Let's Not Meet: A True Horror Podcast - 10x02: The Basement Bathroom - Let's Not Meet
Episode Date: February 20, 2023Stories in this episode: - Creepy Story from 1990, by Breezy (0:50) - The Basement Bathroom by Emilie (5:17) - The Aggressive Good Samaritan, by Gracie (15:32) - Creepy Camouflaged Mountain Man, b...y Lily (19:07) - Man in the Woods, by Halley (30:54) - Stalked by the River, by Simon (34:42) - Dairy Queen Creep, by Umbridge_Shenanigans (43:13) - I Scared a Sports Star, by Gracie (46:25) Extended Patreon Content: - Creepy Cop, by Beau - The Yellow School Bus, by Jaime - Catcall Creep, by Ingrid To donate a few bucks to help my childhood friend Kailene pay for her medical expenses for cancer treatment, visit https://www.gofundme.com/f/kailene-spray-raygoza. All of the stories you've heard this week were narrated and produced with the permission of their respective authors. Let's Not Meet: A True Horror Podcast is not associated with Reddit or any other message boards online. To submit your story to the show, send it to letsnotmeetstories@gmail.com.  Get access to extended, ad-free episodes of Let's Not Meet: A True Horror Podcast with bonus stories every week at a higher bitrate along with a bunch of other great exclusive material and merch at patreon.com/letsnotmeetpodcast. This podcast would not be possible to continue at this rate without the help of the support of the legendary LNM Patrons. Come join the family! Check out the other Cryptic County podcasts like Odd Trails, Welcome to Paradise (It Sucks), and the Old Time Radiocast at CrypticCountyPodcasts.com or wherever you get your podcasts! Listen to Everything Is Creepy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you find your favorite Podcasts with new episodes every Wednesday, and watch on YouTube the following day at https://www.youtube.com/@EverythingisCreepy/about PDS DEBT is offering free debt analysis to our listeners just for completing the quick and easy debt assessment at www.PDSDebt.com/meet. - Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/groups/433173970399259/ - Website - https://letsnotmeetpodcast.com - Patreon - https://patreon.com/letsnotmeetpodcast - Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/letsnotmeetcast/
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Las comunidades negras e ispanas se vende especorcionalmente afectadas por la enfermedad de las células falsiformes,
una enfermedad devastadora que puede provocar anemia, fatiga, crisis de dolor, insuficiencia en diversos órganos,
y muerte prematura.
Un nuevo estudio de investigación ofrece el potencial para luchar contra la enfermedad de células falsiformas.
Visite ruby-scd-stary.com para obtener más información sobre una opción de tratamiento en investigación
para la enfermedad de células falsiformes.
El estudio ahora está reclutando personas de 18 a 50 años.
En Dallas, visite ruby-scd-stary.com.
This podcast contains adult language and content.
If you have a story to share, send it
to Let's Not Meet Stories at gmail.com.
Enjoy the show.
My name is Andrew Tate, and this is season 10 episode 2 of Let's Not Meet a True Horror podcast. Enjoy the show. My family and I moved to a new town in Idaho in 1990 when I was 10 years old.
It was wintertime, with freshly fallen snow.
One night I was in my new bedroom, decorating, setting everything up just right and getting
ready for bed.
I thought that I heard a noise outside my room.
My peek through the blinds to see what it was.
My saw nothing, so I went about my night. But then I heard the noise again, and it sounded
like tapping or knocking. Once again, I peeked out the window and saw nothing. I stayed
up really late that night, being a 10-year year old kid, I imagined I was probably doing stupidly embarrassing things
like singing new kids on the block into my hairbrush as if it were a microphone.
I know for sure that I changed out of my clothes and into my pajamas while continuing to organize
my room.
As the night progressed, I kept hearing the same noise.
I definitely wasn't going to alert my parents
since I was up really late and I wasn't supposed to be. They were already asleep at that point.
The next day I told my dad about the noises and how I thought that it was creepy.
I let him know that I never saw anything outside of my blinds, but I wanted to alert him just in case.
He opened the front door to look since my room was right by the front door. lines, but I wanted to alert him, just in case.
He opened the front door to look since my room was right by the front door.
He saw footprints from large boots in the snow.
The prints led to my window, and there were boot prints facing my window as if someone
had been standing there and peering in.
My dad was on high alert and went outside to follow the remaining boot prints to see where
they led.
He followed the prints all the way to our new neighbor's door.
The neighbor was a young man who lived with his family.
He had a daughter who I had just met the week that we moved in.
I went to her house.
