Derms of lone horse are kind of on their own. They're working for darkness. They can be aggressive at times. But their purpose is not to constantly create a large amount of harm—although they have the potential to do so.
Derms of lone horse take unpredictable actions. One action of derms of lone horse is to inhabit houses and even furniture, mimicking ghosts. People might think a house is haunted, or think a ghost is traveling with a piece of furniture, when it's really a derm of lone horse.
A derm of lone horse is also similar to a derm of push-pull. They don't always perform the exact same stunts, although very similar. This is the demon that women especially have experienced as taking forceful actions like covers getting pulled off of the bed or legs getting tugged or the feeling of getting pushed down stairs.
Derms of lone horse are some of the demons constantly mistaken for ghosts by paranormal professionals. People think these are ghost hauntings—they think ghosts are doing these things. Really, these are rogue derms. When a chair moves violently across the floor or a book gets thrown off a shelf across the room—in most situations, what's causing it is this rogue, lone horse variety of demon. They can travel with old furniture. They also tend to inhabit old prisons and old hospitals and even old institutions like prestigious schools, lurking in the basement.
Derms of lone horse are not governed by fallen angels. They haven't been recruited. They're also not sitting on the fence like the souls of hopelessness.
Find out more in Angels, Demons & Spiritual Tools by Anthony William.
This item posted: 05-May-2025
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