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:

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Anonymous said...

Excellent post! Also, I'd like to commend you specifically on the opening-the-doorknob drawings. They impressed me for some reason ;o)

Anonymous said...

I apologize for ever doubting you had left us. This is spectacular.

UnderOrange said...

I'm glad to see my curse of discovering awesome things just as they end doesn't seem to be the case with your posts. This was a delightful read. *knocks on wood*

My personal nightmares revolved around the basement. For some reason I was completely convinced that enormous snakes lived in the basement and would threaten to eat my family if any of us set foot on the floor. My little terrorized mind actually invented furniture to put in our otherwise unfurnished basement specifically for me and my family to jump from, trying desperately not to touch the floor.

Mom told me to counteract the snakes by thinking of nice things before falling asleep. This did actually lead to one dream about snakes that were made out of ice cream cones. It had the bonus effect of not being very scary because they kept melting.

Unknown said...

Loved your illustrated story. I also had trouble sleeping as a child (and as an adult, damn). When I was somewhere between 3 and 5 years old, I started having these night terrors. I tried going to my mother's room (Dad was stationed overseas), but after a few times my mother wouldn't let me sleep with her; so, I would sleep on the couch or even on the floor in the hall ~ anywhere but in my bedroom (with my sisters who of course slept soundly). In my case, I saw these weird sparkling lights in the air above my bed that terrified me for some reason. It only happened in my bedroom. Maybe alien beings were checking up on me through a scrying/portal device that only worked there. lol Eventually the nightly light shows stopped, but I never did manage to learn to sleep soundly like a normal person. Oh well such is life.

Big Poppa Ben said...

Scaaaa~aary. These last posts have been super-substantial. And the art keeps getting better! Except for the bears. The bears look the same.

Susan Kane said...

I wonder how many small innocents children have been traumatized by their older siblings' stories??
Thanks for the new blog. You have given 'blogging' a new look. Susan

Anonymous said...

FIRST

Anonymous said...

I was never afraid of monsters. I just thought a murderer/kidnapper/rapist was trying to break into the house or my room everytime I heard a sound in the house. I was also afraid of aliens. Any sound or light or wind outside was aliens. Then there was our cat Trouble. She was a feral cat that my mom took in. She was mean. At night I'd hear that cat fighting with other cats. I thought she was going to kill the cats and then kill me. My mom got Trouble fixed and gave her her shots and send her back out. I'm still afraid of being murdered/raped/abducted at 22. -Amber

Valerie said...

...............yeah. I love you. Well, child you. How do I ensure that my daughter is like you growing up? :P

Anonymous said...

You don't write anything for weeks and thats the best you can come up with? Lame

Anonymous said...

FREAKIN' AWESOME!

ShutUpDonny said...

You are the best storyteller on the internet! Thank you!

allonsmari said...

I have to remember to stop checking your blog when I'm in the library.
:D

rachel's life. said...

kenny loggins would have told her a better scary story.

Anonymous said...

That was a great story. I really like the art too! Thanks!

Anonymous said...

this was exactly me when i was younger. my sister was 3. i was six. i had the worst fucking nightmares in the world and would crawl through the foot of my parents bed and sneak up between them. and steal all their covers. my sister could care less. anyways, there was a crack in the ceiling of our shared bedroom, and i thought a massive spider like the one in harry potter lived in it and was going to come out and suck my brains (my sister and i shared a bunk bed: i was on the top). so i told her the goriest story i had ever heard, which coincidently had been told to me by my older brother in a plot to scare me. she LAUGHED AND ASKED FOR ANOTHER ONE.... and i had the worst nightmare ever that night................ apologies for this being so long XD

...and don't call me Shirley. said...

"Oh, and there were spiders the whole time. The End."

Laughing. So much laughing.

Hurting. Hurting from the laughing. So much hurting.

Tears. Not sure if tears from the laughing or tears from the hurting.

Janno said...

That drawing of you wrapped around the doorknob is super!

Keep your adventures coming, I need them!

P.S., Why weren't you ever afraid of the monsters under the bed, that would grab your ankles if you put your feet over the edge?

Mostly Tom said...

One day I hope to post things as amusing as you...
..until then I'll have to suffer the burden of only being mildly funny. Damn you!

(maybe I should put more bears in my stuff, perhaps that's the key?)

Dain said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

this is an awesome website. I logged on here today and emailed a couple friends, they emailed a couple others and now half my department is reading your blog...

Dain said...

You've definitely focused more on your art in this one...I see shading and I love the colors. Keep up the great work.

talesfromthelagoon.com

Anonymous said...

incredible! I can always count on you for stuff that actually makes me laugh out loud, thank-you

Joyangel! said...

