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People Shared "The Scariest, 100% True" Stories They've Ever Heard, And I Guess I'm Just Never Sleeping Again
People Shared "The Scariest, 100% True" Stories They've Ever Heard, And I Guess I'm Just Never Sleeping Again

Yahoo

time27-06-2025

  • Yahoo

People Shared "The Scariest, 100% True" Stories They've Ever Heard, And I Guess I'm Just Never Sleeping Again

Do you love all things scary, dark, and creepy? Subscribe to the That Got Dark newsletter to get your weekly dopamine fix of the macabre! It's a scary good time you won't want to miss. A few months ago, Reddit user Ok-Bid-1179 posed the question, "What's the scariest 100% true story you've heard of?" to the folks over at r/AskReddit. And, ZERO surprise here, the stories are the things nightmares are made of. Check it out: Warning: Graphic content ahead including mentions of rape. 1."Growing up, one of my friend's family members had a beach house, and I'd get invited every now and then. They had money, and the house was a massive, pretty cool place. They even had a full-time maid who had her own 'flat' at the back. One day, they went there for a long weekend, and when they opened the door, the place was ransacked. It was all a mess — missing TVs, furniture, broken stuff... you get the picture. They went to check on the maid and her flat was empty, all her belongings were gone. They called the cops who came over and had a brief look (not interested from what they said) and left saying the maid probably had something to do with it. And that's what everyone believed for a week..." "The dad returned the following weekend to try and change the locks, etc. and brought their dogs along. One of the dogs started digging and found the maid buried in the backyard under a tarp they had close to the pool. So the theory now is that whoever came in probably knew her and she recognized them and 'she had to go.'" —Overall_Draft_9416 2."My aunt fell asleep on her couch one night and my uncle was asleep upstairs. She woke up around 12 a.m. to a random man staring at her while she slept. He said, 'The guy upstairs was sound asleep.' Meaning he came in, saw my aunt on the couch, looked around, saw my uncle asleep upstairs, and then sat there and watched. She told him to leave and somehow by the will of god HE LEFT. He slid out through the back door... We live in a relatively safe area! Craziest shit I have ever heard." —[deleted] 3."My high school girlfriend called late one night after I was home and in bed. She said that something had happened and asked if I could come over. She was clearly shaken and not full of details. So I told my parents and drove over to her house. At the top of her subdivision, I was met by a cop with lights on. He asked where I was going and I told him about the call from my girlfriend. He lets me go by and I come over the hill to the cul de sac where she lives and I see multiple cop cars around the circle. They watch me pull up and get out of my car. My girlfriend ran out of her house and met me in the street. She explained that someone had broken into her neighbor's house and started beating her with something heavy." "The neighbor managed to get out of the house and headed to my girlfriend's house where she started banging furiously on the front door. My girlfriend's dad was out of town, so her mom answered the door and the neighbor just fell into the foyer bleeding profusely from the head. Her mom looks up to see the attacker headed up the walkway towards the front door. She pulls the neighbor into the house and closes the door, hitting the attacker with it before it fully closes. He then took the heavy tool he had used to beat the neighbor and smashed the little window at the top of the door. Her mom started screaming and the attacker just turned around and walked up the street into the darkness. I spent the night there that night (along with two or three cops outside in their cars) and in the morning we could see blood still pooled on the floor in the foyer and splattered blood above the front door from where the attacker had swung the bloody tool to smash the window. No one was ever caught or even identified. It was just completely random. The neighbor survived and to my knowledge had no permanent physical injuries beyond scarring from having her scalp stapled shut. She moved away shortly after the incident." —LurksNoMoreToo 4."I work a midnight shift at a gas station, and I have worked for quite a while at various stations in different areas with varying levels of criminal activity. I have regulars, of course. I'm a small-statured woman (as is my partner the other half of the week, and we've always been partners), so these regulars often worry about us and keep watch on creepy occurrences when they can. I had one man who worked in the metro an hour away who would stop in every morning for his