Author Topic: Mr. Wilmettte  (Read 1290 times)

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Offline -SpectraL

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Mr. Wilmettte
« on: September 15, 2014, 02:30:43 pm »

  My mother, who grew up in an especially poor and remote section of Quebec, Canada, in the 40's, used to tell me about a man in her young childhood who went by the name of, Roger Wilmette, who could cure toothaches and migraines and other assorted injuries and maladies just by touch. Word of this got around. She said he was a mysterious man who just appeared once in awhile in the area and no one knew where he lived, but everyone knew him for his healing powers. When he would come around, people would hear he was around and seek him out for help.
 
 My Mom says that one night they were all sitting out by the campfire late at night and Mr. Wilmette joined the group. Discussion turned to his healing powers, with some in the group scoffing and making jokes about it while in his presence. She says Wilmette became annoyed at this, but remained quiet. One of the older, noisier, scoffing men in the group suggested Mr. Wilmette demonstrate his powers right there and then so everyone could see if he was fraud or not, and she said Wilmette thought about it momentarily, then accepted the challenge. He told the older man to bring him a chest, two pieces of blank paper, two paper-sized pieces of glass from picture frames, twine and a lock. The older man did. Everyone then went inside and sat around the kitchen table in the kitchen. The two blank pieces of paper were handed to and shown to everyone to confirm they were indeed blank. Wilmette then placed the two pieces of blank paper between the glass, wrapped the glass in the twine vertically and horizontally several times around, placed the glass inside the chest, and then placed the lock on the chest. He then tied a piece of the twine through the chest's lock-hole and also around the lock's shaft, and then tied the other end to the older man's large toe. he then faced the group and told the older man that if he felt any tug at all on twine to switch the light on right away, and the older man was sitting next to the lightswitch. When everyone was ready for the demonstration, Wilmette instructed that the kitchen light be turned off, and they were all pitched into blackness.
 
 Several seconds passed, but no more than 30 seconds, and the older man yelled out that someone had just pulled on the twine. Another person switched on the light immediately. To everyone's amazement, the twine was still securely attached to the lock and chest and the other end still attached to the older man's toe and nothing had changed. The chest had not been moved an inch and all appeared undisturbed. Mr. Wilmette then instructed the chest be opened and the papers examined. The older, scoffing man who had the twine tied to his toe reached out immediately and grabbed the chest with the intent to make a fool out of Mr. Wilmette as a fraud. He took the lock off the chest, opened it, unwrapped the glass, took out the pieces of paper, and to everyone';s complete astonishment, including my mother's, there was Indian handwriting all across the pages, both front and back, complete with small hand-drawn pics of Indian teepees and stick figures wearing tribal garb in the margins.
 
 This is a true story with no embellishments. This is exactly what happened that night.

Offline DaGuru

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Re: Mr. Wilmettte
« Reply #1 on: September 15, 2014, 03:24:09 pm »
Very very weird.

Was there ever and end to the Wilmette legend? Did he ever die, or just stopped coming around and ended up being part of the town's folklore forever?

Offline -SpectraL

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Re: Mr. Wilmettte
« Reply #2 on: September 15, 2014, 03:33:24 pm »
Very very weird.

Was there ever and end to the Wilmette legend? Did he ever die, or just stopped coming around and ended up being part of the town's folklore forever?

My mother says he kept coming around up until the point she moved from that area, which was an area in Quebec called, Deschenes. Most poor families there back in the '40's and '50's lived in old abandoned and burned out houses, and many were haunted, she said. I would imagine Wilmette probably lived out his life in this secluded, forlorn, desperate territory of poverty and misery.

Offline Infinityshock

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Re: Mr. Wilmettte
« Reply #3 on: September 15, 2014, 10:02:37 pm »
sounds like a simple magic trick...nothing more.  if it werent he wouldnt have needed to turn the lights out

Offline -SpectraL

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Re: Mr. Wilmettte
« Reply #4 on: September 15, 2014, 10:09:43 pm »
sounds like a simple magic trick...nothing more.  if it werent he wouldnt have needed to turn the lights out

Not a magic trick, a Majick trick. Many people there over the years also attested to the fact he could heal many ailments, injuries and afflictions by simply touching the affected area.

Offline unbreakable matter

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Re: Mr. Wilmettte
« Reply #5 on: September 15, 2014, 10:15:43 pm »
ITT: Spectral relates the story of a magic trick he never saw himself. I heard david blames went 40 days and 40 nights in a box. Thats real majick
God Bless

Offline -SpectraL

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Re: Mr. Wilmettte
« Reply #6 on: September 15, 2014, 10:20:22 pm »
ITT: Spectral relates the story of a magic trick he never saw himself. I heard david blames went 40 days and 40 nights in a box. Thats real majick

Do you believe in the supernatural?

Offline unbreakable matter

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Re: Mr. Wilmettte
« Reply #7 on: September 15, 2014, 10:26:28 pm »
ITT: Spectral relates the story of a magic trick he never saw himself. I heard david blames went 40 days and 40 nights in a box. Thats real majick

Do you believe in the supernatural?

To an extent. I saw a ghost before. My mom claims to have levitated before and all kinds of stuff. She probably believes in unicorns. She grew up in the poorest city per capita in canada (also likely the stinkiest) and I think belief in the supernatural is the kinda shit that poor people learned to believe in back in le day because they wanted to believe that if some force or power was working in the world then that same power can be harnessed to alleviate their troubles and change their life. When you're working class and have imagination your frame of relativity is smaller and thus you don't know of fancy $2 words for articulating non tangibles so you just go "leprechauns" and everyone knows what you're talking about, even though they don't
God Bless

Offline Infinityshock

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Re: Mr. Wilmettte
« Reply #8 on: September 15, 2014, 10:32:04 pm »
sounds like a simple magic trick...nothing more.  if it werent he wouldnt have needed to turn the lights out

Not a magic trick, a Majick trick. Many people there over the years also attested to the fact he could heal many ailments, injuries and afflictions by simply touching the affected area.

attesting to something means nothing without corroborating evidence

magic is magic.  illusions with no substance

Offline Infinityshock

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Re: Mr. Wilmettte
« Reply #9 on: September 15, 2014, 10:33:13 pm »
ITT: Spectral relates the story of a magic trick he never saw himself. I heard david blames went 40 days and 40 nights in a box. Thats real majick

Do you believe in the supernatural?

To an extent. I saw a ghost before. My mom claims to have levitated before and all kinds of stuff. She probably believes in unicorns. She grew up in the poorest city per capita in canada (also likely the stinkiest) and I think belief in the supernatural is the kinda shit that poor people learned to believe in back in le day because they wanted to believe that if some force or power was working in the world then that same power can be harnessed to alleviate their troubles and change their life. When you're working class and have imagination your frame of relativity is smaller and thus you don't know of fancy $2 words for articulating non tangibles so you just go "leprechauns" and everyone knows what you're talking about, even though they don't

this would explain where your delusions of grandeur originate

its hereditary