Doug Dillon's Blog, page 99

July 24, 2014

Terror in St. Augustine, Florida Wax Museum

ZombieZombies, walking dead infest the nation’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, FL, and threaten teens.


Young adult novel, Stepping Off a Cliff.


Book II of The St. Augustine Trilogy.


Combines zombies,


ghosts,


a giant octopus,


an alien creature,


teen paranormal powers,


Stepping bloga Native American Shaman,


a wax museum


and time travel.


Description


An otherworldly, evil and dangerous force infests America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida.


Everyone living there, or visiting, is at risk in ways too horrible to imagine.


Standing between this invader and the people of St. Augustine are teenagers Jeff and Carla, the mysterious Native American shaman, Lobo, and Lyle, the homeless guy.


In their quest to save themselves and all the inhabitants of this ancient Florida city,


Jeff and Carla uncover lost parts of St. Augustine history,


push past the limits of space and time,


and come face-to-face with what they come to realize are the true walking dead.


 


See the book trailer below for Stepping Off a Cliff



 


Lightning strike blogHere are some links to spooky but true stories of St. Augustine, FL:


The St. Augustine Monster (Included in the book, Stepping Off a Cliff)


Haunted Lighthouse


Ghost Hunt at Miss Caroline’s Guest House


Ghost Playmates 1


Ghost Playmates 2


 


 

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Published on July 24, 2014 10:48

Best Teen St. Augustine Paranormal Historical Stories, Books, Series, Trilogy

ExplosionMDcover2YOUNG ADULT, SUPERNATURAL, PARANORMAL, TIME TRAVEL  ADVENTURES inspired by the author’s true-life experiences.


This is for real. Many years ago, after my father died, there were a lot of paranormal events that happened in my family. At the time, my wife and I didn’t believe in the paranormal but that soon changed.


In fact, Barb and I spent several years after Dad died investigating such weird occurrences. In the end, we had so much research material that we wrote a nonfiction book about it all and even did radio interview/call-in programs across the U.S. and up into Canada.


That book, An Explosion of Being: An American Family’s Journey into the Psychic, was published across the world by a division of Prentice Hall.



But more recently though, I decided to write a series of fiction books for young adults and adults young at heart using my paranormal experiences as the inspiration the wild and crazy plots of those books. As an old history teacher, I couldn’t resist creating this fictional world for young people.


Today, the title of that series is The St. Augustine Trilogy and it takes place in America’s oldest and most haunted city in the U.S., St. Augustine, Florida.


Trilogy Graphic - blogTrilogy Description


Told in his own words, this paranormal/historical series is a very personal account of fifteen-year-old Jeff Golden’s explosive coming of age in America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida.


Join Jeff and his girlfriend Carla as they experience mind-blowing events that threaten to destroy their very existence.


Lightning strike blogFollow the two teens as Lobo, the Native American shaman, tries to protect them from powerful forces beyond understanding. Be there when Jeff and Carla discover the depths of reality as well as their own powers to reshape what they find.


Two of the three books in the trilogy are available in both print and eBook formats at the moment, with the third book due for publication in 2015.


Check out the book descriptions you’ll find here and then click on the active links for each book to see the reviews on Amazon.com.


I’ve also include the book trailers for the two books already in print so you can get a real sense of the characters and the plot.


Below all that, I have included active links to some of the most interesting blog posts I’ve written on the paranormal.


Enjoy.


Sliding - blogSliding Beneath the SurfaceThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book I


Description


In America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida, teenager Jeff Golden is in trouble. Horrible dreams won’t let him sleep, and he is up to his eyeballs in terrifying, paranormal experiences.


Finally, Jeff turns to his girlfriend Carla, and Lobo, the mysterious Native American shaman, for help. But what he discovers is a lot more than he bargained for.


A ghostly presence linked to a local historic cemetery is not only threatening Jeff’s sanity but his life as well. And before he knows what’s happening, Jeff finds both himself and Carla pulled into one of the nastiest and bloody events in Florida history. It is a place from which they may never escape.


Book Trailer



Stepping blogStepping Off a CliffThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book II


Description


An otherworldly, evil and dangerous force infests America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida. Everyone living there, or visiting, is at risk in ways too horrible to imagine.


Standing between this invader and the people of St. Augustine are teenagers Jeff and Carla, the mysterious Native American shaman, Lobo, and Lyle, the homeless guy.


In their quest to save themselves and all the inhabitants of this ancient Florida city, Jeff and Carla uncover lost parts of St. Augustine history, push past the limits of space and time, and come face-to-face with what they come to realize are the true walking dead.


Book Trailer



BOOK3mediumTargeting Orion’s ChildrenThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book III – due for publication in 2015


Description


In this, the final book of The St. Augustine Trilogy, the team of Jeff Golden, Carla Rodriguez, old Lobo, the Native American shaman and Lyle, the homeless guy, gather once again to join forces.


This time, though, the two teens face a paranormal presence that defies full human understanding and becomes a threat far beyond the oldest city in America where they live.


Overwhelmed by the immense responsibility they hold in their hands, Jeff and Carla make a jaw-dropping discovery that leads them in directions they could never before have imagined.


 


Now, as promised, here are those blog postings that contain some very interesting paranormal stories:


Haunted Lighthouse in St.Augustine, Florida


Paranormal Experiences: The Skyway Bridge Disaster


St. Augustine, FL Ghost Hunt: Miss Caroline’s Guest House # 2


The Portal


Ghost Hunting on the Queen Mary


What is Mediumship?


Infinite Hummingbird Experiences


Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp


Paranormal Events in Families: The Car Horn


The Spark in the Road


Children’s Visions


The Horse and the Door


The Last Goodbye


Dreams of Past Lives? The Russian Revolution


Carl Jung on Coincidences, Synchronicity and the Paranormal


Interview with a Medium

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Published on July 24, 2014 03:17

Best Help for Asthma Sufferers

New asthma treatment for adults.  A  patient’s view.  Bronchial Thermoplasty is lifesaving and a life changer. Orlando, Florida. Orlando Health. Dr. Mark Vollenweider.


Doug Dillon (2) - CopyHaving asthma since age 10 has not been fun. If you suffer from this disease, you know exactly what I mean.


Finally this year, when my lung capacity dipped into the thirty and forty percent ranges, my asthma doctor, Mike Anderson, strongly recommended a new procedure.


“You’ve been feeling so bad for so long,” he said, “that you truly don’t remember what it is to feel good.”


My 61 years of severe asthma had finally caught up with me.



Meds


 


The truth of his statement really made me stand up and take notice.


I wasn’t walking daily anymore, my annual bouts with asthma were getting worse, and working out in my yard was a huge ordeal that not only left me breathless but on the verge of passing out.


