The scary thread

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StarCecil

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Feb 28, 2010
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I have a few stories, true stories, though I don't think they're all too special.

So, shortly after my parents divorced, my dad bought this old house in the "white ghetto" part of town. It was sort of rundown but it was pretty big; two bedrooms, basement and an attic-slash-second floor with a half bathroom. Anyways, he used to tell me and my little brother that just after he bought the place he and his new girlfriend threw a housewarming sort of party.

Well, a few neighbors show up, and one says his grandparents had lived there and had, in fact, passed away in there. My dad's girlfriend was native American and her sister really believed in that sort of spiritual Indian sort of stuff. He didn't make much of it, but she insisted that there were spirits there. Anyways, my dad says that at the time he would experience strange things. For instance, he said that if you were in another room - like the bedroom or in the shower - you could hear the phone ring. But by the time you got out to go answer it, there was no ring. He had an answering machine, too, and there was no message nor any missed call. He said it also only happened when you were just out of reach of the phone; not in the kitchen that had an open doorway nor in the living room where the phone was located.

He was also a cheap type of guy and would use the ceiling fans to get out of using the air conditioner. Even when the temperature reached triple digits outside. I hated that. Anyhow, he told me that sometimes the chains on the bedroom ceiling fan would swing up to tap the fan itself. This was unusual because even when the fan was moving as fast as it could the chains would only sway lightly and were weighted down by big glass beads.

Recently, he told me that his bed would also shake at times, very noticeably. It all came to a head one night when his bed shaking much more violently than usual and he slammed his fist down commanding whatever was causing it to stop. And not a single problem has been had since.

I never believed him fully, because he was the kind of guy that would tease us and tell us tall tales just to see if he could get us going. But, he insists on this tale even a decade after and there was one time - just one time, I stress - when my brother and I were laying in bed, having to share one in the second bedroom. It was very late and I was having trouble getting to sleep. I heard noises, though I don't remember how to describe them now. I remember thinking they were outside, across the alley in the neighbor's yard. And then I heard what I describe now as a woman humming.

I don't necessarily believe in ghosts and I don't necessarily think that what happened was paranormal, but my dad insists it was and I've always wondered.

Now, after my parents split we stayed with our mom. We moved houses a few times until we came to stay at a small house just south of the barrio. It was an alright neighborhood, not especially bad, but we had a corner house so we got to hear a lot of noise from skateboarding kids to cars popping the curb. Now, I have to stress I only personally experienced on incident, though my mom insists upon the rest.

She says that her bed used to sway at night, and that someone would whisper her name in he rear. There was a lamp we had that always flickered off and on with no pattern. Sometimes you couldn't get it to light for anything, other times it was perfectly fine. I chalked it up to a shitty outlet. She also claims that she once heard a noise in the living room like a stack of papers falling to the floor.

Well, the one incident I can say for sure I experienced happened when I was a young kid. I have a real foggy memory about my childhood sometimes, though I can vaguely recall t hings that are mentioned to me. This is something that I had never paid much attention to at the time, though now it really unnerves me.

My brother and I shared the master bedroom, since the two of us needed the space, while my mom had the other bedroom. The walls were that white not-paper with no coloring besides the various dings and marks a child's wall would be expected to get. Well, we left for the mall one afternoon and came back late in the day. We went to our room. I don't recall if we called for our mom but at some point she came in. On the walls, at about chest height to me then, were these pink little splotches. They were about the same size as a child's thumb and I still sort of think of them as thumbprints. They weren't paint; more like dye. They were thin enough that you could see the wall beneath them and were all spaced at roughly even intervals, maybe six inches apart.

My mom was livid, asking us if we did it, if it had been there, if we knew about it. I was a kid and I just thought that she was angry, thinking that we had marked up the wall. She was the kind of person that would flip out if we marred the house in any way. Well, I figure now she was actually scared and could only associate it with whatever weird things she had seen. To this day she still thinks it was some sort of spirit. I would really like to know what had done it.
 

JRCB

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Jan 11, 2009
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David_G said:
Have I ever mentioned how much I love you for posting all this stuff?

torno said:
Mr.Mattress said:
vaderaider said:
PurpleSky said:
S.R.S. said:
Go to ED and search creepy pasta.

You ... BASTARD!Almost gave me a heart atack!
Can you tell me what it is in a private message please, Judging from other peoples comments I'm way to scared to go on it.
I second this. I am too much of a pansy to look at it myself. Someone PM me what it looks like.
And me, pretty please.
I believe that it's a gif image of a story, and a face pops out as you read it. Don't worry, the link is dead.
 

Daffy F

New member
Apr 17, 2009
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torno said:
Mr.Mattress said:
vaderaider said:
PurpleSky said:
S.R.S. said:
Go to ED and search creepy pasta.

You ... BASTARD!Almost gave me a heart atack!
Can you tell me what it is in a private message please, Judging from other peoples comments I'm way to scared to go on it.
I second this. I am too much of a pansy to look at it myself. Someone PM me what it looks like.
And me, pretty please.
It's a jump-thing. It's a picture of a 4chan thread, and then as you read it a scary face jumps out at you. Typical stuff :)
 

Giftfromme

New member
Nov 3, 2011
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Edible Avatar said:
The music used in lavender town for the original red/blue pokemon games used bineural beats to convey a sense of paranoia and fear, which has lead to several stories of children committing suicide after playing in the area. Here, wear headphones (need them for bineural beats) and listen to this:



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binaural_beats

Edit: Keeping the thread alive, DONT YOU DIE ON ME!!!!
That music made me commit suicide too. Powerful stuff
 

David_G

New member
Aug 25, 2009
1,133
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JRCB said:
David_G said:
Have I ever mentioned how much I love you for posting all this stuff?
Aww, why thank you. I do my best.

[http://img15.imageshack.us/i/1330541862219.png/]
[http://img26.imageshack.us/i/1330542683835.jpg/]
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[http://img718.imageshack.us/i/1330539928206.jpg/]
[http://img10.imageshack.us/i/1330540209327.png/]
 

