Morbid - Episode 585: Listener Tales 88
Episode Date: July 25, 2024Weirdos! It's Listener Tales, and you know what THAT means! it's brought to you BY you, For you, FROM you, and ALLLLL about you! Today, it's Ash's pick and we've got a batch of tales about si...gns! We have deceased matchmakers, a traumatic birthday, a story about gut feelings, Ghosts that use MORBID to haunt their loved ones, and a grandmother who sends signs for her granddaughter to stop smoking the devils lettuce. If you’ve got a listener tale please send it on over to Morbidpodcast@gmail.com with “Listener Tales” somewhere in the subject line :)See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Wondery Plus subscribers can listen to Morbid early and ad free.
Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts.
Listening on Audible helps your imagination soar.
Whether you listen to stories, motivation, expert advice, any genre you love,
you can be inspired to imagine new worlds, new possibilities and new ways of thinking.
Audible has the best selection of audiobooks without exception,
along with popular podcasts and exclusive audible originals all in
one easy app. Enjoy audible anytime while doing other things, household chores, exercising,
on the road, commuting, you name it. Audible makes it easy to be inspired and entertained as
part of your everyday routine without needing to set aside extra time. There's more to imagine when
you listen. Sign up for a free 30-day audible trial and your first audiobook is free. Visit audible.ca.
I'm Dan Tuberski. In 2011, something strange began to happen at a high school in upstate
New York. A mystery illness, bizarre symptoms, and spreading fast. What's the answer? And
what do you do if they tell you it's all in your head? Hysterical, a new podcast from
Wondery and Pineapple Street Studios. Binge all episodes of Hysterical early and ad free on Wondery Plus.
Hey weirdos, I'm Ash.
And I'm Elena.
And this right here is Morbid. It's morbid listener tales brought to you by you for you from you and all about you, baby.
Yeah.
What's up?
Nothing.
I mean, so much.
I was like, cool.
But nothing of note right now.
No?
Yeah.
Everything's just, you ever feel like you're just in a state of, with your professional
life and just suspended animation?
That's what I was trying to say.
What do you mean?
Like everything's just on hold.
You know, when you get in those little lull periods where like you're waiting on certain
things to happen?
Yeah.
You're just like, come on.
Yeah.
We live in different places though.
You live on earth and I live in the clouds.
So sometimes I don't even know when I'm in that period.
I'm just like, look a bird.
It is.
Honestly, you're better off up there.
It's down here.
It's rough.
Earth is not cute. It's bleak down here.
You know what I heard actually? This isn't something I should tell you, but here we are.
I was listening to, I was just coming off of Earth is Bleak. I was listening to, disrespectfully,
it's Katie Maloney's podcast with Dana. And they had Ariana on and she was talking, every
week they have a segment
where they put something in the basement,
which we should start doing in the office.
It's like, like the...
There's a fly in here fucking terrorizing us.
It needs to stop.
Oh, the sound of a fly just buzzity-buzz buzzing
makes me angry.
It literally ignites every single one of my nerve endings.
I feel exposed. We literally opened the window single one of my......senses....nervenings. Yeah.
I feel exposed.
We literally opened the window for him to go outside too.
I'm like, just get the fuck out.
So not only is he loud and gross, but he's fucking stupid too.
He is.
All right, maybe if we ignore him, he'll leave because he won't feel included.
So they put something in the basement every week, which means like it's like their thing
that they hate or like, fuck that, we're getting rid of it.
Like we're just not going to deal with that anymore.
Yeah.
I love that.
I guess Ariane has been flying a lot
because, you know, like fucking bicoastal queen.
Yeah.
And she said that she's putting turbulence in the basement
because like it sucks so much.
And then she said that turbulence is just going to get worse,
she heard, because of global warming.
I mean, that makes sense
because all turbulence is just like air. And air is getting worse because of global warming. I mean, that makes sense because all turbulence is just like air.
And air is getting worse because of global warming.
Like hot air, cold air, like all the shit that, you know, I mean, because turbulence
is really just like air pushing on the, or like bumps in the air kind of thing.
Yeah.
But, sorry.
But turbulence is okay.
Yeah, because you're just in jello.
Because it can't knock you out of the sky.
I think when I heard that, I said, don't tell Elena, don't tell Elena,
don't tell me that. But do you, does that ever happen to you?
Or you're like, don't tell that person that don't tell that. And then you're like,
Hey, I really have to tell you something. Does that ever happen to you?
Not on that level. But here we are.
See one thing that doesn't happen to me. And one thing that doesn't happen to you.
There you go.
What did you say?
Suspended animation and turbulence and telling people about it.
Telling people with fears of flying about it.
You're like, hey, get on a plane.
Come on, get on a plane.
And you're like, did you know that turbulence is only going to get fucking worse?
And there's nothing you can do about it.
Listen, I didn't tell you to get on a plane.
I'm not going anywhere with you.
I don't have any trips planned with you as of late. Get on a goddamn plane.
You should get on a plane.
Go on vacation.
Yeah.
Just know that turbulence would be worse.
After that, I can't wait.
All right.
Well, I picked Felicity Intertales this week and apparently-
And I didn't read them.
You didn't read them.
I was in a place, I guess, because there's a lot of grandparents and a lot of messages
and signs.
It's very Ash.
You were in a place called space, so-
You aren't, y'all.
Yeah, it's true.
You were in a place called space, so-
You were in a place called space, so-
You were in a place called space, so-
You were in a place called space, so-
You were in a place called space, so- You were in a place called space, so- You were in a place called space, so- You were in a place called space, so- You were in a place, I guess, because there's a lot of like grandparents and a lot of messages and signs. It's very Ash.
You were in a place called space. So aren't we all?
Yeah, it's true. You want to start?
I do. Should I just start with the first one?
Yep, because I want to read the second one.
Look at that. It's perfect.
Oh my God. This is why we work so freaking well.
Let's see. So this one is called the time my dead grandpa played Cupid
for me and my boyfriend.
Isn't that-
I'm kind of obsessed with that.
It says, please keep this anon.
If you read it on the podcast, you can call me T.
Anon.
I will do that for you T.
It says, hello, my fellow witchy spiritual spooky bitches.
If you read this on the pod,
I think I quite literally will shit my dick from excitement and maybe the shock of hearing my own story.
So with that being said, I just got done listening to Listener Tales 86, where during my intent
listening, I was thinking about writing in this odd tale and then the story you read
immediately after mentioned kachina dolls and I knew that writing this not so spooky
spooky tale was a must. With that being said, please excuse any side tangents or ramblings
blablabla.
Ramblings?
Ramblings, I go on. The neuro spiciness is so fucking strong. I feel that on such a deep
level. Feel free to cut out any parts of this story that seem redundant and I will do my
best to stay on track. We will not do that.
I put this in a double space size 14 font potipha.
I mean, hopefully it's a potipha.
I am not necessarily the most tech savvy gal.
It's a potipha.
It's a potipha.
Anyways.
I have a quick confession.
I realized the other day that I don't even know how to make a fucking potipha.
But you like demanded it.
I can't.
Yes, I can't even argue that to make a fucking puttifah. But you like demanded it. I can't, yes, I can't even argue that fact.
That's hilarious.
I was like, guys, I really would prefer
if you put your stories in puttifahs
because it's just like easier for me.
And then I'm like, how do you make a puttifah?
So here we all are.
Here we all are.
That's who we are.
We're just trying our best over here.
We don't know how to do anything.
Let's start with a little backstory, shall we?
We shall.
In April of 2021, I started a new job in a town over from where I was living.
After a while of working there, one of the men on my shift caught my eye.
Now, I'm not typically one of the ones to make the first move because fuck the embarrassment
that comes along with rejection.
Like excuse me while I go crawl into the deepest, darkest hole that I can find.
Oh, do I have a story for you, baby? Oh, I won't tell it. I love that. Now, however,
this man caught my attention enough that I started making it a point to talk to him every
day, flirt with him when possible and eventually give him my number. Good for you, T. Shoot your damn shot.
That's fucking amazing.
It's boss bitch behavior.
I just love the fact that they normally would never do something like this, but they did.
But you're like, I chose now. I like that. Turns out that he had moved here from a different
state about 1500 miles away, only a month before we started working at the company,
and we were hired
a measly three weeks apart. Even though I do wholeheartedly believe that the events in my life
leading up to my employment at the same company as him were divine workings on the universe's part,
I have no clue what the following events were caused by. Throwing in a side note here before
I go further on into the story, my boyfriend is the furthest thing from religious or spiritual,
very much a man of fact and believes in science and physical evidence, agnostic or atheist,
if you will. After months of being friendly, talking, et cetera, our relationship slowly
became more until by May of 2022, we were officially dating. Fast forward to November of 2023,
and we take a road trip to Arizona to visit my grandma.
When we arrived, my grandma had had us get settled in what used to be my grandpa's bedroom
when he was on hospice before he passed away in 2018.
I know, I'm sorry about your grandpa.
But the room has not changed at all except for the bed.
All of his decorations are still hung on the walls and placed on the top of his dresser
are watches, TV and other seemingly random knickknacks. Now,
everything else to add in here, or something else to add, everything else.
I have to add everything else right here.
Now something else to add in here because I feel it is extremely important to the story
is that my grandpa worked for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, specifically with the Navajo
tribe in the Arizona, New Mexico areas back in the 70s.
During that time, he was gifted many things, including quite a few kachina dolls.
I've attached photos of what these dolls look like.
I do not believe these dolls are commonly seen out and about in stores and things, but
I could be wrong, so please feel free to correct me.
