UK Paranormal Events.

Wednesday 17 December 2014

Engineer 'talks' to his dead teenage daughter".

'Hi Daddy, I love you' - Engineer 'talks' to his dead teenage daughter after developing paranormal detection devices

A grief-stricken electrical engineer believes he has found a way to communicate with his dead daughter eight years after her death.

Using his expertise to design and build a series of electromagnetic detection devices, Gary Galka claims to have even recorded his eldest daughter Melissa saying, 'Hi Daddy, I love you.'

Gary Galka, Melissa Galka, Connecticut, Mel-Meter, Ghost Adevntures, Travel Channel, Ghost Hunters, SYFY, Paranormal, Ghost, Spirit, Haunted.

Devastated by his girl's death in a car accident on her way home in 2004 at the age of 17, Gary and his family claim they started to experience unexplained phenomena at their Connecticut home days after the fatal accident, according to the Hartford Courant.

'She started doing things like ringing the doorbell, changing TV channels, turning lights on and off,' said Gary who runs D.A.S. Distribution Inc. in East Granby and lives with his wife Cindy and two other daughters, Jennifer and Heather.

'There were situations when my wife would start to make lunch with Heather and Jennifer and all of sudden they'd feel someone come into the room,' Gary told his local Patch.

'I've been lying in bed and felt someone come down on my side of the bed and felt a weight on my chest, like someone's head.

Gary Galka, Melissa Galka, Connecticut, Mel-Meter, Ghost Adevntures, Travel Channel, Ghost Hunters, SYFY, Paranormal, Ghost, Spirit, Haunted.
'It evolved into things like feeling a tap on the shoulder, someone calling out our names and it felt like someone was kissing our foreheads.'

Convinced these were after-death communications (ADC's), Gary set about creating specific devices so that he could talk with his eldest girl.

Using his knowledge of electromagnetic sensors systems, Gary created the Mel-Meter 8704, named after his daughter, the year she was born and the year that Gary believes she passed into the spirit realm.

Developing additional devices, such as a 'Spirit Box' , Gary has recorded his daughter saying, 'Hi Daddy, I love You.'

The Galka family insist that these experiences are real and that the instruments that electrical genius Gary has created prove it.

The entire family say that they have come into contact with Melissa, even seeing her appear inside their home.

'I've never seen Melissa,' said Gary.

'But my younger daughter Heather has seen her three times.'

Indeed, Gary's ghost detection equipment has found a niche market and the devices which are priced between $79 and $350 have become successful.

'Nobody catered to these people before,' said Gary of weekend ghost hobbyists and even television shows such as Ghost Adevntures on the Travel Channel and Ghost Hunters on Syfy.

'We have all different Mel Meters to do research.'

'I've created over 30 different products for paranomal research. No one was making products for these people.'

Gary Galka, Melissa Galka, Connecticut, Mel-Meter, Ghost Adevntures, Travel Channel, Ghost Hunters, SYFY, Paranormal, Ghost, Spirit, Haunted.
Adamant that he and his family are communicating with Melissa, the whole experience has been cathartic for the Galka's.

'It has brought us so much comfort, love ones want to let you know that you are safe and that you are OK,' said Gary.

'That's really important to them. Through ADC's you begin to heal. We began to heal.

'All Melissa cared about was to help her parents in time to learn to live life again.

'If you can't do that, you're going to be in a deep, dark place for the rest of your life.'

Compelled by his tragic experience, Gary wants his products to be used to help other families going through the grieving process.

'I held her hand and told her to hold on. And that everything would be OK,' explained Gary about how he arrived on the scene of his daughters accident before she went into a coma and later died in hospital.

'I had my hand on her heart and I felt it stop.'

Raised a Catholic, Gary admits he believes in the afterlife and donates one-third of the profits from the sale of his paranormal detectors to bereavement groups.

Addressing anyone who is skeptical about his families experiences, Gary hopes that everyone can keep an open mind.

'I feel compelled to help other bereaved parents, to show these parents that they can live beyond the grief and the be comforted knowing their child is in a good place, to show them they can have hope.'

Article > The Daily Mail

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