Hi! I'msorry. I know this won't get read, 'cos I'm so damn far down this page, but will SOMEBODY PLEASE look at my blog! It's on the verge of becoming defunct. It sucks if something you put a lot of effort into doesn't cut the mustard(<--that's a stupid phrase)

http://epicjoysquared.blogspot.com/

Please look. It's actually awesome!

OG said...

This is so great. <3

Stacey Warren said...

This is awesome. Totally reminds me of being scared of things as a kid and running to my parents' room. However, my imagination did not involve fire monsters. Mine were terminator related - the first one. :) I love your drawings - you rock!

Anonymous said...

Reason # 10 million gazillion why you are awesome:
I was talking about you to someone random and they said "I LOVE ALLIE!!!"
you are champion and I love you more.

Exploding Pineapple Ninja said...

First reaction upon reading this:

"Whoa! Badass Fire Monster!"

Anonymous said...

Oh geez, that was hilarious! xD When your story idea completely backfired I just started cracking up.

This had some nice pics btw. I especially loved the fire monster, it's my background now. o_o
Your pics keep getting better and better, keep it up hun!

Anonymous said...

Funny. My son is doing that mad bolt to our room in the middle of the night. Now I know what all that thudding and twisting of the doorhandle that wakes me in fright actually looks like from the outside.

Anonymous said...

entertaining. but not worth waiting a month for.

Claire said...

HILARIOUS! Your illustrations are so perfect!

Raven said...

That was absolutely, utterly brilliant! Thanks for the laughs!

OCCA Survivor said...

My son is going through this right now. I read this to him and he laughed so hard. He especially liked the fire monsters...

Anonymous said...

I agree with an above poster. I couldn't sleep for 2 or 3 or 4 nights after I watched Carried; I kept picturing Carrie walking down the street covered in pig's blood.

Vincent Rupp said...

I like how the fire monster is so powerful its claws crack stone or dirt.

JL said...

Your illustration of your sister--effing hilarious (can I drop the F-bomb freely here?)! I'm still crying.

I was scared of that damned wall troll from S. King's "Cat's Eye" or whatever the hell it was called.

I only newly stumbled up on this, and I consider myself lucky! Your artwork only makes this that much better!

ShortStuff said...

You keep describing my childhood. Freaky. :) Great story!! <3

Kaia Amber said...

I used to have reoccurring nightmares about swimming in pools with crocodiles. It was terrible.

Angie said...

"But until I saw the whites of the monster's eyes, I would hold my post."

^^^Perfection.

Thanks, Allie!!

Anonymous said...

Allie I have been following your blog for the past couple of months now and it never ceases to amaze me how talented you are as a story teller...and how much our childhoods were alike. I as well would make up fantastical stories in my head to tell my sisters and then think that becuase I said it outloud that they must be true and now all the scary things were coming to get me! I was never able to run to my parents room as I was too paralized to move so I made those poor bastards come into my room/murderer central.

Again thanks for the continuous laughs and good times!

Drew said...

I often wrapped myself up in the burrito of safety and comfort supplied by my blankets, but it never did much to help.

A said...

Your baby sister is a BAMF.

A said...

Oh, and also...I could never run to my parents because the monsters were under my bed and I just KNEW they were waiting for me to dangle my feet over the edge...

Anonymous said...

Congrats with the engagement! xD

Anonymous said...

hai :D

sxoidmal said...

This is heart-warming brilliance, between the storytelling and illustrations. I am such an ardent fan, and I'm grateful you're sharing your work like this.

Unknown said...

I can so relate to this. My mum used to put me in my parents room at night to watch movies whilst they watched sport in the lounge room.
One video my mum rented for me was Stepmonster. The monster in that movie (called a Tropopkin and I pronounced Tra-pumpkin) scared the living daylights out of me. I was convinced it lived everywhere in the dark and night time was always hell.

Frankie D. said...

Wow, you really were a bitch when you were younger.....

Anonymous said...

You're so funny. Please keep writing and drawing.

Unknown said...

I like to start my morning with a bowl of Crazy O's also!

the witch's bwew said...

Oh my god, I'm going to have nightmares about closets full of dead bodies and bad guys. THANKS.

Anonymous said...

Another great story! Totally relatable. I love how the scary stories are really simple - no real plot or reality to them. But there are ghosts! And blood! And lots of things that just want to kill you for unknown reasons. Ah, the nightmares of childhood. I love the part where Allie would steal her parents' sheets when she fled to their room.

Anonymous said...

My 13 year old son thinks you read like Poe.

Unknown said...

hahahahahahahahahahaaaaaa I just laughed so loud at my office!
lol you were scared by your own story!
This blog is soo good for cheering up your day!

Thanks Allie!

Amazing Guy said...

