Am I Crazy? Or Is This a Cover-Up?
Season 7 of The Activity Continues opens with a question that feels familiar, frustrating, and uncomfortably relevant: am I crazy… or is someone lying?
This week’s episode revisits The Dead Files episode Am I Crazy? (Season 1, Episode 6), originally airing in 2011. It’s an early case in the series, before the format fully solidified and before skepticism gave way to patterns. Watching it now, with years of hindsight and countless similar cases behind us, something becomes very clear.
This isn’t just a ghost story.
It’s a story about who gets believed.
A Woman, a House, and a Question She Can’t Shake
In Great Falls, Montana, homeowner Kelly begins experiencing vivid dreams, unexplained sensations, and an overwhelming sense that she’s being guided by something unseen. She believes the spirit contacting her is Valeria Gibson, a woman tied to the property’s history who has been almost entirely erased from the official record.
What’s Missing Matters
As Steve DiSchiavi investigates the property’s history, the absences begin to stand out. Blueprints are missing. Records don’t line up. Details that should be easy to confirm simply aren’t there.
When documentation disappears, it raises an important question: is the lack of evidence proof that nothing happened—or proof that something was hidden?
Meanwhile, Amy Allan independently describes scenes, emotions, and events that align disturbingly well with Kelly’s experiences. Neither woman has access to the other’s information. And yet, the story they tell is the same.
The Pattern We’ve Seen Before
Valeria Gibson’s official story is one that history has used many times before. She was described as unstable. Emotional. Hysterical. Her death was framed in a way that required no further questions, no deeper digging, no accountability.
But when women are dismissed as unreliable narrators of their own lives, the truth has a way of resurfacing elsewhere.
In this case, it comes through dreams. Through intuition. Through a medium who has no reason to invent details. And through a homeowner who isn’t asking to be believed blindly—only to be taken seriously.
Three women.
Different centuries.
The same story.
She’s Not Crazy. She’s Just Not Being Believed.
Rewatching Am I Crazy? now, the haunting itself feels almost secondary. The real unease comes from recognizing a pattern that extends far beyond this one house or this one case.
When women tell the truth and that truth disrupts a comfortable narrative, history often labels them unstable and moves on.
This episode doesn’t offer tidy conclusions. There’s no neat resolution, no definitive answer that wraps everything up. And that may be the most honest outcome of all.
So… grab your Nespresso, settle in, and join us where… The Activity Continues.