cigarettes. He never smiled or seemed friendly, and as I often do, I tried to think of what I could do to make him smile one day. It took many months but I finally pulled it off by having his cigarettes ready on the counter and already scanned for him to pay for as he walked in." "He smiled, and then asked me, 'Do you ever get scared on the night shift? You're a small girl, not safe.' I said I sometimes did but we could lock the doors and hide if we had to, and that the provincial police (think state troopers, if you're American) had a station nearby and often came in to get their highway vehicles washed. I had a good rapport with those police. He nodded and told me a story about when he first moved to our country from Eastern Europe with his wife and child in the late '80s/early '90s. He fell asleep one night at the gas station where he worked at midnight. When he woke up, the phone had been ringing for hours and his manager was shaking him violently asking if he was alright. He was fine, he said, what was the problem? He was sorry he fell asleep. His manager screamed that it was fine he had fallen asleep, but he had to look outside. All of their motor oil was missing and the outside of the place was a mess. The thieves had come and swiped all the oil and left him be because he slept through the entire thing, then moved down the road to the next station for an encore. At that station, the clerk was awake and fought back, so the thieves stabbed him to death and left him to bleed out. When he finished telling me this, he concluded with, 'If you ever feel sleepy just lock the door and do it, it might save your life.' I don't work at that station anymore but I always think about that guy." —IgnorethisIamstupid 5."I was around 10 years old. I was at school but my mum told me she was thinking of taking me to the doctor in the afternoon (recurring eye issue). Lunchtime came around, and I was in the dining hall when the office woman told me there was a taxi outside for me and that I needed to go. I assumed my mum booked it for me as she can't drive. I cleared up my stuff and got my bag. I was just about to leave when I remembered my jacket in my classroom. I rush to get up and head out for the taxi. The office woman told me I was too late and the taxi had gone without me. I just returned to class but panicked my mum would be angry at me. School finishes and my mum is waiting for me at the gates. I burst into tears, apologizing for missing the taxi and thinking I was in big trouble. She never ordered a taxi and had no clue what I was talking about. She ended up not making the doctor's appointment. No one ever found out who ordered the taxi, or who the driver was." —funkster80 6."When I was a little kid, maybe 5 to 6, we had this neighbor who was like a grandma to me. I'd go over and have snacks, and she had a Mr. Potato Head I played with that was her (now adult) son's toy. He came home one day, in his twenties, from the Army I think. I don't remember much about him, but he asked about taking my older brothers camping. My mom said no, she had a weird feeling about him. Later, my mom saw him at our little store in town with bee stings all over and was concerned. He said he got them at the creek. She thought that was weird, because that's just not a thing where we went all the time, but okay?" "A little while later, the news said there was a murder of some campers out past where we lived, no leads. People were shocked — this doesn't happen here! My mom remembered her weird feeling and the bee stings that didn't make sense. She called the police to say, hey, probably nothing, but here's what I got. I remember detectives coming to our house to talk to her. They had some other evidence that matched, but not enough to link him to the murder (a couple with their child). It's unsolved to this day, though the detective said he knew it was him. A few years later, the guy went to prison for the abduction/attempted murder of a woman who ran out of gas and he offered a ride to. She lived, thank god." —gottabkdngme Related: People In HR Revealed Truly Unhinged Reasons Employees Got Fired, And My Jaw Is On The Floor 7."When I was learning to drive, my instructor advised me to always lock my car doors as soon as I get into my car. I asked her why, and she told me about her personal experience. This happened almost a year after she passed her test. She finished work about 3 a.m. She had just gotten into her car and gotten her keys in the ignition when three guys jumped into her car. She had a knife to her neck and was told to drive. They gave her directions to an alleyway. They dragged her out of the car and raped her. After they were done, they left her in the alleyway and stole her car and purse. It took her a while to get help. Police did find her car a few days later, abandoned and on fire, on the outskirts of the city. But the guys were