I met her family.
I stayed for a bit.
I was stoked to have made a new friend.
Well, my dad confronted her dad about these boot prints in the snow.
My dad asked our neighbor to come outside so that he could compare what his boot print
looked like versus what was in the
snow.
Sure enough, it was a match.
Now our neighbor denied ever walking over to our house and standing at my bedroom window,
but we knew that it was him for sure.
The proof was right there.
My dad left and went to file a police report the next day. I was so scared and freaked
out over this. Even though I had blinds on my window, it was still possible to see inside
my room from the gaps on the sides of the blinds. My sister and I went outside to check
it out ourselves, and we were able to see that somebody could easily see inside my room pretty well
from the gaps. My parents got some curtains to completely block the windows for my room quickly
after we discovered all of this. The creepiest part of the whole thing was that the police went
over to my neighbor's house not just once, but twice. The very next day, my neighbor's daughter came over to our house and told me that her
dad got a job offer in another state and would be moving there temporarily.
From that point on, he never came back to his family.
It was wild.
I still can't believe that it happened.
We ended up moving after living in that house for a year.
When we moved to a new house, a similar situation happened to me again. I have terrible luck,
and now I'm super hyper-vigilant as an adult. I'm always watching and keeping my head on swivel.
You just never know if there's somebody creeping out there.
And that's really the creepiest aspect of stalkers. They can and do react in creepy ways,
and we must stay alert.
This is a story that took place in New York City in the early 2000s before 9-11. My friend and I have since stopped talking about the incident, but it honestly creeps me
out more and more as the years go by.
I realize just how lucky we were to have escaped
something potentially more sinister. My friend, we'll call her Casey, and I had been friends
since we were kids. We met at summer day camp when we were around ten years old. Being
the boy crazy girls that we were, we eventually realized that we both had a crush on the same 12-year-old boy.
He had long bangs hanging down from his ball-cut, and if you were a kid in the mid-90s,
you remember the look very well.
One day, during an archery lesson, Casey and I were humiliated by our instructor because
we were pointing the arrows through the bow the wrong way, at the same time.
The boy we liked made fun of us and front of everyone. So much for Kupid's arrow, right?
But our friendship was born into our delight, Kaci and I found out that we had been attending the
same middle school. Fast forward to just after high school graduation.
Casey and I convinced our moms to let us go to New York City.
Neither Casey nor I had ever been to New York City without parents.
Let alone staying overnight in a big city on our own.
Casey was known for being loud and sometimes a little aggressive, though she was also very
sweet.
She just knew how to speak her mind.
I was shy and sometimes a pushover in any type of conflict.
If anyone gave me a hard time, Kasey would tell them off immediately, and that was that.
It was a dynamic that had always served me well in our friendship. But honestly, at that age, we were a bit clueless and naive when it came to just about everything.
When we got into the car and left for our overnight trip, we could barely drive anywhere outside
of our hometown without getting lost.
Once we were on the highway, I realized I had been driving in the opposite direction for nearly an hour, seriously.
But we didn't care. Our moms had booked a hotel in downtown Manhattan, and we were
beyond excited for this freedom and responsibility that we had never tasted before.
The whole point of this trip was to see a Q&A that our favorite B-list celebrity would be participating
in the next day. We were so excited at the prospect of meeting this guy and potentially
giving him a hug and getting our picture taken with him. He wasn't very well known, but
he would go on to be very famous only a few years later.
We still managed to arrive early in the day and check into our hotel.
Casey and I freaked out a little while trying to plan what we were going to wear to meet
our celebrity crush.
And if you were wondering yes, we brought several outfits because we knew it was going to be impossible
to choose the perfect one.
It had to be just right for this guy.
In the meantime, we were hungry and wanted to explore the city a little bit before dark.
We stopped at a well-known fast food pizza place. It wasn't too crowded, but about as busy
as you would expect, a downtown pizza spot to be around lunchtime.
Casey kept complaining about the underwire and her fancy new bra, and I really needed to use the
restroom so we asked the cashier where we could go. He motioned toward the back of the restaurant.
We noticed there were fewer people towards the back, as if it seemed like not many people stayed
to dine. Most people just grabbed the slice and took to the street.
We found what we assumed was the basement door with the restroom sign and carefully stepped
down the winding stairs. It smelled dink and musty. There were lots of boxes against the
wall, but we saw some doors in the very back. There was a person in sight, not an employee or patron.
