14. The Girl In The Box
The kidnapping of Colleen Stan—she was hitchhiking in the 70s and turned down rides because they didn’t seem safe. A van with a young couple and a baby offered her a ride, and because it was a family, she accepted. They held a knife to her throat, put a giant box on her head that blocked out noise and sound, and kidnapped her.
They kept her in a box the size of a coffin underneath their bed. They also brainwashed her to believe that they were part of a mafia called “The Company” that would harm her family if she tried to escape. Eventually, the wife helped her escape and received immunity for testifying against her husband at trial. Really chilling stuff.
15. The Replacement
There was a creepy story that happened in Japan not that long ago. A five-year-old and a three-year-old were just wandering the streets. This officer asked them where they came from, and they were 3 km away from their house. When the authorities took them home, the mother looked worried and was really apologetic about the situation. The mother was also holding a baby.
The officer decided to do some research on the family just in case. It all began to unravel from there. The files said that the “baby” daughter the mother was holding should have been much older, and likely bigger, than what he saw. He thought maybe it was a case of neglect as the two older kids walking alone was also a red flag, so they got officials to visit the house.
They asked if they could have a look at the baby daughter. The baby turned out to be a boy, and he was a whole year younger than the files indicated. The officers ended up finding the third child buried in their backyard. Something must have happened to the baby, so they quickly decided to have another kid to cover it up and were planning on raising it as the deceased daughter.
It’s scary to think that if the newborn was a girl and they made it to her third or fourth birthday without anyone noticing, they probably would have gotten away with it.
16. Eight-Legged Foes
I once found myself in a cave, along with eight or nine other people. It was the middle of the Pennsylvania wilderness, and the only entrance was a small hole in the ground. To enter, you had to sit on the ground, grab a tree root, and drop about seven feet down a steep wall to the floor. We all dropped in and spent at least half an hour exploring this cave.
My friend Dan then tapped me on the shoulder and whispered, "Dude, look at the ceiling." The ceiling was just high enough above our heads to hide the thousands of spiders crawling around on it. We tried to keep quiet about it because we didn't want anyone to flip out, but there was no stopping it. Just seconds later, the whole group noticed them.
Everyone got silent, and you could actually hear the spiders crawling on the surface of the stone. It was an extra nerve-wracking situation because the only way to exit the cave was to basically jump up and pull yourself out of a hole surrounded by spiders. Two of the girls with us were terrified and refused to climb out. They just couldn't muster the courage to put their faces next to a giant spider nest.
They came around though, and everyone got out safely. I had the honor of being the last one to exit. Alone in a dark cave filled with spiders, and nobody around to give me a boost. Fortunately, Dan was brave enough to reach down and give me a hand. When we first discovered that cave, we were all like, "I can't believe we've never heard of this place." Now I know why.
That cave sucks. A few months later, I found out the cave is off-limits in the fall because of the rattlesnakes.
17. I'm A Survivor
Violet Jessop was a woman who sailed on all three of the Olympic class liners. The first one she worked on was RMS Olympic and she was abroad when it collided with HMS Hawke, which tore a huge hole in the ship’s starboard side. Then in 1912, she got on the RMS Titanic as a maid while the Olympic was being repaired. She survived the Titanic tragedy.
After the sinking of the Titanic and already being trained as a nurse, a few years later WWI broke out and she boarded the Britannic. In 1916, the Britannic was hit by an underwater sea mine and sank in under an hour, despite being safer than all the other ships she’d been on. During the sinking of Britannic, she boarded a lifeboat, but because the ship’s propellers were sticking out of the water, her lifeboat was dragged into the path of the propeller.
She jumped from the lifeboat before it was crushed by the huge bronze propellers. She sustained a fractured skull but survived. The other 30 people lost their lives. All of these events didn’t stop her; she continued to work with the company that owned the Titanic and the Britannic. She was also named “miss unsinkable.”
18. The Nanny
My mom was a corporate flight attendant her whole life, and my dad wasn’t in the picture. Because of this, my mom had to hire a nanny for us when she went on long trips. We weren’t rich or anything, we were close to poor. She did it solely out of necessity. The first nanny we had was this lady since before I can remember, who watched us but eventually got cancer and couldn’t anymore.
When this happened, our nanny met my mom at a coffee house in upstate New York, where we lived. She told her she had to resign, but that she had lined up a replacement. This lady she knew, Karen, was going to meet my mom and interview for the job. They exchanged all this information openly at the coffee house in public. This is where it gets almost unbelievable.