I never will.
Live your life.
I will never correct you.
Live your life.
Also, I've never seen a kachina doll in a store.
No.
Regardless, unless you have seen them, you would not be able to conjure up an image in
your mind because they have a very unique look to them.
You are 100% correct.
On our second night visiting, while my boyfriend and I were in the bedroom getting ready for
bed, he turned to me and said, can I tell you something kind of weird?
I told him, of course.
And he went on to say, this has only happened to me a couple of times and it has only been with a few random moments in my life. I muttered,
okay, because he was starting to weird me out a bit. I've had a dream about this room
before. I whipped my head up and looked at him with my brows furrowed. What? I tried
to say it as calmly as I could. He is not a spiritual woo woo guy. So I didn't want
to make him feel silly for sharing this.
That's very nice of you.
I know.
Now I was just fully intrigued.
Yeah, that doll, he motioned with a nod of his head to the kachina doll on my grandpa's
dresser that was placed to the side of the TV.
That whole dresser really, the doll, the TV, the watches laid out, that pot in the corner
and even the large fake tree that sits off to the side.
I sat silent looking at the
belongings scattered about that are now so precious to me waiting for more detail. I have these dreams
sometimes. This is where he really caught my attention because out of the two years we've
been together he has claimed to have only had one dream he can recall in those two years and he also
claims he doesn't dream. I think he just doesn't remember them because what kind of psychopath doesn't dream?
No one, exactly.
Insert my best girlfriend eye roll here.
I had a dream probably four, maybe five years ago.
I know I didn't know yet.
This is him talking by the way.
I know I didn't know you yet.
Well, I don't know if I would consider it a dream,
a vision maybe.
It was just kind of like a closeup of that doll's face and then it zoomed out and it
was the whole dresser.
I can remember the doll and the setup of the dresser the best.
He shrugged as if to try and make a nonchalant comment.
You said this was how many years ago?
I wanted him to repeat it before I started really freaking out.
Like four or five years ago?
Definitely five at the most.
My grandpa passed away almost exactly five years ago.
Whoa.
Right.
I got chills when I read that.
His face fell flat as if he was trying to hide any sort of signal that this had him
freaked out.
We were visiting my grandma about two weeks after the five year anniversary of his passing.
I have had two other dreams about this kind of stuff in my life.
He told me, he said, he told me about the other times and I listened intently. I am still trying to figure out how he could have
had multiple experiences like this and still not believe that there is something guiding
us along our way or that there is a power greater than us. Have you ever seen a doll
like that before? Being from a close southern area in a state of near Arizona, the possibility
was there and I couldn't pretend it wasn't. Nope. There was zero hesitation
in his response. He definitely hadn't seen one of those dolls before. He dropped the
conversation after that, but my head was still spinning. Was this the universe preparing
him for another large, monumental moment in his life, so that when he lived the moment,
he knew he was on the right path? Or was it my grandpa's spirit showing him a glimpse
of his future that has me in it? My grandpa's way of setting me up to know that he is the right one for me without actually
being here to give that approval that I always crave.
You see, my grandpa is and always will be my dad.
He's the only person in this world whose approval matters to me when it comes to my life partner.
Maybe this was his roundabout way to ensure that I knew his approval was there.
I totally think so.
I fully believe that that's what that is because he knew that his approval mattered to you.
And he knew that you needed that.
So he was like, I'm going to give it to her.
I fully believe that.
Because why else would your boyfriend have had that dream?
And even just going back to the way that you asked him out and you never would have really
done that before.
You felt confident enough to do that.
That's a huge part of it.
I feel like that's such an intervention there,
of something that we just can't see.
Because I didn't even think about that part,
that you never would have shot your shot,
like you did with this guy.
And you went full force, like, here's my fucking number, baby.
Like something just told me,
and the way that you guys started the job at the same time,
basically like three weeks apart,
like that's, I don't know.
I always say, I don't know what I believe in.
Yeah.
I'm like, I sit somewhere out there,
and, but this kind of stuff just always makes me
at least think through it.
And like question it a little bit.
And be like, what's going on here?
I don't know if you guys know this about me,
but I hella believe in this shit.
I don't know if you knew this.
It was your grandpa.
Or is it my boyfriend simply blessed with a gift from the universe,
allowing him to see a glimpse of the future?
Maybe.
I suppose we will never know,
but I like to think it's a little bit of everything.
The universe giving my grandpa the opportunity to push him,
and I'm both in the right direction, and my boyfriend's gift opening him up to a message
from grandpa and the universe. I love that. I do too. Maybe next time I'll write in about
all the weird spooky things that happened in my childhood home. Walking into every cupboard in
the kitchen being wide open, lights turning on and off on their own, things being thrown across the
room, shelves literally flying off the walls. Yes, please.
Please do.
Anyway, now that I am properly crying, thanks for reading this.
Keep it weird, but not so weird that, take it away, Ash.
Not so weird that your grandpa doesn't divine intervention a boyfriend into your life.
Yes.
I love that with all the love tea.
Right?
Isn't that amazing?
I love this.
I love that one.
And also your pictures.
They're so adorable together. I'm that one. And also your pictures.
They're so adorable together.
I'm telling you.
And your dogs.
It was meant to be.
Also, you're wearing a dress that is made for you
and you look adorable.
I really love that dress a lot.
I love this.
Oh, and your grandpa looks like such a grandpa.
I know.
Like, you know how some people, you're like,
that's a grandpa.
That guy's a grandpa.
That grandpa gives good hugs. Yes. That grandpa's gonna sneak you cookies. Yeah, and he's like, that's a grandpa. That guy's a grandpa. That grandpa gives good hugs.
Yes.
That grandpa's going to sneak you cookies.
Yeah, and he's handsome.
That's a grandpa.
He's a handsome grandpa.
He's a handsome guy.
And grandma's a stunner.
Oh my God.
I just love them.
Did you see their wedding day picture?
I literally just opened your grandpa and grandma's wedding day picture.
Oh my God.
This looks like something out of old Hollywood.
They are gorgeous.
Wow.
I love seeing old timey like photos like that.
People were just so much better looking back in the day.
It's true.
Because it's like everyone took care of business back then, like when it came to appearance.
Yeah, they like they just did more.
Yeah.
Like as I sit here in leggings and a messy bottom, like people just really cared back
then.
I'm sitting here in like a crusty t-shirt.
We're all just sitting here. I'm wearing a giant sweatshirt and crusty dusty leather
leggings. I literally have a foundation stain on my shirt.
And we're like, people just did... Get it together.
People should care more about their appearance.
This generation cares about what you look like.
Wow.
I'm sitting here talking from a position of never giving a shit about what I look like
when I walk out of the store.
No, we give a shit sometimes.
Properly, yes, sometimes, but oftentimes I'm like, sorry world.
Yeah, more often than not, I'm like, it is what it is, my deal is what it is.
Oh man. events that have shaped who we are as a country and continue to define the American experience.
We go behind the scenes looking at devastating financial crimes,
like the fraud committed at Enron and Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme.
American Scandal also tells marquee stories about American politics.
In our latest season, we retrace the greatest corruption scheme in U.S. history as we bring
to life the bribes and backroom deals that spawned the Teap Dome scandal resulting in the first presidential cabinet member going to prison. Follow American
Scandal on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge this season
American Scandal Teapot Dome early and ad free right now on Wondery Plus. And after
you listen to American Scandal, go deeper and get more to the story with Wondery's
other top history podcasts including American History Tellers, Legacy, and even the Royals.
I'm Dan Tuberski. In 2011, something strange began to happen at the high school in Leroy,
New York.
I was like at my locker and she came up to me and she was like stuttering super bad.
I'm like, stop f***ing around. She's like, I can't.
A mystery illness, bizarre symptoms, and spreading fast.
It's like doubling and tripling and it's all these girls. With a diagnosis the state
tried to keep on the down low. Everybody thought I was holding something back. Well you were
holding something back intentionally. Yeah, yeah, well, yeah. No, it's hysteria. It's all in your
head. It's not physical. Oh my gosh, you're exaggerating. Is this the largest mass hysteria
since the witches of Salem?
Or is it something else entirely?
Something's wrong here.
Something's not right.
Leroy was the new dateline and everyone was trying to solve the murder.
A new limited series from Wondery and Pineapple Street Studios.
Hysterical.
Follow Hysterical on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes of Hysterical early and ad free right now by joining Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge all episodes of Hysterical Early
and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus.
I picked this next one.
Alaina will understand this, none of you will.
But I'll do my best to explain it.
It reminded me of a lady that I used to live with, Judy.
Yes! I could definitely see that live with, Judy. Yes.
So that's why I picked this.
I could definitely see that.
Yeah, this next one.
I love that.
All right, listener tale.
The crime next door that shaped my childhood
and saved me all at once.
Howdy, ladies.
I started listening to your podcast a couple months ago
and have made it all the way to episode 173.
Woo. Woo.
Your stories and comedy make my very stressful job in law so much easier. And the hour trip
and rush hour traffic to downtown Dallas and then hour ride home absolutely fly by to the
point where I don't even want to get out of the car and go see my family. Totally kidding
in case my husband or kids are listening. I love y'all.
I love y'all.
I love y'all. She's like, don't worry. I love y'all.
Just kidding.
I've kind of been chewing on sharing my story as it happened in what used to be a very small,
close-knit town.
And I didn't want any family members hearing and reliving the pain of what happened.
So I will use fictional names, but feel free to share my name, which is...
Christy.
Christy.
Christy.
I love you, Christy.
Christy, you rock.