I'm not the biggest fan of basements in general, but I honestly wasn't too creped out just
yet. We were still riding our city-girl high and giggling as we approached the women's
restroom. It was a very tiny, very cramped space. When you entered through the door, there was a mirror and vanity about six or seven feet
ahead.
Then two toilet stalls to the right.
I was in the stall closest to the door and Casey was in the other.
She slung her uncomfortable bra over the stall door as she changed.
We heard the front door push open and closed shut.
We continued to chit chat until a deep voice said,
hey, the men's room is closed. Might if I come in?
Embarrassingly we both said, sure, as if it wasn't odd having a strange man stand around as we occupied the only two stalls
that were available.
We'll be out in a sec, I added, flushing the toilet.
I watched as Casey pulled the broad down from the door and presumably shoved it into her
bag, then unlatched the stall door.
What happened next all went down in under two minutes, but I remember feeling
like it was an hour. There was an eerie silence as I pulled my pants up and buttoned them.
I heard Casey in a low voice.
Oh, um, can you please not do that? Another short silence. And again, Casey whimpered.
Can you please put that thing away?
I opened my door to find Casey, ready to burst into tears, backing into the vanity, while
the man slowly advanced toward her.
He was in his mid to late fifties, tall with grayish hair, dressed in a well-tailored brown
suit.
He could have been on a lunch break
from Wall Street for all we knew. His hand was moving rapidly, and I saw what was happening.
He quickly turned to me and asked, you want to earn a quick ten bucks little girl? Casey
was softly crying as he had us cornered in this tiny room, where even a scream wouldn't
reach the busy floors upstairs. It suddenly occurred to me how isolated and vulnerable we were.
I wondered if he had a weapon, other than the disgusting one that he had in front of us.
I grabbed Casey by the shirt and dragged her towards the door. The man blocked
us. With his tall, built body. The little whores aren't going anywhere. He threatened,
with a sickening grin. At some point in my life, my mom had told me, when push comes to shove,
you can hold your own. At that moment, with Casey trembling by my
side, I literally pushed the man as hard as I could. There was a bit of a struggle as the
man grabbed at me, but finally, I got around him and ushered Casey out, I told her to run.
Before she could run, the man quickly let go of me and sprinted past Casey.
My adrenaline must have been pumping because
as he ran up the stairs I yelled, you better run, you fucking pervert. By the time Casey and I made it
upstairs he had escaped. We shouted to the employees that a man just tried to assault us in the bathroom,
but nobody really reacted or said anything. The man was gone, just another
spec in a crowded New York City street. I often wonder what would have happened if he had
managed to barricade us down there or worse, if there had only been one of us alone.
In a way, this is a story of personal triumph for me, but I also know it boiled down the
luck.
If he had a weapon, or if he really wanted to, he could have overpowered us, especially
since Casey was frozen in fear.
I still won't use public basement bathrooms alone and I hate using them even if I'm with
someone.
To that fancy dressed New York predator,
let's hope we never meet again. Amplify your career through training and development solutions specifically designed for federal
government professionals, from courses to help you attain or retain certification to individualize
coaching services, to programs at home, your leadership skills, and business acumen.
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that's measurably better. Learn more at managementconcepts.com. That's managementconcepts.com.
This happened in the summer of 2021. I was still living with my parents, and it was late at night,
so I was in bed. In my room at the time, my headboard was against the window in my room, so that I could get
a cool breeze while smoking in bed.
I was sitting up, watching TikTok, when I heard shouting outside from the street.
I was wearing headphones, and there were a few bars within a five minute walk from my
parents' house, so to be honest,
I was used to the neighbors coming home drunk on occasion, especially during the summer.
It wasn't until I took one of my ear buds out that I realized a guy was shouting my neighbor's
name.
My neighbor was married and had two toddlers, so I knew that both she and her husband
were home. Whoever this guy was, he was shouting her name loud enough, that I was sure it woke her
and the kids up.
I took both ear buds out and turned off my phone.
Hey, I heard.
He sounded closer.
He repeated it again.
Hey!
I took a breath and turned around. Outside on the street, I saw a man in dirty work clothes,
standing under a street lamp looking directly at me. You! Do you know if she's home?" he asked.
Yeah, but she's sleeping. I shouted at him. He held up a purse under the glow of the street lamp. I have her bag.
I have to give it to her," he insisted.
"'You can probably just leave it on her doorstep.
She'll get it in the morning,' I suggested.
He stepped closer.
Into the driveway and I saw his face.
He was middle-aged and looked like he hadn't slept in weeks.
I thought to myself, if I was my neighbor, with small kids, this
was the last person I'd want to see on my doorstep in the middle of the night.