RedDeadFred

Illusions, Michael!
May 13, 2009
4,896
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David_G said:
He was the sweetest child in the world, there was no doubt about it. The moment he was born, people gathered around the nursery, pointing at his sleeping form and crooning. What gorgeous hair! What beautiful lips! What adorable chubby cheeks! Fathers ignored their own newborn children in favor of that tiny, perfect babe. Mothers toddled to the glass and pressed tired faces against it, crying for their poor fortune. How much better life would be if that was their child! The nurse that delivered him was amazed when she first held him in her arms. His skin was creamy and white, not that mottled pink every other baby sported. At first she thought he was dead, his eyes shut and his dark brown curls matted against his skull. As soon as she held him, however, she knew he was just fine. He opened his eyes and looked at her with all of the intelligence of an adult, breathing calmly and wrapping his tiny infant fingers around a loose strand of her thin blonde hair. He never once cried, and his mother worried from her bed, sitting up and crying out at the nurse that so lovingly cradled her child. ?My baby, what?s wrong with him,? her voice was weak and her eyes fluttered as she exhaustedly fumbled at the bedsheets she was swaddled in. The nurse glared at her over this perfect babe?s head and snapped at the woman. There was nothing wrong with this child, and there never would be. Reluctantly, the nurse snipped the child?s umbilical cord and set him gently in the nursery, lovingly kissing his head and promising that she would come back for him. Late that night, the nurse quietly tiptoed back into the mother?s room, a hospital-issued pillow clutched calmly in her hands. She smothered the mother silently and cleanly, with no one the wiser. The child would be hers no matter what she had to do for it. She would kill a thousand women to get her hands on that lovely little boy. Swiftly she crept back into the nursery, bending over the tiny crib that held her angel. Crooning, she told the baby boy stories of how she would love him as he grew, and how well taken care of he would be. The nurse didn?t even hear the man sliding into the nursery behind her, a scalpel held firmly in his left hand. She didn?t even feel the cold steel slide delicately around her slender throat, didn?t feel the two sides of her skin part cleanly when so gently coaxed by the clean blade, didn?t feel the slick gush of blood out of her throat as she happily died, her fingertips gently caressing the perfect child?s gorgeous face even in the throes of death. The man who had so proficiently murdered the nurse stepped over her dying body, a look of absolute adoration plastered on his face. Without a word he picked the child up into his arms and stole out of the hospital. Behind him, every nurse and doctor in the maternity ward went insane looking for him. It was a serene summers night outside, warm enough for the man to carry the child back to his apartment, leaving his car and his very pregnant wife back at the hospital he had so deftly escaped from. When he arrived back at his apartment, he did not sleep. Instead he sat the tiny beautiful boy on his bed and watched him. For fourteen days he watched the child, only moving to feed it and bathe it and give it all of the care it needed and more. The babe was the center of his universe. Soon, his wife came home, with a mouthful of angry words to toss at her neglectful husband and a tiny babe of her own to care for. ?You left me alone at a hospital, to have a baby all on my own? Not a word from you. I thought you were dead, Adam!? She threw her purse ferociously at her husband, who had yet to even look at her. The baby in the stroller she had been so lovingly attentive to before opening the door was left back at the entrance to the apartment, the child inside it woken by its mothers piercing shrieks. When the mother walked up to kick the man she so suddenly and violently despised, she laid eyes on the most perfect child she had ever seen. It was a tiny, glowing white child with huge black eyes and the most flawless dark curls on the face of the earth. Without hesitation she leapt towards her weakened, starved husband and choked the last bit of life out of him, desperate to lay her lips against the child, watching as his face turned increasingly blue and frantic the tighter she pulled her longing fingers around his neck. Moments later she was on the bed, wrapped as tightly around the darling babe as she could be without harming it. She drank in its warmth, ignoring the increasingly distressed cries of her own child. Soon, irritated beyond belief by her own, incredibly flawed child?s cries for affection she took her aggressions out on it. Leaping up from the bed as quickly as she could ? not wanting to be away from the vision of beauty sleeping serenely on her bed for too long? she picked her child up with one hand, slamming it fiercely against the wall of the apartment until its head was a mashed mess of blood and bone and brain bubbling out, dirtying her hands. The police came knocking on the apartment door not much longer. Terrified by the vicious noise in the apartment beside them, the family next door had dialed 911, reporting domestic abuse. Cautiously, hands on the guns that rested at their hips, the two police entered the apartment. Upon entering, their noses were assaulted by several awful smells. Rot, death, and the smell of someone who had been sitting in their own filth for two weeks wafted through the air of the stuffy apartment. It didn?t take long for the officers to see the destruction that had occurred in this place, the gaunt dead husband dragged halfheartedly into the hallway, his hair matted with blood. The younger officer swayed on his feet, threatening to faint. ?Listen, Trudeau, sir, I have a pregnant wife at home. I can?t do this, I can?t get killed in here,? his plea was quiet and despondent, but the elder officer simply waved the man forward. They could hear cooing in the bedroom down the hall and, stepping over the dead man that lay at the entrance, entered the open door to the room. Immediately upon entering, the elder officer bent down and vomited, the scene that met his eyes too much for even someone as experienced as him to handle. Blood was smeared on the wall where a dead baby ? lying there, at the floor, its face a smashed mess ? had been mercilessly beaten. On the bed was a chubby woman, obviously the woman who had both born and killed the child that lay at the officer?s feet, one of her hands black with the blood of her murdered baby. Cradled in her arms was a naked, pressed firmly against a firm, swollen breast, was a rotten baby, its skin blue and its mouth puffed up with death. She was whispering to it sweetly, the most contented look on her face. The younger officer, however, was calm. It was clear what he must do. That woman held an angel, and he wanted it. Such a perfect child had never existed. The decision was easy to make. Pulling out his gun, quickly, he shot the woman once in her head, delighting in the explosion of gorgeous crimson that fanned out behind her. The younger man?s companion turned, a look of confusion on his face. Immediately, he was met with two bullets to the left eye. Smiling, the younger man watched his friend slide back against the already bloodied wall behind him. That baby would be his, and no one would stop him from taking it now.
Sunday
I?m not sure why I?m writing this down on paper and not on my computer. I guess I?ve just noticed some odd things. It?s not that I don?t trust the computer? I just? need to organize my thoughts. I need to get down all the details somewhere objective, somewhere I know that what I write can?t be deleted or? changed? not that that?s happened. It?s just? everything blurs together here, and the fog of memory lends a strange cast to things?
I?m starting to feel cramped in this small apartment. Maybe that?s the problem. I just had to go and choose the cheapest apartment, the only one in the basement. The lack of windows down here makes day and night seem to slip by seamlessly. I haven?t been out in a few days because I?ve been working on this programming project so intensively. I suppose I just wanted to get it done. Hours of sitting and staring at a monitor can make anyone feel strange, I know, but I don?t think that?s it.
I?m not sure when I first started to feel like something was odd. I can?t even define what it is. Maybe I just haven?t talked to anyone in awhile. That?s the first thing that crept up on me. Everyone I normally talk to online while I program has been idle, or they?ve simply not logged on at all. My instant messages go unanswered. The last e-mail I got from anybody was a friend saying he?d talk to me when he got back from the store, and that was yesterday. I?d call with my cell phone, but reception?s terrible down here. Yeah, that?s it. I just need to call someone. I?m going to go outside.

