Speaker 1
So I would follow it down the hallway to my sister's room. And when I'd get to my sister's room, I'd see these black and white orbs fighting over her, like diving down, fighting into her. And I would wake up in this moment. But I had it for a couple of years and it would always leave me super unsettled and scared and eventually it just stopped. Fast forward to, I'm like, and we had a bunch of hauntings in this house. Like my brother would wake up crying saying, tell the little boy I don't want to play. So we knew the house was haunted. Nightmare. But yeah. Oh yeah. I hate that. But fast forward to like 20 years later, I'm graduating college and I'm telling my family, my dad, my sister brother about break her nightmares and I mentioned this one. We're about to leave dinner. My dad looks at me and goes, that didn't, that wasn't a nightmare. It happened in real life. And I was like, excuse me. Like what? Like what? Yeah. Like you have to tell me. Glass shutter. So he goes on to tell me that when we first moved into that house, so like around the time these nightmares started, he had fallen asleep on the couch watching TV and woke up to a really loud noise. And so he wakes up, he thinks maybe it was just the TV, turns it off, starts locking the doors, it's late at night, you know, locking doors, make sure windows are closed. And the second he starts walking up the stairs, he just got that feeling that someone was in the house. And he goes up the stairs, checks on me, I'm asleep, my mom is asleep and he starts walking down the hallway and like the closer he got to my sister's room, like the more dread filled his like whole body. I have chills right now. He reaches the door handle and it's ice cold. He opens the door and all of the air is sucked out of the room. And it is just like, he was like every instinct is telling him to run, but his daughter is sleeping. Yeah, as a parent. So he's like, I hope this never happens to you. I hope not. I'm never coming over again. So we're going to need a new podcast room.