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   601 – 800 of 1103   Newer›   Newest»
Anonymous said...

Once I hid in the crevice between my sisters bed and the wall. I waited for her to turn off the lights and settle in. Then in a most pleasant to I said "Hi". The blows I received from her terrified flailing was totally worth it. She checked the bed for me for about ten years.

Adorably Dead said...

This is why I love little sisters.

Noone said...

I love you're writing/drawings! I'm following you now. :)

your posts make me laugh and go awwww. please keep up the amazing work!!!

-Binny

Karissa said...

I totally empathize...the only problem is that I still have this problem. And I'm 17. And I freak myself out every night, worrying about the things that are hiding in the dark all around me.

Rose
http://notwithoutdisclaimers.blogspot.com/

That one girl said...

This story is unusually similar to my childhood. I would try to scare my sister and her little friends to the point of tears, and instead freaked myself so much that I'd spend the night with my parents. It got to the point where they would lock the door and I'd set up a bed outside their door in the hall.

jay b said...

You're back! In top form, too.

Jamie said...

I couldn't stop laughing
did it get better soon at least?:)

Anonymous said...

Dear Allie,

I'm a long time reader, first time commenter :) Love love love your new post! My friend recently made me a picture of an alot with a grape leaf wreath and wine with the caption "I like my wine alot" and I almost cried with joy and laughter. Just wanted to let you know that the alot has found its way into a warm and fuzzy space in my heart <3

Kat

Jennifer Louise said...

Oh this is hilarious.

Thank you Allie! Hahahah.

Jennifer Louise said...

Oh this is hilarious.

Thank you Allie! Hahahah.

Jennifer Louise said...

Oh this is hilarious.

Thank you Allie! Hahahah.

Raine said...

It's stories like yours why I still leave my closets opened at all times... If I can see into them they can't see out.

That's good logic for you. :D

A said...

Ha Ha... I still get scared at night and I'm an adult. When I was little only the bed was safe, even the floor was crawling with snakes.
After reading the original Dracula novel, I went for months without being able to sleep at night. Sadly I had no younger sister to scare into staying awake with me.
PS making up those stories for he probably made you into the storyteller you are now..

Anonymous said...

Thanks, now I'ma have nightmares about sentient murderous lawnmowers.

M said...

omfgjsjhshdfdjsjfh

i just found my new favourite blog

you're amazing

i bow down to you

Liz Peterson said...

So I commented on the wrong blog post, just now, so it might be buried forever. Unless your site is super smart and says, 'Hey, you have new comments on a really old post!'.
If that's not the case, I just wanted to say I think your stuff is awesome, and after reading a bunch of the really old posts, I hope it is paying you well.
Keep up the insanity!

dimi said...

Oh wow! Congrats on your amazing talent on expressing yourself like that! And the drawings are unique! I'm new around your blog and I'm having a blast! I wish you weren't so busy so that we could be friends - I find we have a lot in common! In fact I used to scare the c#%%^ out of my poor younger brother with stories that there were spiders and force him to watch violent horror movies (when my parents weren't there of course-I'm not stupid!dah) thus succeeding to traumatize him forever. He confessed that while playing "Resident Evil" at the age of 17(he stopped and shouted-"I can't do this ANYMORE"). Luckily he is over it now and we can play the game again...
(Sorry for the long post)Thanks for being you Allie!

JewelsRule said...

That's scarier than the Phantom of the Opera! I'll have nightmares now, thanks.

Alecia said...

yaay sooo worth the wait! yaay! I <3 you!! :) Hope I dont get any nightmares tonight

koprivakopriva said...

E P I C. I wish i could spook the shit out of my sister, unfortunately it is not possible given the current level of technology.

Wocket said...

It never ceases to amaze me that you made it through childhood. :)

Anna said...

Yay!! Worth the wait :)

PseudoFanboy said...

ONCE AGAIN YOU HAVE FLIPPED ME ONTO MY BACK CONVULSING AND CHOKING LIKE A RETARDED SEAL ON MY OWN LAUGHTER. i love you allie. please never stop writing EVER.

Anonymous said...

You just keep getting better, Allie. Nowhere to go from here but up.

Diana said...

But...did you get the toy?! :p

Unknown said...

i love you allie! you have all the support of my coworkers and friends.

Anonymous said...

thank God you have posted...i was getting ready to do something productive due to the lack of my drug...that stuff doesn't scare me though, no hyperbole and a half keeps me up at night.

Skye said...

