Health Masters PT - October 2017

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INSIDE This Issue

A Word From Owner Louis Zuniga

Cure for Kids Being Afraid of the Dark Restricting Blood Flow to Speed Up Recovery Don’t Let Neck Pain Control Your Life Refried Bean Poblanos With Cheese Recipe

America’s Spookiest Locations

America’s SPOOKIEST Locations

passed away, she took his words to heart. To build a home for the spirits, she began construction on what is now known as the Winchester Mystery House. She continued building the house for her entire life, 24 hours a day for 38 years. The home features many design choices that lend themselves to a spectral presence. There is a seance room, doors that open to brick walls, staircases that lead directly into the ceiling, and acoustics that channel sound into secret listening places. During the Halloween season, the house offers candlelit tours that are sure to send shivers up your spine. When Stephen King checked into the Stanley Hotel on vacation with his wife, he wasn’t looking for inspiration, but he found it. Their stay in the hotel inspired “The Shining.” The book, along with Stanley Kubrick’s film adaptation, quickly turned the Stanley into a destination for thrill-seekers and paranormal investigators. The hotel has played into its newfound reputation, offering ghost tours late at night. Recently, the proprietors even created a hedge maze to allow visitors to recreate the harrowing chase scene from the movie. At last check, there were no Jack Nicholson impersonators on-site, but who knows what the future holds? Stanley Hotel Estes Park, Colorado

Halloween is, without question, America’s spookiest holiday. Traveling haunted house experiences crop up all over the country beginning in October, but they can’t hold a candle to locations that have long been believed to be home to paranormal inhabitants. If you’re feeling extra brave this month, check out these “haunted” locations.

Magoffin Homestead El Paso, Texas

Joseph Magoffin was a four-time mayor of El Paso. He and his wife, Octavia, were among the city’s most prominent families. Their home, a lavish estate originally built in 1875, was eventually purchased by the State of Texas. When the government bought the home, they got a “bonus,” in the form of the ghosts of Joseph, Octavia, and her brother, Charles. Charles died in his rocking chair on the property and is said to still be rocking to this day. Other visitors have reported hearing the ghost of Octavia belt out Italian arias that were popular among women of her time.

Winchester Mystery House San Jose, California

A medium from Boston told Sarah Winchester that her family was haunted by every person ever killed by a Winchester rifle. Given that her husband and infant daughter had recently

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