I couldn't be first, but it's ok. Really nice Story Love this a lot.

Articulated Chaos said...

I'm ashamed to say I've just been introduced to this place. It's awesome. Your stuff reminds me of reading Calvin and Hobbes when I was a kid. Please keep up this incredible work.

Unknown said...

I love this story! My son is so like your little sister in this scenario.

Victoria said...

*Long time lurker extricates herself from the woodwork*

Wow, Allie. This is just awesome. As an older sister and one who also suffered from monsters in the closet as a child, I found this post utterly hilarious, and so damn true, all at the same time. The one major difference for me was that the monster holding closet in question in my case was positioned close to the exit door, so on a nightly basis I had to decide if staying still would give me less of a chance of getting eaten than bolting for my parents' room.

Keep up the good work, oh master of teh interwebz.

Romantic Heretic said...

The best laid plans of mice and men gang aft agley. Snerk.

MikeH said...

Hahaha, love it! More brilliant images and storytelling - another classic!

Reminds me of when I was 5 or 6 and my older sister (she was 13 at the time) would wake me up to watch 'Creature Feature' late Friday nights. We'd watch creepy/kooky/warped horror shows, then when it was over she would be all freaked out and *I'd* have to walk HER to her room! To this day we still love horror movies and compare films ("Wasn't that GREAT?!?").

Thank you, Allie :)

Dorian said...

hehe - i love the description "like a fearless little burrito"

:)

Dagon Xanith said...

When I found this story I was having very difficult moment, crying, quite down, head filled with my own grown up boogie men,etc.
And I was crying, not sure what to do with myself and I noticed you had wrote new blog entry.
And so I went and read it, it was first good laugh I had all day.
Thank you Allie.

TheOtherOne said...

Big fans for a long time. Love the new post. You inspired us to start a new blog (sort of a best of the best of stupidity). www.abstractjunkies.com Let me know what you think

Ahlam said...

"The most wasted of all days is one without laughter." ~e.e. cummings

I just found your blog this morning and could not pull myself away from it for a ridiculously long time. Thankfully I found a quote that made me feel better about spending my day lost in your hilarity :)

<3 your newest loyal (but not to the creepy point...YET!) fan

Anonymous said...

My sister used to tell me stories like this because she didn't want to be scared alone. There were stories about under-the-bed monsters, boogie monsters, ghosts,all sorts of horrible things.

That was the best. I miss that!

rfjason said...

Jesus christ you are fucked up. Honestly, I didn't see anything redeeming in this story. You are the kind of person who maliciously and deliberately lashes out at innocent children because of your own emotional insecurities and mental dysfunctions. Frankly, I find you to be a disgusting human being. I feel sorry for your parents who are no doubt drowning in an ocean of disappointment this very moment.

Karen Michelle said...

So true about little sisters- you try to terrorize them and they become the scariest little monster you can imagine! I had this happen to me too... I think it's because they are desensitized (by older siblings) at such a young age that they start to become soulless...

Thanks for the great story! :)

underfrog said...

I absolutely LOVE your blog, even though it makes me feel slightly inadequate in my personal endeavors. I happened to stumble upon it about a week and a half ago, and it's become my own personal crack.

Yes, it's taken me a week and a half to get this far. My computer is extremely slow.

Thanks for being hilarious/honest/awesome. I love it. :)

Man vs. Bible said...

there once was a story so frightening, so terribly, horribly terrifying and horrible that anyone who ever told it would be too scared to tell it, so it was never told.

it was also riddled with grammatical errors and redundancies but it was SO FREAKISHLY ABHORRENT that anyone who attempted to proofread it couldn't not do good it at.

also, it's told at such a high frequency, that only wolves can hear it, and even they are somewhat uncomfortable with the details.

this is that story...

Anonymous said...

The drawlings of the skeletons coming out of the dead body pile looks exactly like something straight out of a graphic novel. When?

Anonymous said...

Eeeeee what a fantastic find! I love love love this post. and your entire blog. You now have a very crazy stalker kind of fan from Pakistan.
..
.
I just realised how creepy that sounds (Damn Fox and CNN)

Anonymous said...

I laughed at this so hard...I think I peed alittle...at work....whoops. Love you

obadiahlynch said...

The doorknob drawings were the best.

When I was a little kid I slept in the same room as my 5 years younger brother. I had a horrible vision one night of a disembodied arm floating between our beds, no idea where that would have come from. I had just banished it from my mind and got almost to sleep when my little brother, maybe three years old, woke up and said, "What if a arm comes?"

Jeeeeebus so I didn't sleep that night.

Unknown said...

I love you Allie, your stories are wonderful. I love about the blood and horror, 'cuz I also like the violent movies. But my parents never notice. XD Never notice, 'cuz I'm using speakers!