Omg Ally, I died dead laughing. I have 6 year old twin girls who have a three year old sister and *this totally happens at our house*!! Only my littlest gets the stories in stereo, and she still remains her happy, nightmare free self while the other two need counselling nearly every night (and I need it nearly ever day).

Thank you for bringing such humour to the suffering of others (and yes, ok, to our own suffering too). You are a veritable nightlight of truth.

Meher said...

You sister has quite a spine. And you're drawings are so awesome. I'm in love with you. =P

xifer said...

I see ghosts. Lets just start there. I see them. It doesn't scare me. Horror movies and stories ABOUT ghosts do, for some unexplainable reason. Maybe its because my experiences with them have all gone very well, and ghosty movies and ghosty stories are usually about experiences that don't go well at all. I don't want to ruin my good track record with the spirit realm by adopting negative images of them into my world view, apparently. People think of ghost-stories as kids stuff, but I am often amused by the fact that we take our child reactions to ghost stuff into our adulthood .. Anyway, ranting. Loving this story .. x

Rosie said...

Thank God the man with the leopard skin cape didn't crawl out the loo seat.

How To Live Happily said...

I loved your story!

It's captivating and full of wisdom - even if you don't notice ...

Mother Theresa said...

Well, it looks like the experience has served you well...you've become a first-rate storyteller.

Fiona Lange said...

Yep. I can relate to this. I used to tell my little sister we flew to the moon at night time and the only reason she could not remember the flights was because I gave her mind-alerting drugs. We used to practice flying by jumping on springy tree branches and leaping from them onto the ground. I wonder if all big sisters go through a creepy, evil phase? I wonder when mine will end?

Gin said...

haha awesome! loved the story :D

xtf said...

Read this last night, had a horrible nightmare.

Juz said...

Greetings from Cape Town. I love love love your blog. Jees it's cool.
Thanks for sharing.
Juz

BlackBerry Hosted Exchange said...

Awww! That was just so lovely! Keep writing!

Rebecca said...

Bravo well done

Unknown said...

I love your stories! And the artworks are amazing :D

Looking forward the next post ;)

Anonymous said...

Last!

Lisa Joy said...

Love it! Thank you - Thank you - Thank you!

Jean said...

You are a star.

Ashlee said...

My fear of werewolves (I was five) was fed by my brothers. There's a mean part of me that is thoroughly satisfied your plan backfired, but then, since I was the one with the night terrors, I sympathise with the screaming and the running and the parents being unexplainable beacons of safety.

~Ashlee
http://theDragonsHoard.bigcartel.com | Handmade gemstone jewellery

Shayla said...

Ahaha that's awesome. We should have traded little sisters because mine was a ridiculously easy scare.

One time my parents bought us Furbies (remember those?) and when my sister was sleeping I used to like to position it in front of her with its eyes open so when she woke it was staring at her. And then, of course, I'd totally deny touching it when she asked me about it. After a while, she was really freaked out about it and I used to hide it in more and more surprising places -- buried in her laundry basket, etc. Yeah, she hated that thing.

Alex said...

Does she still do it?

That would be insufferable. I feel your pain; I have a brother of a similar nature.

Faith said...

Hey Allie, I absolutely freaking love your blog. I mean LOVE - at times it is the highlight of my life. But I was so sad to see you use the word spastic in this entry - not okay! Please keep on doing your entries forever because if you stop I might die, but also I hope you don't use that word again :(
Peace out! :)
xx

Anonymous said...

Awesome post. Just started following your blog recently (thanks NPR!) and love it.

Anonymous said...

The fire monster is AWESOME!!!!

Lolita Hansen said...

This blog has some of the funnest stuff Ive read in a long time. I always end up literally laughing out loud. You really need to consider making a book with all your stories and strips in them, it would sell with no problem.

Anonymous said...

I love you, Allie! Thank you for another hilarious piece.

Ben said...

So excited to see a post by you! I check every week day to see if you will brighten my day. Thank you Allie!

PS Fire monster could kick Bear-snake-bat monster's butt!

Me~ said...

Your Dad looked a bit like Jesus and I found comfort in that. This story is flipping hilarious. Love the part where you are scratching at your parent's door and are on the door knob. It gives me the sense of the sheer terror you experienced. Good stuff!

Julie said...

Allie, thanks for the new post! Not having had a new one for so long, I was wondering if you were okay...

My sister and I also shared a room when we were kids, but it was my dad doing the scaring. I don't remember how it started, but there was definitely a story about a giant bug that comes out of the toilet and finds you in your bed, and then you're "dead until morning."