not caught. The reason she started to teach driving, was her way to protect other women and make sure no one else goes through, what she went through. So she advised all her female (and male) students to lock their car doors, as soon as they get in." —RottweilerBridesmaid 8."World War II, the Pacific theater. My great uncle on my mother's side fought at Okinawa. While taking cover behind a rock, he was shot through the foot by a Japanese sniper and evacuated to a hospital for recovery. He was the only member of his platoon to make it off the island alive." —SgtSharki 9."My grandfather was a British FEPOW in Japan in WWII. He did something to piss off the guards of his camp one evening and they beat him badly and tied him up on a fence with the promise to kill him the next day. Another young prisoner died during the night so they switched my granddad and the dead lad so the guards assumed he'd died from his injuries. Luckily he survived and came home in 1945." —bakedNdelicious 10."My uncle was in a bar one night and started talking to this random guy. He described him as 'a really nice guy.' He met him a few other times in the same bar. They drank and talked about random stuff. Soon after, my uncle stopped seeing the guy at the bar. IDK how long after that, but my uncle got notified sometime later that he had jury duty. He showed up and found out what it was for. A serial killer and the killer was his friend from the bar. Derrick Todd Lee. My uncle was promptly dismissed from jury duty for obvious reasons." —I_am_dean 11."My college girlfriend called me one night. 'The Baton Rouge Serial Killer' had been active for a while and she was being followed all over town by a white truck, which the killer supposedly drove. She fit the victim profile: she was a brunette living in a wealthy neighborhood (house-sitting for her aunt). So, my roommate and I drove over and filed in line behind her and the truck. She lived on the LSU campus so I assumed it was a student prank or something. She parked at her aunt's house, and the truck stopped one house short of her aunt's. We pulled in behind her. I explain I'm going to diffuse the situation. At this point, the FBI says the killer was a white guy, but when I walked over to the truck saw this man was Black." "I explained no one was upset but he was freaking out my girlfriend and he needed to leave. He looked side-eyed at me and drove off. I see the guy again a few months later, on the cover of the Baton Rouge newspaper, he'd been arrested. He was, in fact, the killer, Derrick Todd Lee." —Flailing_Aimlessly Related: Here Are 18 "Red Flags" That Made Women Break Up With Their Long-Term Partners, And I COMPLETELY Understand Why Marriage Rates Are Declining 12."In the 1990s, a nurse in New Jersey killed hundreds of hospital patients. Sometimes, he would sneak into patient's rooms at night and inject them with fatal medication doses. Other times, he would put the medication into IV bags in the supply room so they would kill whatever random patient they were given to later. He was accused several times. Some patients pointed him out before they died. Some staff thought he was creepy and dangerous, and refused to work with him. He kept getting fired from hospitals. But the hospital managers knew that if he got arrested, they would be sued by the families of the patients he murdered. So they just fired him, and didn't call the police." "That happened at 12 different hospitals over 16 years. Investigators believe he killed as many as 400 people. After he was arrested, he confessed to 40 murders. In 29 of them, he provided enough details to be charged and pleaded guilty. He is linked to 300-plus more deaths than that, but details of those will probably never be known, because so much information was lost over time or destroyed by the hospitals." —auraseer 13."My grandfather's village was razed by the Nazis. He had nine siblings. The Nazis came to the village in retribution due to guerilla attacks and they believed the guerillas were hiding there. Most young men fled before they arrived. The men that were in the village were lined up against a wall and shot. My grandfather's mother put half her children, the youngest, in the cellar and she took the other half with her because the Nazis were rounding up the entire village and locked them inside the church. The reason she had split her children was because she feared they would all be killed, so she wanted at least some of them to survive." "The Nazis ransacked and burned nearly every house in the village, including my grandfather's. He was in the cellar with his siblings and their house burned above them, but they were saved. The siblings in the church also survived but many others didn't. The Nazis would come again sometime after and pretty much force all the young men and boys, including my grandfather, to help make roads and fortifications for