Never change.
Never.
Trigger warning in advance.
This is going to be a hard one. Oh change. Never. Trigger warning in advance.
This is going to be a hard one.
Oh, boy.
So here it is.
Picture it.
1996 in Weatherford, Texas.
It's the middle of the summer and we are on the fifth day of a hundred plus degree streak.
Back then, it was still a small town and my street faced the woods.
My friends and I would stay up late on a party line telling each other scary stories about
the woods and daring each other to go in them the next day.
Oh, I love that.
Right? Also, the nostalgia within this story is like, you can feel it.
My same house is still there today and all its Fox and Jacob hunter green with deep red
trim glory and my handprints in the concrete that hold the fence posts are still there.
And so are my long gone puppers little footprints.
Side note, his name was Shadow.
Oh, homeward bound.
Yes, after the dog and homeward bound, even though he was a mutt mix of Chow, Shar-Pey,
and Rottweiler. So yeah, he was something alright. He lived a good 21-year life and was blind,
deaf, and even dumber in the end, but always a good pupper.
21 years! That's a long life.
Wild!
Right? But the woods are long gone and have been replaced with hoity-toity cookie cutter houses.
It was the day of my birthday in early October of 1996, and I made a discovery that forever changed me
and somewhat skewed my view of the world and those closest to you, your own family.
Oh man.
When we first moved to Weatherford in 1993, I was about five, and my elderly neighbor,
we'll call her Miss Ivy, and I became close friends fast.
I love that.
Right?
When I wasn't out riding my bike around town, rollerblading at the local skating rink, checking
out a million books from the library, or scaring myself trying to catch lightning bugs in the
woods across from her house, I was next door at Ms. Ivy's house.
She introduced me to tea cakes, Salisbury steak, and tried her hardest to get me to
enjoy tea, iced or hot.
Yes, I know.
Born, raised, and lived my entire
life in Texas and I hate tea of any kind, including sweet tea, which down here means
you are a heathen.
My husband hates tea of any kind too.
Oh, does he really?
Yeah, he does not like tea.
That's funny. And Miss Ivy fostered my love for all things horror and fantasy.
Oh, Miss Ivy sounds like...
She sounds awesome.
Iconique.
Yes. She too was a huge Star Trek fan and loved Captain Jean-Luc Picard.
Yeah, you got it.
Look at you.
I'm doing the hand thing for you.
Look at that.
She loved him as much as I do.
We spent many rainy days on her couch reading Mary Higgins Clark,
Dean Koontz, Clive Cussler, and any series we could get our hands on.
Miss Ivy was like the grandmother I had lost just a year earlier
that I so desperately missed and needed in my life,
as my mother worked for GM and was in Detroit most of the year.
And my dad, well, let's just say I'm putting it nicely,
but he was not a fun person to be around.
Oh, that makes me sad.
I know.
It makes me really sad.
And I'm just so happy that you had Miss Ivy.
Yeah.
As the years went by, Miss Ivy, of course, aged.
And it got harder and harder for her to take care of herself.
I would insist on going over there three to four times a day
to check on her, make her tea and meals,
and make sure she was tucked in bed at night.
Oh, she was lucky to have you.
I know.
Swans was still a big thing then,
so all of her food was delivered.
And I could just heat it up for her
and put it on one of the awesome metal meal trays.
Oh my god.
On the rare occasion my mother was home, she would cook enough for every meal each day
and I would take it over to Miss Ivy and sit with her for a while so she wouldn't be so
alone.
I was about to turn eight when it all happened.
Like I said, it was the day before my birthday.
I was eager to get the day going because no matter how much I had tried to convince my
mother I just wanted to rollerblade up a skating rink with my friends, she insisted on getting a clown, which thanks to poltergeist I'm still terrified
of to this day. And I wanted to see if Miss Ivy could talk her out of it. I wasn't close
with my mother since she was gone so often, and maybe she'd actually listen to another
adult who wasn't on day 12 of a manic episode. I was an extra large pizza on stills at 7,
so it took me a little bit to get up and get
dressed and go over to make Miss Ivy her breakfast and tea. It was Friday and I was out of school for
fall break and I just knew we'd spend the day watching Star Trek together since she knew it
was my favorite of all our shows. I was humming the opening theme to Star Trek when I got to her
door and knocked our secret knock, per usual. Isn't this just so sweet? Sounds like a movie.
But there was no response.
I tried again, just in case she was in the back of the house or in the bathroom.
Nothing.
I walked around the side of the house and noticed none of her lights were on.
For her, this was way weird.
She was always awake by 6 a.m. and it was currently 7.15 a.m.
I ran to the back of the house because I knew she always left the sliding back door unlocked
for me or in case of an emergency.
It was locked too.
I knew something was off and flew home to wake up my parents, absolutely panicked and
in tears.
My mother told me I was being dramatic, that Miss Ivy was old and just wanted to be left
alone, probably, and my dad was babbling some nonsense about her finally wising up and hiding
from the government.
Oh, and poor you are just like panicking.
And you're just like, can you just help me find Miss Ivy, please?
Yeah, like don't tell me I'm being dramatic.
Like this is a big deal.
You're seven.
So 90s though.
So 90s parents do like you're being dramatic.
You're being dramatic.
And you're like, no, this is everything to me.
So I'm not being dramatic.
I'm just reacting to something that is very meaningful to me at seven.
And don't tell your kids they're being dramatic because they will spend years talking about
it in therapy.
Okay?
It's true. That's what I spent talking therapy about this morning.
Yeah.
When I insisted and refused to let my mother go back to sleep,
my mother said she'd go over and try to knock as well.
We tried and nothing.
Miss Ivy didn't have a phone.
And no matter how much I insisted, my mother wouldn't let me call the police.
I just knew something was wrong.
She made me go home and do chores to keep me distracted
and out of her hair with a promise of pizza from Pizza Hut.
The stuffed crust kind had just come out the year before. OMG."
That was really good. Oh, hell yeah. Well, Pizza Hut pizza.
We have an inside joke where we just go, you want a Pizza Hut pizza?
You want a Pizza Hut pizza? And really, it just means do you want a Pizza Hut pizza?
There's really no subtext to that. And now it's all your joke too.
There you go. Well, lunch came and went, then dinner and then bedtime.
Each time I tried to get her to answer the door, hope the back door was open, but no,
nothing.
I cried myself to sleep that night, thinking maybe it was me and my mom was right.
Miss Ivy was fed up with me and she just wanted to be left alone.
Oh my God, my whole heart is breaking.
I know.
I was so upset, I only ate one small stuffed cruststed slice, and anyone knows that a seven-year-old
chunky monkey knows that isn't normal.
The next morning was my birthday, and I bounced out of bed thinking, surely, even if Miss Ivy
just needed a day to herself, she would answer the door today.
Same thing.
Absolutely nothing, and the back was still locked up tight.
I 100% knew that something was wrong at this point because hello, it's my birthday. She always gave me a birthday celebration outside
of the ones with my family and friends since she never left the house and always made her
fanciest of tea cakes. That and today was Swann's delivery day. So I waited for the
delivery time at 10am since my party was until 1pm. As soon as I saw the pale yellow truck
coming down my street, I bolted out the front door and over to her house. The driver, Scott,
smiled and waved. I told him what had happened the day before, and he too found it odd. He
went to her front door and tried knocking as loud as he could, and then we both noticed
it. The smell. In case you forgot from before, it was day 5 of over 100 degree weather. The
smell was indescribable, but once you've smelled it, you never forget, nor is there anything that ever compares to it. Death. And a
metallic sickening undertone to boot. He didn't hesitate another second and ran to my house with
me to call 911. We waited, him holding me because I was sobbing while my mother was off finishing
up things for the party and who the hell knows where my dad was.
Nicole Oh my God, you poor thing. I know.
Shout out to Scott, the swan delivery driver.
It took the police about three minutes to get there and after the backstory of the smell,
the officers kicked in the front door.
Both the officer and Scott tried to shield my eyes, but it was too late.
I saw it all.
Oh no, and this is your birthday, your eighth birthday.
It's literally her eighth birthday.
This is where the trigger warning comes in.
Miss Ivy was in the middle of the kitchen
and all I could see was what appeared to be her eye
and something that looked like a big white rock.
It was her exposed skull.
Oh my God.
The officer questioned all the neighbors, including us,
and a neighbor two houses down remembered seeing
a red Grand Prix sitting in front of her house
in the wee hours of the fourth that Friday.
The neighbor was a psych triage nurse at the hospital in town, so like that's why they
were up that early, as she saw it when she was leaving for her shift. I told the
officer I went over about 7 15 a.m. and there wasn't a car there. The coroner
determined that she had been killed between midnight and 2 a.m. Friday. The
killer had locked up all the doors and windows, save for one, which he crawled
his way out of and then closed from the outside.
When I saw that window later that day, I felt like such an idiot.
There was still some blood smudged on it, and I had just completely flown by it in my
panic.
Oh, you were only seven.
And I'm happy that you didn't see that.
He also turned her AC down to 50, but it was an already old unit.
It was hotter than Satan's nutsack, and the unit froze over and stopped working.
It took about a month, but they found out who did it. Her youngest son. What the fuck. I never even
knew she had children. They never checked on her and she never talked about them. And that's when
I found out about the real Miss Ivy. Miss Ivy was a retired ER pediatric nurse of 45 years and had
three children, two boys and a girl in the middle.
She used to be married to a police officer she met at the ER, but he was extremely abusive
and actually went to prison for a time.
Once he was out, he started looking for her again.
