The Scariest Story

There was a short period of my early life that was punctuated by truly unfortunate nightmares. I'd go to sleep feeling safe and warm. 


Then I'd awaken several hours later and somehow be completely convinced that my closet was inhabited by fire monsters. 


I'd flee to my parents' room because, like most six-year-olds,  I believed that my parents possessed some magical ability to ward off homicidal, fire-breathing monsters that were easily eight times their size.  


I don't know exactly how I thought they would be able to protect me from the monster, but as far as I was concerned, my parents were forcefields of safety and that fire monster could go fuck itself. 

As I lay there between my parents, I felt a gigantic flood of relief.    


Inexplicably, the feeling of complete immunity to danger made me extremely energetic.  


I didn't need sleep; all I needed was safety.  


It was intoxicating. 


And in the morning, despite having slept very little, I'd wake up feeling recharged and ready to rampage.  


Unfortunately, my parents were not high out of their minds on feelings of invulnerability, and they did need sleep.   

After enduring several consecutive nights of spastic flailing followed by days of gleeful chaos, my parents decided that they needed to take action. 

My mother, being the shrewd diplomat that she was, decided to bribe me into staying in my own bed at night. She knew that I had been lusting after a certain stuffed toy, and told me that if I stayed in my own room every night for an entire week, she'd buy the toy for me. 

But the promise of such an enticing reward did not make the nightmares go away. Nighttime turned into a battle of will power.  I would awaken, become completely terrified and be overwhelmed with the desire to bolt to the safety of my parents' room. But I willed myself to stay in my bed.  Instead of sleeping, I spent the entire night vigilantly watching the closet.  


If a monster came out and tried to attack me, I was prepared to flee reflexively.  But until I saw the whites of the monster's eyes, I would hold my post.

I really, really wanted that toy. 

My sleepless nights turned me into a listless little zombie during the day.  Activities that I once enjoyed with childish abandon became a struggle. 


I was completely dead inside.  

But the most insulting part of the whole ordeal was lying awake in my bed, shaking with terror and suddenly becoming aware of my younger sister slumbering peacefully on the other side of the room, wrapped up in her blanket like a fearless little burrito.


She was three years old. There was no possible way that she should be so brave in the face of such extreme danger. I looked at her over there, happily dreaming her little dreams, and I felt envy. I should be the brave one. I should be the one defying death so nonchalantly. Who the hell did she think she was?

Not only did she sleep soundly but she awakened cheerfully, ready to take on whatever daily challenges a three-year-old is likely to face. The numbness and deadness I felt inside contrasted sharply with her blatant contentedness. It started to feel like she was being happy at me - like her enthusiasm was intentional and malicious.


Then I had an idea.


I could bring her down to my level.  I could fill her little mind with images so gruesome that she'd be irreversibly scarred for life and would no longer be able to taunt me with her complete disregard of fear.

And most importantly, if I could make her scared enough to seek refuge in my parents' bed, I could use her as a sort of Trojan horse and tag along under the guise of concern.

She was my ticket to safety and I had to scare the ever-living fuck out of her.


I spent the entire day concocting the most horrifying story I could think of - an amalgamation of every single scary thing I'd ever heard. It was a masterpiece.  It was the scariest story in the world. There was no possible way that my sister would walk away unscathed.

When it was finally bedtime, I waited for my parents to turn off the lights and leave the room, then I turned to my sister and said "Do you want to hear a story?"

She loved stories.  She didn't see it coming.


I began: "On a dark and stormy night....


By the time I was done weaving my tale of blood and horror and more blood, my sister had become silent and wide-eyed.  Her innocent little brain had never encountered such an impressive amount of gore, and I could tell that she was still struggling to process it all. 

Satisfied with my handiwork, I whispered "goodnight" and nestled into my blankets to wait for the inevitable moment when her tender young mind crumpled beneath the sheer volume of terror I'd just injected into it.  


Amazingly, my sister was able to fall asleep.  She couldn't possibly have been unaffected. How could she sleep?  She must be experiencing a delayed reaction, I thought. The inside of her head just had to be a festering stew of terrors - fermenting, bubbling beneath the surface until they gathered enough force to wake her and propel her to the safety of my parents' bedroom.  It had to happen. There was no way that it wouldn't.  

As I lay there in the dark, willing my sister to awaken and experience the full force of the nightmares I'd planted in her mind, I began to think about the story I'd told her.  The bear-snake with bat-arms. The skeletons. The blood. The murderers.  

Then I looked at my closet. 


Oh no.  They were in there.  

The jolt of fear I felt in my spine nearly paralyzed me, but I still managed to flee to my parents' room with tremendous agility.  I desperately clawed at their door until they let me in.  


I told them I didn't care about the toy. I told them I never wanted toys ever again.  I cried violently and screamed about how scared I was.  

Even the impenetrable safety-fortress of my parents' sleeping bodies was not enough to ward off the incredible amount of fear I'd brought upon myself.  I didn't sleep. And it wasn't because I was high on safety.  


In the morning, I felt like I'd aged ninety years in a single night.  This is it, I thought. This is what the end of life feels like. My tiny adrenal glands had nearly exploded themselves in my panic and I was exhausted.  I ate my cereal robotically, expending only as much energy as necessary. 

I almost didn't notice when my sister climbed up next to me.  


She looked much less traumatized than I would have expected, considering that she spent all night stewing in the after-effects of my story.  In fact, she seemed extremely excited about absolutely nothing. 


Maybe I had broken her. Maybe this was how she was choosing to cope with the indelible horrors I'd etched in her psyche. 


But no. 

She was not only unfazed by the story - it had awakened a hunger in her.  She experienced the scariest story in the world and she loved it.  And she would not be content until she had mined my brain for every terrifying snippet it was capable of producing.  I had to make up more stories to tell her. Scarier stories.  Stories with more blood.  Everything became a potential subject for a story. Tell me one about lawn mowers, she'd say. And I'd have to come up with a story about a sentient, homicidal lawn mower. 

I had created a monster. 