them. Despite it all, they all survived the war, though many in the family didn't." —PckMan 14."So when I was around 18, I went to town to drink with my friends. We went all in and by 2 a.m. I was completely wasted. Couldn't see, walk or think straight. One of my mates remained sober to drive us back home. We went to the parking lot and I could hear a voice whimpering in the dark. I turned around and saw two guys carrying a girl to a car. I got closer and now I could hear her voice. She obviously was drunk but she repeated, 'No...,' and, 'I don't want...' over and over. Adrenaline kicked in and I became sober instantly. I screamed at them and immediately called the police. They got in the car and drove off. But I saw the license plate, gave it to the woman I talked to at the police station, and they informed me about 10 minutes later that they arrested the two guys. The whole scene was so terrifying. This was in Germany." —JamesJameson420 15."This only happened earlier this year; a work colleague was off work for a long time, not like him at all. When he eventually returned we found out that his friend had been murdered by a group of football (soccer) wankers. They'd been in a pub watching a match for the team they supported; they were celebrating a win when a group of men from the opposing team got angry and started arguing. When my colleague and his friends left the pub, they jumped his friend and beat him so badly he ended up in hospital where he eventually succumbed to the injuries. This is one of the reasons I hate football, especially where I am (England). Riot vans, hundreds of police, etc., are always around every train station and football stadium. Sad little men willing to take a life over a bag of air getting kicked around. It's not the first time, certainly won't be the last, someone has died over fucking football." —LilithsGrave92 16."Up to this day, I'm still looking for a logical explanation to this. This happened in 2003. So, an ex and I were checked in at a coastal resort where the cottages were far apart, about 200m away. Around 11–11:30 p.m. while we were both drinking beer with the lights turned off and only the TV on, the door knob suddenly rattled violently, like someone was forcibly trying to get it open. There was no double lock on the door so my first reaction was to jump from the bed and block the door with my weight. The force of my landing must have been heard from the other side, but the doorknob continued to twist." "By this time I was already pressing my face to the floor, trying to look/estimate how many people were outside the door via the small gap between the floor and the bottom of the door. There was nothing. Not one pair of feet or anything. But the doorknob just kept rattling. I should point out that the gap between the floor and the door was enough for me to see the outside, or, at the very least, notice any change in shadow/light caused by movement, but there was nothing. The turning of the door knob then stopped. But I never heard any footsteps or any other noise. Waited a few minutes and opened the door. Everything was quiet. No footprints were found outside or on the sand surrounding the cottage. We just noped out of there immediately." —AdBlockerExtreme 17."When I was 17 I was hanging out with two friends and they wanted to smoke weed in the woods. I didn't feel like it so I drove them and waited in the car. After a while I was getting bored and decided to meet them but there were four paths going off in different directions so I just took the biggest one. After walking for a few minutes in the pitch-black forest (this was before flashlights on phones), I come across this dip in the trail, and on the other side was a bench lightly visible due to the moonlight. Sitting on the bench was a man and another standing before him but I could only make out silhouettes." "Being sure these were my friends, I yelled at them before walking over. If you ever walked the woods at night it's just an uneasy feeling all around so I was cautious to begin with. Well, it turns out, just after yelling out to my 'friends,' both silhouettes turned towards me. Not a word, not a sound, the guy sitting down starts sprinting FULL FUCKING SPEED towards me in complete silence. I got the absolute fuck out of there sprinting the other way and tripping over shit because I couldn't see anything. I finally got out and locked myself in my car, but I was really worried for my friends. Maybe a minute later I saw them both coming out of a completely different path, they also confirmed they never saw me or anyone else. My heart still sinks just thinking about that dude sprinting in silence — wtf was that shit?!" —[deleted] 18."The legend of Bearman. So people think of that one South Park episode with 'ManBearPig.' No, it's not even close to that. So, there was this camp I used to go to during the summer. There