My poor sister was so freaked out... "Dead until morning" is still a family catch phrase. Sigh...

Kristin said...

Oh my gosh. This kills me, because I was THE SAME WAY when I was six. Except my incapacitating fear was of chupacabaras (I had a sister who lived in Mexico). My parents gave up the fight on the night that I finally scared myself so much that I barfed salsa all over the hallway carpet. The next night, my mother to accompanied me to the basement so that I could show her what was so scary. (Right. As if chupacabaras come out when parents are around!). There we discovered my dad and sister, crouching in the back corner of a closet. They had been hiding there every night and growling at me when I came down to kiss my dad goodnight.

In related news, my sister's daughter turned six yesterday, and those fire monsters sound really scary...

Jonah Gibson said...

"...like she was being happy at me..." priceless line.

Unknown said...

Hilarious! I'm a little sister and was definitely not so immune. Older sisters are so meeeaan

Marisa said...

You never fail to make me laugh hysterically. There is always a point at which I can no longer breathe and simply flail around in silent laughter... in this post, it was the images of you wrapped around your parent's doorknob that did me in. I can totally picture this.
I'm one of 9 kids... 7th of 9 actually. I had 5 older brothers to pull that crap on me so naturally, I had to scar my little sister and brother as well. Never worked though. They seem to be under the delusion I was the coolest big sister ever. Total fail

Angela said...

Hahaha! Thanks!

Mongo, At The Moment said...

This is great; really great!

Joanie Rich said...

My little sister is so immune from nightmares that if she ever does have one, she is fully lucid while dreaming and tells the monsters to shove it and go away... and they do! Meanwhile I get murdered again and again by someone who looks exactly like the murderer you drew here. HE EVEN HAD THE HAT! It's like you read my mind. You are amazing.

Rachel Kennett Person Extraordinaire said...

Yay! new post!

White Hooder said...

The coolest scary story ever! ^_^

I guess now I will be waiting for the one about lawn mowers. Hahahhaa...

http://365times3oflaw.blogspot.com/

Foodaholic said...

This is great sounds like my sister and I. Thanks for the read as always!

Laura said...

Hey Allie,

Haven't commented in a while, but still reading all your wonderful posts. So glad you've continued writing/drawing, and that you've acquired such a fan base :)

..... and I totally wish my sister'd been like you growing up, because I'm frightened by anything slightly scary on TV!! Even joke-scary movies scare me! haha, so although I was open-mouthed when I realized what you were going to do to your poor sister, I now know it to be a favour ;)

Thanks for another great post!

Anonymous said...

Tell us the one about the lawn mowers!

Anonymous said...

Haha, wow. Thats hilarious

Banana said...

OMO Allie!!! So happy you finally posted. I have been checking every single day for a new post!!! Thank you!! It was funny.... hahahaha... Miss your posts. Please post more frequently!!! :D

The Deep End said...

Scariest story ever, but still the funniest too. Haha awesome awesome awesome!

Read my comics! They're awesome too!

thedeepend-comic.blogspot.com

Courtney said...

THIS WAS THE STORY OF MY CHILDHOOD! (AND MOST OF MY ADULTHOOD!)

X5SoB said...

So, did you sue for the unauthorized use of your images? What about those T-shirts? MONEY! Make some money from this!

Great post, BTW.

Jennifever said...

Your drawings have gotten really good. I especially enjoyed the monster bear snake with bat arms. Nice work, lady. Real inspirational stuff of dreams.

Miss Cellania said...

Oh man, my two daughters went through the exact same thing when they were preschoolers!

STE:) said...

DUDE!!!! This sounds exactly like what my brother did to me when I was 4 years old!! XD

Anonymous said...

I see you're into the whole brevity thing. Far out, man.

Tommy Buttaccio said...

Ohhh my god. This is Hilarious I think I have re-read this five times now, and I still crack up. Reading these always make me feel awesome after feeling shitty.

Anonymous said...

My God.

Nia said...

THAT's the sort of kid that watches all of Marble Hornets/EverymanHYBRID and other Slendy/Rake related shit, all alone at night, and then goes to sleep having the most pleasant night ever.
Disgusting.

Mark said...

i love that you finally have a new post up!! i can see you spent a lot of time with all the illustrations in this one, your hard work is not taken for granted or unappreciated!!

p.s. you're the best thing to have ever happened to the internet

Anonymous said...

Thanks for this. I looooove you.

Unknown said...

Just thought I'd let you know... Kenny Loggins is performing near my town.

pewPewPEWWW said...