In order to protect her children and herself, as her kids were now adults and living in
different parts of the US, she moved from Virginia to Weatherford, Texas and changed
her name.
She cut off all contact with her children and didn't even have a phone.
She remained unlisted in all the phone books, even with her new name.
The night she was killed, and this is according to her youngest son,
we'll call him Teddy's confession, he went to her house.
He never did disclose how he found her, but he did, sadly.
He said his father was just released from prison and they had started talking.
Now, Teddy already hated his mother and blamed her for all the abuse that he endured as a child at his father's hands.
I left that part out, but the father abused everybody in the family, which as a victim of domestic abuse, I do not understand his misguided rage.
But I'm not victim blaming anyone and I cannot speak for how they deal with their own trauma.
Anywho, he said his father and him had started a new relationship during which his father
apologized and said it all happened because his mom was
controlling and abusive to him.
And it was really all her fault that he was
the way he was to the kids.
Oh, OK.
It was her fault that he abused the children.
Yeah, totally.
That makes sense.
Makes sense.
So Teddy's rage and hatred deepened.
Then Daddy of the Year suggested, hey, why don't we
track her down and kill her?
What the fuck?
I'm assuming she didn't take you or her sibling or your siblings off her life insurance policies.
And you know, those are really hefty since she was an ER nurse for 45 years.
Oh my god.
Again, he refused to disclose how he found her. But that night he confronted her and she told him
the exact opposite of everything his father had been feeding to him over the past two years,
and that set him off. He said he just felt like he stepped outside of his body and watched as he bashed her head first on the kitchen counter,
and then when she was on the floor he continued to beat her with a cast iron skillet that I forgot to put away the night before.
The worst part of it all was, he would have only stood to inherit about $175,000,
split three ways between the siblings, as Miss Ivy, the angel she had always been,
donated over half her policy to the ER pediatric ward at the local hospital.
So all over, about $58,450. I know that was heavy, and it did change how I looked at the world for a long time,
but as an adult I see the silver lining in all this. She succeeded in getting me out of an
unwanted party with a terrifying clown, her best birthday present yet. I think of her every time
I watch our favorite shows, especially the new Picard series or the newest one with Sir Patrick
Stewart or read a book by any one of our favorite authors, and have tried to pass on the love she showed me, a complete and total stranger, not to mention, really weird kid, to not just
my children, but those all around me. Sorry for such a long one in the tangents. Tangent
is my middle name. Keep it weird. Love, Christy."
Christy.
I just thought Miss Ivy's story was so beautiful. I know it was so sad.
That was like, so heavy.
But they're bombed. So heavy. No, I'm obsessed with their bond.
And I'm so glad that she got to have that kind of relationship with a child
Right.
without someone interfering.
Exactly.
And turning it into something ugly.
And it's like that fucking man to abuse her forever and abuse their kids.
And blame it on her.
And blame it on her and convince one of the kids to kill her.
It's like, I so wonder how they found her.
Yeah.
Because she had put every precaution.
Yeah, you wonder.
It makes me so mad.
But that bond that they had was just like so sweet.
Oh, that just wrecked me.
I know.
From Wondery, I'm Indra Varma and this is The Spy Who.
This season we open the file on Oleg Penkovsky,
the spy who defused the missile crisis.
It's 1960 and the world's on the brink of nuclear war.
However, one man in Moscow is about to emerge from the shadows with an offer for the CIA.
His name is Oleg Penkovsky.
As a Cold War double agent, Penkovsky wants to supply the US with the Soviet Union's
greatest nuclear secrets.
But is this man putting his life on the line
to save the world, or is he part of an elaborate trap?
Follow the Spy Who on the Wondry app,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Or you can binge the full season of the Spy Who
defuse the missile crisis early and ad-free with Wondry Plus.
I'm Afua Hirsch.
I'm Peter Frankenberg.
And in our series Legacy, we look at the lives of some of the most famous people to have ever lived
and ask if they have the reputation they deserve.
In this series, we look at J Edgar Hoover.
He was the director of the FBI for half a century.
An immensely powerful political figure,
he was said to know everything about everyone.
He held the ear of eight presidents and terrified them all.
When asked why he didn't fire Hoover,
JFK replied,
you don't fire God.
From chasing gangsters to pursuing communists
to relentlessly persecuting Dr Martin Luther King
and civil rights activists,
Hoover's dirty tricks tactics have been endlessly echoed in the years since his death.
And his political playbook still shapes American politics today.
Follow Legacy Now wherever you listen to podcasts.
Oh, so my tale is entitled Listener Tales, Guardian Angels and the Universe's Repeated Attempts to Crush Me. I almost couldn't say crush. Yeah. Sometimes my mouth doesn't want
to do things. It's hard. You know, it's like, don't say that word. Yeah. But here we are.
Don't say the word crush. It's hard. I like that you just like it. All of it. It's hard, you know, it's like don't say that word. Yeah, but here we are. Don't say the word crush hard
It's hard it's all hard every part of it. Yeah, it's true now it says hey weirdos
I've been binging your podcast for a few months and I'm almost caught up. So I clearly love it
Thank you. You may be the best true crime podcast I've found. Oh my goodness
Every time a listener tales episode comes up
I remember that I have a few stories that
you might be interested in.
Finally, I've managed to get some typed up.
I think I've narrowed it all down to three categories, lightly supernatural, supernaturally
spooky and bad mom, dumb criminals.
This PDF contains the lightly supernatural flavor of story.
And if nothing else, it may give some food for thought.
I hope you enjoy.
I don't know if I can say your name so I won't say.
Okay, cool.
It says it here.
Hi there.
You can use my name.
You can use the name Nick for me.
I've encountered a fair bit of weird stuff.
So if you like this, maybe I'll tell you about my brief run as a ghost hunter.
Or that time my boyfriend, my mother's boyfriend fell through our ceiling while hiding from
the cops. Please tell me both of those things.
All of those things.
For now, I have three stories of guardian angels and the universe's repeated attempts
to crush me to death.
Literally.
My first story takes place in the early 90s. I was seven or eight and was spending the
evening at my grandmother's house. She had settled me in her office in front of the small
TV while she was in the den, just a few steps away. My memory of this incident is minimal. I was on the floor with
the TV above me on a small cabinet. If I stood, the cabinet would have been shorter than I
was, and the top of the television would have been just higher than my head. It was, as
I mentioned, the early 90s, so the TV probably weighed almost as much as I did at that point.
Absolutely it did. I don't know what I was, just ask Stu Mocker.
I don't know what I was watching because in my memory,
I'm focused on sorting pennies.
That's so cute.
The rest comes from my grandmother who added that evening
to her catalog of stories of the miraculous
and told it many times over the next decade.
She heard some sort of noise and came to check on me.
When she reached the door to the office,
she saw me with my hands on the TV screen, holding
it up and keeping it from crushing me.
It had somehow tipped over and despite the cathode ray weight of it, I think that's a
brand.
I think it's like a brand of TV.
Yeah.
It's like an old tube TV.
Oh man.
I was keeping it balanced at a precarious angle with a single lower edge still on the
stand.
And this is at like seven years old. Yeah. According to my grandmother, the only way I could have caught and supported the TV was with
the help of my guardian angel. Given some of the things that happen in the future,
I can't entirely argue with her. The second story was several years later. I don't remember how
precisely how old I was, but it was somewhere around 12 or 13. I've always had trouble falling
asleep. Even when I was young.
I would just lie in bed, sometimes for hours,
hoping exhaustion would finally drag me down.
On this particular night,
I was looking at the clouds painted on my ceiling
when I saw a figure at the edge of my vision.
The door closest to me led to the powder room
outside of my bathroom, and I could see through the door
to the door from the powder room to the hall.
Normally I could at least.
Now the doorway leading to the hall was filled with a tall, skinny figure. My first thought was that it was my
stepfather. Like the figure, he was as tall as the doorways, skinny with curly brown hair. I looked.
It wasn't him. This man had a younger face and wore a brown tweed suit I had never seen.
He was a complete stranger to me, but I wasn't afraid.
I only had a few seconds to take him in.
Our eyes met and then he was simply gone.
The doorway empty as if it always had been.
I would be like, that's an intruder in my house.
I'd be freaking out.
I'd be fucking terrified.
But just the fact that they weren't terrified.
Yeah.
Like I would, yeah.
That's terrifying that you weren't terrified.
But I feel like in the old house, like the house we grew up in,
did you ever have experiences that you were like,
I should be fucking terrified right now, but I'm not?
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, it's like, it's a weird, inexplainable feeling.
Yeah. No, that's scary.
Just the fact that he was, like, it makes me think of an It Follows.
The one scene that gets me the most, I think that movie is very scary.
I think they do is very scary. I
think they do it really well. That movie is fucking terrifying. It's very scary. And the
ghosts are very scary. But the one scene in it follows that like really like makes my
stomach churn for some weird reason is when she's walking in the bedroom and that absurdly
tall man just ducks under the doorway
and just like follows right behind her.
For some, I don't know if it's like,
he's so tall and the proximity to her,
how he's just like following right behind her
and he just gets right into the room.
It gets me, even thinking about it right now,
I have chills.
Yeah, same.
There's so many scenes in that movie
that like the two biggest scariest ones for me, like that one scares me, but not as much as the
lady that pisses on the floor.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
Because that's just terrific.
And then the man, I think he's like naked and he's standing on the roof.
Yes.
That scares the shit out of me.
He's just watching.
That premise is terrifying.
It is.
And it's such a good fucking movie.
The whole entire way they, it's well done.