were probably around 500 kids there for a week straight. Everyone had cabins they would stay in assigned by gender and age and an older person was in charge of one cabin. The older person was around 17–18 watching 13–16 year olds in the cabins. The staff were actual adults who had their own cabins, but they would be on night shift duties, walking around and making sure everyone was staying in their cabins. So now that you know the setting, let's get into the legend..." "As it goes, in the woods, when all the kids were in the cabins and the lights were out, a bear would come out from the deep woods and wander into the campgrounds. The bear would then stand on its back legs and walk as if it were a human. It would choose to go into a cabin and if you were unlucky it would go by your bed and watch you sleep. If you made any move, it would grab you and take you into the woods, never to be seen again. Hearing that scared the crap out of 14-year-old me. It was something the older girl told all of us. A bunch of the other girls were like, 'Pfff it's so we stay quiet and sleep,' but other kids from cabins heard of it too. I never stopped thinking about it and always tried to stay as still as possible when I slept. Flash forward a few years later, I ran into one of the staff that used to work at the camp and I told them how scared I was about Bearman, but that it was a good trick to get kids to stay quiet. Well, turns out, it's based on a true story. I guess back in the '80s, a man dressed in a bear costume, some sort of mascot for the camp then, would take girls out of their cabin. Soooo, as you could imagine to my horror, I was completely bewildered that Bearman actually existed at some point in time." —Fluffy_Sky2435 19."I lived in a basement suite with my younger brother in a quiet neighborhood. The entire front of the house was exposed to the sidewalk but the sides and the back were covered with fences and trees. The only way to see if anyone was in the basement was through this small window in my bedroom about five feet from my bed. One day, I got word while I was out that my place had been robbed. The robbers went through the basement suite door through the back, kicked it open, and then made their way upstairs after robbing the basement suite. They just so happened to rob the place in a 30-minute window when myself, my brother, and the people upstairs were out. This means they watched us for a few days and monitored our patterns. What scared me was not really the robbery itself, but the image of me sleeping while a robber presses his face against the window five feet from away from my bed just watching me." —thedreaminggoose 20."My mom is from El Salvador, and she lived there during the height of the civil war. She told me that one time, the terrorist group in her country found out someone in her town was part of the military. He had twin daughters with extremely long hair. They tied their hair to the trailer hitch of their trucks and proceeded to do donuts in the middle of town and drag them until they both died, they then left their bodies on his front door." —Dragonborn83196 "A chimpanzee named Travis attacking his owner's friend. Travis attacked and mauled his owner's friend, blinding her, severing several body parts, and lacerating her face before he was shot and killed by a cop. The owner called 911 during the attack. Travis's screams can be heard in the background at the start of the tape as the owner pleads for the police. Initially, they believed the call to be a hoax until she said, 'He's eating her!'" —SuvenPan "The other terrifying part is that people are allowed to have wild animals as pets, and then act surprised when wild animals behave wildly." —Royal_Visit3419 Note: Some responses have been edited for length and/or clarity. If you or someone you know has experienced sexual assault, you can call the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-4673 (HOPE), which routes the caller to their nearest sexual assault service provider. You can also search for your local center here. The National Alliance on Mental Illness helpline is 1-888-950-6264 (NAMI) and provides information and referral services; is an association of mental health professionals from more than 25 countries who support efforts to reduce harm in therapy. Love stories like this? Subscribe to the That Got Dark newsletter to get a weekly post just like this delivered directly to your inbox. It's a scary good time you won't want to miss. Also in Internet Finds: People With ADHD Are Sharing Their Weirdest Productivity Hacks — And As Someone With ADHD, I Think These May Actually Change My Life Also in Internet Finds: "I Have Never Told My Mom That I Know": 47 Massive Secrets People Uncovered About Their Families That Left Them Shocked Also in Internet Finds: 37 Horrifying Facts That You Will Wish Were Fake, But Are Unfortunately 100% True