1,103 comments:

«Oldest   ‹Older   401 – 600 of 1103   Newer›   Newest»
Julie said...

Another brilliant story! Thank-you so much for making me laugh out loud.

Jacob said...

Oh, Allie, that was entirely too long with out a post, but you made up for it. That was awesome! My own story is very similar, except that the tables got turned on me. My brother (whom I told these same stories to) became so good at making them up that he ended up scaring me all the time. A monster indeed.

Steph said...

Ahahahaha! That was every bit as freaking hilarious as everything you write is. Which is to say, HELLA HILARIOUS.

game_girl_1993 said...

Hehe I know what that's like. I had to sleep with a night light, a cocoon of 13 blankets, about 20 stuff animals(including my giant stuffed Simba), a fan, and my beauty and the beast snow globe. It was only then could I sleep through the night. Parents never let me watch another movie like The Mummy when i was little... I freaked and Hid under the couch, took dad 2 hours to get me to come out, and Mummy proof the house.

Adra said...

This blog rules. I hope you live forever.

Esther said...

It's not really my closet with the monsters. They all live in the bathroom, where they sit all night and eat toothpaste (when they're not eating people).

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

I think those of us with extremely vivid imaginations suffered the most as children whenever night fell.

When I was about 3, I'd had nightmares, but nothing too intense. My mom's friends recommended a book to her - "There's a Nightmare in my Closet." It was about how a little boy was scared of the monsters in his closet, but then he met them and they were really nice and they had a party or something. So she decided to read it to me, thinking it would help me conquer my fears.

Mistake.

All I took away from the book was "There are giant grotesque beasts in my closet waiting to come out at ANY SECOND." I slept with my closet doors tied shut for the next seven years. Even after that, my brothers often scared me by hiding the book under my covers.

Good times.

emma said...

The joy you bring with all this talk of blood and sibling abuse is so fantastic. You brought a smile to my face. I must have a sick and twisted mind. Thanks for the reminder!

Deyna said...

I remember those years spent being afraid of the dark. I came up with 2 ways to combat it:

The first was becoming nocturnal for a long period of time. I'd come home from school, stay awake about 3 more hours, then go to sleep to wake up at about 2 a.m. and begin my nightly vigil before school. I did this for YEARS.

My second method was the realization that the kid hiding under the bed sheet NEVER gets eaten. If there was a movie where the kid under the sheet got eaten, I never saw it. I reasoned that if the kid under the sheet was never eaten, it must be because monsters can't get you under sheets.

I grew out of all of it by the time I was 13, but those were my methods before then. Also, your blog is awesome and I'm jealous of your story-telling prowess.

10swords said...

My night terrors were always of Hoover vacuum cleaners... And silver puddles like Alex Mack... And Geo Storm cars... I was a wuss, wasn't I?

ShanimalsCrackers.blogspot.com said...

My sister really shouldn't complain about me telling her my "scary" stories, because they weren't half as bad as yours.

Chantal said...

Loved it! Soooo funny, reminds me of when I used to do the same thing. Keep up the great work!

Graygrrrl said...

Clearly your sister knew the ancient art of Cachez le Peau which loosely translates to "hide the skin". I was master of this covert art as well. Basically, to protect yourself from whatever lives in the closet or under your bed, you must cover as much of your body as possible. Completely covering the face with your blanket is preferable, but it gets a bit stuffy under there so it's not required.

Anonymous said...

Can you draw a homicidal lawnmower?

Actually, wait, maybe it would look just like a regular lawn mower... Although I'd like to see a short post / comic about some of the stories you told her, lol.

Duchess said...

I did this. Only it wasn't out of spite, but for the pure hell of it. I told my little sister that the undead and ghosts were in our attic - she never went up there again for about ten years - and that an old house on our block had an evil sorceress living in it - she maintained it as true for a long time.
I was seven years old at the time and morality and scruples had not yet taken hold of me.

Anonymous said...

FIRST!

Anonymous said...

Your Dad is hot.

IGS said...

I think a similar thing must have happened to me... I loved all things horror as a kid. Still do =P
Must ask around the relatives.

Anyway, absolutely excellent post, thank you XD

Megan Villa said...

Theres probably no point in leaving you a comment since you probably got tired around number fifty ( I know I would have). But nonetheless, here it is.

I find it SO funny and a complete relief that I wasnt the only child that got scared in the middle of the night by nothing more than her over exercised imagination.

Your mother and mine must know each other because she did the EXACT same thing. Except that while yours was a week my mom thought to make me go through a marathon of terror and make me wait a whole month. But on the bright side, she had made a cool piece of paper with my name and would stick a pretty little star every night I stayed put.

She promised me a surprise in the end and when I finally finished my traumatic challenge, I got a backpack koala bear. I never had expressed any affection for koala bears so this was confusing but we quickly became best friends.

Megan Villa said...

Theres probably no point in leaving you a comment since you probably got tired around number fifty ( I know I would have). But nonetheless, here it is.

I find it SO funny and a complete relief that I wasnt the only child that got scared in the middle of the night by nothing more than her over exercised imagination.

Your mother and mine must know each other because she did the EXACT same thing. Except that while yours was a week my mom thought to make me go through a marathon of terror and make me wait a whole month. But on the bright side, she had made a cool piece of paper with my name and would stick a pretty little star every night I stayed put.

She promised me a surprise in the end and when I finally finished my traumatic challenge, I got a backpack koala bear. I never had expressed any affection for koala bears so this was confusing but we quickly became best friends.

Hannah said...

I'm so glad you made a new post! I was getting worried. I had my appendix out on Feb 14th and if I didn't see a new post soon, I was terrified that it might grow back!

Koci said...

My childhood was spent with a little sister just like that!! Even to this day, she prances around, acting like the sunshine-y light of our lives. It's gotta be something about the younger sibling genetics that give them that puppy dog cuteness/happiness/obliviousness quality.

I'm Katie. said...

Holy shit. It was a red-eyed rabid dog- a la Kujo- for me (though I had very large pet dogs and loved them). I still remember one night I saw glowing eyes in the dark of my room. I bolted to my parents' bed who led me back, turned on the light, and explained it was just the light from the illuminated clock.