The whole entire way they do it is like incredible.
Very unsettling.
Go watch it.
Go watch it.
This isn't an ad.
I could see why that would remind you.
Yeah.
It's just thinking about this really tall, skinny.
In a suit.
In a brown tweed suit.
Yeah.
I hate it.
In the hallway, just with curly hair looking at you?
No, no, nor.
I don't like it.
So this says, my house had been built in the seventies and the land had likely just been
pine forest before that.
So I came to the conclusion that he was unlikely to be a ghost.
My guardian angel, perhaps?
You're putting a lot of faith in this guardian angel business because I would assume that's
a ghost.
I feel like that's a ghost. It's true.
I feel like that's a ghost.
That's a shadow figure.
That's the thing.
That's my sleep paralysis demon.
Like, that's what that is.
I wonder if it was like a thing of like hindsight now you look back.
Because in that moment, I'm trying to like distinguish
if like in that moment you felt like that was your guardian angel.
Because I'm like, wow, that's impressive.
It sounds more to me like it's hindsight
chalking all the events up to each other.
That makes sense.
Finally, my long story.
I tried to find one of the articles written about this
to confirm the date, but because of how long ago it was,
I wasn't able to track down a digital version
of the information.
My cousin, S, is only a couple of years older than I am.
She was the youngest of her siblings,
and when her parents lived in the same small Georgia town
where I grew up, she and I were very close, practically sisters.
They moved away to California before I was a teenager.
S came back to visit when she graduated from high school,
then decided to move back and attend the local community
college.
We started spending time together again.
And while it wasn't a matter of picking up where we left off,
it was still easy to regain
that closeness.
The final story happened on September 20th, 2000, if I'm not mistaken.
If I am mistaken, then it was September 22nd, 1999.
I got up early for my grandmother to take me to See You at the Pole event that day.
See You at the Pole is a Christian student worship and prayer meeting that occurs before
school one day in September.
It takes place at the school flag pole
and is legal as long as it is student initiated and led.
It was a gray Wednesday and I was feeling nauseated.
I don't think I stayed through the entire event
and had my grandmother take me home again.
While I was home in bed trying to recover, S bought a car.
It used little red coupe.
I was feeling a little better that afternoon, so I agreed to go to church. S came to pick me up. Her boyfriend, C, in the
passenger seat. Their friend, R, in the back seat behind C. I sat behind S. That took me
a second.
R-C-S-U.
I was feeling sick again by the end of church. Oh, I'm sorry that you're feeling sick. I
hate feeling nauseated. So I know you're not feeling sick in this moment, hopefully, but
it makes me think of feeling nauseated. So I know you're not feeling sick in this moment, hopefully, but it makes me think of
feeling nauseated and I'm like, oh.
And like not being at home too, like having a car ride between you and your bed.
So S took me home first.
I remembered spending most of the long ride home with my face against the cold glass of
the window trying to keep from throwing up.
Once home, I went inside into my room to decompress and stay near the bathroom.
Normally S would have dropped me off last, because we still tried to spend as much time
as we could together, but that was how it had been in previous rides when she was using
my grandmother's car.
Because I was sick, the order had changed.
I was still awake when I heard my mother's panicked voice on the phone.
I came out to see what was going on.
S had been in an accident.
She had gone to take R home after
me. His family was one of the richest in town and his driveway was basically a private road.
It was also newly repaved and it had been raining that day. One tire of the car had
slipped off the high edge of the driveway and S had overcorrected trying to get it back
on. She drove off the other side, then up a tree and the car fell backwards onto its
roof. Isn't that fucking insane?
In the backseat, R was conscious, unharmed, and able to get his seatbelt undone.
He escaped through the shattered back windshield and ran home to get help.
This was 2000, remember, and even for rich kids, cell phones weren't much of a thing.
Our town is still in the middle of nowhere, and R's house was even further into nowhere. So even if he'd had one, there probably wouldn't have
been much service. Help came. C had a broken arm and some cuts from the glass. S was short,
maybe five feet tall, and that saved her life. Oh, I'm really glad to hear that because I
was worried how this was turning out. Her seat was pulled far enough forward that when
the roof had crushed, it also didn't
also crush her head. From what I was told, she was technically dead for a minute or two,
but she made a full recovery and didn't suffer any long-term effects.
Isn't that crazy?
As for me, obviously I wasn't in the car, and that's what saved my life. When the car
came down, it landed directly on the part of the roof behind the driver. Had I been
in the car, it would have been at my chest level.
I've actually visited the wreckage at the body shop
before they took it off to be junked.
I was making sure none of us's stuff was left in it.
The window where I had been resting my head
minutes before the accident had been replaced
by the metal of the roof line.
If they had been in that car, they would be dead.
I have something watching out for me.
Something that lends me strength, that watches out for me when the monsters are coming from
inside the house.
And something that triggers my instinct to stay home when I need to stay safe.
Guardian angel, guardian spirit, whatever you want to call it.
I've seen the effects and maybe even seen the being itself.
So keep it weird, but don't keep it so weird that you ignore a literal gut feeling sent
to keep you safe. I love a literal gut feeling sent to keep you safe.
I love a literal gut feeling of making you sick.
That last paragraph though of like, whenever you believe guardian angel, guardian spirit,
I've seen the effects.
Now I can see why you were so easily thinking that that skinny man was a guardian angel
because before I was like, that's a ghost. But now I'm like, what was a guardian angel. Because before I was like, that's a ghost.
But now I'm like, what a cool guardian angel. Sometimes I wonder if the kid that I saw at
mom and pup is mine. I've always wondered that. That little doobie. I like that. Because
I feel like people, like, I don't know if I would call it like a guardian angel or like
a spirit guide. I think I would more call it a spirit guide.
Like, I feel like people get a set of spirit guides.
That's just like my personal belief.
I like that.
I like that idea.
I'm down to think that, to at least consider that.
Have you ever seen a full-fledged ghost?
Seen one?
I can't, I don't know because I-
Do you doubt yourself?
With sleep paralysis?
Uh-huh.
I don't know if I've seen something or if it's been sleep paralysis.
And that's the only time.
I've definitely seen things out of the corner of my eye.
Yeah.
And I've felt things and I feel like I've maybe seen something not fully though.
Okay.
Like not like looking directly at it.
And if I have, then I assume it's sleep paralysis.
The only time I ever saw like full-fledged beings was one, the fucking Viking people
messing with your computer.
And I stand by that story today.
I can still see them.
I mean, I'm pretty sure there's Viking blood in our ancestry somewhere.
So.
And your computer was broken.
Maybe it's our ancestors.
Maybe. And then that fucking kid in the room. Yeah. Like that old timey newspaper boy looking
kid, little Peaky blinders. Yeah. And I can still see him like, how long you to draw him
for five maybe. Yeah, you were young. I could draw him. I mean, not well. You should draw him.
Yeah, I could.
I could.
I could.
Maybe I fucking will.
Maybe I might.
But yeah, I don't know.
I want to, and I feel like the reason I was able to see those like beings or whatever
they are full bodied was because I was so young and you don't have the like...
You're much more open to everything.
Yeah, you're not closed off.
But I feel open still and I want to see something good.
I mean, maybe that's when my youngest saw Skeletal.
Probably.
I love Skeletal.
And the girls, the older girls, saw the terrifying people with the scissors.
I'm very terrifying one.
But I don't know.
But I think maybe it's a kid thing.
But I'm so not ready to have kids someday and have them see some shit and have to be
the one responsible to like...
It's An experience.
Yeah, that's scary.
You really learn about yourself in that moment.
Right.
And learn about you and your partner in that moment.
Yeah, exactly.
Oh, Drew will be across the continent.
Just nope.
He'll be like, bye.
When the scissors thing, John literally looked at me
and he was like, tag, you're it.
Like he was just like, I don't know what to do with it.
Honestly, I'll take the supernatural shit and I'll take throw up.
Those two things I can handle.
Hey, good.
I'm, I will take one out of the two of those.
I mean, I'll take two out of the two of those because you got to.
It's just, but I don't, I don't like to take one of those things.
Yeah, I don't.
I'm not like hoping to, but you just end up having to do it.
Yeah.
It's just the way it is.
Talking about kids.
Kids, man.
Kids, man.
Kids have moms sometimes.
Wow.
That was a really good one though.
It was so good.
That was very interesting.
Yeah.
I totally think you saw your guardian angel.
Nick.
Sorry.
I didn't want to call you the wrong name.
What'd you say?
I was like, Nick.
Sorry.
I didn't want to call you the wrong name.
I was like T, S. No, you were Nick. Thank you, Nick. Sorry, I didn't want to call you the wrong name. I was like T-S, no, you were Nick. Thank you, Nick.
E-C. I was going to transition by saying kids have moms sometimes.
And this next one is called, my mom used your podcast to haunt me.
I'm intrigued.
And I said, what?
And then this one had such a beautiful surprise at the end of it that I quite literally almost cried.
I love that.
Okay.
Hey, you spooky, wonderful ladies.
My name is Bunny.
Yes, you can say it.
Hell, you can scream it from the rooftops.
Bunny, I love that name.
I love that name too.
And just a side note, I have been listening to Bunny's podcast, Dumb Blonde.
If you're not listening to Dumb Blonde, you're dumb.
She has some fascinating people on.
Fascinating, yes. I has some fascinating people on. Fascinating guests.
I have been flying through episodes.
She had like all the mob wives on.
She had Alana Pumpkin and Honey Boo Boo on.
She gets guests that are right up my alley.
She had Bam Margera on.