Waiting in the wings of course was the knowledge that pneumonia or a bad case of the flu could pose a severe danger.


Lung + probe“This new three-stage Bronchial Thermoplasty (BT) procedure,” Dr. Mike told me, “won’t cure your asthma but it will certainly allow you to pull in full breaths. And the best pulmonary guy to do that, Dr. Mark Vollenwieder, is just down the street at Orlando Health. If I were going to have those three procedures done, he’s the one I would go to.”


Dr. V 1

Dr. Mark Vollenweider


 


Within a week, I was in Dr. V.’s office, late in the day, meeting with both him and his physician’s assistant, Amy Stumpf.


The actual probe

The actual probe


What a joy that meeting was. Both those people took all the time needed to review my records, explain the procedures thoroughly and answer all my questions.


By the time we got done, all of the doctor’s staff had left for the day. You don’t get that kind of personal care very often.


In the end, Dr. V. declared me to be an excellent candidate and we set the wheels in motion for my three procedures to happen in March, April and May.


I’m not going to detail what is involved in these events. If you haven’t already explored what’s involved in Bronchial Thermoplasty, I’ve added a bunch of links at the bottom of this post for your review. What I am going to do now though, is to tell you about my experiences.


Orlando Health

Orlando Health


First of all, I couldn’t be any happier with my doctor. What a thorough, competent, open and compassionate guy he is. No wonder people come from all over to have him work on their lungs.


Both before and after each procedure, he carefully and warmly explained everything in very understandable terms. My wife, Barbara, who comes from a long line of doctors, was greatly impressed by how he was able to connect with both of us.


I tell you what, if you wish to consider this treatment, and you don’t live in an area with a pulmonologist competent in this procedure, it would be well worth your time and effort to become Dr. V’s patient .


Below you will find a video where he explains BT.



The End Result


lungs bronchiolesDuring each procedure, Dr. V. worked on an overage of 120 bronchial tubes. So that means somewhere around 360 airways were permanently opened.


It is now early July of 2014 and I am breathing better than I have in DECADES! Amazing. I’m back to walking 1 ½ miles a day and I can work in my yard without feeling like I’m going to pass out.


My lung capacity went from a high of 48% to 79%, a 31% increase! And my blood oxygen level that usually showed 96-97% shot up to a steady 99%. No wonder I now feel more alert and clear-headed.


O2Yes, I still get a little tightness in my chest and I have to occasionally use my emergency inhaler to help bring up a clot of congestion. But that’s it.


I no longer have to use my nebulizer and I’m not downing Prednisone and antibiotics on a regular basis. What a joy!


In fact, one of our local TV channels did a story on Dr. V. and the value of these procedures, using me as a sample patient. Click here if you would like to see that news report.


SurgeryBehind the Scenes Details


Now, here is what you need to know about the 3-week time period between each of the 3 one-hour, out-patient events.


Dr. V. and all the literature give fair warning that asthma symptoms will increase after each procedure. That is the main side effect. They say on average, it takes people 3-5 days for those symptoms to fully subside.


ToothpasteBut for me, it took the full 3 weeks between each event. I had to use albuterol in my nebulizer 3-4 times a day and after the last procedure, Dr. V. also had me use a saline solution in my nebulizer to effectively bring up all the build-up of congestion. I also had to request addition doses of Prednisone.


Oh, a word about congestion. Be aware that for a number of days you will bring up great clots of the stuff. Mine was very dark. Dr. V. told me that it had been down there a very long time. His opening of the bronchial tubes set in motion a squeezing of the lungs like you would squeeze tooth paste tubes.


Lung Plug 04-21-2014

Nasty but true


But it isn’t always just congestion you bring up. Dr. V. warned me that old congestion actually congeals in the lungs and plugs up the bronchial tubes. Those plugs can be in there for years.


This I understood but was unprepared for the spider-like thing that popped out of my mouth. It was so large, I even took a picture of it. The branching is simply showing how the plugs had solidified in multiple tubes and were interconnected.


The red color, blood, you see  in this picture, simply shows the thinness of the cell walls at that point.


“Unless you’re coughing up cups of blood,” Dr. V. told me, “what you are seeing here may look scary but it’s nothing to worry about.


As difficult as it was having increased asthma symptoms for so long and having to cough up all that old stuff in my lungs, it was definitely worth it to have the procedures done.


CoughOne Final Change


For whatever reason, I find that my ability to cough up congestion has changed. Before BT, I expelled congestion in the usual way. But after BT, I have found that doesn’t always work very well.


Maybe it’s just me and my lungs’ unique reactions to the procedures, but the easiest way for me to get rid clotted mucous now is to rapidly expel air from my lungs.


And when I say rapidly, I mean just the way you do when you are fully exhaling during the breathing test in your doctor’s office. If you are an asthma patient, you will know exactly what I mean.


So just take that information in as an indicator that everyone reacts differently. Above all else, if and when you have BT done, keep in close contact with your pulmonologist and ask lots of questions.


The Acid Test


Front viewI’m a writer of fiction for young adults. This past weekend, I traveled up to St. Augustine, Florida to do some on-site research, take pictures, etc. This is the final stage of completing the third book of The St. Augustine Trilogy.


One of my final stops on the way out of town was the St. Augustine Lighthouse.


Previous to that visit, I definitely avoided going up very many stairs And I shuddered as I looked up that winding staircase of 207 steps.


But then I thought, why not givge it a try? The proof is really in the pudding, right?


I thought I walked up that staircase slow and easy but it turned out it took me only a little over 10 minutes.


Sure, I was somewhat out of breath when I got to the top but I wasn’t exhausted, wheezing, and coughing. To be honest, my legs hurt more than my lungs but I’ll take that trade any day.


 


Breathing free

Breathing free through BT


Prognosis


As if I don’t have enough good news to report, Dr. V. told me that my lung capacity could even increase more over time. Instead of losing the usual 1% per year, I might bump my 79% up some more. Wouldn’t that be something? To help make that a reality, I have to maintain a good exercise schedule and keep up my allergy shots with my asthma doctor.


 


OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAThe Cost  Factor


Make no mistake about it. Even though Bronchial Thermoplasty is an outpatient event, it isn’t cheap. We’re talking about 3 hours of skilled intervention with a full surgical crew. According to Orlando Health, where the procedures were performed, the total cost was estimated in the $18,000 to $20,000 range.


Lucky for me, Medicare in Florida now covers this procedure to some degree but it is so new that how much is actuallycoveraged isn’t completely clear. And even though I have a secondary health insurance policy, so far, most big insurance companies won’t pay for it.


They (he insurance companies) call the procedures experimental, a ridiculous assessment based on how long this treatment has been used in the U.S. and Europe. The good news, Dr. V. tells me, is that because Medicare accepts Bronchial Thermoplasty, the insurance companies are sure to follow sometime soon.