Thing is, it wasn't the clock. I knew the difference between a single clock face with a 5" diameter and roman numerals and two glowing yellow eyes right beside it.

When your parents give you an obviously false answer to safety? Talk about mind fuckery.

(I'm going to be leaving my bathroom light on tonight. Thanks. :))

Unknown said...

Pure genius, loved it, how do you find time to draw so much in paint!?... however you do it, kudos! :)

diemer said...

I was getting sleepy at work. You fixed that.

Your son. said...

Hi Mom!

Anonymous said...

You know you're famous when people fight over first comments. Also: You're amazing. I loved this one. :3

Chelsey said...

xD I always have the need to make my sister afraid when I am!

recently I told her about the 'Slender Man'. We both didn't sleep for a loong time lol ;D

Paollai said...

LOL! think my favorite panel was the one of you offering up your drawing and being "completely dead inside". hilarious!

That was totally me when I was little. It's nice to know I wasn't the only weird kid with sleeping problems. My parents eventually figured out that if they left a tape recorder going the entire night I would be distracted by it and fall asleep once I got over my anxieties. The downside is I have "the little country mouse" memorized to this day.

Anonymous said...

I'm just delurking to say hi, and tell you that I can't read your posts at school because I always end up laughing like a maniac XD.

I really like your blog.

Justin said...

Best birthday present ever. So endlessly hilarious, as always!

Stefanie D. said...

Hey! Just letting you know I used one of your drawings on my blog because I was talking about you. :)

http://run-on-riot.blogspot.com/2011/02/triple-tangent-tuesday.html

It's funny how sabotage usually ends up blowing up in your face, huh? LOL. Funny as always. :)

Anonymous said...

Dude.
Fuck brevity.
Give me everything.
>:(

Anonymous said...

hahahahaha oh my god...
me and my older brother totally did this to our little brother when he was 5 (he deserved it he pulled off barbies head!!!)
except instead of monsters and skeletons and closets, we went with spiders and crickets (both of which he was absolutely terrified of) being under his bed during the day and crawling over him when he slept! he woke up at 3am screaming "get them off get them off" we weren't allowed to watch tv for a month :( he still has nightmares now and he's 23!

kids are cruel! but oh so funny!

you rock allie - thanks for making me laugh and for cheering me up after a crappy day at the office :)

dulish said...

I love how artistic everything gets when you start telling the scary story. That must have taken you forfrickingever to draw.

Call_Me_Little_'D' said...

I absolutely LOVE the facial expressions you give your characters! And that crazy bit of hair sticking up in the back reminds me of my hair as a kid!!

Your blog never fails to make me laugh and I share it with just about everyone!!

Hanna said...

You have crystallized the inherently darker nature of older siblings who are all to commonly thwarted by their own evil genius!

Mrpink said...

My god. You are a evil genius.

Also good to see a post, it's been a while!

Miranda said...

Because of my sugar-coated deranged personality, I thought that this story was HILARIOUS! "And there was more blood," you said. I would have been JUST like your little sister! XD I guess that's what I get for having TWO older brothers!!! XD

~Miranda

Baby K said...

yayayayayayayayayayayayayayayay.
can I have another story now please!?

maxie said...

I knew where this story was going, because my son tried to scare his sister with a scary monsters-are-going-to-get-you story and he ended up being the frightened one who couldn't sleep!!

Love your blog.

Anonymous said...

I'm so glad I'm not the only one who experienced telling someone a scary story that ended up scaring me exponentially more than the story-listener.

charrion said...

Great story! Loved it!

I probably won't sleep tonight for fear of skeletons, dead bodies, murderous bad men, ghosts of little sisters (made of blood), snake-bear-bats, and blood, lots and lots of blood but I still loved it.

I'm kind of glad my closet doesn't have doors.

Anonymous said...

I laughed so hard I started crying. This never happens to me.

Anonymous said...

Nice :)

Allie T. said...

this is why i sleep with my closet doors open.
sometimes my clothes still scare me.

tara simone said...

For a second I thought she was talking to me! Her name is my name! (above commenter). I love your work, you are so funny! I wish I could be funny like you, but ...well...I'm working on it. And I can't trick my sisters like that. They know me too well.

Roy said...

Wow, you're drawings are getting really good :)

Roy
http://cruisesurfingz.com

faelnor said...

Wow look at the ugly comments. It must be so 'great' to look at a first page of comments after posting something you're proud of and then having to take everyone's words with some kind of professional detachment because of the innate stupidity of "FIRST"ers, copy cats, stalkers, female fans with no more than three synapses, more stalkers of the "i'm just joking but still please marry me but you understand me *wink*" kind, more female fans going on with their similar experiences, boring cynics like me that continuously complain about the comments to highlight how special they are, even more stalkers etc.

Anyway, that was the most depressing hyperbole & 0.5 post I've seen in a while. Not a happy story for sure. Oh excuse me, "hilarious and wonderful Allie!".
So how did you solve that nightmare problem in the end?

faelnor said...

Actually I'd very much like a chart of the people that post comments on your blauahaahaahahg

Sarah said...

I don't remember any closet nightmares from when I was a kid - but I still can't sleep with the closet door open. I must have blocked them out :\

I think the scariest thing (that I remember?) was my brother's night terrors and sleep walking. Imagine you're 8 and you can't sleep because something is about to attack from your closet. There is silence and then... Piercing, blood-curdling shreik from the next room. Or his zombie sleepwalking. That's the stuff of nightmares.

Well... I was tired but now I don't think a nap is possible... Thank goodness there are no closets at work, but now something is definitely about to attack me from under my cubicle 8-|. Probably a giant millipede (nightmare with roots in teenage petshop job) with bear claws and a shark head.

Aside: I missed you so much. Post awesomeness more frequently pwease. *grin* <--- the grin is supposed to help convince you. Is it working?

LaurieM said...

Thanks Allie! You've just made my entire month of February!!! Love your work!

Zoe(gbt) said...

