scary stories

Discussion in 'Off Topic' started by fluffy_Squirrel, Jun 30, 2014.

  1. Hey o.o post a scary story here and i will gift you :) MUST BE SCARY! :D
     
  2. A pretty scary story for my parents was when I discovered the genre of Heavy Metal and all of it's subgenre's. 

    Scared yet? Pretty scary for them. 
     
  3. o_O boo!!! -_- post a Story please and make it scary :eek:
     
  4. Too Long;Read It?


    We bought our ten bedroom country house in North Northumberland
    in 1997. Originally built as a hunting lodge, it had since been a
    private home and more recently an up-market hotel. It took several
    months to convert it into something resembling a family home and I
    spent several nights in the building on my own after a day of
    stripping out walls, tiles and hotel furnishings. My brother Steve
    visited one day and as we walked along the west wing corridor he
    pointed out the similarity to the Overlook Hotel in The Shining. I just
    ignored the comment. It didn’t spook me at all.
    We moved in during the Spring of 1998 and the house seemed warm
    and homely if not a little large for the five of us; me, my wife and our
    three kids. Possibly the least scary room of all was the toilet in the
    front hallway. Narrow, wood-panelled with a small window letting in
    light, it was by far my favourite toilet of the seven we had to choose
    from. I spent many happy hours sitting there in the mornings,
    enjoying a peaceful dump and a read. I could almost say it was my
    favourite room in the whole house. And then it happened.
    I’d been suffering from loose stools for months. I was never off the
    toilet. The doctor thought it was Irritable Bowel Syndrome (it later
    turned out to be lactose intolerance, but that’s not really important).
    One day things were so bad I’d bunged myself up with Imodium. An
    overdose on reflection. I was also suffering from an anal fissure (a
    tear in my arse) that caused incredible pain if I so much as farted.
    (At the time I thought it was piles, but that’s not really relevant
    either). I thought a few days without passing a stool would do me
    good. I wasn’t thinking ahead. Sooner or later I was going to pay the
    price.
    He pointed out the similarity to the Overlook Hotel in The
    Shining. I just ignored the comment. It didn’t spook me at
    all.
    The stool, when it eventually arrived, was like a sack of hardened
    cement weighing me down. I wasn’t sitting on an elephant, I was
    sitting on a stegosaurus. I went into that bathroom like a condemned
    man. I’d never felt fear like it. I sat down, breathed deeply, and
    waited for the movement to begin. It came in contractions, every
    time the pain getting worse. I breathed as deeply as I could, grasped
    the radiator, sweat ran down my face, I groaned and I grimaced. It
    was like shitting a roll of red hot barbed wire, except there’d be more
    give in a roll of barbed wire. And then, after ten minutes or so, it got
    stuck. The pain was at its height, and it got stuck. It wouldn’t shift,
    backwards or forwards. I rocked back and forth trying to hypnotise
    myself, trying to suppress the agony. I’d never known pain like it. I
    had visions of Elvis. I knew that if I didn’t bleed to death, my heart
    would pack in any second. I thought about calling to my wife in the
    kitchen to say goodbye. I thought how ironic it was me, a man who
    made a living out of toilet humour, dying on the toilet. I really
    thought that was it.
    The pain reached a hideous crescendo, and I felt my bumhole
    rending itself in twain. Then I reached the watershed. The girth of the
    stool began to reduce. As the log slid slowly out the pain subsided.
    The feeling of relief, the joy to be alive, was immense. I was
    euphoric. Before wiping what remained of my arse I turned to look at
    the stool. It looked like a rusting German bomb unearthed on a
    building site. Like the fortunate family whose roof it might have
    fallen through, I was lucky to be alive.
    The next day I went to the doctors and bent over while he stuck a
    telescope up my ringpiece. He diagnosed the anal fissure and gave
    me some ointment for it. Since then I’ve been fine. But that room
    has never felt the same. The ghost of that giant stool haunts it to
    this day.
     