Yeah, she had Bam on.
Recently, and I was like, whoa.
J Woww.
She gets like really good guests.
It's an interesting conversation when she had, like she really
knows how to have a conversation with anyone.
It doesn't feel like a, cause it's, it's not like a formal interview, but it's very much
an interview.
Yeah.
But it doesn't feel interviewee.
No, it feels like she's just having a conversation.
Yeah.
She seems very down to earth and I really like her.
Yeah.
So go listen to dumb blonde
Divorced beheaded died divorced beheaded survived We know the six wives of Henry VIII as pawns in his hunt for a son
But their lives were so much more than just being the king's wives.
I'm Arisha Skidmore-Williams. And I'm Brooke Zifrin. And we're the hosts of Wondery's podcast,
Even the Royals. In each episode, we'll pull back the curtain on royal families, past and present,
from all over the world to show you the darker side of what it means to be royalty.
We rarely see Henry VIII's wives in their own light, as women who used the tools available to them
to hold onto power.
Some women won the game, others lost,
but they were all unexpected agents in their own stories.
Being a part of a royal family might seem enticing,
but more often than not,
it comes at the expense of everything else,
like your freedom, your privacy,
and sometimes even your head.
Follow even the royals on the Wondery app or
wherever you get your podcasts. Go deeper and get more of the story with Wondery's top history
podcasts, including American Scandal, Legacy, and Black History for Real.
All right. Well, this bunny though says maybe I'll be able to hear you since I also hail from the great Masacheche.
Masacheche!
I like that.
I love that.
Of course, I need to start this off with the obligatory fangirl gushing.
I found your podcast when you were 12 leagues under the sea, an OG baby.
Hell yeah.
And it has been so incredibly endearing to see you both grow and prosper in this life.
Aw.
Alaina, you've written a whole damn book.
Thank you.
I'm so excited for book two.
Thanks.
Plug where you can deal it.
Deal it.
Plug where you can buy it.
Oh, you can buy it.
Go to thebutchergame.com and you can get all the links to get it anywhere.
It's like everywhere.
Target, Walmart, Amazon, pre-order, Barnes and Noble, little indie bookstores.
Go get it.
We're getting so much closer to September and you don't want to be caught in September without the butcher
game because maybe you'll get it like a day early sometimes that happens when you pre-order
I can't guarantee it but I'm just saying like sometimes that happens and that's fun which
is always a fun surprise and either way you'll get it on the day exactly so do it she's yeah
do it she said you've also dealt with great loss but you are prospering and absolutely
fucking killing it.
Thank you very much. Ash, you uh, you beautiful spooky gal
You found your forever person and you by the time you read this got married
You're a whole damn wifey for lifey now. Wifey for lifey. Thank you
You both are so incredibly inspiring and talent and talented. I will always tell people to go and listen to morbin
Aw, thank you so much
Now this might be a long tale, but I hope you find it to be a fun ride.
I attached a double space 14 point
puttifo for your viewing pleasure.
I do apologize for any grammar or spelling mistakes.
My brain works faster than my fingers.
No need to apologize. Not at all.
My mother, Denise, you can absolutely absolutely news.
Hello. Hello.
You can also use her name.
She absolutely would have loved
it unexpectedly died at the end of January in 2023 I'm sorry bunny it truly destroyed
my entire world I was a new mom at the time having had my daughter six months before in
August and my dog Gaia passed away three months before if a dog was a soulmate he she was
mine and I feel like dogs can be soulmates. Oh, 100%.
My mom and I were like oil and water when I was a teenager,
but as adults, we grew so close together.
She was my best friend.
She was so incredibly motivated to better herself
and her life.
She was so excited for life again.
She had truly found her spark.
So it hit my, it truly hit my family hard.
Oh, that's awful.
Let's go back a couple of years ago.
I showed my mom your podcast and she was enthralled.
My mom loved all things true crime, spooky shit, and loved a cult story.
We were listening to your Bridgewater Triangle episode.
Oh, that was so fun.
Right?
Seeing I live in, is it the Copacut?
I think so, yeah.
Seeing I live in the Copacut woods, which is part of it.
And that's how she ended up listening to every episode.
She had untreated ADHD and you were her hyperfixation.
She even wrote in once.
Oh my God.
Which we have.
Yay.
Well, I didn't even find it.
You included it, so thank you, Bunny.
But on this particular summer day,
we were painting her apartment
and we were listening to the Richard Ramirez episode.
She physically gagged every time his stench
or how gross of a human being he had been was mentioned. I didn't know my mom had the weak constitution of a Victorian dandy.
Of a Victorian dandy. That is an amazing way. Wow. I know so many people that have the constitution
of a Victorian dandy. Me too. So many people. Lots-huh. Lots and lots of people. That we interact with.
On a daily basis.
That have the constitution of a Victorian dandy.
Yeah, fucking Victorian dandy's all right.
But anyway, I couldn't stop laughing at her.
I love that.
It was honestly the weirdest, happiest memory I shared with her.
Now we will go back to January 2023, and it's the dreadful day I need to go through her apartment
and all her little personal things. the things that made it real.
I walked into her apartment, which no one was in besides me,
and I hear your podcast playing through her portable speaker.
But the thing is, her phone was in my house
about five miles away.
What?
And my phone was off, so nothing could
be connected to that speaker.
I listen closely, and it's the same episode
that was playing the day we were painting
that room. I am chilling all over my entire body. I got the wham. It's like right. I was
absolutely stunned, but my mama definitely had a flair for the dramatic. So why wouldn't
she choose that one? That's amazing. A few nights later, my husband was at work and I
was sitting on the couch with my daughter in the living room and across the room is my daughter's nursery.
Side note about my house is my husband is a bougie bitch and needs to have the fancy
Alexa controlled light bulbs in every room.
Oh, John wants to do that so bad.
You should.
Those are cool.
They're fun.
My daughter and I were watching some movie really at six months old.
She wasn't watching just me.
The lights in her room start flashing on and off for about 10 times.
In that moment found out my fight or flight responses to freeze. Oh, you too. That's mine. I just go,
and then I stay in place. I would be the first to die in a horror movie. I know. I know. Ash too.
Me too. We'll die together, girl. But I nervously ask out loud, mom, if that's you, please stop.
You're scaring me. And it stops immediately. Cause that's your mama. And she's like, I'm not trying to scare you. I'm sorry.
Occasionally, my daughter's motion activated toys would go off. But that did come to an end
one night when I was in bed before my husband. And I got the biggest wave of warmth and her
signature perfume filled my nose. I remember muttering, I love you, mama. Good night.
Okay. That just like made me choke down a sob.
Yeah, there's tears in Alina's eyes right now.
Damn.
And I drifted off into dreams of starlight.
It's been quiet for a few months now, but here and there I'll get little hints of her saying hi, and they are always welcome.
A side note, the night my mom passed, I went to bed.
I don't know how long I laid there, but I remember feeling the cold, wet boop of a dog nose on my face.
The boop of a dog nose.
And a little nudge, the same way Gaia would always wake me up in the morning.
I think my girl knew how much I needed her in that moment.
Thank you lovely ladies for reading my tale.
Attached was the email my mom had written.
I found when I had to go through her things.
I'm not really good at goodbyes, so I'll just say see you later.
I'm obsessed with this.
Her mom's listener tale, which is Denise's listener tale.
Denise.
So Denise says, let me start out by saying you ladies are wicked awesome.
You're wicked awesome, Denise.
I know. The stories you tell, the cases you cover are dark and fascinating. I was binge
listening to listener tales while cleaning my apartment and reorganizing when one of the
stories hit me hard and I realized I'm not alone in my situation.
Let me explain. I was adopted when I was four. My adoptive parents weren't any better than
the abusive, alcoholic egg donor that gave me up. The apartment we lived in at the time
of the adoption was on the third floor of a three-family home with a huge backyard and
a massive tree in the back. I had recurring nightmares of being kidnapped by a massive vulture and not having a voice to scream for help.
Fast forward to 1989. I was 17, working as a cashier and enjoying life, hanging out with
my friends, being single, basically carefree. This is around the time I met my first serious
boyfriend. We were dating for a bit when we decided to move in together. I was in charge
of finding our apartment, so I set out to look and in my journey I walked down the street where my first home was. I
wanted to see the house and see if it still gave me the heebie-jeebies. I got no vibes
from the house and chalked it up to overactive imagination in my childhood. I turned around
and found an apartment for rent sign on the house directly across the street from my childhood
home.
Whoa.
Long story short, we took the apartment.
A few months later, my adoptive father passed away.
The same night, he came to visit me.
I was asleep in my bed next to my boyfriend, sleeping, when I heard him calling me.
He wasn't quiet about it either.
He made sure I heard him and woke up.
He was yelling that I did this to him.
I made him suffer.
I was supposed to never tell anyone what he did
Oh, I tried waking up the boyfriend, but he wouldn't wake up my quote-unquote father told me he wouldn't be able to help me
So don't bother trying to wake him up
I told this piece of shit get out of my house and the fight ended
I was pissed and yes scared because what the fuck was he doing in my house at 2 a.m
The next day after work
I met my cousin Michael at the mall like usual because because that's what 17 year olds did back then,
and he told me he was sorry about my father.
I asked him what he was talking about,
and he told me at 6.30 the previous night,
he had a massive heart attack and died.
What the fuck?
So when she had that experience,
she thought that her dad just came into her house
and was yelling at her, not that he was dead.
What the fuck?
I sat there for a bit and replayed the previous night over in my head,
and oh my God, it hit me like a brick to the chest.