No, I have to give it to her. You don't understand," he persisted.
I promised her porch is hidden enough, so it'll be safe until the morning, I said.
He mumbled as he straightened from the 45-degree angle stance that he was standing in, and
then ran full speed towards her yard.
I could tell by the grunt in the thud that I heard that he threw her purse over the fence.
He walked over to my driveway and said, there!
The following day my mom caught my neighbor on her way to work and asked about the guy from the night before.
My neighbor said that she heard everything and was understandably terrified.
The day before she had taken her kids to the park, she set her purse down on a bench and completely
forgot about it as she was corralling her two year olds into the car.
She panicked for the rest of the day because
both her American and Chinese passports, her ID, credit cards, and photos of her kids were all in
there. She found everything except the photos of the children strewn all over the yard the next
morning. The best-case scenario is that this was an aggressive good Samaritan that wanted a reward
for something for returning her bag.
But why he decided that one in the morning was the best time to do so is beyond me.
I really don't want to meet this man again. I'm from a small town in the heart of Virginia nestled between mountain peaks.
This story took place during my Thanksgiving break from college in 2019.
My best friend from school, who will call Elaine, was from Missouri.
She couldn't be convinced to pay for a plane ticket to go home so she decided to come
spend her break with me and my folks.
Being the host, I felt like it was necessary to show her the culture of my little hideaway
town, which included a Walmart, a few hiking trails, and odd shops run by the locals.
One of the most revered spots among high schoolers and alcoholics is a place simply referred
to as the rock.
Going to the rock with friends was almost a ride of passage among teens.
It was a place where board 14 to 18-year-olds could go party uninhibited by law enforcement or other adults
who could ruin the fun.
In being true to my young backwoods' self, I decided Elaine hadn't really seen my town
until she experienced the rock, so we decided to set off my little Nissan Versa to traverse
the mountain.
For some context, to get to the rock, you have to drive about 30 minutes away from my house
which was already in the middle of nowhere.
This meant we had to drive even further into the middle of nowhere.
You know how you have to take a certain turn-off which was always hidden behind tall grass
and wasn't indicated by a street sign?
Well, from there you follow a paved road that was only wide
enough for one car up the mountain. Driving up this paved road, there are patches
of thick forest where you can't even see past three trees, and there are these amazing
overlooks that have views of miles upon miles of cow fields. There are people who live up in this mountain.
The trek uphill begins with nice cabin-style houses owned by families, but further uphill,
the houses become more shack-like, and eventually there's no housing at all.
After a while, the paved road meets a gravel road that winds up the rest of the hill.
Now, it's important to note that there are plenty of private property and no trespassing
signs posted on this road.
These signs have been posted by the local electric company, which has towers at the
mountaintop.
Believe me when I say, I'm a rule follower.
Even local law enforcement knew about the rock, and no one ever reported getting into actual trouble for trespassing from being up there.
Officers only showed up sometimes to break up a rager and make sure that nobody fell off the cliffs.
I was confident that Elaine and I would be fine during this trip, as I always was when I went up to the rock.
We reached the end of the gravel road and I went up to the rock.
We reached the end of the gravel road, and we got out of the car.
Some clouds had moved in while we had been driving uphill, and a deep fog had set into
the woods that we parked in.
We could barely see.
Since we had taken the time to drive up there, I still thought that it would be fun to see
the graffiti on the rock from prior high school classes dating back to 1988.
I located the footpath that we had to take through the grassy forest to get to the rock.
The mistyness of the fog definitely gave off a spooky vibe, but also added to the fun
of everything.
It was fall, and the leaves were turning a beautiful orange and yellow color, as they lined
the pathways that we were walking on.
I'm serious when I say that this fog was so thick that if I was any more than 10 feet
ahead of a lane, she would not be able to see me, and I'd have to stop and wait for her
to catch up.
When we finally made it to the rock, Elaine was an awe of it.
She thought that it wasn't actually going to be a big rock, but there, teetering on the
edge of a cliff was a giant boulder, covered in rainbow graffiti, littered with beer cans
and discarded cigarettes from all of the parties.
The trees looked like Christmas ornaments had been hung on all of them, but it was really just
bras belonging to girls who had come up there to hook up. It became a tradition to toss their
discarded undergarments as an I was here kind of marker. It really was quite a sight to see.
It feels a bit like a time capsule. Elaine and I had finished exploring and walked back towards my car.
It was dead silent up there at the rock
with the exception of our chatting
and our footsteps breaking the leaves on the path.