See, this random woman had overheard the whole exchange and showed up at the time and location for the interview saying she was Karen. The real Karen never showed up. This was probably between 1991 and 1992. Long before the Internet was used how it is today. Apparently, the interview went fine, my mother hired her, and we never really talked to the previous nanny again.
Until, that is, about five years later. The original nanny survived the cancer and ran into my mom at the mall. My mom thanked her for the recommendation and said Karen had been working out great. That's when she told my mom that her recommendation had to move out of the state and never went to the interview. She just thought since my mom never called her, we hired someone else.
So a complete stranger watched me and my sister from the ages of five to 10. We went on road trips with her, and she even had her own room in our house. She didn’t have any family and we never met any of her friends. She watched us for weeks on end while my mom was away on flights. My mom came back after running into the original nanny and confronted her.
She broke down crying and said she was in a bad place at the time and needed a job. She had fallen in love with her kids and she loved being our nanny. I guess my mom was like, whatever, you’ve been watching them this long and they’re both still alive. She continued to be our nanny until I was old enough to watch my sister on my own. And that was 90s parenting.
19. Misery Loves Company
I was driving home through backroads I had never been on before and came across a bookstore in a tiny town in the woods. The bookstore was actually in a house, where the front of the home had been converted into a store. There was a box on the porch that said, "50 cent books!" so I stopped to see if there were any Stephen King books in there.
A middle-aged woman comes out with a huge smile and gives me a bowl of fruit and some tea. I'm like, "This place is awesome!" and rummage through books while eating the fruit and downing the tea. Inside the store/home, there were a lot of cool art books and stuff, so I spent some more time in there. She brought me more tea. Even when I said, "No thank you, that's plenty," she kept refilling.
She gave me dessert too—brownies and cookies. I didn't realize it at the time, but I was in big trouble. She was drugging me. It's hazy to remember the details, but at some point, she closed the shop, telling me to take my time looking at the books. She told me that she was going to go take a shower and was gone for a while. When I was ready to pay, I had to wander back through her house to find her.
I found her in her bedroom. She was in bed. I'm pretty sure she was naked. At the time, I thought, "Weird, she's watching an exercise video in bed?" but later realized that’s not what she was watching. You might think this is hot, but it isn't. She was my mom's age and had been telling me how she reminded me of her kids in college. So NOT hot.
I told her I was ready to pay, and she told me how to open the register, so I went and opened it, put in what I thought I owed, took out the change, and left. When I stumbled outside, a fire engine drove by, screaming with sirens. In the distance was the glow of a big forest fire, and the stars were being covered by smoke. A tall man on a horse watched the fire truck pass.
He looked right at me, took a piece of wood or something out of his mouth, and said, "Town's burnin'." I swear to God I have a crystal-clear memory of this happening, even though I'm sure it couldn't have. By this point, I guess I was seriously tripping balls on SOMETHING. I'm not a drug guy, so I don't know what I had, but I was out of my mind and could hardly walk.
I got back in my car and drove home along twisting roads on tall cliffs above the ocean. Twice I realized I was on the wrong side of the road. One of the times I realized this was because a massive truck was headed straight for me, laying on the horn and flashing its lights. I kept thinking about how my car could be like an airplane AND a submarine if I drove it off the cliff.
I can't believe I made it home alive. Later I realized I was in that house for about four hours looking at books. At least that's what I hope I was doing.
20. Daytime Descent
The co-pilot of Germanwings Flight 9525 locked himself in the cockpit and set the airplane for a slow descent into the French Alps. For 10 minutes, the crew desperately tried to get back into the cockpit, but the door was designed to withstand assault and it did not fail. This was a daytime flight and passengers knew what was happening.
They could see the mountains getting closer out the windows. It wasn’t a quick crash, but was a long, drawn-out realization of what was coming.
21. Lost And Found
This one kid back in the early 20th century named Bobby Dunbar went missing, and after eight months of searching for him, the authorities came across a man with a kid who looked a lot like Bobby. The Dunbars believed it was their son, and after a battle in court with the kid’s supposed mother, they brought their son home. A parade was even held due to the missing boy’s return.
He lived believing he was, in fact, Bobby Dunbar. But then the real story came out. A few decades later, his granddaughter began investigating the events on her own and asked Bobby’s nephew for a DNA sample so she could see if her and Bobby’s nephew were related. Turns out, they weren’t. Meaning the real Bobby Dunbar was never found and what happened to him will remain a mystery.