FIRST! Oh damn it, someone/somepeople beat me to it.
Anyway, I can realte to this story so much, I was often in awe of how my younger sister was impermeable to the mosters that lived under the stairs. Love it Allie!

Anonymous said...

Hahahah this is brilliant!!!
I was the younger sister in my family, and I happen to have a talent for defying death nonchalantly. It must be a family thing.
Plus, I'm hungry for burritos now :)
Thanks for an AMAZING post!

Ori said...

Having read all the other posts on your blog
Ever
Because I'm super creepy and totally capable of doing that

I have to say that this story explains two very important aspects of your current life.

First of all, your fear of monsters combined with your parents' avid neglect (by means of bribery) has resulted in your current irrational fears. Like the orc rapist. Have you thought about the orc rapist lately? If I were you, I would probably call your parents right now. Explain to them how horribly traumatized your life has been, and then instruct them to view this entry.

Secondly, by creating a monster in your sister with her constant need for stories, you pretty much brought about a pretty happy future for yourself. Who needs to work when you've been trained all your life to entertain other people with ridiculous nonsensical stories? Not this girl. Aw hell yeah.

Please be creepy and find me. I'll be waiting.

-Shawn

Kylie Tresh said...

OMG thats so me when IIII was 6!!

Dee said...

OH SWEET JESUS!!!! New post!! Hallelujah, I was suffering from Hyperbole withdrawl ^_^

Anyhoo, I know you're super busy BUT! I have a question for you. My friends and I have been having an ongoing debate as to what animal would be most likely to rule the world. One says velociraptors (if they are resurrected), another says ostriches, another says guinea pigs, but I say that bears would totally dominate. I say this because I believe that soon, they will slowly but surely evolve over the years to gain mind-control in their brains. Also, I've already located the ringleader of the bear forces, his name is Eduardo.

Besides from the obvious reasons, bears are totally awesome, so of COURSE they would dominate!!!

...Right?

Anyways, I just wanted to pose that question to you and leave a long comment on your blog. I love your blog, and constantly get weirded-out glares from my family when I'm reading a new posts, sputtering with laughter.

And so my horrific, rambling comment must now come to a end. Ta ta, Allie! Can't wait for the next post!!

You probably won't even see my question... Oh well! It felt good to ask, anyways.

Gigi said...

You, my friend, are brilliant.

Anonymous said...

With such horrors as bat armed bear snakes serpentining the shirts in my closet, I here by hold you accountable for the sleepless nights that lie ahead.

Lisa said...

LOVE it! Thanks for posting today, it's my birthday! More!!!

Anonymous said...

Thank you, Allie - your post brightened my dreary day - as always!! Fearless little burrito is the best line ever - and I have felt like people were being happy at me before, too
: )

Carolyn said...

YAY! Instant classic!

Becca said...

Allie, I came here to say, "PLEAAASE post another story! We miss you!!!!" and what should I find but a brand new post! Yay! Like your little sister, I am thrilled. (: Thank you.

AshleyD said...

Allie! I LOVE your blog but HATE the cursing! You have such wonderful creative stories...surely you can come up with better adjectives than the "f" word (unless they are important to the story, of course). I've also noticed a lot of kids read your stories too...so keep it clean for them, if not for me. :) Thanks!

Ashley

Rebeccapedia said...

Holy crap, this is hilarious!! When I was younger I went through this phase where I would devour every scary story, be it book/tv/film/someone's shitty ghost story, I LOVED it. Now, I'm 24, and sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night convinced there's a snake in my bed, or a person in my closet, and the other night I SWEAR I saw a a little tiny pygmy run across my windowsill! I love you and your blog, and I can't believe you never whored-out the fact that you were nominated in that blog awards thing, I voted for you SO YOU HAD BETTER WIN!

Mike Glover said...

Loved the light and shadows in the colander-as-hat drawing!

Tina said...

Normally I see myself in your stories but now I have my own four year old 'fearless burrito' it was the pictures of you in bed with your parents that made me weep with laughter. My DD is asleep in my bed right now!

We don't shut the door so she hasn't wound herself round the handle yet but I am so tempted to try it!

Faith said...

I would make my mom spray Lysol in my closet before I would go to sleep. Lysol doubles as monster repellant.

Bassloop said...

Very good! A bit of belly-laughing going on here :)

Liz said...

Allie, your posts never cease to amaze me and make me laugh. And for that I thank you.

Anonymous said...

Just to let you know: Someone linked this on FARK. That officially means you've MADE IT ON THE WEBS!
Your pics and stories are by far some of the best things to ever happen to my workdays.

Janice Grinyer said...

my God. you just saved me years and years of therapy for wondering why I dont understand my adult kids fixation on their childhood.

thank you. and I mean that from the bottom of this poor mom's "could i have been a better parent somehow?" heart...

;)

christina r. said...

I love scary stories about closets and blood. Your post was hilarious.

Tiff said...

Yay, a new post!!! I've been waiting forever for this!!! Thanks!!

You know, for me, it was quite the opposite. I never really had nightmares or got scared or anything, but my sisters were practically almost always in my parents' bed. Only, maybe, once a year I would go to my parents' bed. A few years ago, I went to my parents' bed because I read this email about a baby sitter who went to the mom's bedroom and saw this clown who killed her. It was a horrible story, and I told it to my sisters too, and we were all sleeping in my parents' bed for a week.

Love the story!!! :D

QueenRuthie said...

"Tell me another story!" made me laugh so loud that my dog barked. And speaking of dog, my husband and i always say, "Eeeeeeeeeeeeeee" when something's wrong now. It snowed last night, so, of course, when we let her out, we said, 'The ground is weird and I'm a dog." She totally only thinks in squares and triangles. BRILLIANT!

Megan said...

Oh man I had nightmares all the time as a kid so I can definitely relate. Awesome story :)

Anonymous said...

On a grumbly day, you have made me giggle. Thank you.

Except now I'm gonna have nightmares... BUMCAKES THATS REALLY BACKFIRED!

And also there are ALWAYS spiders.