?
Well, that didn?t work so well. As the tingle of fear fades, I?m feeling a little ridiculous for being scared at all. I looked in the mirror before I went out, but I didn?t shave the two-day stubble I?ve grown. I figured I was just going out for a quick cell phone call. I did change my shirt, though, because it was lunchtime, and I guessed that I?d run into at least one person I knew. That didn?t end up happening. I wish it did.
When I went out, I opened the door to my small apartment slowly. A small feeling of apprehension had somehow already lodged itself in me, for some indefinable reason. I chalked it up to having not spoken to anyone but myself for a day or two. I peered down the dingy grey hallway, made dingier by the fact that it was a basement hallway. On one end, a large metal door led to the building?s furnace room. It was locked, of course. Two dreary soda machines stood by it; I bought a soda from one the first day I moved in, but it had a two year old expiration date. I?m fairly sure nobody knows those machines are even down here, or my cheap landlady just doesn?t care to get them restocked.
I closed my door softly, and walked the other direction, taking care not to make a sound. I have no idea why I chose to do that, but it was fun giving in to the strange impulse not to break the droning hum of the soda machines, at least for the moment. I got to the stairwell, and took the stairs up to the building?s front door. I looked through the heavy door?s small square window, and received quite the shock: it was definitely not lunchtime. City-gloom hung over the dark street outside, and the traffic lights at the intersection in the distance blinked yellow. Dim clouds, purple and black from the glow of the city, hung overhead. Nothing moved, save the few sidewalk trees that shifted in the wind. I remember shivering, though I wasn?t cold. Maybe it was the wind outside. I could vaguely hear it through the heavy metal door, and I knew it was that unique kind of late-night wind, the kind that was constant, cold, and quiet, save for the rhythmic music it made as it passed through countless unseen tree leaves.
I decided not to go outside.
Instead, I lifted my cell phone to the door?s little window, and checked the signal meter. The bars filled up the meter, and I smiled. Time to hear someone else?s voice, I remember thinking, relieved. It was such a strange thing, to be afraid of nothing. I shook my head, laughing at myself silently. I hit speed-dial for my best friend Amy?s number, and held the phone up to my ear. It rang once? but then it stopped. Nothing happened. I listened to silence for a good twenty seconds, then hung up. I frowned, and looked at the signal meter again ? still full. I went to dial her number again, but then my phone rang in my hand, startling me. I put it up to my ear.
?Hello?? I asked, immediately fighting down a small shock at hearing the first spoken voice in days, even if it was my own. I had gotten used to the droning hum of the building?s inner workings, my computer, and the soda machines in the hallway. There was no response to my greeting at first, but then, finally, a voice came.
?Hey,? said a clear male voice, obviously of college age, like me. ?Who?s this??
?John,? I replied, confused.
?Oh, sorry, wrong number,? he replied, then hung up.
I lowered the phone slowly and leaned against the thick brick wall of the stairwell. That was strange. I looked at my received calls list, but the number was unfamiliar. Before I could think on it further, the phone rang loudly, shocking me yet again. This time, I looked at the caller before I answered. It was another unfamiliar number. This time, I held the phone up to my ear, but said nothing. I heard nothing but the general background noise of a phone. Then, a familiar voice broke my tension.
?John?? was the single word, in Amy?s voice.
I breathed a sigh of relief.
?Hey, it?s you,? I replied.
?Who else would it be?? she responded. ?Oh, the number. I?m at a party on Seventh Street, and my phone died just as you called me. This is someone else?s phone, obviously.?
?Oh, ok,? I said.
?Where are you?? she asked.
My eyes glanced over the drab white-washed cylinder block walls and the heavy metal door with its small window.
?At my building,? I sighed. ?Just feeling cooped up. I didn?t realize it was so late.?
?You should come here,? she said, laughing.
?Nah, I don?t feel like looking for some strange place by myself in the middle of the night,? I said, looking out the window at the silent windy street that secretly scared me just a tiny bit. ?I think I?m just going to keep working or go to bed.?
?Nonsense!? she replied. ?I can come get you! Your building is close to Seventh Street, right??
?How drunk are you?? I asked lightheartedly. ?You know where I live.?
?Oh, of course,? she said abruptly. ?I guess I can?t get there by walking, huh??
?You could if you wanted to waste half an hour,? I told her.
?Right,? she said. ?Ok, have to go, good luck with your work!?
I lowered the phone once more, looking at the numbers flash as the call ended. Then, the droning silence suddenly reasserted itself in my ears. The two strange calls and the eerie street outside just drove home my aloneness in this empty stairwell. Perhaps from having seen too many scary movies, I had the sudden inexplicable idea that something could look in the door?s window and see me, some sort of horrible entity that hovered at the edge of aloneness, just waiting to creep up on unsuspecting people that strayed too far from other human beings. I knew the fear was irrational, but nobody else was around, so? I jumped down the stairs, ran down the hallway into my room, and closed the door as swiftly as I could while still staying silent. Like I said, I feel a little ridiculous for being scared of nothing, and the fear has already faded. Writing this down helps a lot ? it makes me realize that nothing is wrong. It filters out half-formed thoughts and fears and leaves only cold, hard facts. It?s late, I got a call from a wrong number, and Amy?s phone died, so she called me back from another number. Nothing strange is happening.
Still, there was something a little off about that conversation. I know it could have just been the alcohol she?d had? or was it even her that seemed off to me? Or was it? yes, that was it! I didn?t realize it until this moment, writing these things down. I knew writing things down would help. She said she was at a party, but I only heard silence in the background! Of course, that doesn?t mean anything in particular, as she could have just gone outside to make the call. No? that couldn?t be it either. I didn?t hear the wind! I need to see if the wind is still blowing!
Monday
I forgot to finish writing last night. I?m not sure what I expected to see when I ran up the stairwell and looked out the heavy metal door?s window. I?m feeling ridiculous. Last night?s fear seems hazy and unreasonable to me now. I can?t wait to go out into the sunlight. I?m going to check my email, shave, shower, and finally get out of here! Wait? I think I heard something.
?
It was thunder. That whole sunlight and fresh air thing didn?t happen. I went out into the stairwell and up the stairs, only to find disappointment. The heavy metal door?s little window showed only flowing water, as torrential rain slammed against it. Only a very dim, gloomy light filtered in through the rain, but at least I knew it was daytime, even if it was a grey, sickly, wet day. I tried looking out the window and waiting for lightning to illuminate the gloom, but the rain was too heavy and I couldn?t make out anything more than vague weird shapes moving at odd angles in the waves washing down the window. Disappointed, I turned around, but I didn?t want to go back to my room. Instead, I wandered further up the stairs, past the first floor, and the second. The stairs ended at the third floor, the highest floor in the building. I looked through the glass that ran up the outer wall of the stairwell, but it was that warped, thick kind that scatters the light, not that there was much to see through the rain to begin with.
I opened the stairwell door and wandered down the hallway. The ten or so thick wooden doors, painted blue a long time ago, were all closed. I listened as I walked, but it was the middle of the day, so I wasn?t surprised that I heard nothing but the rain outside. As I stood there in the dim hallway, listening to the rain, I had the strange fleeting impression that the doors were standing like silent granite monoliths erected by some ancient forgotten civilization for some unfathomable guardian purpose. Lightning flashed, and I could have sworn that, for just a moment, the old grainy blue wood looked just like rough stone. I laughed at myself for letting my imagination get the best of me, but then it occurred to me that the dim gloom and lightning must mean there was a window somewhere in the hallway. A vague memory surfaced, and I suddenly recalled that the third floor had an alcove and an inset window halfway down the floor?s hallway.
Excited to look out into the rain and possibly see another human being, I quickly walked over to the alcove, finding the large thin glass window. Rain washed down it, as with the front door?s window, but I could open this one. I reached a hand out to slide it open, but hesitated. I had the strangest feeling that if I opened that window, I would see something absolutely horrifying on the other side. Everything?s been so odd lately? so I came up with a plan, and I came back here to get what I needed. I don?t seriously think anything will come of it, but I?m bored, it?s raining, and I?m going stir crazy. I came back to get my webcam. The cord isn?t long enough to reach the third floor by any means, so instead I?m going to hide it between the two soda machines in the dark end of my basement hallway, run the wire along the wall and under my door, and put black duct tape over the wire to blend it in with the black plastic strip that runs along the base of the hallway?s walls. I know this is silly, but I don?t have anything better to do?
Well, nothing happened. I propped open the hallway-to-stairwell door, steeled myself, then flung the heavy front door wide open and ran like hell down the stairs to my room and slammed the door. I watched the webcam on my computer intently, seeing the hallway outside my door and most of the stairwell. I?m watching it right now, and I don?t see anything interesting. I just wish the camera?s position was different, so that I could see out the front door. Hey! Somebody?s online!
