Rachel Thompson

Yves Fey Spooks Us With Her One #Paranormal Experience @YvesFey #Historical #Mystery

On my last visit to France, I made a return pilgrimage to Auvers-sur-Oise, a town a little to the north of Paris where Van Gogh spent the last three months of his life, and where he completed seventy-seven paintings.  With all his conflicts and suffering, his productivity was amazing.
With me on this second visit was Sandra, my dear friend from Eugene, Oregon.  For her it was not only the first trip to Auvers-sur-Oise, but to France.  She wanted to spend most of her getting to know Paris, but I said we should see a small town as well.  She loves Van Gogh, and the town is close, though the trains are finicky.

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It’s a charming town, with reproductions of Vincent’s art set about the sites he painted in the town and on the pathways leading to the wheat fields and the cemetery, and a museum in the Auberge Ravoux, the inn where he lived and died.

It was raining lightly in the morning and early afternoon, grey, wet, and cloudy, but not very cold.  The greyness and rain proved an advantage for our venture into the tiny Vincent Van Gogh museum.

There were no crowds of tourists this time, the building was all but empty!  Most of the ground floor is taken up by the restaurant.  There is a small gift shop on the premier étage (our 2nd floor), where you may buy tickets and memorabilia.  The woman in charge explains that the room is mostly empty, but is very “emotional.”  And so you climb the stairs to the little attic room.  The first time I was there, I expected to be moved to be in the room where Van Gogh had lived and died, but not with the weight and intensity I experienced as I climbed the stairs and entered the room.  I was overwhelmed with grief.  At first, I told myself that I was probably projecting my natural sadness at such an amazing life cut short with no recognition.  But, in reflection, it felt like something that entered me rather than the familiar sensation of sadness welling from within.

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I was curious if I would feel a similar sensation again.  For all my fascination with the occult, I don’t think I am particularly sensitive compared to many of my friends.  But I felt the same sensation as I began climbing the staircase, even more intensely, for I was very aware of it as apart from me, a weight descending on me and filling me with devastating sorrow.  The few other people in the room did not seem to feel it—except for Sandra.  We looked at each other and it was all we could do not to burst into tears.  The feeling went as soon as we left.  There was only the lingering amazement at having felt so distraught, and the memories it stirred of Vincent’s difficult life.  We felt our own sadness that his life ended so unhappily, but not this other weight of emotion. 

After his death, the room was never rented again, supposedly because the rooms of suicides are considered bad luck.  But I wonder if other people did not feel that resident grief, and find it impossible to stay there.  I believe what we experienced is known in the paranormal world as an imprint.  I did not feel the presence of a person—a ghost—but of a despair that had penetrated that tiny room. There is controversy now whether Van Gogh committed suicide, or was the victim of an accidental shooting.  There appears to be evidence both ways.

Down the hall is a larger room where we watched the movie they have about Auvers-sur-Oise and Vincent’s time there, with images of the art he painted, since the little town can’t afford to own one now.  We went down to the restaurant to have lunch.  One of the saddest moments I felt at the Auberge Ravoux was not Vincent’s room with its lingering imprint, but a quote in the restaurant of Van Gogh saying that perhaps, one day, he might have a show in a little cafe like this.  That quote brought the far more familiar sense of sadness welling from within.  Though there were these moments touched with unhappiness, the visit to the town and the inn were overall positive and happy.  After our pleasant lunch, we wandered through Auvers-Sur-Oise where Vincent did so many wonderful paintings.  In the pattering rain, we went on up past the church along the road to the cemetery.  Beside the road you see the wheat fields he painted.

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Vincent is buried with his brother Theo beside him.  Two simple white gravestones with lots of ivy growing over them.  Sad, but in a peaceful way.

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When we left the cemetery to walk back to the town, the rain had departed, the sky was bright blue, filled with fluffy clouds, and the sun was shining bringing out all the colors of the leaves and flowers.  We caught the last train back to Paris, after our sweet and sad day in Auvers-sur-Oise, the memory imprinted in our hearts.

 
FLOATS THE DARK SHADOW
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Genre – Historical Mystery
Rating – R
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