Anonymous said...

could you please start a line of greeting cards? pretty please??

StephanieC said...

First of all, wow, your animations are getting even MORE amazing, the more you do.

Your sister was happy AT you... lol. I know that feeling.

I say it every time I comment here, but you are just fucking awesome. I hope you got that toy in the end.

Maybe special dog is payback for all those rambunctions nights you had in your parents' safe bed.

Special dog in the hotel.

Hmmm.....

Seriously?... Reeeally??... Seriously?

_
_
_

Sue said...

And to this day, does your younger sister still enjoy horror stories? Maybe horror movies? I would've so disliked having an older sister telling scary stories but your younger sister sure is fearless haha :P

Kelly Buckholtz said...

When I was small like you were, I was afraid that there was a bear in the closet waiting to disembowel me.

paula. said...

I'm 22 and still have the worst stupid nightmares. ever.
My younger brother is my savior, he never complains when I wake him up in tears. He turns on the tv, puts it on cartoonnetwork and watches it with me until I feel I can sleep again

Anonymous said...

When I shared a room with my big sister, she used to tell me the plots of all the horror movies she'd ever seen, hoping to terrify me to death (literally, because she hated me). She only scared herself into sleeplessness, while I slept like the babe I was and was unfazed. In fact, I grew up to be a horror movie fan. While she still sleeps with a nightlight. Payback is sweet. :)

Anonymous said...

Definitely one of the best! Hilarious!

Shannon said...

Oh my God! I have been waiting for this! YES! And it was even better than I had expected!!!!!! I've just been refreshing your page for a month.

Thank you. So. Much.

I laughed like an idiot the whole way through and I think my mum is scared of me now... I don't even care, thank you so much!

ADDICTED!

Sara said...

That was so awesome! More more@@

ValiantFay said...

<3 fearless little burrito

Liz said...

Your pictures are superfreakhogamazing. Just like yoooooooooooooooooooou! super cheesy, super honest, superallie!

Liz said...

Your pictures are superfreakhogamazing. Just like yoooooooooooooooooooou! super cheesy, super honest, superallie!

Ruby said...

So guess what? It's my birthday today and you totally just made it that much more special :D thanks for that, allie

the Yeti said...

I did the same to my sister when we were young, but unfortunately I succeeded in scaring her. With time I grew up and my fears diminished and hers grew. The outcome? She insisted on keeping the lights of our room on, forced me to sleep facing her, and demanded that I did not fall asleep until she did ( and she kept awake until she was exhausted from thinking of all the horrible things monsters could do to her).

I woke up tired and zombie-ish in the morning, and when I reproached my sister about it, she had the undeniable truth ready to be thrown upon me.
"but you told me all those stories. It is your fault. "

lexcade said...

you make me incredibly happy. and today, i needed that. thank you.

Unknown said...

You have an amazing writing style! Love It!

Penny Lane said...

Pure Deliciousness!

Lauren said...

Glad to see you back.

LOVE this. Especially the bit about "high on safety".

Anonymous said...

Everyone is talking about the kids' points of view. I'm a parent of 4 and 2 year old boys. I swear to god I fell out of my chair laughing at the safety of parents' beds! My kids never sleep when in my bed, yet wake up refreshed! I'm so glad you explained to me what is going on.
Thank you

Anonymous said...

So genius! I've been dying for a new post!!!!! Thanks for making my day suck WAY less!!!! :)

Melissa said...

ZOMG Awesome Story...look what you can do and still be loved and adored by countless people!

Jenny said...

Was the stuffed thing a Popple by chance?

Night Shift in Delaware said...

Thanks for writing something for us! If you post again before March I will send you a FREE GIFT!!

Anonymous said...

I love your stories and like to share with my grandchildren. However the language in this one, while only used 3 times, is such I cannot.

Not to infringe on your artistic rights, your stories are wonderful and would be more so if they were G rated. :)

Peggy said...

Awesome post today. Your drawings are amazing, and SO funny.
After raising 2 daughters, I can totally see this happening.
Thanks for the laugh today!

Nonym said...

Pirates hid in my room when I was a kid. They snuck in during the day, hid under my bed, and plotted my demise while I was at school. I realized that they would only be able to get me if my feet got close enough to the bed for them to reach out and grab. I wasn't about to let that happen.
I ended up running and launching myself at the bed when I was still a few feet away, successfully avoiding their reach every night.

Another tactic of mine was to scurry under the bed before it got dark and they were safe there, and spending the night making sure they didn't show up. Eventually my parents stopped me from sleeping under the bed because they were afraid that all four legs of the frame would give out at once and I would be trapped.
They solved both their problem and my pirate infestation at once by removing the frame and leaving the mattress on the floor.

Jessica said...

That was the best scary story ever! I really liked the transition between a closet, lots of closets, and 300 closets. Also, that fire monster drawing is so good!

SACRISTAR said...

sounds like you needed a sentient homicidal vegetable to keep you safe at night: http://notsosilent.blogspot.com/2007/02/sprout.html

Eyeamsighhhkoe said...

Dude this reminds me of the time I told my sister there were monsters in the toilet and she didn't shit for a week and peed in the yard :)

Anonymous said...

I've been waiting for this moment for WEEKS. I freaking loooove reading your stories.:D

christy said...

This is excellent. As a child, I worried an incredible amount about vampires. Then, our of a desperate need for sleep, convinced myself that i would be safe if no part of my body was out from underneath the covers, because the vampires wouldn't be able to see me (or bite me). Only then I couldn't see so I then formed an amazing habit of sleeping in a super tight blanket burrito except for a tiny hole to watch for vampires.

Corinne said...

As always, LOVE IT.

And I totally want to wrap myself in blankets and be a fearless little burrito now. XD

sowbug said...

Great post - I love the happy sleepy faces.

My childhood nightmare had to do with cows. My grandparents had a small dairy farm and I loved the cows. But at night, I would wake up convinced that they were living in my bedroom and I was so afraid of their drool and manure. I wanted to run to my parents room but if I touched the floor I'd step in manure, so I had to whimper "mom" "dad" "mom" "dad" until they came in and turned on the light.