?
I got out an older, less functional webcam that I had in my closet to video chat with my friend online. I couldn?t really explain to him why I wanted to video chat, but it felt good to see another person?s face. He couldn?t talk very long, and we didn?t talk about anything meaningful, but I feel much better. My strange fear has almost passed. I would feel completely better, but there was something? odd? about our conversation. I know that I?ve said that everything has seemed odd, but? still, he was very vague in his responses. I can?t recall one specific thing that he said? no particular name, or place, or event? but he did ask for my email address to keep in touch. Wait, I just got an email.
I?m about to go out. I just got an email from Amy that asked me to meet her for dinner at ?the place we usually go to.? I do love pizza, and I?ve just been eating random food from my poorly stocked fridge for days, so I can?t wait. Again, I feel ridiculous about the odd couple of days I?ve been having. I should destroy this journal when I get back. Oh, another email.
?
Oh my god. I almost left the email and opened the door. I almost opened the door. I almost opened the door, but I read the email first! It was from a friend I hadn?t heard from in a long time, and it was sent to a huge number of emails that must have been every person he had saved in his address list. It had no subject, and it said, simply:
seen with your own eyes don?t trust them they
What the hell is that supposed to mean? The words shock me, and I keep going over and over them. Is it a desperate email sent just as? something happened? The words are obviously cut off without finishing! On any other day I would have dismissed this as spam from a computer virus or something, but the words? seen with your own eyes! I can?t help but read over this journal and think back on the last few days and realize that I have not seen another person with my own eyes or talked to another person face to face. The webcam conversation with my friend was so strange, so vague, so? eerie, now that I think about it. Was it eerie? Or is the fear clouding my memory? My mind toys with the progression of events I?ve written here, pointing out that I have not been presented with one single fact that I did not specifically give out unsuspectingly. The random ?wrong number? that got my name and the subsequent strange return call from Amy, the friend that asked for my email address? I messaged him first when I saw him online! And then I got my first email a few minutes after that conversation! Oh my god! That phone call with Amy! I said over the phone ? I said that I was within half an hour?s walk of Seventh Street! They know I?m near there! What if they?re trying to find me?! Where is everyone else? Why haven?t I seen or heard anyone else in days?
No, no, this is crazy. This is absolutely crazy. I need to calm down. This madness needs to end.
?
I don?t know what to think. I ran about my apartment furiously, holding my cell phone up to every corner to see if it got a signal through the heavy walls. Finally, in the tiny bathroom, near one ceiling corner, I got a single bar. Holding my phone there, I sent a text message to every number in my list. Not wanting to betray anything about my unfounded fears, I simply sent:
You seen anyone face to face lately?
At that point, I just wanted any reply back. I didn?t care what the reply was, or if I embarrassed myself. I tried to call someone a few times, but I couldn?t get my head up high enough, and if I brought my cell phone down even an inch, it lost signal. Then I remembered the computer, and rushed over to it, instant messaging everyone online. Most were idle or away from their computer. Nobody responded. My messages grew more frantic, and I started telling people where I was and to stop by in person for a host of barely passable reasons. I didn?t care about anything by that point. I just needed to see another person!
I also tore apart my apartment looking for something that I might have missed; some way to contact another human being without opening the door. I know it?s crazy, I know it?s unfounded, but what if? WHAT IF? I just need to be sure! I taped the phone to the ceiling in case
Tuesday
THE PHONE RANG! Exhausted from last night?s rampage, I must have fallen asleep. I woke up to the phone ringing, and ran into the bathroom, stood on the toilet, and flipped open the phone taped to the ceiling. It was Amy, and I feel so much better. She was really worried about me, and apparently had been trying to contact me since the last time I talked to her. She?s coming over now, and, yes, she knows where I am without me telling her. I feel so embarrassed. I am definitely throwing this journal away before anyone sees it. I don?t even know why I?m writing in it now. Maybe it?s just because it?s the only communication I?ve had at all since? god knows when. I look like hell, too. I looked in the mirror before I came back in here. My eyes are sunken, my stubble is thicker, and I just look generally unhealthy.
My apartment is trashed, but I?m not going to clean it up. I think I need someone else to see what I?ve been through. These past few days have NOT been normal. I am not one to imagine things. I know I have been the victim of extreme probability. I probably missed seeing another person a dozen times. I just happened to go out when it was late at night, or the middle of the day when everyone was gone. Everything?s perfectly fine, I know this now. Plus, I found something in the closet last night that has helped me tremendously: a television! I set it up just before I wrote this, and it?s on in the background. Television has always been an escape for me, and it reminds me that there?s a world beyond these dingy brick walls.
I?m glad Amy?s the only one that responded to me after last night?s frantic pestering of everyone I could contact. She?s been my best friend for years. She doesn?t know it, but I count the day that I met her among one of the few moments of true happiness in my life. I remember that warm summer day fondly. It seems a different reality from this dark, rainy, lonely place. I feel like I spent days sitting in that playground, much too old to play, just talking with her and hanging around doing nothing at all. I still feel like I can go back to that moment sometimes, and it reminds me that this damn place is not all that there is? finally, a knock on the door!
?
I thought it was odd that I couldn?t see her through the camera I hid between the two soda machines. I figured that it was bad positioning, like when I couldn?t see out the front door. I should have known. I should have known! After the knock, I yelled through the door jokingly that I had a camera between the soda machines, because I was embarrassed myself that I had taken this paranoia so far. After I did that, I saw her image walk over to the camera and look down at it. She smiled and waved.
?Hey!? she said to the camera brightly, giving it a wry look.
?It?s weird, I know,? I said into the mic attached to my computer. ?I?ve had a weird few days.?
?Must have,? she replied. ?Open the door, John.?
I hesitated. How could I be sure?
?Hey, humor me a second here,? I told her through the mic. ?Tell me one thing about us. Just prove to me you?re you.?
She gave the camera a weird look.
?Um, alright,? she said slowly, thinking. ?We met randomly at a playground when we were both way too old to be there??
I sighed deeply as reality returned and fear faded. God, I?d been so ridiculous. Of course it was Amy! That day wasn?t anywhere in the world except in my memory. I?d never even mentioned it to anyone, not out of embarrassment, but out of a strange secret nostalgia and a longing for those days to return. If there was some unknown force at work trying to trick me, as I feared, there was no way they could know about that day.
?Haha, alright, I?ll explain everything,? I told her. ?Be right there.?
I ran to my small bathroom and fixed my hair as best I could. I looked like hell, but she would understand. Snickering at my own unbelievable behavior and the mess I?d made of the place, I walked to the door. I put my hand on the doorknob and gave the mess one last look. So ridiculous, I thought. My eyes traced over the half-eaten food lying on the ground, the overflowing trash bin, and the bed I?d tipped to the side looking for? God knows what. I almost turned to the door and opened it, but my eyes fell on one last thing: the old webcam, the one I used for that eerily vacant chat with my friend.
Its silent black sphere lay haphazardly tossed to the side, its lens pointed at the table where this journal lay. An overwhelming terror took me as I realized that if something could see through that camera, it would have seen what I just wrote about that day. I asked her for any one thing about us, and she chose the only thing in the world that I thought they or it did not know? but IT DID! IT DID KNOW! IT COULD HAVE BEEN WATCHING ME THE WHOLE TIME!
I didn?t open the door. I screamed. I screamed in uncontrollable terror. I stomped on the old webcam on the floor. The door shook, and the doorknob tried to turn, but I didn?t hear Amy?s voice through the door. Was the basement door, made to keep out drafts, too thick? Or was Amy not outside? What could have been trying to get in, if not her? What the hell is out there?! I saw her on my computer through the camera outside, I heard her on the speakers through the camera outside, but was it real?! How can I know?! She?s gone now ? I screamed, and shouted for help! I piled up everything in my apartment against the front door ?
Friday
At least I think that it?s Friday. I broke everything electronic. I smashed my computer to pieces. Every single thing on there could have been accessed by network access, or worse, altered. I?m a programmer, I know. Every little piece of information I gave out since this started ? my name, my email, my location ? none of it came back from outside until I gave it out. I?ve been going over and over what I wrote. I?ve been pacing back and forth, alternating between stark terror and overpowering disbelief. Sometimes I?m absolutely certain some phantom entity is dead set on the simple goal of getting me to go outside. Back to the beginning, with the phone call from Amy, she was effectively asking me to open the door and go outside.