It was his spirit.
I told my cousin about my experience and he got chills.
I have full chills.
I do too.
We sat and talked about the situation
and how much my quote-unquote father hated me
for outing his dark secret, and yes, it almost ruined his life.
So he wasn't going to go to hell without letting me know first.
Wow.
Isn't that just like, fucking haunting?
Holy shit.
Flash forward to 2006.
My husband and I were living in a tiny town, 20 minute drive away from his mom and stepfather.
My mother-in-law was in very poor health for a very long time, so we would go visit her often. She took a liking to me because I made her favorite child happy.
She would call us on our birthdays at 1201 and sing happy birthday to us over the phone.
She was a great woman who loved hummingbirds and lilacs. I know she sounds so sweet. And
I'm glad you had that experience with your husband's parents.
Up in the mountains of upstate New York, when trees knock out the power, it could
take days before you get it back, so you better have a generator. My mother-in-law did. It would
kick on automatically when they lost power, which happened a lot. She was on oxygen and the machine
wouldn't work without power. One night a wicked bad storm came through and unfortunately the
generator did not kick on, and my mother-in-law passed away. We got a call the next morning from my father-in-law that something was wrong with mom and we needed
to come quick.
After we got there, we checked for a pulse and called 911.
They investigated and sent us home.
I fell asleep on the couch that night and started smelling lilacs.
Oh, that's such a distinct scent.
It is.
Half in and half out of sleep, my mother-in-law leaned over the couch and told me, make sure
you take care of my baby. I told her I would, opened my eyes, and she was gone.
Fast forward to 2013, I moved to Massachusetts and took a job bartending, my career of choice
for close to 25 years in a private club that was said to be haunted. Which I'm like, I want to know
what club this is. Bunny right back to us. During my job interview, that was actually a question they asked if I was afraid of ghosts.
Oh my God.
I told them, I don't bother them, they don't bother me.
I was told the ghost was a previous owner from way long ago when the now private club
was a brothel.
Cool, huh?
Ooh, I love those kind of tales.
The best.
Of times long ago.
I do too.
So the backstory is, and this is a fucking awesome backstory.
It's crazy.
But it's like, whoa.
The backstory is the brothel owner, Etta, caught her husband with one of the working
girls and killed him by running him over.
And now she's stuck there.
Whoa, Etta.
Now every time I started a shift, I would say, good morning, Etta.
And my boss thought I was nuts, but it kept her happy because she never bothered me. She did bother others. Yeah. So you were just like, no judgment, Etta. And my boss thought I was nuts, but it kept her happy because she never bothered me. She did bother others.
Yeah. So you were just like, no judgment, Etta.
Yeah. Hey, girl.
I'm just coming to work.
Good morning. Once the guys at the bar were talking shit about Etta and the bottle shook
on the shelves. I quickly told them stop. They were pissing her off.
Hell yeah.
I had only been in Massachusetts for a few weeks and was staying with family. I was again
half asleep on the couch when I felt someone in the kitchen watching me.
I thought it was one of the family members getting a drink, so I looked in and saw a
shadow move away.
It kept happening, so I got pissed and said to whomever it was, either say something or
go away.
Well, ladies, this older man in a gray suit and a fedora sat on a coffee table in front
of me and said, you'll be fine.
You're going to go through things you don't think you'll survive, but I promise you, you will."
Whoa.
I asked him before he left who he was and he said to call him Fredo. I chalked it up
to a dream until the next night. One of the female patrons was very into spiritualism
and asked me if Fred or Al meant anything to me. I said no, but she just stared at me
and asked if I believed in spirits. I told her, but of course, why do you ask?
But of course.
She proceeded to tell me that I have one that follows me and protects me. That's why she
asked about Fred or Al. I said Alfredo, Fredo for short, and she said, that makes sense.
Wow.
So I told her about that night before and she wasn't shocked.
Holy shit. And that's not like a regular name.
No, not at all.
You don't hear that all the time.
Exactly.
Fast forward again to August 2021.
My boyfriend Ernie passed away suddenly and I was heartbroken.
I tried to give him CPR, but he was already gone.
Oh man.
The night he passed.
She had gone through stuff.
I know you guys have gone through a lot.
The night he passed, I wouldn't come into my apartment until the next morning.
I spent the next day taking care of things, making calls, and because he was so loved, everyone
was stopping by and checking on me. I finally went to bed around 10.30. I had my phone next
to me like always, and before I fell asleep, his text message tone, unique to Ernie only,
went off. I smiled and said, good night, baby. That was his way of letting me know he was
here.
Now it's January, and I'm slowly moving ahead with life. I got really good news from my daughter
and came home and told him this wonderful news. I have his ashes. That night I felt the bed sink
in next to me and at first I was freaked the fuck out. I was frozen in fear and I asked
to nobody in particular, what the fuck are you doing? And then I realized who it was.
It was Ernie. He was a big dude. He was 275 when he died. Told me congratulations and he was there because he missed sleeping with
me. I was a bit rude and reminded him that he was dead, but I didn't want him to know.
Hey, you're dead. Hey, excuse me. You're dead.
I tried waking up a few times, but I was having such great dreams about him with my daughter and
me spending time together and laughing and joking. He passed before my daughter's wedding, which was in October, and he had been all jazzed about doing the
low dance from Flo Rida. He even practiced at work and got caught by his friends.
Stop.
I love that.
I'm obsessed.
So needless to say, I know he's still here and when I least expect it or don't know,
I need him. He'll show up. So ladies, this is why I'm haunted. I don't mind it anymore
and take it as it comes.
Feel free to shorten this up if you decide to use it." No way.
I will continue to listen to your podcast because you guys keep me in stitches.
I owe finding your podcast to my daughter who also loves the listener tales as much as I do.
Thanks again, ladies. Thanks ladies again. Keep up the great work and keep it weird.
Denise. I felt like that one was so special.
Oh, that was like so special.
Yeah.
And thank you, Bunny, for sending both of those in.
Oh, Bunny.
That was great.
And like, as soon as I, I, that one caught my attention because like my mom used your
podcast to haunt me.
I was like, what?
And then when I read through Bunny's, I was like, oh my God, that's such a fun story.
And then to find Denise's at the bottom.
That's special.
Like we've never had a tale like that.
And Bunny, I love that Bunny had Denise who sounds like such a hot shit and such a cool
mom.
And then also Ernie.
It sounds like you were close to Ernie and like, I'm sorry that they're both not here
anymore.
But I'm really glad that you had that.
I'm glad you had that.
And it sounds like even though they're not here here, they're here.
I feel like Ernie and your mom will come through more and more.
And reading that now, like the mom, Denise's listener tale, I'm like, oh, that's definitely
Denise.
Oh, a hundred percent.
Because I'm like, she's like, oh, I get to do it now.
Like, let's go. Like, you know, ah, Denise. How, a hundred percent. Because I'm like, she's like, oh, I get to do it now? Like, let's go.
Yeah, exactly.
Like, you know, ah, Denise.
How special is that?
Denise and Bunny, that was a great one.
Right?
Like, that was a really great one.
That was a find.
I loved that.
And I love that you both love Listener Tales.
I know.
Thank you.
We would do more if we could.
So the last one that I'll read is called Listener Tale.
My deceased grandma's like, hi, I'm still here, dummy.
Hey, Ash and Elena, my name is Maylin.
And first of all, love your podcast.
My sister, I want to make sure, Corinne.
Oh, that's like a cool way of spelling that.
It is.
K-O-R-I-N.
I like that, right?
Yeah, that's really cool.
Introduce me and we've always loved all things spooky, ghostly, murdery, and are Halloween
obsessed.
I quit my corporate job in 2021 to pursue my artistic plant passions.
So I listened to you guys constantly while running all things for resting plant face.
What a great name for a company.
That's amazing.
Thank you for keeping me abreast of all things spooky, spooky and feeding my true crime ghostly
fix each week.
All right now here's the Puddafa attached with stories of Grandma Josephine.
And the pictures of Grandma Josephine.
What baddest be.
Oh, Grandma Josephine.
A queen.
A literal queen.
And look at the wedding picture.
I'm pretty, I like, I'm obsessed with this.
All these pictures are amazing.
Is this you?
I love. Mayln, these pictures are amazing. Is this you? I love.
Maylyn, you are all amazing.
Oh, yeah.
Maylyn is obsessed with Halloween and these are all her Halloween costumes.
Top notch.
The prince one.
Top motherfucking notch.
The elf on the shelf is both amazing and horrifying all at once.
Like you really killed it.
These are incredible.
All right, let's begin. A little background. Since I was a wee little girl, I've been very sensitive to the mask. All at once. Like, you really killed it. These are incredible. All right, let's begin.
A little background.
Since I was a wee little girl, I've been very sensitive to the paranormal, runs in the family.
But as a child, I didn't really talk about it.
Cut to now, I realized I'm an intuitive dreamer and have dreams with messages from the dead,
or I'm helping the dead and dreams with premonitions and a whole lot of other crazy shit.
I'm working now to accept and expand my gifts as I'm no longer afraid. Weee!
Isn't that cool?
I love that. Okay, here's the goods. My grandmother passed away suddenly in her sleep at the age
of 67 on May 15th, 1992, when I was five. Although I was young, I'd cry for her often
when I felt alone, sad, scared, which unfortunately was a lot when I was a kid. Oh, that like breaks my heart to hear that.
But yay therapy for working through that.
I just felt so connected to her even though she was only in my life a short time.
