It sounds like a quirky local custom. It isn't.
A recent case documented by True Horror Feed tells the story of a family in Uttar Pradesh who encountered something a paranormal investigator still can't fully explain.
A young woman began showing signs of severe psychological distress — episodes she couldn't control, and behavior that left her family desperate for answers. When conventional options didn't help, the family turned to a dargah (a shrine built over a saint's grave) known locally for spiritual healing.
What the resident healer told them was oddly specific: an exact date, months earlier, when the girl had unknowingly disturbed a jinn's resting place — according to Islamic folklore, an unseen being that exists parallel to our world.
The story doesn't end there. Weeks later, her sister experienced something similar — this time triggered by a simple phrase spoken on the way out of the shrine: "chalo chalte hain" ("let's go").
The case draws comparisons to the well-documented Annelise Michel case from 1970s Germany — the basis for The Exorcism of Emily Rose — where audio recordings captured during dozens of documented sessions became evidence in a criminal trial.
Whether you see this as folklore, psychology, or something unexplained, one thing stands out: a community felt strongly enough about this pattern to put a permanent warning sign at their village entrance.
Would you take that sign seriously — or say "let's go" anyway?
📖 Full story: https://www.truehorrorfeed.com/2026/06/jinn-possession-case-from-up-that.html
(Note: This story is shared for cultural and folklore interest. It references sensitive mental health themes — if you or someone you know is struggling, please reach out to a mental health professional.)
#folklore #paranormal #indianculture #mythology #unexplainedmysteries