My mother tricked me into feeling safe. She told me that if she tucked me into bed tight enough, I wouldn't have nightmares. It totally worked, except for when my grandmother babysat. Her feeble old lady hands couldn't tuck me in tight enough, and so the nightmares would come.

Unknown said...

I find it absolutely hilarious that this is the next story you posted! Just last night my family, my boyfriend and my friend were talking about how (even now still in my 20s) I am far too easily terrified of stories. I have such a terribly vivid imagination that any comment, even ones as innocent as "what's behind you?" and "don't look over there" turn me into a quivering ball of fear if told in the proper light (i.e. none, i.e. night, i.e. you better not leave me the fuck alone or I might die!) There was one time my boyfriend came to bed and decided it would be funny to act like a zombie, and funnier still to continue to act like one even after I told him not to be an idiot and go to bed. Needless to say even though I KNEW he couldn't actually be a zombie I started defending my life as I tried to run out of the room terrified to go hide on the couch. We didn't talk for a while after that. In fact he still thinks it's funny. Fantastic story Allie! So happy to know it's not just me! (even if it is please don't tell me)

Harpa Jónsdóttir said...

This just made my day!

Ankita Sarkar said...

yay! post. hilarious as usual, but they take you so long :(
:D:D:D:D

George L Smyth said...

When I was about six I was able to convince my sister, who was two years younger than me, that the fireflys outside were robbers trying to get into the house. She still remembers that.

Plumsauce10 said...

I created a monster once.

She was evil and hellbent on destroying the world but I found her oddly beautiful all the same.

Love your work btw.
Awesomeness in a bag.

Anonymous said...

Oh my goodness - my stepdaughter must be you in a parallel universe! Hopefully she grows up to be as smart and witty :)

Erin said...

It's great to se a new post, you're so very funny :)

34milepizza said...

Great post! I've been waiting and waiting and wai...You get the idea. My older sister used to hide in the closets and jump out at me almost every day. Apparently, I never learned my lesson and it never got old for her. Also, you made it on FARK.com today.

Shyam said...

Beautiful story...I am envious of your writing skills!!

Alyx said...

This will never get read, but I want to say it anyways.
I feel so bad for you 'cause you were the most unlucky kid on the planet.
But it's so gosh darn funny.
And I don't care what you think of yourself (well, I do, but don't), you're so funny and such a talented writer. Like, really. Have you read books on the shelves these days? You know, the ones trying to be funny? It's like some bitter old man, who doesn't even comprehend the word 'funny' is writing every joke.
But makes me laugh all of the time.
I'm sorry you struggle with ADHD, I really am.
But your writing is beautiful.
Oh, and I love the way you draw you and your sister. So freaking adorable. Curly hands. <3

GhtoPrincess said...

Yay!! When you post it's like my birthday/Christmas/First day of Summer all rolled into one! This is officaly my Best. Day. EVAR!

Anonymous said...

That was awesome! No wonder there's so much time between posts, you've been working "alot" on these. The drawings are great. One can only wonder what kind of sweet revenge your sister took out on you when she was older. Wait, I smell another post!

Anonymous said...

You are brilliant. And hilarious. Never change.

Lala said...

This entry has the best pictures of any of them! Your arts have been improving, missy. Love it~ Keep up the good work. :)

Michelle said...

I'm a weird dreamer. I rarely, if ever, have nightmares, and in fact, I'm almost never in my own stories. Rather, they play out like movies are books and I'm just watching it happen from my place of safety. Scary things might happen, but they don't really affect me because I'm not part of the story.

Peter Cartier said...

Hey, Im a fan of the blog. Good language with great stories and perfect drawings. I refer to my better half as "the girlfriend" in my blog so we've got that in common. From one humorist to another: you're hilarious.
http://throwsomepepperjackonit.blogspot.com/

Lorelei said...

I literally screamed with laughter between the story and the pictures. Tears were streaming down my face and each time I calmed down another part of the story started me off again lol Thanks for such an enjoyable read!

Jess said...

When I was little, zombies lived in my closet... and they still do. Great post, as always. :)

jamie said...

loved this entry! I love the reaction shots - those always make me crack up

I kinda wish the copyright monster said, "I kill you scum!" for some reason.

Anonymous said...

I have an older brother who was always trying to scare me. To this day, he cannot watch horror movies. I used to love them, but they have become boring and uninteresting. Thank you, elder siblings, for tempering our steel.

E said...

Your sister is my hero. But who are the whack-jobs who just want to post that they were the first to post? Seems like they have verrrrrry little going on in their lives.

luminaria said...