 


Orlando Health LogoMy Estimated Costs


Orlando Health, where my procedures were done, has really been wonderful about the complexity of financing. They have been my advocate with both Medicare and my other insurance company. Way ahead of time, they were able to tell me that the maximum I might have to pay would be $1,800 per hospital visit, down to a minimum of $350. So altogether, my total payments, including Dr. V.’s fees, might top out at $5,400, or go as low as $1,050.


Believe it or not, I am writing this on the 16th of July, 2014 and even though my first procedure was March 25, I have yet to receive a bill. Not bad, eh? I’ve seen paperwork going back and forth between Orlando Health and Medicare, including appeals that Medicare accepted, but that’s it.


Thumbs upWhat a pleasure it was to arrive for each procedure back in March, April and May and not have to address the money issue at all. Way to go, Orlando Health. You all are great!


OK, that’s my story and I’m sticking to it. If you would like to contact me and chat about this some more, just use the contact form on my website and we’ll get together via email or phone. I thoroughly enjoy talking to people about my experiences. In the meantime, here are some website links that you might find useful.


Asthma – Anderson Allergy and Asthma in Orlando


Orlando Health:


• General Information


• Pulmonary and Sleep Medicine Specialists – Services


• Orlando Health – BT Description


• Dr. Mark Vollenweider


Overall BT Details & Programs


American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology on BT


NebulizerAre You a BT Candidate? (BT for asthma.com)


Cleveland Clinic


National Jewish Health in Colorado


University of Minnesota Medical Center


Keck Medical of the University of Southern California


Mary Parks Asthma Center University of Rochester, NY


 


 

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Published on July 24, 2014 00:38

July 23, 2014

Top Young Adult Ghost Stories – Authors Writers

ExplosionMDcover2YOUNG ADULT, SUPERNATURAL, PARANORMAL, TIME TRAVEL  ADVENTURES inspired by the author’s true-life experiences.


This is for real. Many years ago, after my father died, there were a lot of paranormal events that happened in my family. At the time, my wife and I didn’t believe in the paranormal but that soon changed.


In fact, Barb and I spent several years after Dad died investigating such weird occurrences. In the end, we had so much research material that we wrote a nonfiction book about it all and even did radio interview/call-in programs across the U.S. and up into Canada.


That book, An Explosion of Being: An American Family’s Journey into the Psychic, was published across the world by a division of Prentice Hall.



But more recently though, I decided to write a series of fiction books for young adults and adults young at heart using my paranormal experiences as the inspiration the wild and crazy plots of those books. As an old history teacher, I couldn’t resist creating this fictional world for young people.


Today, the title of that series is The St. Augustine Trilogy and it takes place in America’s oldest and most haunted city in the U.S., St. Augustine, Florida.


Trilogy Graphic - blogTrilogy Description


Told in his own words, this paranormal/historical series is a very personal account of fifteen-year-old Jeff Golden’s explosive coming of age in America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida.


Join Jeff and his girlfriend Carla as they experience mind-blowing events that threaten to destroy their very existence.


Lightning strike blogFollow the two teens as Lobo, the Native American shaman, tries to protect them from powerful forces beyond understanding. Be there when Jeff and Carla discover the depths of reality as well as their own powers to reshape what they find.


Two of the three books in the trilogy are available in both print and eBook formats at the moment, with the third book due for publication in 2015.


Check out the book descriptions you’ll find here and then click on the active links for each book to see the reviews on Amazon.com.


I’ve also include the book trailers for the two books already in print so you can get a real sense of the characters and the plot.


Below all that, I have included active links to some of the most interesting blog posts I’ve written on the paranormal.


Enjoy.


Sliding - blogSliding Beneath the SurfaceThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book I


Description


In America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida, teenager Jeff Golden is in trouble. Horrible dreams won’t let him sleep, and he is up to his eyeballs in terrifying, paranormal experiences.


Finally, Jeff turns to his girlfriend Carla, and Lobo, the mysterious Native American shaman, for help. But what he discovers is a lot more than he bargained for.


A ghostly presence linked to a local historic cemetery is not only threatening Jeff’s sanity but his life as well. And before he knows what’s happening, Jeff finds both himself and Carla pulled into one of the nastiest and bloody events in Florida history. It is a place from which they may never escape.


Book Trailer



Stepping blogStepping Off a CliffThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book II


Description


An otherworldly, evil and dangerous force infests America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida. Everyone living there, or visiting, is at risk in ways too horrible to imagine.


Standing between this invader and the people of St. Augustine are teenagers Jeff and Carla, the mysterious Native American shaman, Lobo, and Lyle, the homeless guy.


In their quest to save themselves and all the inhabitants of this ancient Florida city, Jeff and Carla uncover lost parts of St. Augustine history, push past the limits of space and time, and come face-to-face with what they come to realize are the true walking dead.


Book Trailer



BOOK3mediumTargeting Orion’s ChildrenThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book III – due for publication in 2015


Description


In this, the final book of The St. Augustine Trilogy, the team of Jeff Golden, Carla Rodriguez, old Lobo, the Native American shaman and Lyle, the homeless guy, gather once again to join forces.


This time, though, the two teens face a paranormal presence that defies full human understanding and becomes a threat far beyond the oldest city in America where they live.


Overwhelmed by the immense responsibility they hold in their hands, Jeff and Carla make a jaw-dropping discovery that leads them in directions they could never before have imagined.


 


Now, as promised, here are those blog postings that contain some very interesting paranormal stories:


Haunted Lighthouse in St.Augustine, Florida


Paranormal Experiences: The Skyway Bridge Disaster


St. Augustine, FL Ghost Hunt: Miss Caroline’s Guest House # 2


The Portal


Ghost Hunting on the Queen Mary


What is Mediumship?


Infinite Hummingbird Experiences


Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp


Paranormal Events in Families: The Car Horn


The Spark in the Road


Children’s Visions


The Horse and the Door


The Last Goodbye


Dreams of Past Lives? The Russian Revolution


Carl Jung on Coincidences, Synchronicity and the Paranormal


Interview with a Medium

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Published on July 23, 2014 17:59

Popular St. Augustine, FL Science Fiction Stories & Books

ExplosionMDcover2For young adults and adults young at heart –  supernatural, paranormal, time travel adventures inspired by the author’s true-life experiences.


This is for real. Many years ago, after my father died, there were a lot of paranormal events that happened in my family. At the time, my wife and I didn’t believe in the paranormal but that soon changed.


In fact, Barb and I spent several years after Dad died investigating such weird occurrences. In the end, we had so much research material that we wrote a nonfiction book about it all and even did radio interview/call-in programs across the U.S. and up into Canada.


That book, An Explosion of Being: An American Family’s Journey into the Psychic, was published across the world by a division of Prentice Hall.