Anonymous said...

So TRUE and Hilarious!!!!

Anonymous said...

Your sister is a LOT cooler than you are. Put her on here at once. Go!

Kyra said...

Is it weird that when I think of you as a kid, I can only see you in cartoon-form?

Kyra said...

Is it weird that when I think of you as a kid, I can only see you in cartoon-form?

The Onion said...

I have a twin sister who used to sleep like the dead in our shared bed. I would watch the door for the murderers like I had seen on an Episode of Quincy my Mom was watching...eeeeeek.

Later I found out she would sleep with her head under the covers so if a murderer came in, he would kill me first and she would have time to flee. Mean.

My Mom was a meanie, and wouldn't let us sleep with her. She would advise me to curl up next to my sister, who wouldn't know if Freddie Krueger was curled up next to her.

Zoey11 said...

What the fuck is this? One giant setup for a pun? Did I miss the funny?

kim sofia said...

i love this so very much, as much as i love scary stories

SammySimplicity said...

Allie, your work never ceases to amaze me and make me laugh hysterically. When I was young, my parents decided to have me watch the old black-and-white version of Invasion of the Body Snatchers.
At the age of 23, it's poorly done and the acting is terrible. But at the age of 9, it's the scariest movie I had ever encountered. No movie since then has scared me or scarred me as much as that one did.
In the movie, if you fall asleep, you die, and an alien seed pod creates an alien version of yourself to roam the earth. Needless to say, sleep didn't come to me easily for weeks afterwards.
Every time I even began to feel my eyes drooping, I'd start screaming and crying. I would run to my parent's room and wake them up to make sure they hadn't been made into alien copies. I'd grill them with questions only they would know, and have them express their love for me because aliens cannot express human emotion.
The scariest night of this experience was when I'd fallen asleep for a few hours. Maybe it was a bodily reaction to lack of sleep, or maybe it was just my body playing a cruel, coincidental joke on me, but I woke up tingly and with some sort of hives.
I ran screaming to mom and dad's room, just knowing the end was here. I'd done it, I'd slept too long, but, instead of dying in my sleep, I had woken up, only to watch myself die and become a pod created copy.
My parents finally calmed me down, probably with some Dimatap, and I fell asleep. The nightmares finally ended, but the word "pod" haunted me for months afterwards.
Everything was fine for a few years until I learned that a more graphic remake had been made during the 90s with better acting and better graphics. I vowed that day never to see that film.

clenchy said...

This post is the best thing I have encountered on the internet.

Hanny said...

What a fun story! Thanks for sharing!

Unknown said...

Dude! Your blog *rocks*. Keep it up!

carolynjl said...

you should have ended it on the tell me another story picture panel. more effective, mefinks...

but then again i'm not writing a blog that already has over 525 comments on one post...

Brenna said...

The fire monster is really an amazing piece of artwork. Kudos!

ju.lee said...

When my parents locked the door to their room at night so I couldn't sleep in their bed, I used to sleep at the foot of their door. Like a dog. I think I turned out alright...

Anonymous said...

awesome post, LOLOL





































































































*has nightmares* D:

Joanne said...

My older sister used to tell me that I was a Korean War orphan, and they were going to send me back...

Sarah said...

I never had the monster fear as a kid - and luckily my little brother and slept in separate rooms, because he sleep-yells.
Try walking down the corridor to the bathroom at 1am and as you pass the black and gaping open doorway of your brother's room, hearing, "NO, NO, NO, NO!" Scared the shit out of me every time, even once I grew up, right up until we moved.

lanie@ plumb tuckered said...

hee-hee. As the oldest sister, I totally get this. I told my little sister that when my dad poured the foundation for our house, he accidentally walled someone inside. Unlike YOUR sister, who is clearly awesome, mine ratted me out that very night.

Anonymous said...

very cool! loved it

Unknown said...

...your daddy is, hands down, the most adorable-to-the-point-of-being- irreversibly-damaging thing I've evah clapped eyes on. Well done, mon petite Broshette, well done!

Lauren ♥ said...

First of all:
This made my life.
Second of all:
Your little sister? Just like mine. Her favorite color is even yellow & she's a perky little blonde, too.
:0

Eve S. D'ropper said...

Ahahahahaha!!! Soooo funny, as per usual, Madame Blogger! The little-kid-with-head-tilted-innocently-to-side pictures are so cute...and the terrifying pictures you are able to draw on the computer kinda awe and scare the crap out of me simultaneously. Keep writing--you're hilarious! :D

~Eve S. D'ropper, of Words From The Hallway (http://wordsfromthehallway.blogspot.com)

Stevie said...

I love the reference to the photo on the Facebook page. Awesome!

leslie (crookedstamper) said...

OMG, I think *I* will have nightmares after this! EEEP!

PS: BWAHAHAHAHAHHAA!

Ben said...

I love this blog. Every post is an absolute riot. You rock Allie!

Doggie Days said...

Maybe you just got the wrong sister. The second someone even mentioned scary stories I was in bed with my parents. Until I was seven. Then it wasn't cool anymore.

Ferretkingdom said...

LMAO. I was the baby of the family. Sounds like what my older sister did to me, only she really did scare me! LOL

D.B. Echo said...

Love it! And I especially love the detail on the closet door, where two facing panels have been laid out so the grain and knots form a symmetrical pattern! And this grain and knots always form FACES and DEMONS and the figures of all of the animals and people who have ever been MURDERED in the forest where this wood was harvested! AND THEY'RE ALL TRAPPED THERE IN THE WOOD GRAIN AS PSYCHIC IMPRINTS, WAITING TO BURST FORTH WHEN THE LIGHTS GO OUT AND INVADE YOUR SLEEPING MIND!

Crap. Good thing all the wood in my bedroom has the grain painted over.

goingalittlecrazy said...

so funny! thanks for the laugh. I've seriously gone back and read all of your posts. they are great! :-)

Christopher said...

So you basically invented inception, but sucked at it.

Kersley Fitzgerald said...