I keep running through it in my head. One point of view says I?ve acted like a madman, and all of this is the extreme convergence of probability ? never going outside at the right times by pure luck, never seeing another person by pure chance, getting a random nonsense email from some computer virus at just the right time. The other point of view says that extreme convergence of probability is the reason that whatever?s out there hasn?t gotten me already. I keep thinking: I never opened the window on the third floor. I never opened the front door, until that incredibly stupid stunt with the hidden camera after which I ran straight to my room and slammed the door. I haven?t opened my own solid door since I flung open the front door of the building. Whatever?s out there ? if anything?s out there ? never made an ?appearance? in the building before I opened the front door. Maybe the reason it wasn?t in the building already was that it was elsewhere getting everyone else? and then it waited, until I betrayed my existence by trying to call Amy? a call which didn?t work, until it called me and asked me my name?
Terror literally overwhelms me every time I try to fit the pieces of this nightmare together. That email ? short, cut off ? was it from someone trying to get word out? Some friendly voice desperately trying to warn me before it came? Seen with my own eyes, don?t trust them ? exactly what I?ve been so suspicious of. It could have masterful control of all things electronic, practicing its insidious deception to trick me into coming outside. Why can?t it get in? It knocked on the door ? it must have some solid presence? the door? the image of those doors in the upper hallway as guardian monoliths flashes back in my mind every time I trace this path of thoughts. If there is some phantom entity trying to get me to go outside, maybe it can?t get through doors. I keep thinking back over all the books I?ve read or movies I?ve seen, trying to generate some explanation for this. Doors have always been such intense foci of human imagination, always seen as wards or portals of special importance. Or perhaps the door is just too thick? I know that I couldn?t bash through any of the doors in this building, let alone the heavy basement ones. Aside from that, the real question is, why does it even want me? If it just wanted to kill me, it could do it any number of ways, including just waiting until I starve to death. What if it doesn?t want to kill me? What if it has some far more horrific fate in store for me? God, what can I do to escape this nightmare?!
A knock on the door?
?
I told the people on the other side of the door I need a minute to think and I?ll come out. I?m really just writing this down so I can figure out what to do. At least this time I heard their voices. My paranoia ? and yes, I recognize I?m being paranoid ? has me thinking of all sorts of ways that their voices could be faked electronically. There could be nothing but speakers outside, simulating human voices. Did it really take them three days to come talk to me? Amy is supposedly out there, along with two policemen and a psychiatrist. Maybe it took them three days to think of what to say to me ? the psychiatrist?s claim could be pretty convincing, if I decided to think this has all been a crazy misunderstanding, and not some entity trying to trick me into opening the door.
The psychiatrist had an older voice, authoritarian but still caring. I liked it. I?m desperate just to see someone with my own eyes! He said I have something called cyber-psychosis, and I?m just one of a nationwide epidemic of thousands of people having breakdowns triggered by a suggestive email that ?got through somehow.? I swear he said ?got through somehow.? I think he means spread throughout the country inexplicably, but I?m incredibly suspicious that the entity slipped up and revealed something. He said I am part of a wave of ?emergent behavior?, that a lot of other people are having the same problem with the same fears, even though we?ve never communicated.
That neatly explains the strange email about eyes that I got. I didn?t get the original triggering email. I got a descendant of it ? my friend could have broken down too, and tried to warn everyone he knew against his paranoid fears. That?s how the problem spreads, the psychiatrist claims. I could have spread it, too, with my texts and instant messages online to everybody I know. One of those people might be melting down right now, after being triggered by something I sent them, something they might interpret any way that they want, something like a text saying seen anyone face to face lately? The psychiatrist told me that he didn?t want to ?lose another one?, that people like me are intelligent, and that?s our downfall. We draw connections so well that we draw them even when they shouldn?t be there. He said it?s easy to get caught up in paranoia in our fast paced world, a constantly changing place where more and more of our interaction is simulated?
I have to give him one thing. It?s a great explanation. It neatly explains everything. It perfectly explains everything, in fact. I have every reason to shake off this nightmarish fear that some thing or consciousness or being out there wants me to open the door so it can capture me for some horrible fate worse than death. It would be foolish, after hearing that explanation, to stay in here until I starve to death just to spite the entity that might have got everyone else. It would be foolish to think that, after hearing that explanation, I might be one of the last people left alive on an empty world, hiding in my secure basement room, spiting some unthinkable deceptive entity just by refusing to be captured. It?s a perfect explanation for every single strange thing I?ve seen or heard, and I have every reason in the world to let all of my fears go, and open the door.
That?s exactly why I?m not going to.
How can I be sure?! How can I know what?s real and what?s deception? All of these damn things with their wires and their signals that originate from some unseen origin! They?re not real, I can?t be sure! Signals through a camera, faked video, deceptive phone calls, emails! Even the television, lying broken on the floor ? how can I possibly know it?s real? It?s just signals, waves, light? the door! It?s bashing on the door! It?s trying to get in! What insane mechanical contrivance could it be using to simulate the sound of men attacking the heavy wood so well?! At least I?ll finally see it with my own eyes? there?s nothing left in here for it to deceive me with, I?ve ripped apart everything else! It can?t deceive my eyes, can it? Seen with your own eyes don?t trust them they? wait? was that desperate message telling me to trust my eyes, or warning me about my eyes too?! Oh my god, what?s the difference between a camera and my eyes? They both turn light into electrical signals ? they?re the same! I can?t be deceived! I have to be sure! I have to be sure!
Date Unknown
I calmly asked for paper and a pen, day in and day out, until it finally gave them to me. Not that it matters. What am I going to do? Poke my eyes out? The bandages feel like part of me now. The pain is gone. I figure this will be one of my last chances to write legibly, as, without my sight to correct mistakes, my hands will slowly forget the motions involved. This is a sort of self-indulgence, this writing? it?s a relic of another time, because I?m certain everyone left in the world is dead? or something far worse.
I sit against the padded wall day in and day out. The entity brings me food and water. It masks itself as a kind nurse, as an unsympathetic doctor. I think it knows that my hearing has sharpened considerably now that I live in darkness. It fakes conversations in the hallways, on the off chance that I might overhear. One of the nurses talks about having a baby soon. One of the doctors lost his wife in a car accident. None of it matters, none of it is real. None of it gets to me, not like she does.
That?s the worst part, the part I almost can?t handle. The thing comes to me, masquerading as Amy. Its recreation is perfect. It sounds exactly like Amy, feels exactly like her. It even produces a reasonable facsimile of tears that it makes me feel on its lifelike cheeks. When it first dragged me here, it told me all the things I wanted to hear. It told me that she loved me, that she had always loved me, that it didn?t understand why I did this, that we could still have a life together, if only I would stop insisting that I was being deceived. It wanted me to believe? no, it needed me to believe that she was real.
I almost fell for it. I really did. I doubted myself for the longest time. In the end, though, it was all too perfect, too flawless, and too real. The false Amy used to come every day, and then every week, and finally stopped coming altogether? but I don?t think the entity will give up. I think the waiting game is just another one of its gambits. I will resist it for the rest of my life, if I have to. I don?t know what happened to the rest of the world, but I do know that this thing needs me to fall for its deceptions. If it needs that, then maybe, just maybe, I am a thorn in its agenda. Maybe Amy is still alive out there somewhere, kept alive only by my will to resist the deceiver. I hold on to that hope, rocking back and forth in my cell to pass the time. I will never give in. I will never break. I am? a hero!
====
The doctor read the paper the patient had scribbled on. It was barely readable, written in the shaky script of one who could not see. He wanted to smile at the man?s steadfast resolve, a reminder of the human will to survive, but he knew that the patient was completely delusional.
After all, a sane man would have fallen for the deception long ago.
The doctor wanted to smile. He wanted to whisper words of encouragement to the delusional man. He wanted to scream, but the nerve filaments wrapped around his head and into his eyes made him do otherwise. His body walked into the cell like a puppet, and told the patient, once more, that he was wrong, and that there was nobody trying to deceive him.
Those were both very disturbing. The second one especially. It was so well written that it could easily be published in a collection of short stories.
 