I was also so afraid of the dark, would always cover my mirror before bed and had unexplainable
experiences, but also super afraid slash intrigued with the paranormal, just a normal weirdo
kid. Skip to college,
me 2005 to 2009, I found myself in a physically and emotionally abusive relationship. I'm
sorry. I know me too. During the super dark period, I would see a ton of red Cardinals,
like a shit ton from flying past my windshield while I was driving one physically hitting
my rearview mirror while I sat in a parked car, wood cutouts of them randomly like they were everywhere. It became a family joke because I would see them that
often. However, at the time, I didn't understand the significance.
And red cardinals are super symbolic.
Yeah, aren't they supposed to be like...
It's a loved one.
Yeah. In 2009, I was about to graduate college and was still in this horribly abusive relationship.
Among other things, he would tear me down about the fact that I was in college.
He'd always say I'd always be in debt.
Suck it, dick bag.
I paid my school loans off four years ago.
Fuck yeah, you did, Malin.
Hell yeah.
And I was wasting my time in school.
So you can imagine the joy of graduation was gone and I was just mostly beat down about
it.
It sucks because when you're in that obviously like, like you're of course, like soaking in what
they're saying and like it hurts.
But people like that say shit like that to successful people because they're upset that
they didn't do shit with their life and that they're not successful.
100%.
They're threatened.
And they want to see it affect you.
Because they don't want you to succeed.
Yeah.
And they want, it makes them feel like they achieved something because they'll never achieve
anything of importance or significance.
So they have to by making you sad or feel less than.
So fuck you, dick bag.
Yeah.
Fuck you, dick bag.
We hate you.
It was the week before graduation on Mother's Day weekend.
At the time, my family had this tradition where we go to my grandmother's grave on Mother's
Day weekend to say hi and just talk to her.
She passed away around Mother's Day and my mom did not get to see her before she passed
suddenly, so going around this time was super important for my mom. That day in my head,
I told grandma at her grave I wish she was here to see me graduate and if she could send
me a sign to let me know she was watching over me. Boy did she ever. The day before
my graduation, there was a religious ceremony at the university.
At the time, I was in the thick of organized religion, Ick.
That's, I did not say that.
The Ick was written there.
That's her personal feelings.
Nothing out of the ordinary happened in the day,
in the next day to my knowledge,
I graduated and had a lunch to celebrate.
I was so emotional that day, self-worth was low.
And I remember just feeling so down that night, even though I had just accomplished
this great thing. Later that night, my mom calls me and says,
Hey, so I didn't want to make you sad earlier, but did you recognize the Bible verse on the
program from the baccalaureate ceremony? I had no idea what she was referring to. She
says the program had the verse from your grandmother's tombstone on it. And today is the anniversary of her death, May 15th. The verse was from, was one
from Isaiah. I have called you by name. You are mine. I immediately started to cry and
told my mom I had asked grandma to give me a sign. She was still here with me while at
her grave. This was my sign and I almost missed it.
Of all the Bible verses in the entire world.
Like what?
And like, just like even the words in that one,
like I've called you by my name, you are mine.
And the fact that, that's the thing.
And the fact of all of them in the world,
the one that's on her tombstone.
Right.
And on the day that she passed away,
on the anniversary of her death.
Like you can't just let that go.
Yeah.
A lot of times I just feel like
there's no such thing as coincidence.
No, definitely not like that.
Cut to present day and grandma still gives me signs when I need them.
Sorry, I had a hiccup.
The last one was when I decided to quit my professional dance career.
I was just doing a standard cry in the shower about it.
The lights flickered while I was ugly crying in the shower.
And for some reason I was like, hi grandma, but also freaked out because I was home alone.
The next day I'm on Google Maps trying to find a halfway location point to interview
someone for a job on my team at the time.
My grandparents' house happened to be in the city that was the in-between point between
Dallas and Fort Worth where we were to meet.
I plopped the little yellow guy on the map in a random spot to see if I could find a
coffee shop. To my surprise, the street view was on the map in a random spot to see if I could find a coffee shop.
To my surprise, the street view is in the middle of the cemetery where my grandmother
is buried.
No, come on.
Come on.
I had to call my mom to confirm the name of the cemetery and it was, it was just another
sign that she was here with me while I was going through a tough time.
That's bonkers.
Isn't that crazy?
All of those things like together.
I've since talked to a medium and she told me my grandma is one of my spirit guides.
The medium gave me a specific situation that I had alone in my bedroom where I was watching
this emotional ass music video where a woman had dementia and was lump in throat crying.
She said my grandma was there and that I shouldn't worry about that.
Like this was a private moment alone.
I had not talked about it.
The medium said it was a way to prove my grandma
is always with me.
The medium also told me that birds were another way
she was showing up.
Ahem, Cardinals?
I'm sure she was like, get out of that relationship, idiot.
Lastly, the medium also told me my grandma says
that I shouldn't smoke the devil's lettuce.
Eye roll.
I love that she's like guiding you
through all these hard times and showing up when she needs
and she's also like, stop smoking weed.
Put down the weed.
Come on, Malia, that's the devil's lettuce.
And I love that everything else you're like,
oh my God, grandma, and then that one you're like, eye roll.
Okay, grandma.
All right.
Anywho, I have so much comfort knowing grandma
has always been with me working through these
difficult times.
That must feel very comforting.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
I also want to point out that if you do want to connect with loved ones that have passed,
you just have to ask and pay attention to the signs.
I love that.
I'll write back someday to tell you some other spooky tales I've had.
The little dead girl saying hi or the time I lived in a haunted house.
Guys, you got to send these. I want these.
You guys can send them all in one put-a-file
if you feel like it.
Like if it's not overwhelming to write all of that at once.
Wherefore it.
Yeah.
I'm attaching a few things.
Pick a beautiful grandmother, Josephine.
She is a queen.
She is gorgeous.
And she just looks like a hot shit.
She looks like a hot shit.
Yeah, she's slayed.
Yeah, her gravestone with the verse
and my program with the same verse
and some of my past Halloween costumes
because I go all the way out.
Love y'all, Malin.
Malin.
I love all these.
These pictures of grandma Josephine are,
look like they're the most classic, like 40s.
Yes.
Pin upy, beautiful gal. And she's just smiling and all of them like so happy.
The wedding picture in particular, she just looks so happy.
I love it.
I love it. And I'm pretty sure your grandpa is, or like whoever she married is winking
in that picture.
Yeah, I was going to say he's winking in the picture. And when I tell you guys that
Malin does Halloween correctly.
Oh my God.
Malin does Halloween correctly. Mal my God. Malin does Halloween.
Malin parties for Halloween. She goes all the way off.
Truly.
I love it.
All the way off.
Love, love, love.
Wow.
These were great.
I love these Lissiter Tales so much. They were all like symbolic.
Ash just hand picked these.
I did. I love a Guardian Angel sign moment.
She loved it.
I had a moment yesterday, I texted you.
I was like stressed out about everything in life.
That we're always stressed out about.
That we're constantly stressed out about.
And also my armpit was swollen, so that was scary.
But it turns out that I just have an infected hair follicle.
Isn't that super cute?
Yum.
But I was like, oh no, what does this mean?
And I was leaving Elena's house and I collide, I don't know if you heard me scream,
I collided with the largest dragonfly I've ever seen.
I saw that dragonfly after you left. It was big.
It hung around.
Okay.
And the dogs were trying to eat it out of the air.
Oh, glad they didn't.
They didn't.
Because I think I knew that dragonfly. And I like, I'm not kidding you, I collided with
it. Like it like skidded across my fingers.
Yeah, it was no joke. Like I feel like it was trying to get my attention.
And I just said to like somebody that has passed away in my life,
like, hey, if that was you, like, I love you, like, thank you.
And I was like in my head kind of doubting myself, like,
who knows if that person that I love is like representing themselves
by colliding into me as a dragonfly.
Sounds a little crazy when you word it like that.
And then I'm pulling out of the street and I pull behind a car with the license plate 888, which is like
an angel number. So hello. Hello. And I just, I felt comforted. And it was, it was during
a moment where you needed to be comforted. And during a moment where that particular
person like knew what the situation and like knew how much I hate doing certain things
and being wrapped up with certain things.
And they were always there for me through that.
See, I love that.
Yeah, exactly.
And I believe, I think that too.
I think it was that person.
I would, and I just like immediate,
because that's the thing, I immediately was like,
all right, I'm good.
And it was such an inexplicable feeling of just like,
because I was so stressed and then it was just like,
boom, gone.
And that's when you know like something has shifted.
Yeah. Yeah.
And it was funny because I got home and Drew was like,
I was actually thinking of that person today.
Like that's funny.
Oh, that's so funny.
I love that.
So I totally believe in all that stuff and I fucking love it.
And they were just beautiful tales.
They were gorgeous tales. I loved all of them. You all do such a I fucking love it. And they were just beautiful tales. They were gorgeous tales.
I loved all of them.
You all do such a great job with these.
We really do.
And we really love doing them.
Keep sending them in.
Yeah.
We fucking love you.
You're honestly the best.
You're the best part of this job.
That's why we love Listener Tales so much, because it's about you guys.
Yeah.
And we get to read your stories and learn more about you.
It's so fantastic.
We just dig you.
Thanks for being there.
Yeah, you make this worth it.
You literally make it worth it.
So thank you for doing that.
And we hope you keep listening.
And we hope you keep it weird.
But not so weird that you don't keep sending in your listener tales because we love them.
We love them so much.
We love you.
We love you.
Love, love, love.
These were so emotional.
You're beautiful! If you like Morbid, you can listen early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus
in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. Prime members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music. the world.