I was going to go on and on about your amazing illustrations, but it's the writing that has tears streaming down my face. You're my hero.

Unknown said...

When I was 4 or so, Reading Rainbow did "Miss Nelson's Missing," in which the nice teacher is replaced by an evil teacher named Viola Swamp. That night, and several nights the week thereafter, I fled into my parents' room. Mom kicked me out because I "slept like a whirling dervish." So the pictures of you stealing all the blankets and thrashing around was spot-on!

I was crapulatingly terrified of "The Swamp" for about 5 years after that. I tried explaining it to my parents, but they just bought me books about the Everglades. Eventually I discovered lucid dreaming, kicked the Swamp's ass, and recovered from the nightmares. I don't know why I didn't think to share the trauma with my little brother. It probably would have backfired like it did with you!

Anonymous said...

I feel like we're all like your sister - keep telling us stories! More, More!

It's a terrible burden, but we're so thankful you put up with us.

I am just totally in love with your endearing and evocative artwork.

mmoneh said...

I wish I could be a fearless burrito

Genevieve said...

Boring comment since I always post but your stories make me feel so happily nostalgic and blissfully comforted remembering our strangely odd and seemingly parallel upbringings. I love it.

dinogami said...

Allie, this post is hilarious, and, as usual, the drawings make it even better! But hey -- when you get a chance, let us know what you're up to these days...!

Anita said...

I like how you slept across the bed with your feet in your Dad's back, forcing both parents to the extreme edges of the bed. My kids did the same.

srpescado said...

Still laughing...milk coming out my nose laughing at this . Fearless burrito is fabulous. someday you will see a man who looks like the dad in the story with that phrase on his shirt..........that will be moi.
You are one very funny and twisted sister. Thanks for throwing some happiness my way.

Kris said...

*Clap. Clap. Clap.*

LB said...

The stuffed toy: A Pound Puppy. Am I right?

Anonymous said...

I am amused by the comment posts as much as by your story. This is my first time visiting your blog and will certainly be back!

My nightmare was about horribly short and fat and very tall and skinny people made out of TV snow that would begin fighting and become a big ball of snow eventually filling up the "screen" of my mind. I have never figured out why that was so frightening and never told my parents because I am sure they would have laughed at the ridiculousness of it.

Of course, this would be the same mother who forced us to play in the scary basement (probably so our noise wouldn't bother) and then one day jumped out of the depths of a very black closet (that naturally was not even acknowleged due to it's overwhelming "scary closet-ness") wearing a vampire cape and screamed a banshee's scream* and then laughed when we all cried and nearly peed ourselves. Did I mention that my sister and I's friends were there and refused to ever come over to play again?
*I did not at the time have knowledge of a banshee but istantly recognized it as such when reliving the terror of this moment upon hearing a banshee scream in a movie.

I also had nightmares about vampires.

Who needs sisters when Mom's around?

Becky E.

MyOhMichael said...

I was doing ok, good even, looking through the pictures of the scary story.... and then...

There were spiders.

Why. Did. There. Have. To. Be. Spiders.

And what the hell is wrong with your little sister? Did she grow up to be a sociopath? Or worse: the owner of a homicidal pet spider?

I have so many questions and no answers.

And there's no way I'm sleeping tonight.

Unknown said...

This post was absolutely fantastic. I laughed so hard! The fearless burrito, high on safety, you hanging on the door knob, the three hundred closets, "it started to feel like she was being happy at me"- all of this is priceless. OMG... you describe being the older sibling seeking to destroy the bluebird of happiness in the sweet innocent younger sibling with such panache. I love it. Are you my long-lost evil twin? ;)

Hybride said...

Wow, really funny! Loved the pictures, especially your sister wrapped up as a burrito.

Biohazard said...

Leaving a comment here seems a bit like spitting in the ocean, but I do want to say I always enjoy your work. You have some great stuff here! Keep up the good work, and I hope you finally got to sleep, LOL!

http://myconfusiontheory.blogspot.com/

Anonymous said...

If you were my sister, I would make you tell me stories, too. Actually, it would seem that the entire internet is now your sister. Yay.

Jayne said...

Oh, Allie. Just... Thank you! You're incredible!

Gracie said...

I'm actually scared of the closets. Thanks.

Unknown said...

I love you.

Angela@BeggingTheAnswer said...

Being a parent of a 3 year old who recently discovered what nightmares were, let me tell you that your pictures of you in your parents' bed are SPOT. ON.

Unknown said...

That needs to go on the "Best of Blog" sidebar... lol!

Anonymous said...

A friend emailed me a link to the "moving dogs" blog and I loved it so much that I had to read the other postings.
I just wanted to let you know that when I pee my computer chair laughing, I'm going to hold you personally responsible. Expect a bill in the mail for a new computer chair seat and a pair of pants.

Catena Creations said...

My next-oldest sister and I used to race off the school bus to catch the last few minutes of "Dark Shadows." Whenever she got scared from the show, my mom and dad ALWAYS let her crawl in bed with them. But when I got up because Barnabas Collins was about to bite my neck off, they always made me go back to bed.

I can already tell that the image of Dad in polka dot boxers and curlique hands is going to make me laugh at the most inopportune moment. As are the pictures of you wrapping yourself around the doorknob. Most excellent work!

Johnnie Black said...

Hahaha that's great.

When I was a kid I was convinced for YEARS there were witches inside the curtains in my bedroom. When I finally got the courage to inspect them, I discovered they were just a fairly subdued floral pattern.

Anonymous said...

YAY new blog!!!! now ill read it ^_^
*reads..*
HAHAHAHA omgh you're great!!!

Lilypad said...

When I was a six, my older brother had a sleepover and watched Jurassic Park with his friends. I sat in the living room with them, since my mom needed to keep an eye on me. It was a horrible mistake. That night, and for about a month, I dreamed raptors were coming to eat me. In my head, they were under my bed, in my closet, and outside my door. Meaning I couldn't run to the safety of my parent's room. I felt ashamed to tell anyone of my nightly vigilance of playing dead beneath my sheets, all the while wide awake. Eventually i convinced myself that if there were raptors in my room, they would have eaten me by then. I've never watched another dinosaur movie ever again.