But more recently though, I decided to write a series of fiction books for young adults and adults young at heart using my paranormal experiences as the inspiration the wild and crazy plots of those books. As an old history teacher, I couldn’t resist creating this fictional world for young people.


Today, the title of that series is The St. Augustine Trilogy and it takes place in America’s oldest and most haunted city in the U.S., St. Augustine, Florida.


Trilogy Graphic - blogTrilogy Description


Told in his own words, this paranormal/historical series is a very personal account of fifteen-year-old Jeff Golden’s explosive coming of age in America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida.


Join Jeff and his girlfriend Carla as they experience mind-blowing events that threaten to destroy their very existence.


Lightning strike blogFollow the two teens as Lobo, the Native American shaman, tries to protect them from powerful forces beyond understanding. Be there when Jeff and Carla discover the depths of reality as well as their own powers to reshape what they find.


Two of the three books in the trilogy are available in both print and eBook formats at the moment, with the third book due for publication in 2015.


Check out the book descriptions you’ll find here and then click on the active links for each book to see the reviews on Amazon.com.


I’ve also include the book trailers for the two books already in print so you can get a real sense of the characters and the plot.


Below all that, I have included active links to some of the most interesting blog posts I’ve written on the paranormal.


Enjoy.


Sliding - blogSliding Beneath the SurfaceThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book I


Description


In America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida, teenager Jeff Golden is in trouble. Horrible dreams won’t let him sleep, and he is up to his eyeballs in terrifying, paranormal experiences.


Finally, Jeff turns to his girlfriend Carla, and Lobo, the mysterious Native American shaman, for help. But what he discovers is a lot more than he bargained for.


A ghostly presence linked to a local historic cemetery is not only threatening Jeff’s sanity but his life as well. And before he knows what’s happening, Jeff finds both himself and Carla pulled into one of the nastiest and bloody events in Florida history. It is a place from which they may never escape.


Book Trailer



Stepping blogStepping Off a CliffThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book II


Description


An otherworldly, evil and dangerous force infests America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida. Everyone living there, or visiting, is at risk in ways too horrible to imagine.


Standing between this invader and the people of St. Augustine are teenagers Jeff and Carla, the mysterious Native American shaman, Lobo, and Lyle, the homeless guy.


In their quest to save themselves and all the inhabitants of this ancient Florida city, Jeff and Carla uncover lost parts of St. Augustine history, push past the limits of space and time, and come face-to-face with what they come to realize are the true walking dead.


Book Trailer



BOOK3mediumTargeting Orion’s ChildrenThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book III – due for publication in 2015


Description


In this, the final book of The St. Augustine Trilogy, the team of Jeff Golden, Carla Rodriguez, old Lobo, the Native American shaman and Lyle, the homeless guy, gather once again to join forces.


This time, though, the two teens face a paranormal presence that defies full human understanding and becomes a threat far beyond the oldest city in America where they live.


Overwhelmed by the immense responsibility they hold in their hands, Jeff and Carla make a jaw-dropping discovery that leads them in directions they could never before have imagined.


 


Now, as promised, here are those blog postings that contain some very interesting paranormal stories:


Haunted Lighthouse in St.Augustine, Florida


Paranormal Experiences: The Skyway Bridge Disaster


St. Augustine, FL Ghost Hunt: Miss Caroline’s Guest House # 2


The Portal


Ghost Hunting on the Queen Mary


What is Mediumship?


Infinite Hummingbird Experiences


Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp


Paranormal Events in Families: The Car Horn


The Spark in the Road


Children’s Visions


The Horse and the Door


The Last Goodbye


Dreams of Past Lives? The Russian Revolution


Carl Jung on Coincidences, Synchronicity and the Paranormal


Interview with a Medium

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Published on July 23, 2014 13:01

Best Asthma Therapy

New asthma treatment for adults.  A  patient’s view.  Bronchial Thermoplasty is lifesaving and a life changer. Orlando, Florida. Orlando Health. Dr. Mark Vollenweider.


Doug Dillon (2) - CopyHaving asthma since age 10 has not been fun. If you suffer from this disease, you know exactly what I mean.


Finally this year, when my lung capacity dipped into the thirty and forty percent ranges, my asthma doctor, Mike Anderson, strongly recommended a new procedure.


“You’ve been feeling so bad for so long,” he said, “that you truly don’t remember what it is to feel good.”


My 61 years of severe asthma had finally caught up with me.



Meds


 


The truth of his statement really made me stand up and take notice.


I wasn’t walking daily anymore, my annual bouts with asthma were getting worse, and working out in my yard was a huge ordeal that not only left me breathless but on the verge of passing out.


Waiting in the wings of course was the knowledge that pneumonia or a bad case of the flu could pose a severe danger.


Lung + probe“This new three-stage Bronchial Thermoplasty (BT) procedure,” Dr. Mike told me, “won’t cure your asthma but it will certainly allow you to pull in full breaths. And the best pulmonary guy to do that, Dr. Mark Vollenwieder, is just down the street at Orlando Health. If I were going to have those three procedures done, he’s the one I would go to.”


Dr. V 1

Dr. Mark Vollenweider


 


Within a week, I was in Dr. V.’s office, late in the day, meeting with both him and his physician’s assistant, Amy Stumpf.


The actual probe

The actual probe


What a joy that meeting was. Both those people took all the time needed to review my records, explain the procedures thoroughly and answer all my questions.


By the time we got done, all of the doctor’s staff had left for the day. You don’t get that kind of personal care very often.


In the end, Dr. V. declared me to be an excellent candidate and we set the wheels in motion for my three procedures to happen in March, April and May.


I’m not going to detail what is involved in these events. If you haven’t already explored what’s involved in Bronchial Thermoplasty, I’ve added a bunch of links at the bottom of this post for your review. What I am going to do now though, is to tell you about my experiences.


Orlando Health

Orlando Health


First of all, I couldn’t be any happier with my doctor. What a thorough, competent, open and compassionate guy he is. No wonder people come from all over to have him work on their lungs.


Both before and after each procedure, he carefully and warmly explained everything in very understandable terms. My wife, Barbara, who comes from a long line of doctors, was greatly impressed by how he was able to connect with both of us.


I tell you what, if you wish to consider this treatment, and you don’t live in an area with a pulmonologist competent in this procedure, it would be well worth your time and effort to become Dr. V’s patient .


Below you will find a video where he explains BT.



The End Result


lungs bronchiolesDuring each procedure, Dr. V. worked on an overage of 120 bronchial tubes. So that means somewhere around 360 airways were permanently opened.


It is now early July of 2014 and I am breathing better than I have in DECADES! Amazing. I’m back to walking 1 ½ miles a day and I can work in my yard without feeling like I’m going to pass out.