Oh my goodness, Ms. Brosh. I have become such a huge fan of yours in just the past couple of months. I am sitting here in an art class, and no one can figure out why the middle-aged guy is snickering continuously. Thank you for another wonderful post.

Boo said...

ALLIE! I THOUGHT YOU WERE DEAD. NEVER SCARE ME LIKE THAT AGAIN.

Alexander Martinov said...

i liked this post alot ;)

Anonymous said...

Oh *LOL*. You are incredible. It's humor at its best!!!!!!! Kind regards from Dorte in Denmark;o)

Anonymous said...

Awesomely, epicly AWESOME!!!

F. T. said...

You posted this five hours ago, according to the time-tag on your post. You have 713 comments.

Congratulations, you have won at the internet.

P.S. Awesome. Totally awesome.

Olive said...

"Fearless little burrito"
"Crazy O's"

Lol :)

Anonymous said...

Hilarious. I love what you do with the pictures. It really makes everything twice as funny.

Anonymous said...

FIRST?!?!

Anonymous said...

Eeee! You continue to be amazing!

Sam Dwyer said...

I check this daily in hopes of finding another treasure awaiting me! I was pumped when I found out there was a new post and you definitely did not disappoint!

Thank you once again for the awesome and hilarious stories!

Azunara said...

Ahem.

Eeeeeeee! Moar postings! Yaaaaaay! *does a happy dance, collects herself, tries to look serious, looks back at the post and breaks into a giggling fit.*

Nathan said...

YAY YOU'RE ALIVE!

And back with an awesome blog post. This is truly excellent.

Elianne la banane said...

Some pictures in this post made me think of Salad Fingers... Great post, as always!

Oh, and by the way, this comment is made out of blood.

Unknown said...

I am currently experiencing my 6-year-old going through this. He caught the tail end of a movie he shouldn't have seen, and it's scared him for a week now. He, too, is a bundle of contentment in our bed, and is what I consider and "Aerobic Sleeper", exercising through the night, flipping, turning, flopping, so much that I become the zombie the next days(s).

Great story.

Tania Michele said...

funny as hell XD
my fave still has to be the Kenny Loggins story (i'm sorry for mentioning satan's name) :p

loved this tale!! xx

Anonymous said...

Haha, my parents used to bribe me with buying stuff so I'll sleep in my own room. I seriously relate to this :D

Unknown said...

I love your posts :) As a recent fan I have been reading older posts, and they make my day. You are both a true comedienne and artist. Thank you so much for another fantastic story.... Tell me another story!

Petra

Lily said...

LOVE IT! You need to tell us some of the other stories. Correction: You have created 2 monsters.

Unknown said...

I used to have a reoccuring nightmare of my dad mowing the lawn.
I was watching out the window, and suddenly it would start chasing him over the hill.

Sometimes he came back, bloodied, but he came back.
Sometimes he did not.

Aniki said...

Oh my.... you saved me. Like, completely. I have to be up all night because of this #%$*#&%* deadline, but you managed to turn this into a good thing. Wow. I love you.

kolossal.k said...

I have spent the past 5 days going through all of your posts. Of course i had to stop for things like school and food, but those were the most entertaining 5 days of my life. Thank you.

Cora said...

Just discovered your blog through Tia's and I'm ridiculously glad I did. I confess my crimes in cartoony illustrations on my blog too sometimes. I adore your style!

xoxoalk said...

I love you so much I love you so much I LOVE YOU I LOVE YOU I LOVE YOUR LITTLE STICK-FIGURES I LOVE YOU!!!!!!

Lena said...

After reading this story, I have the same reaction as your younger sister had so long ago: "Tell me another story!" :)

Amy said...

sheer awesomeness. she probably grew up to love everything morbid. i do too!

'sentient, homicidal lawn mowers' i just texted that to my boyfriend. i wonder what he'll say...

dollized said...

The green colander on the head? Perfect!

I love your brain!

Sarah said...

Your sister is awesome.

Well, so are you, but you have to admit that she did beat you this time.

Little sisters suck, now that I think about it.

Now I'm conflicted. And it's your fault.

Unknown said...

Your stories serve as a constant reminder of why I hate children ages 4-9 and probably will never have kids.

Unknown said...

Hmm first time I have posted a comment, and i would love for you to hunt me down. Anyway glad to see a new post, big fan. My friend says you and I have so many similarities it creeps her out. Like the whole bike thing. Okay now to get to the point. I AMM SOOOOO HAPPY that you posted something new. Seeing new posts makes me jump up and down and shout random praises to any and all deities that make exist. Please never quit posting, I would lose the will to live.