Elaine actually took one of the most cursed looking pictures
of me in existence, where I look like a giant goblin
hobbling through the fog, but that isn't
the scary part.
When we made it back to the car, we were physically damp from our hike.
We had been scrolling through various photos that we had taken on our phones.
The fog was now hanging so close to us that we couldn't even see the trees anymore.
I had taken the time to check around the car before getting in to make
sure all the tires had air and nothing had fallen off during our ascent. We were giggling
with each other when all of a sudden we heard a knock at the window. Remember, there isn't
a house for miles out here. If there were any vehicles on the road, we easily would have seen them or heard them.
We hadn't seen any other vehicles this entire time, so I wouldn't have thought anyone
would be nearby.
We both screamed bloody murder as our phones flew out of our hands and we turned towards
the window.
Outside was a man.
He was a very large man, I might add, wearing all camouflage. He even had his face
painted to further conceal himself. I couldn't tell what his face looked like. He had a large
beard, and he looked like he hadn't showered or seen another human being in months.
Now, it wasn't uncommon for Hermit to live in the mountains, but what really put me off
was the giant shotgun that he had in his hands and a second one strapped to his back.
Looking back, I handled the situation stupidly.
I proceeded to start the car and opened the window just to crack.
Hi, I said sheepishly, trying to seem as innocent as possible.
He shouldn't be here.
He responded in a gruff tone.
I'm sorry, sir.
We're just leaving.
Elaine assured.
You've been here a while.
I saw you pull up.
I've been waiting for you to get back, the mountain man growled.
He had been watching us the entire time. At this point I was shitting
myself, I was thoroughly convinced that we were going to die.
It's private property, he cautioned. No trespassing. I'm really sorry, sir. We'll leave right
away. I quickly apologized. It's hunting season, and you two are out here without any orange on at all.
You could get shot dead.
I could have shot you."
He said, still angry as he leaned closer to the window.
He put his fingers over the lip of the window and whispered softly.
If I were you, I'd leave now, and I'd never come back.
I quickly started the car and replied that we'd be leaving right away, adding that we wouldn't
be back any time soon.
Likely never.
I put the car in drive and the man took a step back.
I slowly began to turn around at the dead end of the gravel road.
The man was not moving at all.
I actually had to make an effort not to hit him as I was reversing.
He just stood there like a statue staring blankly at us.
As soon as I turned the car around, I started to slowly pull forward,
and the man finally turned around, walked away, and disappeared into the mist.
It was at this time I realized not only did he have a rifle on his
back, but he also had a giant machete tucked into his belt. He had a rope tied to his backpack.
But the oddest thing that I saw hanging from him was the handcuffs.
Elaine and I sped down that hill, trying to talk about what just happened.
I haven't told anybody about this encounter, especially not my parents, who would be pissed
if they found out that we had been trespassing.
I never heard other accounts of people seeing that man up there at the rock, at least not
after that.
I've been wondering why he was dressed in all camouflage, though.
I also wondered why he advised us to wear orange when he wasn't wearing anything orange himself.
Shouldn't he abide by these hunting standards as well?
Where did he come from? How did he get up there without a vehicle?
Where was he watching us from? Who was he? And why did he have handcuffs?
Thinking back on it, the land that we were on was owned by the electric company, so he
was trespassing just as much as we were. To this day, Elaine and I won't talk about
this creepy encounter. It's almost as if we're worried we're going to summon him accidentally
if we're worried we're going to summon him accidentally if we discuss it.
To the creepy camouflage mountain man, if this property really is yours, I won't trespass
again and I hope we never meet again. Amplify your career through training and development solutions specifically designed for federal
government professionals, from courses to help you attain or retain certification to individualized
coaching services, to programs that home, your leadership skills and business
acumen.
Management concepts optimizes your professional development, online in-person, individually,
or groups.
It's training that's measurably better.
Learn more at managementconcepts.com.
That's managementconcepts.com.
I used to study in my university's Arbidum, which was positioned between my school and my
apartment building.
I had to walk through a short trail in the woods to get to my apartment from the grassy
area in the Arboridum.
It was about a 10-15 minute walk before I could reach the well lit road my complex was
on.
One afternoon, while reviewing material for a psychology exam, I lost track of time and
suddenly realized how dark it was getting.
I hurriedly packed my bag and started down the trail to my apartment.
The wooded area was pretty dark, and as a young petite woman I started to get paranoid.