Also, I loved your "haunted hotel" story. Here was the parts I loved:

"On a dark and stormy night you go to a haunted hotel. Inside, there's a closet. Actually, there are lots of closets. THREE HUNDRED CLOSETS. AND THERE'S BLOOD. Because there are dead bodies. And skeletons. And more skeletons. And there are bad guys. They're bad because they are MURDERERS. And there's a monster it's a bear but it has a snake body. And it has bats for arms. All of those things want to kill you. And they kill you. But then you wake up and you aren't dead anymore. There's blood everywhere. It's your blood. And you cry, and your tears are also blood. And they kill you again. [Approximately 23 similar scenes have been omitted for brevity.] And then you realize that you are a ghost and you have scary teeth and you are made out of blood. And even though you are a ghost, they kill you again. Oh, and there were spiders the whole time. The end."

Lee said...

For me, it was The Grudge. :| I watched that movie, thinking I could handle it.

I COULD NOT, GOOD SIR.

I ran out of the room in hysterics shortly after the scene where the girl is pulled into her own bed from under the sheets. Every since that day, I have slept with the sheets tucked FIRMLY UNDERNEATH MY FEET.

Tosha Rach said...

I think this has to be my favorite of all your posts. Unfortunately, I can relate most to your little sister. I used to traumatize my cousins with stories like that.

Excellent, as always.

Mia said...

Perfect! Amazing! Horrible day turned AWESOME.


I kinda wish I had done this to my sister when she was younger and unable to smack me. xD

Maya Shavzin said...

the three consecutive drawings of you lying between your parents in their blanket is perhaps the cutest thing i've ever seen. ever! :O

Maya Shavzin said...

four drawings, sorry.
you're great!

maxporter said...

Ahahhahahah. Now I want to know what your sister is like.

Lauren--NY said...

Hilarious and adorable. I love your blog so much! Tweet more! xoxo

Heather said...

This is EPIC!!!! I love the story pics sequence (especially the ghost and the blood ghost and the bad guys killing the ghost) and laughed out loud for real at the clawing at the door sequence. Actually, I don't think I've laughed so hard at a post since the fish story. Thank you for creating this!

Anonymous said...

well, there was that clown under my bed......

Fred Miller said...

Hey! I used to wear a colander on my head, too, but not because I hadn't slept. I was playing war. It was a soldier's helmet.

Anonymous said...

Long time reader, first time poster. Bloody love your stories. Felt compelled to post as I heard this quote today and it reminded me of your drawings of you in bed with your folks: "It's wonderful to climb the liquid mountains of the sky. Behind me and before me is God and I have no fears." An awesome woman named Helen Keller said it. As an atheist, (I'm aware of how pompous that sounds, but am too tired to think of a more 'street' way to say it) this is exactly what I think religeon gives people: that feeling of being in bed between your parents, and, at the risk of sounding like a nonsensical insomniac lunatic, I felt like posting it to you having read this new story just a few days ago. And your assertion above this post box that you're "totally creepy" and "totally capable of finding me" does not surprise me – I'd expect nothing less ;-] Once more, great blog: love it.

raini said...

Allie, are you secretly my older sister? The drawings of your parents look EXACTLY like my parents!

Cody said...

ALLIE!!!! :D :D :D <3

You're baaack :) This made my day and a half. This one was a gooder!

sideshoweric said...

This was intensely good!
All the while I was thinking about my own two boys, 6 and 3. The older one is a bit neurotic, and the younger one is gleefully unaware of pretty much everything. Luckily they're boys and I'm pretty sure they're biologically incapable of anything like the plan you hatched to scare your sister.

Anonymous said...

please tell me your sister is hopelessly addicted to shitty horror films...

Unknown said...

brilliant!

Harrison said...

We're getting married right? When we do, I'll tell you scary stories. Or I'll tell your sister scary stories for you. And there will be oodles of blood and poodles of blood (that is, poodles lusting for your blood. Toy poodles even.)

Plummy said...

FABULOUS!

sewa mobil said...

Nice article, thanks for the information.

stefanchu said...

I love you. That is all.

No but seriously, I really like your work. :) The artwork is simply hilarious and you never fail to entertain me.

Alice said...

YAY!

Your away for so long and when I come back you have stories,,, WITH PICTURES!

epic. I used to do the same to my sister but it actually scared her. We ended up sleeping in the same bed for around 3 months, both terrified of the tentacle monster underneath her bed. . .

mn from the Cariboo said...

I don't read your new blog postings until I have time to savour them, especially the artwork. It is priceless. Love the bit of hair on your dad's chest.

Anonymous said...

Who cares about who is first >_>
Anyways, this story. Is jizztastic.
~~Anonymous

Unknown said...