22. Hide And Seek
I read a story recently about Paulette Gerbara Farah, a four-year-old child who went missing from her room in 2010. Her parents immediately notified authorities and started a social media campaign to find Paulette. Paulette's room was searched multiple times for any sign of what happened and was also used by her parents to do media interviews.
Here's the terrifying part: Paulette's body was found 10 days later...IN HER BED! She had wedged herself between the mattress and the footboard and suffocated. There is even a photo of her room where she is in her bed before they found her. It's insane looking at that picture and knowing she is there, and no one had found her.
23. Franklin’s Lost Expedition
About 130 British sailors and military personnel on two ships embarked on a mission to find the Northwest Passage from the Atlantic across to the Pacific through arctic waters. The HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, which were two former warships reclassified as ice breakers thanks to their sturdier builds, departed British waters in 1845...and were never seen again.
In subsequent rescue attempts and investigations, it was discovered that quite possibly everything that could have gone wrong on the expedition did. The weight of the ships with their reinforced hulls and decks designed to fire mortars and cannons off worked against them, as much of the waters they crossed were shallow and filled with rocks and icebergs.
The time chosen to launch the expedition occurred at one of the coldest Arctic periods in recent history. The polar ice didn’t melt like usual as the ships became locked in the frozen water and experienced an endless winter for over a year. The food they stored that was supposed to last for years thanks to the revolutionary new process of canning was bought at the lowest bid.
Because of this, much of the food was improperly sealed and spoiled, leading to food poisoning. Even the ones that were properly sealed and kept intact were riddled with lead thanks to the soldering used to keep the food inside fresh. In conjunction with the lead pipes in the ships the men would have been drinking out of for years, the entire crew of both ships were slowly being infected with lead.
This also affects the mind, leading to memory loss, heavy paranoia, and general mental deterioration. After over a year stuck in the ice, the captain in charge of the voyage, John Franklin, and many other crew members perished in unknown circumstances and the remainder decided to abandon ship and try and hike out together to the nearest trading outpost at Back River in Canada, hundreds of miles away.
They loaded up their rowboats with supplies and fixed them on sleds to be pulled. All remaining crew perished on that journey. Some of their remains were eventually discovered by local Inuits, who described desolate campsites of skeleton-like corpses with hazily built, half-open tents and even human body parts in cook pots, heavily implying that the men resorted to cannibalism in their last desperate hours.
24. Tourists
In the 80s there was a Mexican cult led by an American named Adolfo Constanzo. They used to kidnap random people from tourist towns and nearby cities and perform human sacrifice on them in their rural Mexican desert compound. They used amphetamines and other substances to force the victims to stay awake during the ritual and to not pass out from shock.
The cult believed the more pain and fear they could generate in the victim, the more powerful the body parts would be as the ritual sacrifice. They are believed to have kidnapped and sacrificed over 26 people in the three years that they were active from 1986 to 1989. The leader completed suicide when the authorities showed up at their compound.
They caught 14 cult members, but most people believe there were at least a dozen more that escaped and are still out there.
25. Hunker Down
A dad, mom, and three kids decided they wanted to spend a weekend away at their cabin, but the dad had to work on Friday, so they decided that the mom and kids will go on ahead without him and he will meet them at the cabin Saturday morning. A gigantic storm rolled through town and suddenly a tornado touched down. It destroyed part of town, including the neighborhood where the family lived.
The dad is a firefighter, so they were swamped with rescues, but dad was happy knowing his family was safe at the cabin. His truck finished their active calls and decided to take a drive around town to look for anyone that needed help and see all the damage. As they drive down the family’s street, they see his house is half destroyed but more importantly, he spots his wife’s car in the driveway.
The mom and all three kids lost their lives because they had decided to wait for dad as a surprise. The dad ended up completing suicide a year or so later.
26. Bad Air
I remember my mom telling me about a family she once knew who all succumbed to carbon monoxide intoxication. They lived in the end unit in a row of attached townhouses and their next-door neighbor decided to complete suicide by running their car in their garage. The neighbor didn't know that the air ducts for all the townhouses were connected, so once he started the car and lost consciousness, the fumes traveled through the ducts into the home of the family next door.
It got to the mother and two children while they slept. I don't remember if the father passed as well, or if he was already at work when it happened. The people who lived on the other side of the units were out of town and spared. As a result, they changed the way townhouses were built so that they didn't have common airflow with connected ducts like that development did.