I grew up in the woods, so I'm very comfortable in nature, whether it was dark or not, but
I'm nervous as I've heard that people will come to the arboretum after dark for nefarious
activities, as it's under campus police jurisdiction not the town's PD.
Because of this, I came up with a plan.
I went to Audubon Camp as a kid, and we used to do night hikes.
On one of these night hikes, I learned that you can see much further in the dark if you
let your eyes adjust rather than just using a flashlight.
I also figured that if I used my flashlight, it would be a dead giveaway of my location,
and would call attention to me. I put my phone in my pocket and let my eyes adjust to the dark.
I started walking down the trail slowly, looking into the distance to spot movement, and
attentively listening to the sounds around me. Everything seemed fine until I started
approaching a curve in the path.
About 60 feet in front of me, I could vaguely make out a human-like shape in the trees.
I wasn't sure so I slowly walked forward, watching for movement from the form in front
of me.
But I saw nothing.
I kept my foot steps quiet, which was another Audemon camp skill, and I got about ten feet
away from the shape in front of me, and I realized that I was right.
It was absolutely a human.
A man was crouching on the side of the trail, dressed completely in black, holding a bike
next to him and hiding his face from me.
Thankfully, I learned that I'm good in this type of scenario. I took out my phone,
turned on the flashlight, shown the light on him, and loudly said,
I see you, don't move, and don't follow me.
I slowly walked by him. I never took my gaze off of him.
I got far enough away, and I took off running to my building once there was enough distance
between us.
The whole time I watched him, though.
He never moved a muscle, and continued to sit, squatting completely still almost like
a statue.
Once inside my apartment, all my panic feelings burst out, and I sat down crying and explaining
what happened to my roommates. We called the campus police, but by the time they got there,
the man in black was long gone. I never ran into him again, and I'm very proud of myself for
how I reacted to a creepy situation. I feel like I also should thank my Audubon camp counselor
for what they taught me, as it helped me to keep my shit together and remain safe that day.
But to that weird man wearing all black, crouching in the woods and covering his face, let's never meet again.
This happened 11 years ago, in 2012. It was the summer after my senior year of high school. I used to hike down to the end of my road. My family lived pretty far out in the middle
of nowhere in South Carolina. At the end of the road, the
county had attempted to build something, but they gave up after laying the foundation.
Rusted Rebar was slowly being absorbed by the forest with each passing year. Past that,
there was a path that led to a river. If you followed this path for a couple hundred yards, you'd go down a hill and come out
to a secluded riverbank.
It was a bit of a journey to get there, but this was a great place to unwind.
I wasn't a super social kid, so it was a really great place for me to get away for a few
hours at least.
It was a very private place.
Or so I thought.
Sometimes there would be evidence that other people had been there.
I'd see ashes from bonfires and empty beer cans or liquor bottles.
Sometimes it seemed like the place had a completely different life when I wasn't there.
One day, in the afternoon, I started the journey to the riverbank.
I was out there later in the day then normally, because I thought that it would be fun to see
the sunset.
As I passed the rusted rebar from the foundation of the unfinished building, I remember getting
an odd feeling like I was being watched.
I figured I was just being paranoid.
It was really easy for me to spook myself
into feeling that way when I was alone in the woods.
There was this giant truck that was parked there, but that wasn't exactly uncommon. This
area was a great place to hike hunt and fish. I didn't see anybody around, but my kept going.
When I got to the river, I took my clothes off to swim.
I wasn't skinny dipping.
I wore bikini swim briefs underneath my clothes that would dry really fast.
This came in handy because I was terrible at packing for swim trips.
Most times I would even forget to bring a towel with me.
After my first swim in the river, I came back onto the river bank and laid out in the sun.
It was still an hour or two before the sun was supposed to set, but I got that feeling that I was
being watched again. I felt vulnerable, so I looked around, and then I saw him. Standing at the
trailhead maybe twenty yards away was this old guy with a ponytail and a grungy-looking
pharaoh beard.
He was just staring at me.
His clothes were dirty and ratted, and he looked terrible.
I could tell that he didn't smell any better than he looked.
I was pretty on edge as soon as I saw him because he didn't announce himself
or acknowledge me or anything. He just continued staring.
At first, I thought maybe he owned the land, and I felt awkward saying something to a dude
while wearing a speedo on his land, but as far as I knew, this place wasn't private property.
I raised my hand and waved. I didn't really
want to make friends with him, but I didn't want to be polite either.