My lung capacity went from a high of 48% to 79%, a 31% increase! And my blood oxygen level that usually showed 96-97% shot up to a steady 99%. No wonder I now feel more alert and clear-headed.


O2Yes, I still get a little tightness in my chest and I have to occasionally use my emergency inhaler to help bring up a clot of congestion. But that’s it.


I no longer have to use my nebulizer and I’m not downing Prednisone and antibiotics on a regular basis. What a joy!


In fact, one of our local TV channels did a story on Dr. V. and the value of these procedures, using me as a sample patient. Click here if you would like to see that news report.


SurgeryBehind the Scenes Details


Now, here is what you need to know about the 3-week time period between each of the 3 one-hour, out-patient events.


Dr. V. and all the literature give fair warning that asthma symptoms will increase after each procedure. That is the main side effect. They say on average, it takes people 3-5 days for those symptoms to fully subside.


ToothpasteBut for me, it took the full 3 weeks between each event. I had to use albuterol in my nebulizer 3-4 times a day and after the last procedure, Dr. V. also had me use a saline solution in my nebulizer to effectively bring up all the build-up of congestion. I also had to request addition doses of Prednisone.


Oh, a word about congestion. Be aware that for a number of days you will bring up great clots of the stuff. Mine was very dark. Dr. V. told me that it had been down there a very long time. His opening of the bronchial tubes set in motion a squeezing of the lungs like you would squeeze tooth paste tubes.


Lung Plug 04-21-2014

Nasty but true


But it isn’t always just congestion you bring up. Dr. V. warned me that old congestion actually congeals in the lungs and plugs up the bronchial tubes. Those plugs can be in there for years.


This I understood but was unprepared for the spider-like thing that popped out of my mouth. It was so large, I even took a picture of it. The branching is simply showing how the plugs had solidified in multiple tubes and were interconnected.


The red color, blood, you see  in this picture, simply shows the thinness of the cell walls at that point.


“Unless you’re coughing up cups of blood,” Dr. V. told me, “what you are seeing here may look scary but it’s nothing to worry about.


As difficult as it was having increased asthma symptoms for so long and having to cough up all that old stuff in my lungs, it was definitely worth it to have the procedures done.


CoughOne Final Change


For whatever reason, I find that my ability to cough up congestion has changed. Before BT, I expelled congestion in the usual way. But after BT, I have found that doesn’t always work very well.


Maybe it’s just me and my lungs’ unique reactions to the procedures, but the easiest way for me to get rid clotted mucous now is to rapidly expel air from my lungs.


And when I say rapidly, I mean just the way you do when you are fully exhaling during the breathing test in your doctor’s office. If you are an asthma patient, you will know exactly what I mean.


So just take that information in as an indicator that everyone reacts differently. Above all else, if and when you have BT done, keep in close contact with your pulmonologist and ask lots of questions.


The Acid Test


Front viewI’m a writer of fiction for young adults. This past weekend, I traveled up to St. Augustine, Florida to do some on-site research, take pictures, etc. This is the final stage of completing the third book of The St. Augustine Trilogy.


One of my final stops on the way out of town was the St. Augustine Lighthouse.


Previous to that visit, I definitely avoided going up very many stairs And I shuddered as I looked up that winding staircase of 207 steps.


But then I thought, why not givge it a try? The proof is really in the pudding, right?


I thought I walked up that staircase slow and easy but it turned out it took me only a little over 10 minutes.


Sure, I was somewhat out of breath when I got to the top but I wasn’t exhausted, wheezing, and coughing. To be honest, my legs hurt more than my lungs but I’ll take that trade any day.


 


Breathing free

Breathing free through BT


Prognosis


As if I don’t have enough good news to report, Dr. V. told me that my lung capacity could even increase more over time. Instead of losing the usual 1% per year, I might bump my 79% up some more. Wouldn’t that be something? To help make that a reality, I have to maintain a good exercise schedule and keep up my allergy shots with my asthma doctor.


 


OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAThe Cost  Factor


Make no mistake about it. Even though Bronchial Thermoplasty is an outpatient event, it isn’t cheap. We’re talking about 3 hours of skilled intervention with a full surgical crew. According to Orlando Health, where the procedures were performed, the total cost was estimated in the $18,000 to $20,000 range.


Lucky for me, Medicare in Florida now covers this procedure to some degree but it is so new that how much is actuallycoveraged isn’t completely clear. And even though I have a secondary health insurance policy, so far, most big insurance companies won’t pay for it.


They (he insurance companies) call the procedures experimental, a ridiculous assessment based on how long this treatment has been used in the U.S. and Europe. The good news, Dr. V. tells me, is that because Medicare accepts Bronchial Thermoplasty, the insurance companies are sure to follow sometime soon.


 


Orlando Health LogoMy Estimated Costs


Orlando Health, where my procedures were done, has really been wonderful about the complexity of financing. They have been my advocate with both Medicare and my other insurance company. Way ahead of time, they were able to tell me that the maximum I might have to pay would be $1,800 per hospital visit, down to a minimum of $350. So altogether, my total payments, including Dr. V.’s fees, might top out at $5,400, or go as low as $1,050.


Believe it or not, I am writing this on the 16th of July, 2014 and even though my first procedure was March 25, I have yet to receive a bill. Not bad, eh? I’ve seen paperwork going back and forth between Orlando Health and Medicare, including appeals that Medicare accepted, but that’s it.


Thumbs upWhat a pleasure it was to arrive for each procedure back in March, April and May and not have to address the money issue at all. Way to go, Orlando Health. You all are great!


OK, that’s my story and I’m sticking to it. If you would like to contact me and chat about this some more, just use the contact form on my website and we’ll get together via email or phone. I thoroughly enjoy talking to people about my experiences. In the meantime, here are some website links that you might find useful.


Asthma – Anderson Allergy and Asthma in Orlando


Orlando Health:


• General Information


• Pulmonary and Sleep Medicine Specialists – Services


• Orlando Health – BT Description


• Dr. Mark Vollenweider


Overall BT Details & Programs


American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology on BT


NebulizerAre You a BT Candidate? (BT for asthma.com)


Cleveland Clinic


National Jewish Health in Colorado


University of Minnesota Medical Center


Keck Medical of the University of Southern California


Mary Parks Asthma Center University of Rochester, NY


 


 

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Published on July 23, 2014 00:37

July 22, 2014

Real Sea Monsters Exist

Octopus 3 (Morgue File)Florida sea creature hotly debated by scientific community for over 100 years. A controversy that gained international attention in multiple centuries.


I’m a Florida writer, author of The St. Augustine Trilogy, a series for young adults and adults young at heart. As the title for these three combined novels suggests, they all take place in my favorite city of St. Augustine, Florida.