Amyn8r said...

"I'm super creepy and totally capable of finding you"... o_O

I was going to post something congratulatory and nonsensical, but now I'm completely overtaken by an potent mixture of hope and paranoia. Thanks, dude. If you want to see other people drawing badly while telling stories, see my blog. Or not. I'll still love you. 8D
http://dreaded-bananasaurus.blogspot.com/

Running Girl!! said...

so just to update on the last comment... I am now a follower, and I tend to be a little stalkerish. You have been warned :)

Running Girl!! said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Yuriinangel said...

This - "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." nearly made me die laughing. You paint with words so well. and your drawings have the maximum expressiveness per simplicity I've ever seen! Such a gift! Thank you :)

Will said...

That was absolutely fantastic!

Much admiration,
Will

http://awkwardstorytime.blogspot.com

Anonymous said...

The closets part of the story reminded me of Powerthirst.

BABIES!
YOU'LL HAVE SO MANY BABIES!
FOUR HUNDRED BABIES!!!!!

Unknown said...

I was exactly the same way at that age!!! O_O

(Usually, I woke up screaming, though, which caused my parents to come get me and bring me back to their room)

Hysterical, as always. =D

TNT said...

Allie!
Thank you for posting I was starting to get worried about you! (Well honestly, I was more concerned for myself I was slowly going crazy without your blog to turn to...but it's good to know you're alive!)
Keep on posting- you're hilarious!
(I suggest one a day :) You think you can draw fast enough?)
Regards to boyfriend for me!
~TNT~

Jessica said...

I love how your parents in this cartoon look EXACTLY like mine did, except my dad's hair was lighter. After my puppy died when I was like 6 or 7 I had this terrible fear that the house would catch fire and we would all burn. I got these stomach cramps at night. My parents were sympathetic for a few days but it was not their nature. I never got to sleep with them. Other times when I had the flu I would say "stay with meeeee" and my mom would yell at me "what do you want me to do? WATCH you throw up???" Anyway, this phase stopped and we never burned. :) Do you actually read ALL these comments??? I love your writing.

Unknown said...

Allie, you make the world a better place.

Thank you!!!

Carrie

Anonymous said...

This was such a great story! I loved it so much that I read it to my 12 and 8 year old kids, brother and sister and yes, I bleeped out the F-words. They giggled the whole way through and absolutely loved the drawings. Keep them coming, that was super fun!

Susan said...

Allie, you're back!! Awesome. I wondered what happened to you.

I was the scary-story-telling older sister. It formed the basis for my fiction writing today. Yours probably helped make you into the excellent storyteller you are now.

Your fire monster is terrific. A work of art. And your dad? Bushy hair and beard, and boxers? - hilarious!

You are really good at drawing monsters!

Anonymous said...

HAHAHA! i can identify with this, being the oldest of two girls and my sister and i were about as far apart in age as you and your sister.

i get ridiculously excited every time i see that you've made a new post!

Amelia Rice said...

HII. Lar. IOUS! I LOVE YOU!

Unknown said...

My little sister slept in the same room with me, and she'd ask me for stories. I told her the ones I was learning as in Catholic school -- the stories of martyred saints. I'd help put my baby sister to sleep with tales of St. Lawrence being fried alive by the Romans, or St. Agatha having her breasts hacked off. Crazy thing was that we never found these stories scary. It's only been as adults that we realized how weird that was. Apparently my sister found my stories soothing, no matter what they were about.

Clandestine Road said...

I've read this several times now and each time I laugh at "fearless burrito," "stew of terrors," and the doorknob scene.

You are brilliant and a little disturbing, which makes you awesome.

RED! said...

i almost peed my pants laughing at this post! definitely one of my favourites!!

LiamMagnum said...

Really really glad theres a new post.

starting to become inexplicably worried.

also, this reminds me of the other night when i read a story called "squidwards suicide" on a certain imageboard. Spent the rest of the night staring at the front door.

It didn't matter that it was deadlocked. i was terrified of...no idea, there was no "bad guy" or monster or anything.

that was a bad night.

Athena said...

Wonderful work, Allie. Can't wait to see the next one!
Also, engaged?! Fricken fantastic! Congrats!

Jenna Loserface said...

I feel your pain, Allie--my younger sister is also much, much braver than I despite my constant reading of Mr. King and playing hockey ball against guys nearly three times my age. .___.

Marcea Chika said...