VincentX3

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Jun 30, 2009
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Needs more stories David_G
Loved that mega post you did a while back =X All those "Afraid of the dark" style stories creeped me out!
 

Ldude893

Elite Member
Apr 2, 2010
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41
Anyone heard of the SCP Foundation [http://www.scp-wiki.net/]? I found it a month ago; not every entry is scary but most of them are great reads, which isn't surprising considering that the site's founded by the Paranormal board of 4chan.
Best ones are found here [http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/top-rated-pages]. Pages ending with "-J" are joke pages.
 

Nouw

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Mar 18, 2009
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Redlin5 said:
Nouw said:
Listening to Lavender Town while listening to it Backwards...interesting.
...

My childhood. DAMN YOU SCARY THREAD!



[HEADING=2]DAAAAAAAAAAAMMMMN YOOOOOOOOU!!!![/HEADING]
Oh jesus why am I here? I should be listening to symphonic metal and anime intros not lavender town >.>. WHYYYY??? May your childhood rest in peace.
 

Ldude893

Elite Member
Apr 2, 2010
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TopazFusion said:
This has probably already been posted, but I can't be bothered looking through all those pages.

Jebus Christ, that was awesome and freaky at the same time.
 

Starik20X6

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Oct 28, 2009
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The things that scare me most aren't the stories about monsters or demons or cursed GameBoy games. For those who like their horror a little more existential, I present: "Embrace the Horror"

"It is not accurate to say that there is horror in the universe. The universe is horror."

-Dr. Werner Heisenberg, physicist

You're better off not knowing what I'm about to tell you. Once you know it, you can't unknow it and you'll spend the rest of your life wishing you could. Unless you just happen to forget it, though living your life with that kind of a faulty memory would be its own horror, would it not?

The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents.

My glimpse into the true horror of the universe, like all dread glimpses of truth, flashed out from an accidental piecing together of separated things -- in this case an old newspaper item and the shit left behind by my former roomate.

It fell upon me to examine the boxes of shit that grad student G.O. Fuckart had abandoned at my place, as he left no forwarding address. There was little of note in the shoebox of personal records, the stack of paperback books and the porn, porn and porn that littered the room. But there was one box which I found exceedingly puzzling. Not the box itself -- it was merely the empty cardboard container which once contained a Nintendo Gamecube. But what could be the meaning of the queer clay bas-relief (a sort of sculpture on a flat surface) I found inside it?




I did not know. I would have been happier if I had remained in my slumber of ignorance.

The second discovery that would forever plummet me down the horror hole came when I was cleaning out my refrigerator. In the remote reaches of the produce drawer at the bottom I found the remains of an old piece of fish, wrapped in a newspaper. I tested the fish for freshness by smelling it. I regained consciousness some forty-five minutes later.

I was about to throw the rancid meat away when I noticed the year on the newspaper: 1922. Fascinated, I unwrapped it and saw a small article about a German man named Werner Heisenberg, a scientist who had been ticketed and fined on a public nudity & disorder charge. The fine was cancelled, it said, because Heisenberg was also drunk at the time and in Germany public drunkeness actually earns the citizen a small monetary reward.

The incident piqued my interest and I investigated it further. I'm about to share what I discovered and how it relates to the clay artifact G.O. Fuckart left behind. This is your last chance to turn back. I highly recommend you do so.

Werner Heisenberg was a nuclear physicist, meaning he studied atoms and the particles inside the atoms that make up everything in the universe. He knew these very particles had been continously flying around since the universe exploded into existence a very long time ago. The scientist had, in fact, gone past studying reality and was studying inside reality, into the very building blocks of existence. It was, as he put it, "more fascinating than watching a monkey shit a grandfather clock."

Heisenberg's day of horror would come in the fall of 1922. He was performing his atomic experiments (while heavily intoxicated, as is the way among German scientists) and he noticed that it was difficult to measure exactly where the subatomic particles were going and how they were interacting with other particles, because they're so tiny that the enormous microscope he used to view the particles (called a "Mondoscope") would knock them off course when he turned the light on. It seemed like a minor problem, and he certainly didn't realize that all of reality had just come undone before his eyes. He would find out soon enough.

"Hans!" shouted Heisenberg to his young apprentice, Hans Schmeisel. "I cannot measure the movement of the subatomic particles, because when I flip the switch on the Mondoscope the machine itself throws them off their natural course!"

Schmeisel looked at the Mondoscope, then at Heisenberg, then at a printout of the results scrolling out of one of their gigantic diesel-powered computers.

The apprentice began screaming.

"What is it?" demanded Heisenberg, clutching the shrieking young man by the lapel. "You are screaming like a woman! Remember your penis!"

"But Herr Heisenberg," stuttered the assistant, tears streaming down his eyes. "Do you not see? You said you scattered the particles from their natural course when you turned on the Mondoscope! But it is not so!"

"Fool!" shouted Heisenberg, slapping the man across the jowls. "Look at the results!"

"But I have! It is true they were scattered by the Mondoscope! But the particles are also still on their natural course!"

"That's impossible, you sausage-stinking ass!"

"Do you still not see?" squealed the apprentice. "The Mondoscope is itself is made of the same particles you are observing with it! And so is this laboratory! And so is your hand. And so is your brain."

Heisenberg did not understand. Instead, he grabbed a leather strap and gave the assistant a sound beating, for it was not considered proper among physicists at the time for an apprentice to talk back to his master.

"But sir!" Squealed Hans from the floor as the leather strap lashed across his shoulders with a sound like a gunshot. "My brain is made of atoms and atoms only react to other atoms and energies present in the world! They cannot be changed! It was destined from the beginning of time that I should talk back to you just now!"

"So be it!" Screeched Heisenberg. "And so it was also destined from the beginning of time that I should thrash you for it!"


In the throes of his beating frenzy, Heisenberg had not yet realized that all of reality as humans had ever understood it had just melted away, right there in his lab. But in the long night that followed, the truth landed on him like a jackboot on a ferret. Neighbors found Heisenberg that next morning, naked, clinging to the branch of an Elm tree and screaming insults to the wind.

The tree, he ranted to the police who tried to coax him down, would always grow according to the quality of the soil and the rainfall and the air and the genetic code in the seed from which it grew.

"If you change one factor, you change the tree!" slurred Heisenberg, beery urine dribbling down his thigh. "It is as sure as flipping a switch! As it is for the tree, it is for the man in the tree!"

Heisenberg wept, his genitals vibrating with the sobs. "Don't you get it? What this tree will look like ten years from now is decided completely by forces set into motion billions of years ago. And we're made of the same stuff!"

"Well," chuckled one of the officers, "I could have that tree cut down right now! That would show the universe who's boss! We'll see what the cosmic elements have to say about that!"

"You fool! Don't you realize that the lumberjack is himself formed by the same elements as the tree? The tree grows and sprouts green, the lumberjack lumberjacks, but both do it by the same cause-and-effect domino fall. If he cuts down the tree then he was always destined to cut it down! If he changes his mind then he was always destined to change his mind!"




The officer laughed and shook his head. He had heard all that before, way back in school, fate and free will and all that. Fortunately for him, he didn't fully realize what Heisenberg was saying. The police eventually knocked Heisenberg down from the tree by jabbing him with long staffs called "pokeabstimmung."

"Don't you worry, sir," said the officer as he helped Heisenberg into the police van. "The future is what you make it! Just choose to do the right thing!"

Heisenberg let out a long laugh. "Fool! When you were a babe at your mother's crotch, you had a brain built on the genes handed down by your parents! And they got theirs from their parents, all the way back to the first life formed by an accidental cell mutation! And everything you've seen or heard in your life since was fired into your brain as electrical nerve impulses from your eyes and ears. We can measure those impulses! They are physical things! And each of those impulses, what you called 'sights' and 'sounds' threw certain chemical switches in your brain, all of which can also be observed and measured! And those switches, as they turn as predictably as gears in a clock, are what we call 'thoughts' and 'emotions!' And what you know as your 'self' is just the accumulation of chemical changes made to a genetic blueprint! We could change it in a lab! We could make you fall in love! We could make your soul from scratch! EVERYTHING YOU'VE EVER HEARD ABOUT FREE WILL VERSUS FATE CAN NOW BE MEASURED IN A LABORATORY! THE DEBATE IS OVER!"