This Cemetery Groundskeeper Did An AMA, And People Had A LOT Of Questions, Here Are The Fascinating Things They Shared
This Cemetery Groundskeeper Did An AMA, And People Had A LOT Of Questions, Here Are The Fascinating Things They Shared

Yahoo

time21-06-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

This Cemetery Groundskeeper Did An AMA, And People Had A LOT Of Questions, Here Are The Fascinating Things They Shared

Do you love all things weird, dark, and creepy? Subscribe to the That Got Dark newsletter to get your weekly dopamine fix of the macabre! It's a scary good time you won't want to miss. Recently, Reddit user odd_fisch, a cemetery groundskeeper, did a very interesting AMA on r/CemeteryPorn (they also shared the really pretty photo below!). And, unsurprisingly, a lot of people had a lot of questions. Here are the best and top-voted questions and then the answers from odd_fisch: 1."What percentage of graves get visited?" —finalgirl08 "Roughly 30% but it varies a lot depending on holidays." 2."Do you have many regulars who visit a lot? To visit particular graves, or to take in the whole place, typically?" —turtle2turtle3turtle "A few, some people come to walk, and some who visit regularly at graves. One gentleman has been visiting every weekend for years now. We also have a lot of Pokéstops LOL." 3."How common is it for people to piss and shit on the graves of people they hated in life?" —Famous_Suspect6330 "Well, I've never seen people shit but, umm, I have seen other unsavory acts, if you're smelling what I'm stepping in…" 4."Can share any particular incident or burial which made you laugh?" —OGadminOP "Nothing that made me really laugh. But my first week working there, prior to me living there, I was a pallbearer because there was no family in attendance so I and the other groundskeepers stepped in." 5."I volunteer in a previously abandoned cemetery. We have lots of cave-ins where caskets collapsed over time in the wooded sections. Do you experience this at yours? How do you handle it if so?" —isuzupup__ "We do have some cave-ins, and unfortunately, one of our best options is just to fill it in. Most of the graves that collapse are 150+ years old so they get few or no visitors." 6."When a headstone is broken or pushed over, who typically deals with that? Would it be you if you just happened upon it or would the family of the deceased have to ask for it to be fixed? I pick up headstones if I find them toppled or kicked over, and I always wondered who is supposed to do that since some of the ones I've picked up were seemingly like that for years, and no one picked them up. But I know I saw the groundskeepers. So I wasn't sure if it was a 'can't touch it till a report is made' type of situation or not." —Individual_Ad_6777 "Typically, it is the responsibility of the family. However, if we're able, we always fix what we can! Some are just too big to move even with four people on it." 7."Have you ever had any issues with visitors (living or ghosts, LOL)?" —DistinctBell3032 "The house I stay in is almost 200 years old — it's been used as a funeral home/office, storage, and some other stuff. Sometimes, the house feels a little spooky. But nothing unfriendly! Unfortunately, the living customers always present issues. Always complaints to be made. At the end of the day, it doesn't bother me!" Related: "That Sentence Sat In My Head For Months": Men Are Revealing The Most Hurtful Things A Woman Can Say To Them, And It's Actually Fascinating 8."How many high school metal bands have you caught trying to film music videos?" — GivemTheDDD "Not many LOL, but we do have people come in at night for 'séances.'" 9."Any problems or accidents with the people having 'séances?'" —HanhnaH "Problems? Yes. Accidents? No. Mainly, they tend to leave trash, candles, and other items." 10."I was in a graveyard with my daughter yesterday. We met an older gentleman who was mowing a section of the lawn/graves. He saw us walking and pointed to the stone a little ways away and said, 'That one's mine.' Being certain he wasn't a ghost, how often do families preplace a stone and do maintenance? I'm guessing his family of yesteryear is buried there. It was a tiny cemetery, under 20 rows." —fugensnot "Preplaced stones are a great money-saving option and take a lot of stress off of your family when that time comes! It very well could've been his stone, especially if there was no death date!" 11."Is your job well compensated?" —alwayssearching2012 "It is! Room and board are provided, and although it's mostly volunteer work, anything after 20 hours is paid!" 12."Have you ever seen a ghost in your cemetery before? I think that is the question that everybody wants to know the most." — International-Sea561 "No, not in the cemetery itself, but the house is a different story. I like to think I'm safe as I take care of the place in part!" Related: Here Are 50 Pictures That Make Me Grin Uncontrollably No Matter How Many Times I've Seen Them, In Case You Need Them 13."Do you ever feel afraid, especially at night, or are you pretty comfortable being there?" —Wintermoon54 "It feels more like home than any other place I've lived!" 