thought

    Next time you feel it…

    Don’t ignore it.
    Don’t explain it away.

    Just sit in that exact moment.

    Because whether the signal came from something external…

    or something internal…

    Your brain believed it immediately.

    And once it does—

    You don’t un-feel it.

    🎧 Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get your podcasts now.

    Show More Show Less
    10 mins
  • Annebelle, Ed and Lorraine Warren - The Occult museum
    Apr 1 2026

    They didn’t start at the house.

    That’s the part people get wrong.

    They think investigations begin when the cameras turn on…
    when someone asks a question into the dark…
    like the dark owes them something.

    It doesn’t.

    This episode follows a night inside one of the most infamous locations in paranormal history—connected to Ed Warren and Lorraine Warren—but this isn’t about what was seen.

    It’s about what responded.

    Before the questions.
    Before the prompts.
    Before anything that should have triggered a reaction.

    Something answered…
    to presence alone.

    And once it started…
    it didn’t behave the way people expect.

    It wasn’t chaotic.
    It wasn’t random.

    It was aware.

    This is not a story about fear.

    It’s about something much worse:

    Recognition.

    ⚠️ WHAT YOU’LL EXPERIENCE
    • A location that reacts before interaction begins
    • Simultaneous physical awareness felt by multiple people
    • Devices triggering in overlapping, intentional patterns
    • Audio responses occurring during speech… not after
    • A sudden, complete stop in activity at exactly 2:30 a.m.

    Not fading.
    Not weakening.

    Stopping.

    🔻 THE DETAIL THAT DOESN’T LET GO

    It didn’t build.

    It didn’t escalate.

    It was already happening
    the moment they arrived.

    And when it ended…

    it didn’t drift away.

    It chose to stop.

    🕯️ THE CENTER OF IT

    The object people focus on… isn’t the source.

    The Annabelle Doll
    was never the point.

    It was what had learned to use it.

    And more importantly…

    what didn’t need it.

    🧠 THE REAL QUESTION

    If something can respond…
    before you speak…

    Then what, exactly, triggered it?

    Because it wasn’t your voice.

    It wasn’t your equipment.

    It wasn’t your questions.

    It was you being there.

    🔥 THE MOMENT

    Every device triggering.
    Stacking.
    Overlapping.

    Before a single question was asked.

    🎧 LISTEN WITH CAUTION

    This episode is best experienced:

    👉 In a quiet room
    👉 With no background noise
    👉 With your full attention

    Because the silence…
    won’t stay empty.

    📲 WATCH THE INVESTIGATION

    🎥 Footage available via Paranormal Recon on Facebook

    🧩 FINAL THOUGHT

    The Warrens believed something most people ignore:

    How you enter…
    determines what follows.

    So ask yourself:

    When nothing happens…

    are you sure nothing is there?

    Or…

    has it just chosen not to respond yet?

    Show More Show Less
    23 mins
  • Why You See Things Out of the Corner of Your Eye
    Mar 27 2026

    Don’t look directly at it.

    You’ve seen it.

    That movement—
    just outside your focus.

    You turn your head…

    and there’s nothing there.

    But your body already reacted.

    And it didn’t react to nothing.

    This episode breaks down one of the most common—and least understood—experiences:

    👉 Seeing something move… that disappears the second you look at it

    We explore what’s really happening when:

    • Your peripheral vision detects something before you understand it
    • Movement feels real… even when you can’t confirm it
    • The same moment starts happening more than once
    • You stop questioning it… and start waiting for it

    You’ll hear how films like It Follows use background movement to create dread—
    and why your brain does the exact same thing in real life.

    And how real-world reports from locations like Muncaster Castle Apparitions don’t describe full apparitions…

    They describe movement.

    Peripheral.
    Repeated.
    Unconfirmed.

    This isn’t about seeing something clearly.

    This is about your brain reacting to motion…

    before it knows what it saw.

    A question:

    Did something move…

    or did your brain decide that it did?