27. The Silent Gibbon Twins
There were two twin sisters who rarely spoke, except to each other. They were sent to separate boarding schools to get them to talk to other people, but they entered severe catatonia instead. They were eventually hospitalized, and they made a pact that if only one of them was alive in the end, the other must speak and live a normal life.
They had a month-long discussion and decided that to live a normal life, one of them should complete suicide. Eventually, one perished due to heart inflammation with no causes noted on the autopsy. And just moments after, the surviving twin spoke: "I'm free at last, liberated, and at last Jennifer has given up her life for me."
28. Not Him
When I was about six years old, I went to this seedy carnival that was set up in a mall parking lot with my dad and my grandma. We were waiting in line for the infamous pirate ship ride. My dad got out of the line to get us drinks. Maybe about five minutes later, a man grabbed my hand and said, "Come on! This line is too long," and started to lead me away.
I remember my grandma yelled after me, "Mel! That’s not your father!" I looked up and saw this man wearing a matching faded denim jacket and jeans, cheap Nascar sunglasses, and a firefighter's mustache. When he saw that my grandma was screaming, he let go of my hand and vanished into the crowd. We told these officers that were standing by their cars, and they said they couldn't do anything. It actually bothered me for a very long time.
29. Don’t Listen
Someone close to me suffers from schizophrenia and the voices convinced them that they should chop up their significant other and child—who didn’t exist— and should end their life. They tried to do that and thankfully their significant other got home early to see smoke billowing from the kitchen. Both of them were safe. That's how the significant other found out that they had schizophrenia.
We got them all the help they could, and they are doing a lot better now. It was one heart-attack-inducing moment for us.
30. Bear Necessities
Explorers like a century or two ago went to look about the Arctic but had their supplies accidentally destroyed and shortly after, it had all run out. So, they hunted a polar bear and ate it. There was just one huge problem. No one at the time knew about how deadly a polar bear's liver was. Because of the high amounts of vitamin A, the toxicity made the crew deathly ill.
One of them felt that their foot was wet, so he took it out of his boot...and his skin came off with the boot.
31. Heads Up
My soccer coach used to tell us this story whenever we were practicing heading the ball. My coach said he had a player who went out of his way to head the ball as much as possible and got really good at it. But one time the ball hit him square on the top of his head and his tongue was out. The guy ended up biting his own tongue in half.
32. What Lies On The Ocean Floor
An interesting deep-sea study was conducted last year that has some frightening implications. Marine biologists took three alligator carcasses and dropped them 6,600 ft into the Gulf of Mexico. This is deep enough that there is no natural light, therefore no plants either. Without plants, the ecosystem must sustain itself on marine snow, which is usually composed of scraps of dead animals that were partially eaten nearer to the surface.
The ecosystem this deep is basically all scavengers, with a few small predators. The first of the three gators was fully consumed after less than 24 hours by giant amphipods—large deep-sea invertebrates the size of a grapefruit. The second was consumed more slowly, and after 51 days only the bones were left. Interestingly, a new species of bone-eating worm was found on the remains. The third carcass is the one that gives me chills.
When the scientists sent their probe down to look at it, it was gone. Not a trace. There were drag marks on the seabed and the ropes used to hold it in place had been torn apart, but other than that, it was gone. In waters this deep, most animals are the size of a cat or smaller. They stay small because food is so scarce. To be big enough to tear through rope, pick up a gator, and leave with it, whatever took it must have been an order of magnitude larger than anything that lives that deep.
It’s possible it was a shark, but sharks of the estimated size required don’t often live so deep. We still don’t know what took that gator.
33. Underground Cinema
One day a bunch of law enforcement officers in training explored some of the catacombs under Paris. A lot of the catacombs are completely unmapped, and they entered an area and heard dogs barking and snarling. They continued going and saw there were cameras and speakers mounted on the wall, playing pre-recorded dog sounds. They continued.
They came into this huge opening and found a cinema. It was lavishly decorated. It had projectors and a mix of old and new movies. It even had electricity running and three phone lines. The officers marked where they were and went back outside. Three days later, they returned to try and investigate further with more experienced officers.
Everything was gone. All the wiring had been ripped out, the phone lines were cut, and all the furniture was gone. All that remained was a note that said, "Do not try to find us." As far as I know, they never figured out who was there.
34. Do Not Stop
I traveled to Atlanta for a conference a few years ago and, being from a rural part of the Central US, I wasn't used to a city like that. So, eventually, I got lost in what most people would call a rough neighborhood. It's around 9 pm and I'm sitting at a stop sign; the only working streetlamp on the block is right there above my car.