I absolutely love all of your posts! I can't wait for the next one.

Bob N said...

Seems like when you're 3 years old you're basically incapable of fear. It's just not a thing to you. You have to be older... say... at least 5 or 6? I recall walking with my family on some old train tracks and inventing what I thought was a mediocre horror story about a ghost train that spirited you away if you walked those tracks. A ghost train that had crashed and all the bodies had been hidden in that sinkhole we had just passed. A ghost train looking for new souls to imprison in that pit of sorrow. I was basically just ad-libbing the whole thing. Like I said, to me it seemed very patched together and kinda meh. Until something that sounded like a train whistle sounded in the distance and my sisters both started bawling. My mother made me recant all of the scary details of my story and basically replace them with puppies and rainbows but the damage was done, the hike was over, and my sisters refused to hike on train tracks for a long time. And I was in very serious trouble for making up an off-the-cuff story for the hell of it because clearly I wasn't just telling a story, I was purposefully and maliciously weaving a prison of fear around my poor, innocent sisters.

Steve said...

New reader here, I'm starting to feel those same emotions I get when I have a crush. Love your blog.

Eli said...

My monsters were not in my closet, they were under my bed. I had to lie in the EXACT middle of the bed so the creatures/witches/monsters wouldn't be able to reach around and grab me. Also, when getting out of bed in the middle of the night I had to leap as far away from the bed as possible so they couldn't catch me then either. Then, I had to run like hell to the door so they didn't have time to catch up. I guess I thought they couldn't leave the my room.

Anonymous said...

The Bad Guys (who are murderers) look like the Midnight Crew from the totally awesome Ms Paint Adventures.

Anonymous said...

I always wondered why kids have to turn sideways between their parents in bed. They can never sleep straight up and down! I was expecting the little sister to be messed up for life and end up in a mental ward. It is fitting that you were instead made to be her story slave:) Did each story you told make it worse for you? Did your parents chain you to your bed? Inquiring minds want to know.... Oh, no one can find me. No one.

Anonymous said...

I'm the one you cannot find. Celestial9513 :)

Anonymous said...

I just rediscovered you. I'd read one of your posts before, but your awesomeness didn't sink in enough to go through and read your other posts at the time. This one however worked and I've just had a little marathon reading through many many many posts. I am now very sleepy and wishing I had been in bed an hour ago. CURSE YOU, but in the best way possible. 8D

kat said...

love the new post! i always wait in anticipation for your next one! they never fail to make my day. you rock!

=]

KittyKat said...

Dear Allie,

MORE STORIES! MORE MORE MORE! We miss you when you're gone and not writing.
The Lack of you writing, does it mean that you've found, like... a "real job"?
(I can understand why you'd want to do that, being a poor couch potato is annoying when you do it for too long.)
But, back to the main point of my message. MORE STORIES ALLIE! PLEASE! MORE MORE MORE!!!!
=)
Please. Please. Pretty Pretty Please! *Bats Eyelashes*

Peaches said...

Awesome!

Rick-yBobby said...

Allie, thank you for yet another piece of eye-watering humor. I swear, you have added 12 years onto my life with the amount of laughing I've received from your blog. You've even inspired me to start my own. It's only been up for a couple of months, but I write when I can.

Anonymous said...

As much as I love your drawings, I really wish you would post more frequently, even if that means no/fewer pictures =(
I started reading your blog last month and have been checking for a new post every day since I finished reading the entire blog.
Great post though!

Destiny said...

I can go the through most grown up of days and still be sure there's a crazed, mutant boogeyman hanging like a bat behind my shower curtain. It really puts things into perspective.

Alecia @ Hoobing Family Adventures said...

That last picture with the parents in it is EXACTLY our Sunday night last week. Hilarious!

sarahinalaska said...

I totally stumbled upon your blog on my brother' Facebook page and I just wanted to let you know your blog has gotten me through a week of suffering from the morning sickness from hell. I haven't been able to eat much over the past week which has left me weak and bedridden (at my inlaw's house no less) and I've spent every day reading your blog. Through the nausea and ginger ale you made me laugh! Thank you! I will now stalk your blog forever *insert evil laughter here*

Anonymous said...

you inspire me to be a better writer

Charlotte Wren said...

O_O Your fire monster looks almost exactly like a monster I used in a story a couple months ago.

You have given my creature life, and I love you for it...

Unknown said...

I do believe I used this technique to scare my brother out of the bedroom that I wanted. His closet was better for making forts, so I contrived a story about a ghost hanging herself in the closet...3 year olds are putty...