Genius...

DorianTB said...

That story was pure genius! You've brought back my memories of being afraid of the dark as a child, except this was as hilarious as it was creepy! Beaucoup kudos on this wickedly funny little masterpiece!

Stephanie said...

Even funnier than the last one! I especially like the picture of you trying to draw without enough sleep.

Lisa: Overlord of Carrots said...

On my eighth Birthday I saw the movie Tremors. Yeah, I know what you're thinking "Ha, that movie was so cheesy, why are you even bringing it up?" At 8 years old IT WAS THE MOST TERRIFYING THING EVER!! I had horrible nightmares of the giant graboid-worm-monster lurching from the ground and eating me. I didn't play anywhere unless it was inside a building or on concrete for about a year...

Money Reasons said...

last
.
.
.

LAST, I can't believe I'm last (lol)

Oh wait, I'm not last, I see that someone just commented below me...

Great story... but, I'm glad you weren't my sister growing up!!!

Em said...

Hahahahahahahaha! Fantastic! I love this blog. :-D

STE:) said...

These pictures were amazing!! You have outdone yourself!!

Rune said...

Your posts ALLWAYS make my day better! <3

I loled HARD XD

Two Demented Dames said...

I would of never slept again and in fact my daughters enjoy telling me those stories now. I don't enjoy listening and they still scare me into no sleep and I'm too old for that shit. Good Job. Glad you finally posted.
Susan
www.swimbeauswim.blogspot.com

Unknown said...

Oh, and did you read Diary of a Wimpy Kid 5 [Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days]? It's got a horror movie in there, where Greg watches it. You know, the muddy hand, that goes 'round the country killing people. I hoped that muddy hand should kill everyone in the universe! :D

Wildrider51 said...

It seems totally possible that all your happy, hysterical readers have your sister to thank for honing your storytelling skills!

You never fail to make me laugh out loud and terrify people with my guffaws! Bravo!

Autopsy Gremlin said...

This is exactly how my childhood went. *cough* And still the way I respond to mysterious serial killer noises in the night.

courtney said...

You have totally described my childhood. you are awesome.

Ása Johannesen said...

I think I love you. Just wanted to let you know how incredibly funny I find your stories. And your drawings! The first post I read (actually had read out loud to me while I looked at the pictures like the little child that I'm not) was the one about how dogs don't understand moving. The drawings of helper dog were just amazing and we habitually quote that post (mostly by saying "we are sound buddies!" or "eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee").

Keep them coming!

Freya

digillette said...

I didn't know you had a sister. This was awesome. It makes my day when you have a new post.

DiDi

www.conversingwithcats.com

CG said...

Allie, is it possible we have the same father? Creepy and misshapen chest hair pattern...check. Hair style reminiscent of Mr. Kotter...check. Beard that is folk festival-ready...check. Saggy drawers only my mother could love...check.

Coincidence?

And HE always said he was going bowling...

Jin said...

Show us a picture of your sister!

Unknown said...

This was me after every single scary movie or ghost show I ever watched. EVER. And considering I was 18 when I watched Paranormal Activity (a movie that kept me awake with fear for 3 nights), I do not see this trend coming to an end any time soon...

Anonymous said...

I had an experience quite like this when I was about six or seven years old. It was brought on by the original version of The Blob.
I couldn't look at the color red for two weeks. Ketchup was particularly traumatizing.

Beta Dad said...

Last!!

Anonymous said...

I feel like I can relate. I had a similar phase not even a few years ago. I was 13, and recently, rats had invaded our house. Real rats, friendly neighborhood rats who enjoyed pooping on our counters. My mother told me stories of rats creeping up onto my bed and clawing my house as I slept. And this came right after I went online (oh, the wonders of the Internet!) and discovered rats could crawl through a hole the size of a dime, and our house was around 60 years old. Couldn't sleep for weeks until we eradicated the dang things.

Thank you for spreading the story of the nightmares of terrified children everywhere and telling the monsters in our closets and under our beds to f off.

Elvira said...

This is awesome in the form of tacos.

DowntroddenInDC said...

LOL, I like it. As a child I remember hyping my self up and freaking out about all sorts of things.

Hannibal said...

Good evening, Clarice.

Anonymous said...

Dear Allie,

Just so you know, my older sister is the reason why I was TERRIFIED of closets and a few other things for years. My younger sister, however, is more like yours.

Herself said...

you totally kill me...LOVE your work :)

Nicole said...

SO funny! I was similarly handicapped w/terrible monster fantasies. Mine were alligaters under the bed. My bed was the "safe zone" so long as all my apendages stayed under wraps. Then the inevitable, Midnight potty break. 6yr old girl, standing in the middle of the bed, terrified she can't jump far enough into the room to escape the reach of the alligators under her bed....and then wondering how she was gonna jump that far back INTO her bed....