I reached over to change the radio station and noticed movement out of the corner of my eye. This guy, who easily fit the description of every gang member I had ever heard of, walked into the light of the streetlamp and started toward my car...pulling a ski mask over his face. I slammed on the gas and got out of there. I have never been so scared in my life.
35. Midnight Visitor
When I was about 12, I had a lot of issues with night terrors and rarely slept a whole night through. This one night, I got up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom. I sat down, half asleep and thinking of nothing but emptying my bladder and going back to bed, when I saw movement out of the corner of my eye.
There was a man standing by the other door to the bathroom staring at me, not moving. He was wearing a tattered grey jumpsuit, had a crutch, and little to no hair. I don't remember how I got down into the basement where my parents slept but suddenly there I was, freaking out. My dad finally went up and looked in the bathroom and kitchen.
He didn’t see anything but allowed me to sleep on the couch down there anyway. I didn't fall back asleep. About an hour or so later, I heard the sliding door to the bathroom that was connected to my sister’s room and limping footsteps. The next morning my dad searched around and noticed that the fridge and pantry had been raided. We never caught the guy.
36. Can I Keep Them
My first job was working at a gas station. One night when business lulled after rush hour, a car drove up and the man inside it asked me for directions to a restaurant. I started giving him directions and he asked me to come closer because he couldn't hear very well over the noise from the street. I thought it was reasonable, so I took a couple of steps closer to his car.
As I was explaining how to get to the restaurant from the gas station the man interrupted me and said, "You have the most beautiful eyes I've ever seen. I'd like to put them in a jar on my desk so I can look at them all day." The guy I was working with quickly yanked me away from the man's car and told the creep that he needed to leave, or else.
37. Unnatural Strength
A buddy of mine asked me and three other friends of ours to come over and help him remove some trees from his backyard. We had two chainsaws going at once, and the friend who owns the land was cutting down a tree when the tree I was cutting fell in the wrong direction. The tree fell on him and pinned his leg and hand to the ground.
Instantly, me and my other friend all had adrenaline running through us and three of us picked up a 50-foot tree and freed our friend. A couple of days after that, we tried to pick up the same tree and it would NOT budge. It’s freaky how strong you can be when adrenaline is pumping through you; my friend lived with a couple of broken bones.
38. Tokaimura Nuclear Plant
The worst case of radiation exposure that I can think of outside of the Chernobyl incident was the case of Hisashi Ouchi, a Japanese plant worker who was exposed to fatal amounts of radiation. However, thanks to his family and doctors he was kept alive against his will for 83 days. A week into his stay in the hospital he said, “I can’t take it anymore […]. I am not a guinea pig", yet the doctors continued on.
All of his skin had fallen off, all of the skin grafts had fallen off, he'd lost multiple limbs, and he suffered heart attacks multiple times a day. I sometimes work on the grounds of a nuclear power plant and always said that if the worst happened and I was exposed to a lethal amount of radiation that I would just off myself rather than suffer something like that.
39. Shark Attacked
Marine biologists attached a tag to a nine-foot-long great white shark. The device measured temperature and depth, to monitor the shark's movements. The tag was later found washed up on a beach. The data showed that four months after it was attached, the female great white abruptly dove to a depth of 580 m (1,903 ft). The ambient temperature surrounding the tag spiked from 8°C to 26°C (46°F to 78°F).
The data suggested an attack. This tracker, attached to a great white, was pulled down rapidly, and measured higher temperatures consistent with some animal's internal body temperature. One theory was that the culprit was another great white. We won't rule out Cthulhu though.
40. Whipping Tom
In 17th-century London, Whipping Tom was like Jack the Ripper, accosting women on the lonely, foggy streets of London. But instead of murdering them he would appear, slap their behinds yelling, "Spanko!" and vanish. He was so elusive that he was never caught, not even with men dressed in drag trying to lure him into a trap.
41. Watch Your Back
There was a body discovered somewhere in Siberia. The cause of his demise was found to be freezing, but something was off. It turned out he had been attacked by a tiger. The tiger used his jaws and grabbed the guy by his backpack, picked him up over his head, and slammed him so hard that it snapped both of his femurs. The poor dude lived three days after the attack, crawling around in the snow.
42. Home Alone
The story of Joyce Vincent has always been particularly creepy to me, but also pretty sad. She was a 38-year-old woman from England who lost her life suddenly in her apartment, but her passing went totally unnoticed for two years. When her unpaid rent reached a certain amount, officers forced entry to the apartment and found her remains on the couch, with the TV still on.
