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NEVER GETTING OUT: PORT ARTHUR
I should start with the location. Anyone who has ever been
to Tasmania will know of the reputation of Port Arthur. The
old penal settlement was the dumping ground for the worst
prisoners and, it seems, the worst guards as well. All in
all, the place has a history of violence and misery which
is transmitted into the modern day as a distinct air of
unease around the whole site. Today it is a Tasmanian
tourist mecca, notably famous for its ruined buildings, and
the ghost tour. I should also mention that from a young age
it was clear that I had inherited the family 'gift' that I
explain as a kind of heightened locational intuition. I was
accustomed to images and feelings bombarding me from
certain places, and was equipped to deal with them. Or so I
thought.
As a teenager, I went on a school trip to Tasmania,
including the ubiquitous trip to Port Arthur. The group
spent a few nocturnal hours on the Ghost Tour, which,
although wonderfully atmospheric, wasn't all that
terrifying. The following day, however, we returned to
explore the old buildings, and absorb some of the history
of the site. A friend and I were poking around some of the
old outbuildings - not included on any real tour of the
place, and not terribly interesting - when I began to feel
the familiar tingle of what I can only describe as intense
atmosphere. I felt watched, but I refused to feel
uncomfortable, and followed my friend into one of the old
half standing cell blocks. As soon as I entered the first
cell, I was overcome with an absolute despair, and was half
convinced that I would never get out of the building. Then
it became increasingly difficult to breathe - I felt as
though someone was holding my throat and not allowing me to
move. I must have made some sound, because my friend came
around the corner into the cell with me. Suddenly I could
breathe a bit easier, but the feeling of being unable to
leave the building was still there. My friend refused to
believe that anything had happened, but she was worried
when she had to show me where the exit was. I was literally
lost.
Later, with all sensations gone and me feeling a bit
more at ease, I was stopped by a teacher who was concerned
about how I got those marks on my neck. Although I didn't
have the presence of mind to take a photo, the marks looked
bruise like, and were spaced like finger tips... Nothing
will persuade me to visit Port Arthur again!
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