Anonymous said...

Best. One. Yet.

Jessamine Diane said...

HILARIOUS!!!!

Meredith said...

Hahaha, my closet totally had soulless button eyes as well.

This reminds me of my best friend in grade school, who told her little sister that if you wake up in the night and see a triangle of glowing stars in front of you, it means you will soon die. Then she snuck into her sister's room and stuck glow-in-the-dark plastic stars to her closet door... much screaming ensued.

DeBT said...

The story behind the Far Side's "Monster Snorkel" is also reminiscent of this blog post as well. Gary Larson was sleeping soundly when his brother woke him up from a nightmare he had. His dream involved a wolf that he described in vivid detail, then later dismissed once he'd exorcised his demons.

Ironically enough, his brother's nightmare wound up scaring Gary Larson for years. Now we know who to blame for his warped humour.

Likewise, there was a Lewis Trondheim short where the author saw his son watching Alien. He asked what he thought of the movie, and his son said it was okay. Later, the author thought to himself that if he'd seen this movie when he was his son's age, he would've been scared out of his mind.

Anonymous said...

Great post.I love it and bookmarked.

http://funnyandspicy.com/the-best-basketball-dunking-devils

Sandra said...

Clearly you need to thank your sister's unquenchable thirst for stories for having created in you a fantastic story teller.
PS: I love your drawings. Six year old you looks like a guppy. That's how I imagine you. A cute little guppy wrapped in the parents' blankets.

Katie said...

NINE-HUNDRED AND FORTIETH! WIN!

Loved it so, so much. I used to scare myself into believing that there were rats under my bed that would eat any bit of me that I was so unfortunate as to let dangle over the edge. You wouldn't believe how small I could scrunch myself up with the covers just allowing enough room for my nose to stick out for air. And when I was older and had a friend over for sleepovers? We would convince ourselves there was a murderer outside the window.

Your stories and your pictures are so fucking funny, I can't wait to read more!

John said...

you have Jesus for a father in the first picture story.

Unknown said...

Did you have a name for the fire monster? You should name it/him/her.

schmiddybiddy said...

I pretty sure you stole this story from my childhood diary but I won't press charges since you told it so well.

P.S. It's my birthday so you should read my blog.

http://schmiddybiddy.blogspot.com/

Anonymous said...

Allie, only you could make us laugh at skeletons, blood, bad guys, and snake-bodied bat-armed bears. And spiders. My hat's off to you.

Regards,

T.A.

http://expandedvocabulary.wordpress.com

Anonymous said...

You are funny. It is nice the world has you in it.

Ahlam said...

Depressed...and Elated!!! OK. So since I discovered you on Friday I've been reading your blog on my laptop AND trying to read it on my blackberry when I actually have to leave or put my computer down so my family doesn't try to stage an intervention or something. Well, I just found a whole bunch of posts that I somehow missed-probably because my bb is painfully slow and jerkey and hard to read big stuff like blogs on but I was doing it anyway even in the bathroom at lunch with the almost-in-laws which is probably a sign that an intervention may actually be necessary. So the good news (for me) is, I am not out of Allie posts just yet :) The bad news (for me) is...I'm probably not going to realize my goal for the weekend even though I changed it to revolve around experiencing your funniness to the fullest (sorry, I know you hate those!) My family is looking at me with hunger in their faces and my stomach is suckin' on my backbone so I'm going to have to tear myself away from you, my funny little friend. Sad face :(

Maureen said...

Definitely the most scariest story ever. Lawn mowers also sound scary.

Whatme? said...

Very good, as usual.

SillyJaime said...

Every time you post a blog, it's like the clouds open up and God Himself is singing the Hallelujah chorus in all of His magnificent voices, with Jesus and Saint Peter as his backup singers. And I hold off as long as I can before reading it because I know that it's going to make everything in the world good again. And then I read it, and every time it is magnificent and I can always relate, and I'm sad that it's over and wish you'd written ten more than you already had.

I'm greedy.

Mark Thuesen said...

very creative, nice job.

mark thuesen

Michael Vox said...

My daughter demanded I read the 'ghost story' to her three times. She laughed harder and harder each time.

Lisa @ Crazy Adventures in Parenting said...

Oh my friggin' God, brilliant! I seriously laughed I cried. Love it! Thrilled to have found this blog from the Bloggie Awards!

Anonymous said...

You know, when you started posting less and less often, I honestly worried that eventually your posts would lose their quality. But they're always worth the wait, and I'm really, really glad that this whole thing has taken off for you. Thanks for doing this blog.

J. R. Keogh said...

Love your blog and have been reading for about a year now.