He kept staring. It was almost as if he couldn't see me even though he was looking right at
me. I kind of shifted up on the riverbank to make sure that he was looking at me, or
at least to let him know that I could see him since he didn't
react to my wave. Then he laughed out loud, and this creepy, high-pitched voice, and started
saying something to somebody nearby. I sat up and watched as he kept talking. He started
getting angry, like he was in a very heated argument, but it didn't look like
anybody was with him.
He was just having this intense conversation with himself.
He went back into the woods, still talking to himself.
Then, I heard his high-pitched, creepy laugh again, but this time it sounded like he was
heading away from me.
I was a little bit more than creeped out at this point, but I figured I would let it
slide, which was my first mistake.
Some time later, just before sunset, I went back into the water for another swim.
This was the worst thing I could have done.
This freak must have been watching me from somewhere in the woods because when I got
out of the river, my clothes were gone.
I was sufficiently freaked out.
This dirty old man really just steal my clothes.
I hadn't brought my wallet, phone, or anything else of value.
It was just my clothes, but seriously, what the fuck, dude?
I looked around for a little while, thinking maybe he had
just thrown my clothes into the forest just to fuck with me. I also didn't want to step on something
sharp or get bit by something or catch poison ivy. I didn't go very deep into the forest before
I heard that stupid, creepy high-pitched laugh again. I almost jumped out of my skin. I turned back to the
riverbank, and there he was, right where I had been laying. He was staring at me with this
dumb, open mouthed smile on his face.
I really like your panties. He said, as he started making these absurd moaning noises.
That was it for me. I was done. I ran back toward the trail and
nothing but my swimsuit. Hearing nothing but that creepy, high-pitched laugh. I was happy
to hear it because I knew that as long as I kept hearing that dumbass laugh in the distance
behind me, it meant that he wasn't anywhere near me.
As I passed the Rusted Out Foundation at the opening of the trail, that giant truck was
still parked there.
I should have gotten the license plate, but I was too focused on getting the fuck out
of there.
I felt a lot calmer when I was out on the street, but I still had this paranoid feeling that
he knew where I was and at any moment, he would come roaring down the street in that truck
to try and do God knows what to me. I nearly dove into the woods. When I heard a car coming up
behind me, but thankfully, it was just some girls. They honked and whistled as they drove by laughing.
I didn't weigh them down for help or anything because I was really close to home,
and the girls didn't seem like they would be very helpful anyway. I would have been embarrassed had I not been in survival mode.
I got home without anyone seeing me and haven't told anybody about this until now.
It makes me wonder how crazy people can be when they feel like they're able to get away with
acting the way that they do. It was the last time I ever went to that riverbank.
So to the creepy old man in the woods who decided to steal my clothes, ruin my plans to watch
the sunset, and planned to do God knows what to me.
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Some time ago, when I was 15 or 16, I worked at a dairy queen.
The store that I worked at was located on a street where taxis were always back and forth,
so I never had to call for a cab.
I could just step outside, wait for one to drive by and hail it.
My parents didn't drive, so we had a deal where they would pay for half my cab fare.
Whenever I worked the closing shift, which ended at midnight or later depending on how long
it took us to clean up, my coworker who lived right next door to the store would wait with
me on the picnic tables out in front until I was able to hail a cab.
Late one night while sitting at the picnic table, I noticed a car driving by us.
It seemed to slow down but kept going.
I don't know what made me notice it, but I did.
Anyway, a taxi came by shortly after and I hailed it.
My coworker assumed that I had gotten into a cab left and went home.
I told the taxi driver where I wanted to go,
but he said that he wasn't going that way, so I went back to the picnic tables by myself.
I wasn't too concerned because, like I said, taxis were driving up and down the street all the time.
While I was waiting, the car that I had clocked earlier came around the corner and pulled into
the parking lot. Then the driver
got out of the car and started walking toward me. To this day, I do not know why I didn't
just run to my friend's house. The guy who got out of the car said it's kind of cold
tonight, isn't it? It wasn't, but I just agreed, and he said, it's kind of lonely too. Q. Enter a freak out.
He went on to say, God told me to stop and talk to you.
At this point, I saw another taxi pulling to the parking lot across the street.
I didn't even say anything to the man, and instead just started walking toward the
cab parked across the street.
The creep then said, I can give you a ride.
I said, no, that's okay.
To which he replied, I love you.
I sprinted for that cab, probably breaking world records.
I swear.
I jumped in the back seat of the cab and asked the driver if he was working and if he could
drive me home.
The cab driver could tell that I was freaked out, but he got me home safely.
I was so afraid that the creep would follow us.
Well, after this incident, I called for a cab every single time I worked late and waited
inside the store until the cab arrived.