43. Don't Do It Yourself
I’m an electrician and I’ve seen some really scary things that have been under homeowners’ noses for a long time. The worst I’ve seen was in the house I grew up in. A couple of years ago, the high voltage line on the electrical pole fell on my mother’s electrical line. It literally shot the main lug through the 1/8” thick steel panel cover and destroyed everything that was plugged in.
This came a year after the boiler went and almost burned the whole house down. Another bad one I’ve seen is homeowners replacing outlets themselves and pretty much making the whole house energized. Just imagine having your siding on your house able to end you if you touch it.
44. The Lake Nyos Disaster
Lake Nyos is a volcanic crater lake that slowly leaks carbon dioxide into the water. In 1986, the lake belched out a cloud of invisible carbon dioxide gas that suffocated everything within a 25 km (16 mi) radius. Over 1700 people and all their livestock perished without even understanding what was happening to them.
45. Slow End
2.3 million gallons of molasses exploded out of a poorly made container in Boston and flooded a neighborhood, slaying 21 people and injuring 150. The scary part is hearing about how people tried to swim out of it, but it was too thick. They got tired and sank under the molasses slowly and suffocated as they tried to breathe. The thought of it haunts me. I'm not claustrophobic but I could imagine it being a total nightmare for someone who is.
46. Accidental Aquanaut
The cook of a tugboat that capsized 23 km off the coast of Nigeria found a small air pocket in the boat and was the only survivor, trapped 30 m underwater. He was rescued after 60 hours of being under constant danger from drowning, hypothermia, and nitrogen absorption.
47. Farm Hand
My grandma grew up on a farm. She was over at a friend’s house for the night, and as they were getting in bed, her friend said, "Oh, we forgot to check the pasture gate." They got out there and my gran said, "We locked this." Her friend's almost casual response chilled her to the bone. She just said, "I know, there's a man under the bed."
It wasn't uncommon for drifters to show up in places like that and this was what they were taught to do.
48. One In A Million
A neighbor just regaled me with this heartbreaker. His sister, her husband, and two kids went up to Washington to camp every year. So, they were up there in May, early June, sometime during 2002-2003, and the son went to use a rope swing to jump into the lake. The whole family was watching, fun times. But then everything took an incredibly dark turn.
The boy botched the jump and ended up with the rope around his ankle, fell badly, broke a bone, and was just dragging underwater, flailing. The dad immediately springs into action to save his son and dove in—into shallow water. He smashed his skull open, was instantly paralyzed, and drowned. The mother obviously tried to save them both, dove into the water, and suffered a fatal heart attack.
The son stopped flailing and was just hanging there, head underwater. The daughter, 10 years old, had no idea two minutes prior that she would be sitting safely on shore, watching her whole family die. So incredibly heartbreaking. She was raised by my neighbor as a daughter. I just can’t even imagine what that would be like. Just normal, mundane risks proving lethal in less than 200 heartbeats.
49. Better Watch Out
My best friend’s parents were out of town one weekend and she had the house to herself. She went about her business, having dinner and watching TV. When she went to bed, she was lying with her back to her closet when she heard the door open. She somehow pretended to be asleep, and then the horror started. A man who was hiding in the closet walked around her bed to the side she was facing and gently stroked her hair and face, and then left.
She immediately called her boyfriend to ask him to come over, then called her parents and then the authorities. After the authorities investigated the matter, they found that the man had been getting into their home through their doggy door. He had been living in a tent in the forested area behind their home for months to creep on her. They found a ton of surveillance footage of her sleeping and pieces of her clothes and other belongings.
50. Pickup Line
When I was seven, I was raking rocks in my aunt’s front yard and a beat-up pickup truck pulled up. A man got out, fiddled with something under the hood, and then closed it. He said to me, “Hey kid, do you know how to pop a clutch?” Spending my childhood on a farm, I did indeed know how. “Yes,” I responded. “Give me a hand really quick,” he said.
I started walking toward his truck and at the last second, I heard my mom call out to me from the garage, so I turned around to see what she wanted. That's when I heard the truck door slam and the engine start-up. I turned around to see him drive away really fast. I never really thought about it again after that, until now, about 30 years later.
I jumped up after laying down to go to bed when out of nowhere the memory came back, and it hit me: This guy was probably trying to kidnap me. I really dodged a bullet that day, thanks to my mom. I’ve never been so scared from just a memory. I was shaking for at least a half hour over it. It still freaks me out thinking about it.
Sources: Reddit,