14."Have you ever seen anyone ever accidentally fall into a grave?" —No_University6980 "No, but we joke about hiding in them pre-funerals (death jokes are a norm)." 15."What's the oldest grave there?" —Bleacherblonde "Dates into the late 1700s, it's barely legible due to erosion, but we have a record of it!" 16."For those old sites, since no one is around anymore to help maintain them, do you guys get together and help those out a little more?" —Oy_theBrave "Typically, yes. We knock out entire sections at a time, usually a couple of acres a day. We encourage people to come and maintain what they want to, but we knock out our stuff independently!" 17."Do you have a list of your favorite headstones? What is it about them that makes them you're favorite?" —crapatthethriftstore "I have a few I really like. Mostly, it's because of their interesting names, or because they're funny; we have a Nimrod McGruber. Poor guy. Some of the stones have nice sayings or cool engravings as well." 18."Have you ever been involved in an exhumation?" —genzgingee "No they are very uncommon!" 19."Do you assist with burials (like, set up those things that lower the casket)? What are the requirements to become a cemetery groundskeeper?" —CHAIFE671 "All I had to do was put in the work, and the opportunity arose for me to move to the cemetery! And we lay out burial sites and currently hire out for digging/ openings/closing. We're in the process of repairing and replacing a lot of stuff!" 20."I also work at a cemetery, primarily in the office, but I also help the grounds crew from time to time. What's the dumbest complaint you've heard about the way you keep your cemetery? For us, I'd probably say the lady who complained that our trees weren't trimmed pointy enough." —starwishes20 "Oh man, we just got one this Memorial Day, the local paper printed a piece from the VA saying we didn't allow any flags for the veterans. This simply wasn't true. We even had hundreds of them ready to be placed by anyone who wanted to! Sat them outside by the office and everything! We also placed a few around our veterans' monument near the entrance, so clearly, flags were not a problem." 21."Why do I see really old headstones with 'perpetual care' on them, yet they're cracked, toppled over, or broken? Doesn't perpetual care mean they paid so that if it ever broke, no matter how far into the future, it would be fixed? What happens when those old mausoleums start crumbling? Does anyone fix it, or will it just continue to fall apart? What if the mausoleum gets so bad that the coffin is exposed?" —Inevitable-Plenty203 "Mausoleums are typically family property. I can't speak for other cemeteries, but for us, when something like that happens, we file insurance and have stones replaced. Very old stones don't get replaced for a number of reasons — the perpetual care didn't exist at the time of the burial, likely was family responsibility, or it's simply so old that insurance won't do anything about it." 22."What do you do during a typical day?" —ImDeepState "Mowing, trimming, stick removal, and decoration removal (plastic decorations are hazardous in many ways)." "What's your favorite part about the job?" —Queenielauren "The peacefulness of it! It's quiet and living there gives me a lot of pride in it." You can read the original AMA on Reddit. Note: Some questions responses have been edited for length and/or clarity. Want to read about more weird, dark, and creepy things? Subscribe to the That Got Dark newsletter to get your weekly dopamine fix of the macabre! It's a scary good time you won't want to miss. Also in Internet Finds: Holy Crap, I Can't Stop Laughing At These 28 Painfully Awkward And Embarrassing Conversations Also in Internet Finds: I Need To Call My Doc For A New Inhaler After Cackling So Hard At These 41 Funny Tweets From The Week Also in Internet Finds: People Are Sharing How What Happened In Vegas Did NOT Stay In Vegas, And This Should Be A Lesson To Never Go To A Bachelor/Bachelorette Party There