As America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine was the perfect setting for these paranormal/historical books.


Stepping blogIn the development of Book II in the trilogy, Stepping Off a Cliff, I needed some sort of unusual creature as an integral part of the plot. Much to my amazement, I found that such a fascinating animal actually existed in St. Augustine’s past.



In fact, I originally used these key words, “St. Augustine Monster”, in a Google search and came up with a bunch of hits with titles saying, “The St. Augustine Monster.”


And after scanning some of that information, I found out that the St. Augustine Historical Society, where I was doing research for the trilogy, even played a part in what turned out to be one of the most sensational news stories of the late 1880s.


Of course, on my next trip to St. Augustine and its historical society, I asked for information on “The St. Augustine Monster” and was handed a thick file. What fascinating reading!


SAHS exterior

Street entrance to the St. Augustine Historical Society’s Research Library


At the end of this post, you will find some of the links I first encountered on Google for you to begin your own search for information on this subject if you should choose to do so. But in the meantime, I decided to condense my basic research as much as possible in order for you to get a quick glimpse of this intriguing event in Florida history.


1. Nov. 30, 1896

Two boys discover a huge carcass of some sort while riding their bikes on St. Augustine Beach.


One of Dr. Webb's photos of the carcass

One of Dr. Webb’s photos of the carcass


2. Dec. 1, 1896

The boys bring Dr. DeWitt Webb to view the carcass. Webb is a physician, amateur naturalist and head of the St. Augustine Historical Society and Institute of Science (Today known as the St. Augustine Historical Society).


What Webb Finds, Does and Concludes:

• The carcass is partly buried in sand and it is badly deteriorated.


• He digs it partly out.

• The surface is pale pink but in the reflection of bright sunlight it looks a whitish silver color.


Dr. Webb

Dr. Webb


• The length measures 18’ and the width 7’-10’ wide.

• Webb estimates the weight at somewhere between 4 and 7 tons.

• The carcass has a thick hide (3+ inches) – hard to cut – dulls knives & axes.

• The carcass has stumps that to Webb looks like where arms had been attached.

• Webb believes what the boys found is the remains of a giant octopus.


3. Dec. 7, 1896

• Webb gets some help and has the carcass photographed.


• Close to this date, a Mr. Wilson- digs out carcass even more and finds more “arm” stumps and one arm 23’ long.


Ocean 14. Jan. 9-15, 1897

• A storm carries the carcass south close to Crescent Beach.

• Dr. Webb finds it again. He takes 4 horses, six men & planking, moves the carcass back to St. Augustine Beach and rolls it 40’ above high tide line.

• Webb adjusts his measurement of the creature’s length from 18’ to 21’.

• The carcass becomes a tourist attraction.

• News reports from this era call the creature, “The St. Augustine Monster.”


kraken5. March 17, 1897

• The carcass is last seen on the beach.


6. Scientific Analysis, late 1896, early 1897

• Dr. Webb initially sent drawings of the carcass to Dr. Verrill of Yale.

• At first, Verrill thinks Webb’s find might be a giant squid.

• Verrill then changes his opinion and calls it a giant octopus. He even publishes his conclusion and gives Webb’s find a scientific name – Octopus Giganteous. He determines, based upon the carcass dimensions sent by Webb, that the creature’s arms might have been 100’ long, giving it a diameter of 200’.

• But once Verrill gets photos & samples of the carcass from Webb, he changes his mind yet again. This time, he says that the creature is actually the remains of a large whale – whale skin and blubber.

• There the story ends until the late twentieth century.


Octopus 1 (7. Revived Interest, 1957

• Mr. Forest Wood, Director of Marine Studios, later called Marineland, just south of St. Augustine, becomes interested in Dr. Webb’s forgotten find.

• He gathers all the information as is available about the creature and locates the old tissue specimens at the Smithsonian Institute.

• Wood begins a campaign to get scientists to analyze what he has found using modern methods of investigation. That effort takes a while.


8. Scientific Analysis, 1971

• One scientist agrees to investigate, Dr. Genarro at the University of Florida

• He studies the case, examines the photos and analyzes the specimens.

• His conclusion is that what Dr. Webb found was indeed a giant octopus.


The carcass and possibly Dr. Webb next to it

The carcass and possibly Dr. Webb next to it


9. Scientific Analysis, 1986

• Dr. Roy Mackal, University of Chicago, verifies Dr. Genarro’s findings.


10. Scientific Analysis, 1995

• A joint team of investigators from the University of Maryland and Indiana University open their own investigation (Sidney Pierce, Gerald Smith, Timothy Maugel and Eugenie Clark).

• They conclude that Dr. Verrill’s final verdict was correct. The remains found by Dr. Webb were those of a whale.


So there you have it, at least where the story rests at this point. And as promised previously, below you will find links to some excellent sources that in turn will allow you to burrow even deeper.


Enjoy.


Castillio de San Marcos, the old Spanish fort on Matanzas Bay

Castillio de San Marcos, the old Spanish fort                               on Matanzas Bay


 


Wikipedia Article


The Smithsonian Institution Archives


The St. Augustine Record (St. Augustine’s hometown newspaper)


Explore Southern History.com


The Baltimore Sun


Natural History Magazine


Orlando Sentinel


Historic City News


The New York Times


Los Angeles Times


Oh, one more thing. Below you will find the book trailer for Stepping Off a Cliff. You might find it interesting to see how “The St. Augustine Monster” gets worked into the plot here in a tantalizing way.



 

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Published on July 22, 2014 20:08

Best Young Adult Ghost Stories – Authors Writers

ExplosionMDcover2YOUNG ADULT, SUPERNATURAL, PARANORMAL, TIME TRAVEL  ADVENTURES inspired by the author’s true-life experiences.


This is for real. Many years ago, after my father died, there were a lot of paranormal events that happened in my family. At the time, my wife and I didn’t believe in the paranormal but that soon changed.


In fact, Barb and I spent several years after Dad died investigating such weird occurrences. In the end, we had so much research material that we wrote a nonfiction book about it all and even did radio interview/call-in programs across the U.S. and up into Canada.


That book, An Explosion of Being: An American Family’s Journey into the Psychic, was published across the world by a division of Prentice Hall.



But more recently though, I decided to write a series of fiction books for young adults and adults young at heart using my paranormal experiences as the inspiration the wild and crazy plots of those books. As an old history teacher, I couldn’t resist creating this fictional world for young people.


Today, the title of that series is The St. Augustine Trilogy and it takes place in America’s oldest and most haunted city in the U.S., St. Augustine, Florida.


Trilogy Graphic - blogTrilogy Description


Told in his own words, this paranormal/historical series is a very personal account of fifteen-year-old Jeff Golden’s explosive coming of age in America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida.


Join Jeff and his girlfriend Carla as they experience mind-blowing events that threaten to destroy their very existence.