The police van was two kilometers down the street by the time Heisenberg finished that speech. It's just as well. With that realization, everything the policeman outside had ever thought or said or done in his life would have been rendered utterly ridiculous.

The cop had woken up to go to work in the morning because he believed that having a job was better than living as a hobo in a train car. But to call one thing "better" or "worse" than another is based on the idea that we are able to choose between two outcomes. This is physically impossible, as Heisenberg had found out.

As a scientist, even in a state of extreme inebriation, he knew that if you cool water enough it has to freeze. And if you send certain impulses down the optic nerve into the brain, the gooey neurons that make up the brain have to chemically react in one way. Those chemicals are our thoughts and emotions and personality and actions. Claiming that there is some magical force in the brain that can let us "choose" how our brain chemicals will react to impulses is just as ridiculous as claiming you can make a pot of water boil only with the force of your mind, or that Randy Johnson can make a pitch stop in midair and return to him just because he "chose" for it to do so. The impulses that play on the brain are bound by the exact same laws of physics as the baseball in flight.

To change them would require nothing short of magic.

You're scoffing, just as you were destined to scoff from the moment the universe burst into existence billions of years ago. "After all," you say to your computer monitor, whilst arrogantly stroking your luxuriant beard, "I can choose to stand up or remain sitting! I'm sitting here right now, making the choice! I can do either one! I know what it feels like to freely choose!"

That feeling that you can choose to do something different than what you wind up doing is just a chemical side-effect, an impression of the emotions that feels like something it really isn't, just as a certain formation of clouds can look like a castle or a tree branch can look like it's flipping you the bird. You're getting an impression of something that isn't really there.




I can prove it. Are you sure you want me to?

Okay. You already know that there is a difference between the statement "the waterfall is 50 feet high" and the statement, "the watefall is awesome." The first is fact, the second is opinion. The first is saying something about the waterfall, the second is only saying something about your feelings toward the waterfall. The waterfall is a certain height even if no one is there to observe it, but the waterfall is only "awesome" inside the skull of a person looking at it. When the person leaves, the awesome leaves with him.

But what lots of people don't notice is that all statements making a value judgement on anything ("better" or "worse" or "awesome" or "sucks") are factually meaningless. It's hard, because if you loved the Lord of the Rings movies you don't just think that's your preference. You secretly think that those movies are better than, say, the Carrot Top vehicle Chairman of the Board.




And deep down you let yourself think that even if the whole world loved Chairman better, they'd simply be wrong, as if "better" somehow was a thing that existed outside of people's opinions (which are just the result of chemical reactions in the skull). If you disagree with that, try to prove it. You'll start sputtering that the acting was "more natural" in your film, that the editing was "superior" and the story was "more meaningful." But you'll notice that all you did was break out a few categories and express more opinions, all of which still exist only in your head. You're just saying you prefer one style of acting to another, one type of editing, one type of story.

If you shoot back that critics and film experts universally agree that Rings was better, then are you saying that all you meant by "better" is what critics thought was better? And that if the critics changed their mind, the movie would factually stop being better? So you can never say the critics are "wrong" about a movie because the definition of "better" is just what experts happen to like?

No, of course not. And when asked why a thing is better if you answer "it just is," you lose. The scientific mind doesn't answer "why is the sky blue" with "it just is." You have to give the logical reason for it. And no statement of "better" can be supported in this way. Try it with a friend. It's fun!

"Goodyear tires are better on snow than Firestone."

"Why?"

"They keep you from skidding off the road."

"So you say it's 'better' to keep the car on the road than to drive into a ditch? Why?"

"Because you could be injured or killed if you land in the ditch."

"So you say it's 'better' to be alive than dead? Why?"

"Because society depends on you to do good things and you can't if you're dead."

"So you say it's 'better' to do good things than not to do them? Why?"

"Because society won't survive if people don't do good things. And people need society to thrive and be happy."

"So it's better for people to thrive and be happy than not? Why?"

"It just is."

Bzzzzt. You lose. Think on it long enough and you'll find that, sure, there are opinions on which lots of people agree, but they are still just opinions. And nothing in the universe is "good" or "bad" on its own, apart from what people think of them. So the feeling you get in your gut that tells you water molecules tumbling over rock are "beautiful", and that diarrhea molecules sprayed on bed sheets are "disgusting", is just superstition. You begin to see Heisenberg's horror revealing itself. Your entire life has been lived based on the idea that some objects and states of being are inarguably "better" than others and you've always acted according to that belief. You're still reading this because you thought it would be "better" to read it than to stop reading it. But when you examine the situation you realize you cannot call anything "better" than anything else without stopping to acknowledge that your statement was so meaningless as to not be worth saying.

You're not reading this because it's "better" to. You're reading it because you were always destined to read it.

Every attempt to claim otherwise falls apart. The illusion dissolves. You see things as they are, see that the molecules are what they are and that by the laws of physics, they could not have been anything else and cannot be anything else in the future other than what they are destined to be. Heisenberg's horror, the utter meaninglessness of everything you have ever thought or felt, reveals itself before your eyes like one of those stupid-ass Magic Eye pictures.

Of course if nothing can truly be "better" than anything else, then that includes people's actions, too. This can be proved in the same way. My message board hosted this long and detailed discussion on dog fucking where a few posters said there was nothing wrong with sexing their pets. The response was as loud and angry as it was clumsy and futile:

"But the dog can't give consent! It's like rape!"

"What if she 'presents' herself to me sexually, the way she does with another dog?"

"But... the dog could be injured!"

"It's a big dog and I have a small penis."

"But... but... it's disgusting!"

"That's your opinion, based on arbitrary social taboos. To say dogfucking 'is' disgusting is no more valid than saying The Fast and the Furious 'is' awesome."

"I can't believe you need a reason not to fuck your dog!"

"And yet, you can't come up with one."

The dogfuckers were right, of course. Even if you argue that dogfucking is "bad for society" and could cause the human race to become extinct due to people fucking dogs instead of women, you're still stating an opinion. You're saying it's "better" for the human race to survive than go extinct. Why? "It just is."

As a footnote, it is interesting to notice that, after his discovery, Werner Heisenberg burned his results, abandoned the area of study and tried to build an atomic bomb for the Nazis instead.

And this brings us to the sculpture G.O.Fuckart left behind. With some analysis I was able to identify the image as a Flying Spaghetti Monster.




The Flying Spaghetti Monster, if you haven't heard of it, is an internet phenomenon started to show the utter ridiculousness of religious belief. They point out that you can't prove the Flying Spaghetti Monster (FSM) doesn't exist, even though it's intentionally retarded, and thus all religions are also retarded because they also cannot be proven or disproven. Here I finally found brethren who grasped Heisenberg's terrible secret.

Their website has signed many thousands to the roster of Flying Spaghetti Monster "worshippers" (who laughingly call themselves "Pastafarians") and they are heroically grinding their boot of sarcasm into the face of the old and obsolete school of thought that Hesienberg could have destroyed had he gone public. That obsolete school of thought, in the form of "religion" or "absolute morality" says there are actually two forces that can make things happen in the universe.

The first is the random, mindless motion of physics, energy carrying forth elements spewed from the Big Bang like a handful of Mardi Gras beads farted from a cow's anus.

The other, they claim, is will. The idea is that humans possess control of some kind of invisible metaphysical energy (what they call a "soul") that lets them actually choose their actions, apart from the pure physical push of genetics and stimulus. It supposedly exists independently from the physical brain and it acts by choosing, not based on opinion, but by recognizing inherent "good" and "bad" things in the universe.