  5. We bought our ten bedroom country house in North Northumberland
    in 1997. Originally built as a hunting lodge, it had since been a
    private home and more recently an up-market hotel. It took several
    months to convert it into something resembling a family home and I
    spent several nights in the building on my own after a day of
    stripping out walls, tiles and hotel furnishings. My brother Steve
    visited one day and as we walked along the west wing corridor he
    pointed out the similarity to the Overlook Hotel in The Shining. I just
    ignored the comment. It didn’t spook me at all.
    We moved in during the Spring of 1998 and the house seemed warm
    and homely if not a little large for the five of us; me, my wife and our
    three kids. Possibly the least scary room of all was the toilet in the
    front hallway. Narrow, wood-panelled with a small window letting in
    light, it was by far my favourite toilet of the seven we had to choose
    from. I spent many happy hours sitting there in the mornings,
    enjoying a peaceful dump and a read. I could almost say it was my
    favourite room in the whole house. And then it happened.
    I’d been suffering from loose stools for months. I was never off the
    toilet. The doctor thought it was Irritable Bowel Syndrome (it later
    turned out to be lactose intolerance, but that’s not really important).
    One day things were so bad I’d bunged myself up with Imodium. An
    overdose on reflection. I was also suffering from an anal fissure (a
    tear in my arse) that caused incredible pain if I so much as farted.
    (At the time I thought it was piles, but that’s not really relevant
    either). I thought a few days without passing a stool would do me
    good. I wasn’t thinking ahead. Sooner or later I was going to pay the
    price.
    He pointed out the similarity to the Overlook Hotel in The
    Shining. I just ignored the comment. It didn’t spook me at
    all.
    The stool, when it eventually arrived, was like a sack of hardened
    cement weighing me down. I wasn’t sitting on an elephant, I was
    sitting on a stegosaurus. I went into that bathroom like a condemned
    man. I’d never felt fear like it. I sat down, breathed deeply, and
    waited for the movement to begin. It came in contractions, every
    time the pain getting worse. I breathed as deeply as I could, grasped
    the radiator, sweat ran down my face, I groaned and I grimaced. It
    was like shitting a roll of red hot barbed wire, except there’d be more
    give in a roll of barbed wire. And then, after ten minutes or so, it got
    stuck. The pain was at its height, and it got stuck. It wouldn’t shift,
    backwards or forwards. I rocked back and forth trying to hypnotise
    myself, trying to suppress the agony. I’d never known pain like it. I
    had visions of Elvis. I knew that if I didn’t bleed to death, my heart
    would pack in any second. I thought about calling to my wife in the
    kitchen to say goodbye. I thought how ironic it was me, a man who
    made a living out of toilet humour, dying on the toilet. I really
    thought that was it.
    The pain reached a hideous crescendo, and I felt my bumhole
    rending itself in twain. Then I reached the watershed. The girth of the
    stool began to reduce. As the log slid slowly out the pain subsided.
    The feeling of relief, the joy to be alive, was immense. I was
    euphoric. Before wiping what remained of my arse I turned to look at
    the stool. It looked like a rusting German bomb unearthed on a
    building site. Like the fortunate family whose roof it might have
    fallen through, I was lucky to be alive.
    The next day I went to the doctors and bent over while he stuck a
    telescope up my ringpiece. He diagnosed the anal fissure and gave
    me some ointment for it. Since then I’ve been fine. But that room
    has never felt the same. The ghost of that giant stool haunts it to
    this day.
     