I found both this tale and so many commiserating comments like group therapy.

I am the younger, and my sister's schemes worked as seeing the cover art for "Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark" makes me want to sleep with the lights on twenty years after the fact.

Thanks for the laughs and the therapy! :)

Treads said...

Just for your information, your blog brightens my day. You may not publish as often as other blogs, but you more than make up for it with quality. Keep it up.

Haukmoon269 said...

As always, I majorly lol'd! Totally made my day! <3

CatMont said...

So funny, and really like my childhood in a creative family of 4 kids (two of whom have become writers) -- the best most awful night was when my brothers left a tape-recorder under our little sister's bed and somehow crept in late one night and turned it on. They had recorded fake scary voices saying things like "I am the devil!" It worked on her, at age 5. -- Catherine

Mommy Meets World said...

That just made my night!!! A friend shared it on FB, and I am going to find myself awake all night reading earlier posts haha, thank you :-)

Anonymous said...

That was a scary fucking story

RevW said...

After reading your blog for a few months, I have to say there's one thing more impressive here than your awesome cartoon posts: the comments from the rabid, raving lunatics who accuse YOU of being nuts/horrible/deranged.

Thatsmagicink said...

Ally, I like the similarities in the head tilts between your three-year-old sister and your simple dog.

Thatsmagicink said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Mmm.. Fearless Burrito...

Anonymous said...

I think my life would be complete if spaghatta nadle told a scary story! Just throwing that out there! Thanks for all the laughs, I love your blog!

JP said...

I suppose it didn't help i read this after watching the x files. In a dark room, all by myself...i see monsters everywhere now. I hope bat armed snake bears haven't made it to australia.

And just for something original, i'll post a link to MY site, which is grossly inferior to yours *sigh*

http://dropbearsanddropkicks.blogspot.com

You Know You Love Me said...

totally awesome dude! loved it wid the pictures u drew.

Jeanette Nyberg said...

Soooo funny. Funny funny funny funny funny. You good for nasty February horribleness. I'm loving the doorknob wrapping.

Jonadab said...

My youngest sister was in actuality completely fearless. However, she made up imaginary fear stories and used them to manipulate our parents.

She didn't want to sleep in her own room (because that would be boring, since there was nobody to antagonize in there), so for years she claimed to be afraid of the dark so she could sleep with my other sister. She wasn't afraid of the dark under any other circumstances (she would, for instance, happily hide in a dark closet or basement or attic while doing something naughty, or when people were trying to find her e.g. to put her to bed); she just wanted somebody to annoy while she was supposed to be going to sleep.

TrueHarmonyOfTheMind said...

I LOVE IT !!!!!

Charley Robson said...

*falls over and rolls on the ground in hysterics*

BRILLIANT! I was a nighmare sufferer too ... my dad gave me his "magic pillow" though, after about two months, and then I was okay. Poor Allie, haha xD

Anonymous said...

This totally made my day. I love seeing in Google Reader that there's a new post here.

Anna said...

The reason you failed to terrify your sister is because you were her impenetrable security blanket!
Most of us fail to see how these little balls of annoyance our parents spawn despite already having an awesome child totally worship us until all the adoration and potential for easy manipulation has gone.
Great post :D More please!

Rain Finnegan said...

Your sister sounds like how I am now. Scary stories are the best! Especially with plenty of gore! I like your bear-headed-snake-with-bat-arms. He seems like he'd make a great pet. But I'd have to get a pretty huge terrarium for him... The wait between posts was most deffinately worth it. Thank you Allie!

Anonymous said...

Dear My Son's Teacher,
If you have time to read Hyberbole and a Half, you have time to read your email. Please, go to your inbox. He has some outstanding work that needs your input. I know your inbox gives you anxiety but please understand we all have anxiety or we wouldn't need this blog just to get ourselves out of bed each day. M'kay?

Don't read ALL the emails. Just the one I sent today. It's the most current one.

Thanks!!

Chelsea said...

wrapped up in her blanket like a fearless little burrito.

I basically just lost it here and started laughing hysterically in the middle of a library. Damn it, what good are younger siblings if you can't terrify them?

Anonymous said...

Hilarious. You really cant find this stuff anywhere else. You might be able to find other stuff on my blog.
http://whatshappeningtothemole.blogspot.com/

Anonymous said...

Hilarious. You really cant find this stuff anywhere else. You might be able to find other stuff on my blog.
http://whatshappeningtothemole.blogspot.com/

Anonymous said...

HaHa - so funny! Awsome scary story, my monsters always hid under my bed!! :-)

dismalmrfox said...

