The impression of supernatural encompasses something that is bizarre by scientific considerateness. Human beings are astonishingly prone to paranormal beliefs and particularly to belief in invisible. Belief in the existence of such person-like entities is omnipresent.

Belief in bizarre beings: Normally people tend to associate the things which are extraordinary or out of world with supernatural. For some it is just a joke to ponder upon, while others may have an undivided sharp belief in them. By and large when someone talks about stuff like this; at first people enjoys it and usually make fun out of it, and when things get out of hand that someone will be discarded as a crazy and a mad man. Why do people do that precisely? The only possible explanation is that we are afraid. We are afraid of the invisible and the unseen. We don’t know if things like these even exist then what they are capable of. That is why we tend and prefer to hide our fear in a face of denial. In order to believe in the unseen stuff people need evidence and testimonials. Well, if you’ll be able to see and prove the supernatural and unseen, it wouldn’t be unseen or supernatural at all, now would it?
How can we easily blame our follies on supernatural?

If there really is no good justification for believing such beings exist, however, why do people deem in them? There’s much scientific assumption about that but, as yet, no ultimate answer.
One understandable advantage of positing indistinguishable agents is that they can account for what might otherwise be baffling. For example: I could swear I left my keys on the table, but there they are beneath the sofa. How on Earth did that occur? If I believe in unseen or invisible beings living in my house that have the desire to cause mischief and the power to do so – then the mystery is at once solved. Invisible agents provide quick, suitable explanations for events that might otherwise thump us as deeply unexplained and, in so far as these beings can be appeased or persuaded, belief in them can also create the illusion of control, which can be comforting in an otherwise uncertain and dangerous world.
Are we delusional to believe that unseen beings exist?

The factor of fear and an unexplained feeling that ‘someone’s there’ is closely related to one’s perception of mind. Psychologists believe that if a person starts to believe that he is not alone and that there is someone definitely there, then he really began to see things, things that a normal human being wouldn’t see. This evidence proves that maybe there are no paranormal beings, that maybe it’s all just in our heads. So many ‘maybe’s’ but the fact here is that even scientists and investigators are not so sure about the unseen. Because it is unseen it aims to cause confusion and play tricks with one’s mind. The research yet adds another debate: “Lots of people believe it so there’s got to be something to it!”.
Playing Ouija board:

Ouija board is basically a flat board with the letters of the alphabet arrayed in two semi-circles above the numbers 0 through 9; the words “yes” and “no” in the primary corners, “goodbye” at the bottom; accompanied by a “planchette,” a droplet-shaped device, typically with a small porthole in the body, used to maneuver about the board. The idea was that two or more people would sit around the board, place their finger tips on the planchette, sham a question, and observe, flabbergasted, as the planchette moved from letter to letter, spelling out the answers apparently of its own harmony. Even psychologists believe that it may propose a link between the known and the unknown. The Ouija board, in fact, came straight out of the American 19th century obsession with spiritualism, the belief that the dead are able to communicate with the living. For some it is just a good time-pass and fun, while for others it actually works.
What to believe and what not to believe:

Monsters are everywhere these days, and belief in them is as sturdy as ever. What’s harder to believe is why so many people procure into cloudy evidence, shady schemes and downright false reports that disseminate myths that often have just one ultimate truth: They put money in the pockets of their purveyors. Today’s ubiquitous and often one-sided, promotional coverage of the paranormal, both on the Internet and TV, perpetuate myths and folklore as well or better than any ancient storyteller, just like horror movies. Fiction and belief subterfuge fact and news, feeding the 24/7 appetite and they are easily swayed. The counter to that question is decidedly tinged, but studies point to an interesting conclusion: People who practice religion are typically encouraged not to believe in the paranormal, but rather to put their faith in one deity, whereas those who aren’t particularly active in religion are freer to believe in supernatural stuff.