    🎧 Don’t look too fast.
    Just let it happen.

    🔥 Key Moments
    • Why peripheral vision prioritizes movement over clarity
    • How your brain “completes” what it doesn’t fully see
    • The moment detection turns into expectation
    • Why repetition makes it feel intentional
    ⚠️ Listener Note

    This episode hits differently in low light.

    🎙️ About the Show

    The Dreadful Truth explores the space between psychology and the unexplained—
    where your brain reacts first…
    and the explanation comes later.

    📲 Follow & Listen

    If this episode made you pause…

    send it to someone who’s seen something they couldn’t explain.

    Listen on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

    Show More Show Less
    9 mins
  • Silence Isn’t Empty — Your Brain Won’t Let It Be
    Mar 27 2026

    Turn everything off.

    No music.
    No TV.
    No background noise.

    Just silence.

    How long does it take…

    before that silence doesn’t feel like silence anymore?

    This episode breaks down something most people never question:

    👉 Why silence doesn’t stay quiet
    👉 Why your brain refuses to leave it empty
    👉 And why the longer nothing happens…
    it starts to feel like something should

    We explore what’s really happening when:

    • Silence starts to feel heavy
    • You begin to hear things that aren’t fully there
    • Your awareness sharpens for no clear reason
    • “Nothing” turns into anticipation

    You’ll hear how films like Skinamarink create dread using almost nothing at all—
    and why your brain does the same thing in real life.

    And how real-world experiments, like the Philip Experiment, didn’t start with something happening…

    They started with a room that no longer felt empty.

    This isn’t about ghosts.

    This is about what happens when your brain is left alone with silence…

    and refuses to accept it.

    A question:

    Are you hearing something…

    or is your brain trying to finish what isn’t there?

    🎧 Listen in a quiet room.
    You’ll understand why.

    🔥 Key Moments
    • Why silence triggers discomfort instead of calm
    • How your brain creates expectation in empty space
    • The moment “nothing” becomes something
    • Why understanding it… doesn’t stop it
    ⚠️ Listener Note

    For full effect, listen in silence.
    No distractions.

    🎙️ About the Show

    The Dreadful Truth explores the space between psychology and the unexplained—
    where your brain reacts first…
    and the explanation comes later.

    📲 Follow & Listen

    If this episode made you uncomfortable…

    send it to someone who thinks silence is peaceful.

    Listen on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

    Show More Show Less
    10 mins
  • Why You Feel Watched When You’re Alone
    Mar 27 2026

    You’ve felt it.

    You walk into a room you know…
    nothing is out of place…
    and still—

    you stop.

    Not because you saw something.

    Because something in you decided:

    “Don’t move yet.”

    This episode breaks down one of the most common—and least talked about—human experiences:

    👉 The feeling of being watched when you’re completely alone

    We explore:

    • Why your brain reacts before you understand why
    • How your mind fills in gaps when information is missing
    • Why that feeling is so specific… and so hard to ignore
    • The difference between perception and presence

    You’ll hear how this same mechanism is used in film—like The Night House—to create dread without showing anything at all.

    And how real-world cases, like the Enfield Poltergeist, didn’t begin with something happening…

    They began with a feeling.

    This isn’t a ghost story.

    This is something else.

    A question:

    Are you imagining it…

    or noticing something
    before you can explain it?

    🎧 Listen with the lights off.
    Or don’t.

    🔥 Key Moments
    • The exact moment your brain decides something is wrong
    • Why stillness has never meant safety
    • How your mind creates “presence” without permission
    • The line between instinct… and something else
    ⚠️ Listener Note

    This episode is designed to be experienced in a quiet environment.

    🎙️ About the Show

    The Dreadful Truth explores the space between psychology and the unexplained—
    where your brain reacts first…
    and the explanation comes later.

    📲 Follow & Listen

    If this episode made you pause…
    share it with someone who’s felt the same thing.

    Listen on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

    Show More Show Less
    11 mins