They imply that the emotional impression you get from a kitten in a blanket versus a pile of maggots on a human face is a result of the soul actually tuning into an inherent "goodness" in the first and "badness" in the second. They imply that these attributes exist whether you are there to observe them or not. They imply that if there were only two men left on Earth, and one murdered the other, the murder would still be wrong even though there is no one left to think it is wrong.

And by that, they say, humans are able to do something incredible, which is to re-make the physical universe in ways they see fit. It may have been destiny for a stone to roll to a certain spot and stay there, but this power of "will" lets a human actually interrupt that destiny by picking up the stone and sticking it in his pocket.

It only demonstrates how ridiculous this is when we notice that the only observable instance in all of the universe where this power is exercised is via one particular species living in one short span of time on one particular tiny speck of a planet out in the vast ocean of nowhere.

That would suggest that human beings are not only unique in their physiology, but actually harness a sort of energy that is stranger and, in some ways, more powerful than that found in the stars that dwarf their planet. We're back to the ridiculous geocentrism that says all of the universe revolves around us humans. As if there was something special about us.

They also believe that the universe itself was born from this mystical power of preference or "will," in that there are supposedly sentient energies larger and older than the universe itself (what the Chinese call the "Tao" and the Hindus call "karma" and others call a "god") and that those powers either recognize some things as good and some things as bad, as we do, or that they implanted "goodness" or "badness" in the things they created.

In fact, the FSM thing was started in response to a movement in American schools to teach "Intelligent Design," which would teach in science classes something that cannot be measured by any scientists: that this magical force called "will" exists and influences the universe even though it cannot be measured or weighed or seen or smelt. Of course, they should be teaching in the opposite direction. They should be debunking the silliness of "free will" which also cannot be measured or seen or smelt, and obliterating the concept of "morality," which is made up of many "it just is" (or "you just should") statements that also cannot be proven in a laboratory.

What is baffling about the Pastafarians, however, is that they don't demand that. They stop short in their understanding. While rightfully mocking this magical force called "will" in the form of religious belief, many of them seem to cling to the idea of "will" in the human brain. They'll accidentally use words like "mind" as if the "mind" is some separate thing that exists apart from electrochemical signals transmitted between neurons. They may talk about "love" as if it were also some kind of mystical energy and not just a certain kind of neural chain reaction. They laugh at the idea of a "soul" and then proceed to talk and live every day as if they had something exactly like it inside themselves.

Even worse, one Pastafarian chatted with me online and went from mocking the silly creationists, to talking about attending a rally on environmentalism. He said I "should" support cleaner alternative fuels and cutting greenhouse gases:

"Othwerwise global warming is going to get really bad in 30 or 40 years, mass starvation, the whole bit."

"So? I won't be alive for that. I'm already 72 years old."

"Well, yeah, but your children..."

"No kids. I drive an Escalade and I leave it running 24 hours a day, because it might hurt my wrist to twist the key every morning. Don't worry, I can afford it."

"But... what about future generations? Don't you want them to survive, too?"

"Why? How does that affect me? I'll be dead."

"But... but... you should care about your fellow man even if it doesn't benefit you!"

"That's a false emotional impression, left over from our ancient herd instinct. Surely you're not saying that it's 'better' to care about your fellow man than not to."

"Of course I am! People will die if you don't!"

"So you say it's better that people live than die? Why?"

"It just is!"

I was shocked and disappointed. He believed in this invisible, unmeasurable force called "better" as much as he believed in man's equally-unmeasurable ability to discern and act on the "better" thing and that "it just is" right do that "better" thing when given the chance. He believed in things science can't quantify. He believed in the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

He had to know that the kind of cold logic he demands of the religions to prove there "just is" a god or an absolute morality is just as lacking in his "just is" statements. To say racism "just is" bad or that I "just should" care about my environment is just as unscientific as the Christian saying you "just should" stay a virgin until marriage.

And even stranger, when talking about the FSM they'll say they want to make people, "think for themselves" and "only teach science in science classes." These would all be admirable goals, if it were actually possible for humans to act apart from their genetic blueprint and external stimulus, which we've long proven they're not. What sort of curriculum Georgia's schools teach next year was determined at the moment of the Big Bang, billions of years ago.

The very core of their movement, that it would be "better" for people to abandon religious beliefs in favor of logical scientific materialism, is contradictory because by the rules of logical scientific materialism nothing in the universe can truly be "better" than anything else and nothing can be changed. I suppose I cannot fault them for this. It's easy to debunk other people's bullshit, any college freshman can do it. It makes you feel better about your own bullshit. But it takes real balls to debunk your own.

After all, it is the exact same anthropomorphism that lets humans look to the sky and see "God" that lets them look to their own brain and see "free will." It's simply projecting personality where there is none. It's also the same method of thinking that lets a little girl honestly believe that her teddy bear is her "friend." To believe otherwise, is to believe in the Flying Spaghetti Monster. The Pastafarian's beliefs turn out to not be one bit more scientific than those of the Muslim or the Christian or the Malaysian cult that worships a giant teapot.




My friends, we cannot blind ourselves. We have to embrace the horror.

We've let religious quacks say for centuries that there's a layer of self-evident truth at which you stop asking questions because the questions become meaningless. They say asking why dog-fucking is disgusting is like asking why time is running forward rather than backward. They say it factually, "just is." They say you can stop there, that you only clean the windshield until you see the road, and then you're done cleaning.

But that is an arbitrary stopping point. We cannot make their mistake. If you throw up your hands and say, "eh, free will just works somehow, it's Quantum physics or something," or, "I'll just live my life and not worry about it," then you might as well have stopped with, "it just is." Though I guess that would rob you of the chance to make fun of those other people.

No, we must push through to the absolute and terrible truth of the universe, to ride the horror like a dolphin at Seaworld. After we have "cleaned the windshield" enough to see the road we must then look until we can see through the road itself. And through what's behind it and what's behind what's behind it. Real logical inquiry doesn't stop until you've seen through everything. Then, when you can look and see absolutely nothing, you have found the truth.





My pen hesitates at this point, shaking in my very fingers. I have realized, to my horror, that by the very act of writing this I have violated everything I just said. I cannot instruct you on how to see the universe because you were pre-destined to see it in one way, regardless of what actions I think I "chose" to take. I'm even writing this based on the unspoken assertion that it was "better" to write it than not. The very act of saying what I said contradicts what I say, like a man who tells you everything he says is a lie.

So, nevermind, I guess.

-David Wong

It's a long read, but well worth it. The thing I love about it is how it sits in the back of your mind, resurfacing every so often to refresh the horror. You may not believe it, but it will always live in the back of your mind as a possible truth...
 

GistoftheFist

New member
Jan 6, 2012
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TopazFusion said:
This has probably already been posted, but I can't be bothered looking through all those pages.

That was a good way to spend 10 minutes. Here's one I don't think anyone has contributed, this was shown to me ages ago. Here's part one:

http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/157883/display/popup/sid/4f861c53a0ffa

And here's part two:

http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/157907/display/popup/sid/4f861cd38091f
 

DANEgerous

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Jan 4, 2012
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Mcupobob said:
Been snoping around form more scares found a awesome youtube channel.


enjoy and shit a brick.
BiscuitTrouser said:

This is hell.

Sleep fucking tight.
Well that is a sort of disturbing link... the spiky seemingly pointless ball in the first vid pops up at around 1:45 then shatters the room about a minute later at about 2:35 returns as a prominent in the second.

It almost makes me wonder, did they ever find that show from Lebanon in the first? If not who made that image and do they have a hand in both videos? Because if they worked on both they could likely write some fucking epic horror.
 

Lionsfan

I miss my old avatar
Jan 29, 2010
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Well now I'm not tired anymore, so thanks cause there's no way I'm going to fall asleep in class now