Unknown said...

Love it still laughing

Inconnue said...

Another storyyyy...loved it hahahahahaha

annotations said...

I love your (deeply...uh...creative) mind; your ability to catch any psychological nuance in your crazy drawings; your doggies; your pure entertainment value; and, well, everything. However, stories like this make me very glad I am an only child!

ebolamunkee said...

My brother used to tell me the scariest shit when I was little. I wonder if this is why all older siblings try to scare their younger siblings?

Anonymous said...

Wow, you really were an awful child, lol. But it appears you've proven karma works.

kiyaroru said...

Allie
You are a genius.
Your story-telling abilities are surpassed only by your illustrations.
How you precisely convey all human emotions with rather crude drawings is amazing.

Ted from Willow, Alaska said...

I was safe from vampires as long as the yellow curtains were closed tightly enough that I could not see any part of the sky, and as long as the blanket was pulled up to my chin so he couldn't see my neck. If I woke up with my neck exposed, I checked for bite marks.

Ted from Willow, Alaska said...

p.s. President Obama says that you have to write two stories a day from now on. Bummer for you. Now get busy.

Shawnabear13 said...

I'm not sure which part I enjoy more: the actual stories of your crazy child self, or the adorable moment to moment drawings of your crazy child self.

You're totally awesome... keep it up. I mean it!

:D

kinnery said...

Bahahahahahaha fantastic. I want your babies.

daphne said...

This is totally the story of my son. Who's 3.

Tami said...

Those fire monsters were freaking terrifying.

My childhood go-to method of finding comfort when I was scared crapless by aliens/murderers/bigfood was to lob a pillow or a stuffed animal really hard at my sister's head. She'd wake up, I'd pretend to be asleep, and knowing that she was awake for some reason would banish my fears.

Geneva said...

Maybe the reason all of those other monsters and murderers never killed you is because the fire monster actually liked you a lot and he was your protector.

Unknown said...

Oh Allie, I wish I was as creative as you, you get me every time!

Now, as for the bear-snake with bat arms, I think this needs a film

Anonymous said...

I was re-reading your posts, wondering where you were and were you dead etc.. then lo and behold! NEW POST!! OMG IM SO EXCITED!

Anonymous said...

Love it!!

Anonymous said...

I LOVE YOU!!!!!!

AND IM A GIRL!

I LOVE THIS POST!! MORE!

MOOOOOORRREEE!!!!!!!

Anonymous said...

It's settled...I'm naming my first child HyperboleandaHalf.

SaraMinerva said...

I rarely ever laugh out loud when reading something. Except when I'm reading one of your posts.

I think I'm a little late to the party, but congratulations on your engagement.

Melody said...

The fire monsters remind me of the creepy dog/monsters from Ghostbusters. I had nightmares about those as a kid, along with all the Gremlins. Thanks for that, 80's.

And thanks for another awesome post!

Fäolin said...

You got engaged! That's YAYYYYYY!!!! To Boyfriend, eh? ^_^

You remind me of my sinister sister...yes yes, she too scarred herself for life trying to scare the shit outta me :)

Fäolin said...

OK, alright, didn't wanna do this buuuuuuuuut
800th comment :D
(I'm helpless)

Anonymous said...

I would just like to thank you for your constant, impeccable use of proper grammar in every post (except maybe the Rum one). For that, you are my hero.

Cat said...

I tried to terrorize my younger sister constantly. I told her if she got her teeth wet, she'd get arrested.

She drank with a straw halfway down her throat for an entire day until my dad got wise.

Fred Miller said...

The Amish Hamburglar is the scariest character in this. I used to dream the Hamburglar was tickling me to death. FUCK!

PopLove Designs said...

Allie - you're so many kinds of awesome Bertie Botts should make a jellybean in your flavor and call it "Allie Awesome"

<3
Andrea

Zina said...

nskjdnjkds. I haven't been following your blog for long, but I love it! I've seen your comics around on other sites and I think they're hilarious. Love love love your post, thanks!

~Zina

Alephra said...

Hi Allie!
In case you ever get THIS far in reading your comments, ^_^ I thought you might like to know just WHY your story for your sister was likely so awesome/failed to fail... Check this entry from TVTropes out.

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CrossesTheLineTwice

Turns out it's possible to go SO far in one direction past the 'line' that you start going backwards from the line again. (if that makes ANY sense...)
Kind of like Evil Dead or They Live. ^_~

«Oldest ‹Older   601 – 800 of 1103   Newer› Newest»