After I got my license in a car,
when I worked late with other girls who had to wait for a ride, I waited with them inside the store
or gave them a ride home myself. If they argued, I would tell them my story. To the creep who approached
me in the parking lot of the dairy queen, I don't love you. And let's not meet.
This story happened in 2019.
I was working as a scare actor in a haunted house.
My job was to be assigned to a room or area of the haunted house, dress up in a costume, and scare people
as they walked through the attraction.
I was alone for most of the night, but occasionally other crew members came through and costume
to relieve me for a break, or to make sure that folks were moving through the haunted
house efficiently.
The house itself was themed after a haunted morgue, complete with odd-topsy
rooms and meatlockers. My room was one of the first rooms guests would
enter, and it would be shaped kind of like an L. I would be in the longer part of the
L and the shorter part was a connecting hallway to another room. This particular hallway
was decorated as one of the meat lockers, with mannequins hanging
and body bags from the ceiling.
There were strips of vinyl shading that closed off one part of the L from the other, so that
when you were in the hallway, you couldn't see the guests that were in the other part
of the room.
Since it was late in the season, I had completely blown out my vocal cords to the point where
the only sound that I could produce was a spooky ghoul voice that my haunted house character
spoken.
On this particular night, it was close to closing time.
We had seen over 1,500 people that night already, and obviously I was getting tired. I pushed through the fatigue
that I was feeling in my legs and back for the last few groups, clinging to the image of
a hot bath and a big meal that was waiting for me at home.
A crew member came through and pulled me aside.
This next group is pretty ratty, so just look out. He cautioned, as he pulled his monster mask back down over his face.
I nodded and gave him a thumbs up.
I had dealt with rowdy, scared, angry, and drunk people all evening, so I thought that
this would be no problem.
I heard this rowdy group that I was warned about before I even saw them.
It was a group of maybe five or six of the
biggest college-aged dudes that I had ever seen. They were with girls and had obviously
been drinking. I started my little scare spiel when one of the dudes lost it. Now I'm
a five-six female and at the time I only weighed 115 pounds. As I would later find out from another
co-worker who was also harassed by this group, the dude who lost it was the quarterback for
a college football team. He screamed a mere inches from my face. I'm not fucking scared
of you. My eyes literally burned from the vodka in his breath. He continued to repeat,
I'm not scared of you, I'm not scared of you. While nearly head-butting me,
his friends behind him yelled at him to back up and leave me alone. That's when he grabbed my neck
and pulled me into the hallway part of the L-shaped room. He threw me against the wall, still holding my throat.
He threw me so hard I saw stars.
He said, I'm going to fucking kill you, in a tone so low and gutterable that it told
me he absolutely would if given the chance.
I couldn't scream or even call for help as I stared into this huge
dude's glazed over darkened eyes. I moutved. I m sorry to him while straining to take a
breath. And then he pulled backward. I looked to see my coworker who warned me about this
group. He had a security guard with him who promptly
restrained this huge guy. The rest of the group piled out of the haunted house behind
their friend clearly embarrassed. They were all obviously kicked out and I was taken
to the outbreak room to talk to the owner. When I got there I saw another scare actor holding
a napkin to her face. This
dude had apparently punched her so hard that she was bleeding and had a minor concussion.
So to the quarterback of a certain college, you're a fucking weeny baby, and I hope you
never mix haunts and alcohol again. Please, let's never meet.
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Better than all the rest! Don't forget to stick around after the music for your extended, ad-free version of Let's
Not Eat A True Horror Podcast, and if you want to get access, make sure you head over
to patreon.com forward slash Let's Not Eat Podcast to sign up and support the show today.
This week you will have heard Creepy Story from 1990 by Breezy, The Basement Bathroom by
Emily, The Aggressive Good Samaritan by Gracie, Creepy Camouflaged Mountain Man by Lily,
Man in the Woods by Halley, Stalked by the River by Simon, Dairy Queen Creep by Umbrage, Shenanigans. And finally, I scared a sports star by Gracie.
All of the stories you've heard this week were narrated and produced with the permission
of their respective authors.
Let's not meet a true horror podcast is not associated with Reddit or any other message
boards online.
As always, if you have a story to share, send it on over to Let's Not Meet Stories at gmail.com.
And please don't forget to check out the new episodes of my other podcasts like Odd Trails,
my true paranormal podcast, Welcome to Paradise It sucks, and the old time radiocasts over
at crypticcountypodcasts.com or just search wherever you get your podcasts.
I'll see you all next week.
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