Lightning strike blogFollow the two teens as Lobo, the Native American shaman, tries to protect them from powerful forces beyond understanding. Be there when Jeff and Carla discover the depths of reality as well as their own powers to reshape what they find.


Two of the three books in the trilogy are available in both print and eBook formats at the moment, with the third book due for publication in 2015.


Check out the book descriptions you’ll find here and then click on the active links for each book to see the reviews on Amazon.com.


I’ve also include the book trailers for the two books already in print so you can get a real sense of the characters and the plot.


Below all that, I have included active links to some of the most interesting blog posts I’ve written on the paranormal.


Enjoy.


Sliding - blogSliding Beneath the SurfaceThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book I


Description


In America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida, teenager Jeff Golden is in trouble. Horrible dreams won’t let him sleep, and he is up to his eyeballs in terrifying, paranormal experiences.


Finally, Jeff turns to his girlfriend Carla, and Lobo, the mysterious Native American shaman, for help. But what he discovers is a lot more than he bargained for.


A ghostly presence linked to a local historic cemetery is not only threatening Jeff’s sanity but his life as well. And before he knows what’s happening, Jeff finds both himself and Carla pulled into one of the nastiest and bloody events in Florida history. It is a place from which they may never escape.


Book Trailer



Stepping blogStepping Off a CliffThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book II


Description


An otherworldly, evil and dangerous force infests America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida. Everyone living there, or visiting, is at risk in ways too horrible to imagine.


Standing between this invader and the people of St. Augustine are teenagers Jeff and Carla, the mysterious Native American shaman, Lobo, and Lyle, the homeless guy.


In their quest to save themselves and all the inhabitants of this ancient Florida city, Jeff and Carla uncover lost parts of St. Augustine history, push past the limits of space and time, and come face-to-face with what they come to realize are the true walking dead.


Book Trailer



BOOK3mediumTargeting Orion’s ChildrenThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book III – due for publication in 2015


Description


In this, the final book of The St. Augustine Trilogy, the team of Jeff Golden, Carla Rodriguez, old Lobo, the Native American shaman and Lyle, the homeless guy, gather once again to join forces.


This time, though, the two teens face a paranormal presence that defies full human understanding and becomes a threat far beyond the oldest city in America where they live.


Overwhelmed by the immense responsibility they hold in their hands, Jeff and Carla make a jaw-dropping discovery that leads them in directions they could never before have imagined.


 


Now, as promised, here are those blog postings that contain some very interesting paranormal stories:


Haunted Lighthouse in St.Augustine, Florida


Paranormal Experiences: The Skyway Bridge Disaster


St. Augustine, FL Ghost Hunt: Miss Caroline’s Guest House # 2


The Portal


Ghost Hunting on the Queen Mary


What is Mediumship?


Infinite Hummingbird Experiences


Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp


Paranormal Events in Families: The Car Horn


The Spark in the Road


Children’s Visions


The Horse and the Door


The Last Goodbye


Dreams of Past Lives? The Russian Revolution


Carl Jung on Coincidences, Synchronicity and the Paranormal


Interview with a Medium

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Published on July 22, 2014 17:57

July 21, 2014

A Real Florida Sea Monster

Octopus 3 (Morgue File)Florida sea creature hotly debated by scientific community for over 100 years. A controversy that gained international attention in multiple centuries.


I’m a Florida writer, author of The St. Augustine Trilogy, a series for young adults and adults young at heart. As the title for these three combined novels suggests, they all take place in my favorite city of St. Augustine, Florida.


As America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine was the perfect setting for these paranormal/historical books.


Stepping blogIn the development of Book II in the trilogy, Stepping Off a Cliff, I needed some sort of unusual creature as an integral part of the plot. Much to my amazement, I found that such a fascinating animal actually existed in St. Augustine’s past.



In fact, I originally used these key words, “St. Augustine Monster”, in a Google search and came up with a bunch of hits with titles saying, “The St. Augustine Monster.”


And after scanning some of that information, I found out that the St. Augustine Historical Society, where I was doing research for the trilogy, even played a part in what turned out to be one of the most sensational news stories of the late 1880s.


Of course, on my next trip to St. Augustine and its historical society, I asked for information on “The St. Augustine Monster” and was handed a thick file. What fascinating reading!


SAHS exterior

Street entrance to the St. Augustine Historical Society’s Research Library


At the end of this post, you will find some of the links I first encountered on Google for you to begin your own search for information on this subject if you should choose to do so. But in the meantime, I decided to condense my basic research as much as possible in order for you to get a quick glimpse of this intriguing event in Florida history.


1. Nov. 30, 1896

Two boys discover a huge carcass of some sort while riding their bikes on St. Augustine Beach.


One of Dr. Webb's photos of the carcass

One of Dr. Webb’s photos of the carcass


2. Dec. 1, 1896

The boys bring Dr. DeWitt Webb to view the carcass. Webb is a physician, amateur naturalist and head of the St. Augustine Historical Society and Institute of Science (Today known as the St. Augustine Historical Society).


What Webb Finds, Does and Concludes:

• The carcass is partly buried in sand and it is badly deteriorated.


• He digs it partly out.

• The surface is pale pink but in the reflection of bright sunlight it looks a whitish silver color.


Dr. Webb

Dr. Webb


• The length measures 18’ and the width 7’-10’ wide.

• Webb estimates the weight at somewhere between 4 and 7 tons.

• The carcass has a thick hide (3+ inches) – hard to cut – dulls knives & axes.

• The carcass has stumps that to Webb looks like where arms had been attached.

• Webb believes what the boys found is the remains of a giant octopus.


3. Dec. 7, 1896

• Webb gets some help and has the carcass photographed.


• Close to this date, a Mr. Wilson- digs out carcass even more and finds more “arm” stumps and one arm 23’ long.


Ocean 14. Jan. 9-15, 1897

• A storm carries the carcass south close to Crescent Beach.

• Dr. Webb finds it again. He takes 4 horses, six men & planking, moves the carcass back to St. Augustine Beach and rolls it 40’ above high tide line.

• Webb adjusts his measurement of the creature’s length from 18’ to 21’.

• The carcass becomes a tourist attraction.

• News reports from this era call the creature, “The St. Augustine Monster.”


kraken5. March 17, 1897

• The carcass is last seen on the beach.


6. Scientific Analysis, late 1896, early 1897

• Dr. Webb initially sent drawings of the carcass to Dr. Verrill of Yale.

• At first, Verrill thinks Webb’s find might be a giant squid.

• Verrill then changes his opinion and calls it a giant octopus. He even publishes his conclusion and gives Webb’s find a scientific name – Octopus Giganteous. He determines, based upon the carcass dimensions sent by Webb, that the creature’s arms might have been 100’ long, giving it a diameter of 200’.

