The Conjuring House: Video Two – When Nothing Happens (And Why That Matters)

The Conjuring House: Video Two – When Nothing Happens (And Why That Matters)

One of the biggest myths about paranormal investigation is that something always happens. Lights flicker. Ghosts speak on command. Objects fly across rooms. And if nothing dramatic happens? The footage mysteriously never makes it online.

So for our second video at the Conjuring House, I did the opposite.

I left the quiet in.

Capturing the In-Between Moments

While we were experimenting with ghost photography (yes, I had a little fun with that), I also set up time‑lapse cameras around the house. Not because I expected something dramatic—but because, in my experience, if anything odd happens, it happens between investigations. While batteries are being changed. While equipment is being moved. While investigators aren’t paying attention.

And what did we catch?

Mostly… nothing.

A small object appeared to move—but my shadow was visible in the doorway at the same time. Occam’s Razor wins: airflow + human movement = not paranormal.

That’s why I leave these clips in. Not to prove a haunting—but to show how easy it is to misinterpret normal causes.

Thermal Camera Reality Check

This was my first real investigation using a thermal camera, and let me tell you—this is a piece of equipment that can easily fool people if you don’t understand how it works.

Reflections in mirrors and windows? That’s heat bouncing back at you.
Your own hand? Congratulations, you’re now the hottest object in the room.
Cold toilets, windows, and doors? That’s just physics doing its thing.

I made a point to wave at reflections and call out my husband’s heat signature on camera so no one could later say, “There’s a ghost person in the mirror.”

Thermal cameras are fun and useful—but only if you’re brutally honest about what you’re seeing.

Phone Apps: Spirit Talker vs. Ghost Tube

Next up, we tested Spirit Talker and Ghost Tube side by side.

Spirit Talker was definitely the more active of the two, throwing out names like Abigail, Oliver, and Henry—all names commonly associated with Conjuring House lore. Ghost Tube, on the other hand, stayed mostly silent.

Does that mean Spirit Talker was communicating with spirits?

Or does it mean it was pulling from familiar patterns tied to the location?

That’s the problem with these apps. When words vaguely fit the narrative, it feels compelling—but it’s incredibly easy to push the meaning if you want it badly enough.

The Basement: Where Legends Outnumber Evidence

The basement of the Conjuring House is often described as the most terrifying part of the property. It’s home to the infamous well, which some claim is a portal, and endless internet rumors—including one persistent claim that a woman hanged herself in the barn.

According to our guide, that story is not true.

The only death that can be historically substantiated is a man who died of exposure near the barn. That’s it.

Down in the basement, we tested:

  • K2 meters

  • Cat balls

  • Motion‑sensitive toys

  • Phone apps

  • EVP sessions

Almost every spike or movement could be reasonably explained by cell phones, airflow, or our own movement. In fact, when devices were placed away from phones, activity dropped significantly.

Creepy atmosphere? Absolutely.
Compelling evidence? Not really.

When the House Is Quiet

One thing that stood out all night was how quiet the house actually was. For a nearly 300‑year‑old farmhouse, there were very few random creaks or unexplained noises. When sounds did happen, they almost always lined up with movement, rain, or the heating system.

That’s not exciting—but it’s important.

Because if a house this famous isn’t constantly active, then we need to ask better questions about how paranormal evidence is presented online.

Sleeping at the Conjuring House

We eventually tried to sleep with night‑vision cameras running. Aside from loud furnace noises and temperature changes, nothing woke us. No footsteps. No whispers. No shadow figures standing over the bed.

The next morning, after reviewing hours of footage, I still didn’t find anything I’d confidently label as paranormal.

Later, I noticed a small scratch on my body that could be interpreted as paranormal—but I don’t remember when it happened, and I won’t pretend it proves anything.

Why This Video Matters

This investigation didn’t give us dramatic proof.

And that’s exactly why it matters.

Paranormal investigation isn’t about forcing evidence—it’s about documenting what actually happens, even when that answer is nothing, especially in a place as legendary as the Conjuring House.

So was the Conjuring House haunted that night?

Not that we could prove.

Maybe the ghosts were on vacation.
Maybe the house is more myth than manifestation.
Or maybe real paranormal activity is far rarer than YouTube would have us believe.

Either way—I’ll keep looking.

👻 Watch the full investigation video to see everything for yourself.
And if you spot something I missed, let me know. I’ll happily re‑review the footage—skeptic hat firmly on.

See you soon,

The Spooky Cat Lady

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