Bring Her Back review – Talk to Me directors return with a film you'll watch from between your fingers
Bring Her Back review – Talk to Me directors return with a film you'll watch from between your fingers

The Guardian

time28-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Bring Her Back review – Talk to Me directors return with a film you'll watch from between your fingers

Australian horror film-makers have spectacularly overdelivered in the last few years, conjuring various nerve-shredding bangers including Late Night with the Devil, You Won't Be Alone, You'll Never Find Me, Sissy, Leigh Whannell's underrated Wolf Man reboot and Talk to Me. The latter – which revolves around thrill-seeking teenagers who converse with spirits instead of taking recreational drugs (kids these days!) – marked the fiendishly good debut of Adelaide-born directors Danny and Michael Philippou. They're back – or baaa-ack! – with another serving of macabre bravado pulled from the black cauldron. Bring Her Back is lighter on thrills and spills for the midnight movie and heavy with thick, abject horror and despair, featuring an intensely disturbing performance from Sally Hawkins as a foster mother from hell. She plays Laura, a former social worker who welcomes into her house two teens around whom the story orbits: Piper (Sora Wong), who is vision impaired, and her older brother, Andy (Billy Barratt). Early in the run time, the pair discover their father dead in the bathroom, and, with Andy three months too young to be Piper's guardian, they move in with Laura and her other foster child, Oliver (Jonah Wren Phillips). The latter is a creepy kid from central casting: mute, with a shaved head, a thousand-yard stare and a tendency to do things that literally left me watching the film through the gaps between my fingers. It's clear that something's a little off about Laura, whose daughter died some time ago. But the script (written by Danny Philippou and Bill Hinzman) obscures her intentions for a long time, fuelling an aura of dreadful anticipation. Hawkins' performance is coy, evasively dancing between light and heavy emotions; trying to nail down exactly what's wrong with Laura is like trying to pin down water with a knife. She creates a character who's needy, desperate and, as we increasingly realise, choked up with intense longing, before moving into a more volcanic space. Strange sounds rumble and buzz on the soundtrack, with Cornel Wilczek's shapeshifting score unfolding as if it were partly composed by demons; perhaps he got a hold of the embalmed hand from Talk to Me and consulted the spirit world. Circles become a visual motif, implying dark magic and rituals, and there are blurry sporadic visions of demonic undertakings recorded on videotapes. The humble old VHS format has been retooled into an eerie relic of yesteryear, ghouls from the past roaming around in the shadows of a passé technology, insulated from the modern digital world. Keep an eye on Oliver: when this kid starts doing crazy stuff, Bring Her Back goes next-level, conjuring images that will challenge even horror enthusiasts with cast-iron stomachs. There's no doubting this film's art, craft and impact, although I did leave the cinema wondering whether I was a richer person for having experienced it, or in some way irrevocably tarnished. I might ordinarily have felt inclined to go home and take a cold shower – but not after this film. Water is often used to signify cleansing, renewal and rebirth but, in their most audacious visual accomplishment, the Philippous turn H20 into something hideous, a metaphorical devil's rain signifying unrelenting emotional pressure. They achieve this partly through contrast: there's either too much water or not enough. An example of the former belongs to that terrible early scene when Piper and Andy encounter the corpse of their fathe, water still gushing from the shower, steam thickening the air into a horrible deathly fog. An example of the latter can be found in Laura's empty swimming pool, which is an oddly evocative image: to observe a pool without water is to see something that just isn't right – a literal emptiness; a space that should be filled. I dare say that the pool might not be front of mind when the closing credits roll. You'll be plagued by much more distressing visuals – and, like me, wondering how to get rid of them. Bring Her Back is in cinemas in Australia from Thursday, in the US from Friday, and in the UK from 1 August

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