  6. Or normal size?

    We bought our ten bedroom country house in North Northumberland
    in 1997. Originally built as a hunting lodge, it had since been a
    private home and more recently an up-market hotel. It took several
    months to convert it into something resembling a family home and I
    spent several nights in the building on my own after a day of
    stripping out walls, tiles and hotel furnishings. My brother Steve
    visited one day and as we walked along the west wing corridor he
    pointed out the similarity to the Overlook Hotel in The Shining. I just
    ignored the comment. It didn’t spook me at all.
    We moved in during the Spring of 1998 and the house seemed warm
    and homely if not a little large for the five of us; me, my wife and our
    three kids. Possibly the least scary room of all was the toilet in the
    front hallway. Narrow, wood-panelled with a small window letting in
    light, it was by far my favourite toilet of the seven we had to choose
    from. I spent many happy hours sitting there in the mornings,
    enjoying a peaceful dump and a read. I could almost say it was my
    favourite room in the whole house. And then it happened.
    I’d been suffering from loose stools for months. I was never off the
    toilet. The doctor thought it was Irritable Bowel Syndrome (it later
    turned out to be lactose intolerance, but that’s not really important).
    One day things were so bad I’d bunged myself up with Imodium. An
    overdose on reflection. I was also suffering from an anal fissure (a
    tear in my arse) that caused incredible pain if I so much as farted.
    (At the time I thought it was piles, but that’s not really relevant
    either). I thought a few days without passing a stool would do me
    good. I wasn’t thinking ahead. Sooner or later I was going to pay the
    price.
    He pointed out the similarity to the Overlook Hotel in The
    Shining. I just ignored the comment. It didn’t spook me at
    all.
    The stool, when it eventually arrived, was like a sack of hardened
    cement weighing me down. I wasn’t sitting on an elephant, I was
    sitting on a stegosaurus. I went into that bathroom like a condemned
    man. I’d never felt fear like it. I sat down, breathed deeply, and
    waited for the movement to begin. It came in contractions, every
    time the pain getting worse. I breathed as deeply as I could, grasped
    the radiator, sweat ran down my face, I groaned and I grimaced. It
    was like shitting a roll of red hot barbed wire, except there’d be more
    give in a roll of barbed wire. And then, after ten minutes or so, it got
    stuck. The pain was at its height, and it got stuck. It wouldn’t shift,
    backwards or forwards. I rocked back and forth trying to hypnotise
    myself, trying to suppress the agony. I’d never known pain like it. I
    had visions of Elvis. I knew that if I didn’t bleed to death, my heart
    would pack in any second. I thought about calling to my wife in the
    kitchen to say goodbye. I thought how ironic it was me, a man who
    made a living out of toilet humour, dying on the toilet. I really
    thought that was it.
    The pain reached a hideous crescendo, and I felt my bumhole
    rending itself in twain. Then I reached the watershed. The girth of the
    stool began to reduce. As the log slid slowly out the pain subsided.
    The feeling of relief, the joy to be alive, was immense. I was
    euphoric. Before wiping what remained of my arse I turned to look at
    the stool. It looked like a rusting German bomb unearthed on a
    building site. Like the fortunate family whose roof it might have
    fallen through, I was lucky to be alive.
    The next day I went to the doctors and bent over while he stuck a
    telescope up my ringpiece. He diagnosed the anal fissure and gave
    me some ointment for it. Since then I’ve been fine. But that room
    has never felt the same. The ghost of that giant stool haunts it to
    this day.
     
  7. Holly.shit o.o lol
     
  8. CAN ANYONE MAKE A STORY WITH ZOMBIES… OR KILLERS……… PLEASE
     
  9. send Me FLAGS PLS
    I DONT HAVE A SINGLE FLAG
    :-(
     
  10. The last man on earth sat alone in a room . . . . .





    There was a knock on the door






    <("<)
     
  11. Good one Azza 
     
  12. :) :-( :) :-( :) :-( :)
     
  13. And then the person behind the door appears to be the legendary dead martial artist Bruce Lee.
     
  14. April 2006, 11:30pm ,Clark Airbase,Angeles City Pampanga.

    I just got back to the Philippines after working for 6 months in Malaysia, i stayed on our grandparents house in the province since my cousins lived there, on the 3rd night since i got back im with my closest cousin jillian hanging out with our friends on our neighbors backyard since one of our friends is teaching her how to play a guitar i decided to go home to charge my phone, i never notice the time until my aunt told me that its already past 11 tell jillan to go home cause its already late, so i went back to our friends house since its only 2houses away from ours and told jill that her mom is calling her, she just said go ate ill just finish this cord then ill follow, so i left again my cousin while walking back i suddenly slowed down and stare at the window of a vehicel thats parked outside our neighbors house that area is dark since the only lamp post was located near my friends house the vehicle has no glass window but theres a tiny curtain on it my eyes are stuck on that window cause im trying to figure out who's sitting inside cause i saw a white guy wearing a yellow polo shirt and his facing don so his hair is covering his face i only saw his thick eyebrow im walking slowly and when i reach the cars window i was stunned cause i dont see anyone inside i even look inside the car then i tried walking bakwards just to figure out the exactvl angle where i saw that figure then my cousin suddenly appeard and it made me jump and she said hoy! ate what are u doing i thought u went home already then i told her what i saw my cousin shouted and run to our house since im surprised on her reaction i also run, when we reach home our aunts ask us what happen tjen my cousin said "Mang Ben showed up again but this time he showed up to ate ara" i was confused and said whos mang Ben and i told u theres no one inside the car my aunts look at each other and said "Mang Ben owns that Car but he died 2 Months ago inside that car he died trough heart attact while driving home he reach the parking but never made out of the car to call for help! i was shaking after hearing that ajd i cnt even sleep that night. Since then i always go home earlier than 7pm and never look at the window of Mang Bens Car.
     
  15. Post some scary story please (>_<)
     
  16. Post some scary story please (>_<)
     
  17. Is it weird that I don't understand 100%
    :?: