I'm in the same boat, "out of sight out of mind." I think if you don't f*ck with this dark sh*t "It" leaves you alone. Nonetheless, it's all quite strange and fascinating.
In the preface to
The Screwtape Letters, C.S. Lewis said to neither ignore nor over-emphasize the influence of demons, but in the West it's been made such a taboo subject that most people think it's best to leave it alone or that merely innocence is enough protection.
C.S. Lewis said:
There are two equal and opposite errors into which our race can fall about the devils. One is to disbelieve in their existence. The other is to believe, and to feel an excessive and unhealthy interest in them. They themselves are equally pleased by both error, and hail a materialist or a magician with the same delight.
There are a few priests in America, however, who are exorcists, almost all of them Roman Catholics, who have given interviews and talks on youtube that describe aspects of demonology clearly and calmly, such as Fr. Vincent Lampert and Fr. Chad Ripperger, both of whom have published books; Fr. Ripperger wrote a very large reference book called
Dominion. If a person has a reason to understand it better, it's possible to learn from current and credible sources. Other good sources include
traditional accounts on the Lives of the Saints.
There is a battle raging between good and evil and it is a shame that more people "in the know" aren't spilling the beans and telling us all they know. We need more heroes who aren't afraid of losing everything in pursuit of The Truth.
In 2021, Australian singer
Altiyan Childs made a five hour video explaining that he'd been in a near-fatal car crash and was grateful to Jesus Christ for his survival, which led to him coming out as a former Freemason. The video is a nearly endless montage of clips and stills of entertainers making Freemasonic gestures in order to demonstrate that they're all "in the club", which he says is just a front for Satanism.
I can think of three reasons why more people don't do this, whether posthumously or not.
(1) Credibility. The modern Western world is materialist and atheist. Many Christians think the devil is just a symbol and there is no clear good and evil. To say otherwise is to lose credibility in most circles.
(2) They would implicate themselves. People are vain and they don't want to be remembered for something bad.
(3) They're terrified. Many non-famous people have come forward and described their lives in Satanic cults and families in ways that convey how terrified they are of retribution against them or their loved ones. Not all of these stories are credible, but there are a lot of them with varying levels of corroboration. One reason they're so scared is that they believe it's difficult to escape the influence and power of these groups and there's a lot of evidence to support the basis for such a fear, including countless stories of extreme surveillance harassment, suspicious deaths of corporate whistle blowers, etc.
(4) A posthumous account would be easily discredited without a person to stand behind it. And I think that if you were brave enough to arrange some kind of posthumous spilling of the beans, then you would be unable to remain silent while still alive, and the reverse is also true.