• But once Verrill gets photos & samples of the carcass from Webb, he changes his mind yet again. This time, he says that the creature is actually the remains of a large whale – whale skin and blubber.

• There the story ends until the late twentieth century.


Octopus 1 (7. Revived Interest, 1957

• Mr. Forest Wood, Director of Marine Studios, later called Marineland, just south of St. Augustine, becomes interested in Dr. Webb’s forgotten find.

• He gathers all the information as is available about the creature and locates the old tissue specimens at the Smithsonian Institute.

• Wood begins a campaign to get scientists to analyze what he has found using modern methods of investigation. That effort takes a while.


8. Scientific Analysis, 1971

• One scientist agrees to investigate, Dr. Genarro at the University of Florida

• He studies the case, examines the photos and analyzes the specimens.

• His conclusion is that what Dr. Webb found was indeed a giant octopus.


The carcass and possibly Dr. Webb next to it

The carcass and possibly Dr. Webb next to it


9. Scientific Analysis, 1986

• Dr. Roy Mackal, University of Chicago, verifies Dr. Genarro’s findings.


10. Scientific Analysis, 1995

• A joint team of investigators from the University of Maryland and Indiana University open their own investigation (Sidney Pierce, Gerald Smith, Timothy Maugel and Eugenie Clark).

• They conclude that Dr. Verrill’s final verdict was correct. The remains found by Dr. Webb were those of a whale.


So there you have it, at least where the story rests at this point. And as promised previously, below you will find links to some excellent sources that in turn will allow you to burrow even deeper.


Enjoy.


Castillio de San Marcos, the old Spanish fort on Matanzas Bay

Castillio de San Marcos, the old Spanish fort                               on Matanzas Bay


 


Wikipedia Article


The Smithsonian Institution Archives


The St. Augustine Record (St. Augustine’s hometown newspaper)


Explore Southern History.com


The Baltimore Sun


Natural History Magazine


Orlando Sentinel


Historic City News


The New York Times


Los Angeles Times


Oh, one more thing. Below you will find the book trailer for Stepping Off a Cliff. You might find it interesting to see how “The St. Augustine Monster” gets worked into the plot here in a tantalizing way.



 

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Published on July 21, 2014 20:05

Popular Teen Ghost Stories – Authors Writers

ExplosionMDcover2YOUNG ADULT, SUPERNATURAL, PARANORMAL, TIME TRAVEL  ADVENTURES inspired by the author’s true-life experiences.


This is for real. Many years ago, after my father died, there were a lot of paranormal events that happened in my family. At the time, my wife and I didn’t believe in the paranormal but that soon changed.


In fact, Barb and I spent several years after Dad died investigating such weird occurrences. In the end, we had so much research material that we wrote a nonfiction book about it all and even did radio interview/call-in programs across the U.S. and up into Canada.


That book, An Explosion of Being: An American Family’s Journey into the Psychic, was published across the world by a division of Prentice Hall.



But more recently though, I decided to write a series of fiction books for young adults and adults young at heart using my paranormal experiences as the inspiration the wild and crazy plots of those books. As an old history teacher, I couldn’t resist creating this fictional world for young people.


Today, the title of that series is The St. Augustine Trilogy and it takes place in America’s oldest and most haunted city in the U.S., St. Augustine, Florida.


Trilogy Graphic - blogTrilogy Description


Told in his own words, this paranormal/historical series is a very personal account of fifteen-year-old Jeff Golden’s explosive coming of age in America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida.


Join Jeff and his girlfriend Carla as they experience mind-blowing events that threaten to destroy their very existence.


Lightning strike blogFollow the two teens as Lobo, the Native American shaman, tries to protect them from powerful forces beyond understanding. Be there when Jeff and Carla discover the depths of reality as well as their own powers to reshape what they find.


Two of the three books in the trilogy are available in both print and eBook formats at the moment, with the third book due for publication in 2015.


Check out the book descriptions you’ll find here and then click on the active links for each book to see the reviews on Amazon.com.


I’ve also include the book trailers for the two books already in print so you can get a real sense of the characters and the plot.


Below all that, I have included active links to some of the most interesting blog posts I’ve written on the paranormal.


Enjoy.


Sliding - blogSliding Beneath the SurfaceThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book I


Description


In America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida, teenager Jeff Golden is in trouble. Horrible dreams won’t let him sleep, and he is up to his eyeballs in terrifying, paranormal experiences.


Finally, Jeff turns to his girlfriend Carla, and Lobo, the mysterious Native American shaman, for help. But what he discovers is a lot more than he bargained for.


A ghostly presence linked to a local historic cemetery is not only threatening Jeff’s sanity but his life as well. And before he knows what’s happening, Jeff finds both himself and Carla pulled into one of the nastiest and bloody events in Florida history. It is a place from which they may never escape.


Book Trailer



Stepping blogStepping Off a CliffThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book II


Description


An otherworldly, evil and dangerous force infests America’s oldest and most haunted city, St. Augustine, Florida. Everyone living there, or visiting, is at risk in ways too horrible to imagine.


Standing between this invader and the people of St. Augustine are teenagers Jeff and Carla, the mysterious Native American shaman, Lobo, and Lyle, the homeless guy.


In their quest to save themselves and all the inhabitants of this ancient Florida city, Jeff and Carla uncover lost parts of St. Augustine history, push past the limits of space and time, and come face-to-face with what they come to realize are the true walking dead.


Book Trailer



BOOK3mediumTargeting Orion’s ChildrenThe St. Augustine Trilogy, Book III – due for publication in 2015


Description


In this, the final book of The St. Augustine Trilogy, the team of Jeff Golden, Carla Rodriguez, old Lobo, the Native American shaman and Lyle, the homeless guy, gather once again to join forces.


This time, though, the two teens face a paranormal presence that defies full human understanding and becomes a threat far beyond the oldest city in America where they live.


Overwhelmed by the immense responsibility they hold in their hands, Jeff and Carla make a jaw-dropping discovery that leads them in directions they could never before have imagined.


 


Now, as promised, here are those blog postings that contain some very interesting paranormal stories:


Haunted Lighthouse in St.Augustine, Florida


Paranormal Experiences: The Skyway Bridge Disaster


St. Augustine, FL Ghost Hunt: Miss Caroline’s Guest House # 2


The Portal


Ghost Hunting on the Queen Mary


What is Mediumship?


Infinite Hummingbird Experiences


Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp


Paranormal Events in Families: The Car Horn


The Spark in the Road


Children’s Visions


The Horse and the Door


The Last Goodbye


Dreams of Past Lives? The Russian Revolution


Carl Jung on Coincidences, Synchronicity and the Paranormal


Interview with a Medium

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Published on July 21, 2014 17:54