Anonymous said...

I fucking love this story. All of your stories. Your an amazing writer - you have the power to make them seem unwillingly hilarious! Love it!

Victoria said...

I just wanted to let you know that u are getting me in trouble. My mom took away my phone because she thought I was texting when I was supposed to be doing homework. But I was reading ur comics! I had to go through 2 hours of homework without ur distraction! It was hell! And then I accidentally let it slip that I read all ur stuff during English and mom got really pissed again. So I blame you. Stop being so funny or I will shove u in a pool of dog hair! (that will be very uncomfortable. Especially when it gets in your mouth.)

Anonymous said...

This post was hilarious!! I loved the drawings. I've read all your posts and they are amazing! You are brilliant. My favorite post ever is the dogs don't understand concepts like moving-awesome! Cant wait for the next one, have a fabulous week!
-Jennifer

queertherine said...

ahaha this happened with my brother and me! and I still stay up most nights scared of ridiculous things BECAUSE THEY'RE ALSO REAL THREATS I just realized the tall man in a tuxedo I've sworn I've seen in my room at nights is just what my lamp looks like without my glasses or contacts, for the millionth night in a row. :/

- said...

you're bloody brilliant.
the entire story. the drawings. the writing.
it's funny as hell. and funnier because it's probably all real life.
and hey. life is funny.
thank you.
:-)

Nelson Barr said...

I am crying happy tears right now!!! I have been waiting so long to read another story. My life is not complete without you! Because I am a Creeper :)

Kimmela said...

YAYYY another post!!!

i was getting worried! i thought something bad happened, like that you exploded or got abducted by spaghetti monsters or something.
I can't properly function during the day if i don't read any of your posts, so i'm glad you've added a new one :)

Chachic said...

LOL, your sister is so cute!

"Tell me another story!" -> still laughing at that line

Anonymous said...

I am in LOVE with this blog.

Arlene said...

Lol makes me wish I had a younger sister to scare the crap out of but alas..no. So will satisfy myself by scaring a neighbor on occasion :D

Desert Islander said...

You feared fire monsters in your closet. I feared clowns. Stephen King's It and that damn toy clown from Poltergeist started it all for me.

To this day, I flinch whenever I see a clown.

I hate clowns. I'd rather have a spider on me than deal with a clown.

*$&% CLOWNS!

Eh, ahem, sorry, that outburst was random. But, on a much lighter note, your blog made me laugh with joy. Thank you for making my long and boring school nights more entertaining.

Arden said...

This is why we have movies like Saw...

RonnieMoye said...

So even as a little girl you OBVIOUSLY had quite the knack for telling good stories and got your sister hooked just like you have all of us hooked now :)

Nine-Fingered Menace said...

I know your your pain; as a kid I was both very imaginative and afraid of my own shadow. Making something up to scare someone else and scaring myself instead, definately something I would have done. Love your blog by the way.

Anonymous said...

I was a scared of closets girl...might still be! And the space under my dresser, and bed, and the hallway... Also, my cousin loves this new post so much, she says she's going to find you and you'll be BEST friends.

Stephanos said...

I found your murderers

http://images.wikia.com/mspaintadventures/images/6/64/Extra0013_1.gif

Stacy said...

haha! this totally reminds me of my sister and I (I was the younger sister...hehehe).
And I still have a little bit of a fear of closets. They creep me out.

Karina said...

I totally needed one of these today! Thanks Allie for the pick me up, I now have the strength to weep over my homework instead of simply staring listlessly at it!

Matt said...

Was this based on the first Jurassic Park? Raptors are harbingers of doom. I'm just sayin'.

jain said...

i just about died when the bear turned into a bear snake with bats for arms! and the worst part about being a ghost is definitely the scary teeth.

PS my creative writing professor wrote "alot" on one of my pieces. a woman with a doctorate that has all her fingers and is not an eagle and wasn't even typing wrote alot. but maybe she did mean to substitute "too much" for bear/yak/pug creature.

Andini Rizky said...

Who are you? You're funny, and you draw like my 7-year-old. Like!

Stranded in a Dream said...

in a way your sister fed off of your fear. that plan really back fired. lol, love your stories

PD said...

Wow, I feel way less bad about telling my sister stories.

Of course, I was a lot older.

Damn.

(Also, I'm impressed by the amount of blood packed into one story.)

Anonymous said...

we told our son that the wolves in his closet moved to Texas.... it worked until his aunt moved to Texas and wanted us to come visit. Needless to say, the wolves ended up moving to Florida. So far, so good....

Nikki said...

THREE HUNDRED CLOSETS.

And the fearless little burrito line cracked me up.

KTMAC said...

i have trouble reading your posts, due to the tears blurring my vision. thank you

Anonymous said...

I want a t-shirt of your batsnakebear!

Nancy said...

You at the age of six is equivalent to me right now. And I'm almost fifteen.

Anonymous said...

Wow only posted for 14 hours, and almost 600 comments! Ok so I'm a first time commenter, and I'm gonna be one of those cool anonymous people. Who am I? Maybe I'm Nicholas Cage. Or a Lutheran minister (Lutheran's have ministers right?) Or maybe I'm a bear trainer from Romania. Anyways, I stumbled upon your blog (Not from the website) awhile ago and I have read everything from the past, and have been waiting for days and days for a new post. And I was not disappointed! My favorite illustration of this post is you hogging your parents blanket while you were "high on safety." That's how I sleep every night.
Keep them coming!

Anonymous said...

Fabulous entry, I too was once a scary story machine for my kid sister, she absolutely adored them and even liked to augment them with her own creative beasties. Go figure.
Cheers, T4

Kate said...

"like a fearless little burrito."
XD
<333

- said...

This is the greatest thing that has ever happened to me.

Unknown said...

NEW POST! THANK JESUS! I was beginning to lose all will to function.

«Oldest ‹Older   401 – 600 of 1103   Newer› Newest»