I discovered this site a few days ago with stumble upon. It was the absolute most awesome thing I think I've ever read. Ever. And I read it again. And then I read everything else at school, and it was AWESOMER.(Probably not a word) Although teachers don't tend to believe you when you say you're dying from laughter. Anyway, I just wanted to thank you for doing what you do.

Pablo said...

You should have added zombies. There's always room for zombies.

Naperville Now said...

Allie -- awesome. Glad to have found you -- and congrats on the award.

Anonymous said...

PLEASE POST MORE OFTEN I LOVE FOR YOUR BLOG. I ALWAYS DIE LAUGHING, NO MATTER WHAT MOOD I'M IN.

Anonymous said...

This is brilliant. I am new to Hyperbole and a Half, and I have fallen in love. This story kind of relates to my life.
Great story and artwork :P
Love the post.
Thanks Allie!!!

Nico said...

I'm the lucky one. I scared the crap out my sister, and inventing stories for her, made me (tiny bit) stronger and I had couple hours sleep, while she was watching the closet!
Hillarious for some, but real life.
Keep going, you're amazing.

SmellyMelly said...

Is it just me, but is the dad the best drawn one out of all of them?

Darren Held said...

Sooooo evil!! But... Owned by a three year old... that's got to be hard to take!!

Robert said...

I cannot stop showing my friends those three images of your crazed little sister, high on life and sweet delicious ignorance.

Probably one of my favorite things in the world now.

Beth said...

LOVE your blog!! :D Thank you for keeping us all fabulously entertained. You rule!!!

HogsAteMySister said...

Is your sister still involved in your empire? Is she the "and a half", kinda like two and a half men? Though I bet you sister spends far less time with porn stars, hookers and aliens than Charlie Sheen. Did you ever tell you sister stories about Charlie? That would have freaked her ass out.

catjee said...

These blogs are the highlight of my day.
Week?
..Month?
Moar, plz. D:

Aaron said...

nine hundred and ninetyieth!
also, this scared me.

Anonymous said...

991 comments, wow, I dont think anyone in the world will read my comment but,
Same thing happened to me, my family rented Candy man and I was in the room, my innocence was gone, i sat there while candyman played and by the end i could not sleep alone,

now i am 25 years old and i have to sleep with the light on, a night light, I have really bad nightmares if i sleep in the dark, im serious...

buddy66 said...

Here's the thing...

I was at my great-granddaughter's 12th year birthday party Sunday; Her 37-year-old father was there; her 60-year-old grandmother; and me, her 80-year-old grandfather. There were mobile devices and laptops aplenty, and were all gleefully digging ''Hyperbole....''

Kid, that's some outrageous fan demographic you've got!

Gine said...

Awesomely awesome in the most awesome way.
G

msyendor said...

Hehe. You've got the blonde shark fin and your little sister has the maniacly gleeful children of the corn(stalk) look as she rises above the edge of the table. Wonderful. I think you could give the old Rod Serling's Night Gallery stiff competition.

Anonymous said...

i just wanted to say i wish i were a book editor because i would totally sign you to turn your blog into a coffee table book. lol. i love all of your stories.

Aleta said...

Every time I read your blog posts, I smile. This was great. I used to be frightened by dinosaurs... oh and if I held up the stuffed animals and the light from the backyard would hit the eyes - they glowed... I used to throw them across the room. Lol.

RipRap said...

Bat snake bear shirt please

Kristen said...

LMBO x infinity.
I love your posts, and the drawings of your dad made me snort/laugh/giggle/choke loud enough to wake the dog and my son from his nap :D
My parents didn't have to bribe me to stay in my bed when nightmares hit, dad slept naked so there was a MAJOR deterant right there.

Kathleen Richardson said...

A witch chased me down a hallway in my dreams. I always woke just before she caught me. Out of bed, out the door and into my parents' bed--every time. Must have been 8 or 9. Thank goodness for understanding parents (or those who were too tired to chase us out of their beds!).

So much talent, m'dear. Keep writing.

Violent Dreams said...

hahaha I loved it :D

mruthke said...

My friends and I were walking to the bar on Sunday to get afternoon drunk (or in my case unhungover). Half-way there they began to talk about some girl who draws pictures with Paint while talking about the internet or emails or dogs or something. The next day I receive a link at work. I click on it and find myself laughing, an embarrassing amount, while my co-worker looks on with jealousy at the joy I am not sharing. Anyway, thanks so much. I love making things with Paint and I love your blog. I look forward to wasting hours and hours of company time reading it.

Anonymous said...

@TehNeyrZomb

You think the Weeping Angels are freaky?
1: Watch Blink at midnight all alone, and realise you have a small ceramic angel in your room.
2: Watch Silence in the library in the dark.
3: Realise that in a later episode of Doctor Who, the angels come through the TV and can come out of your eyes because you saw their eyes. Seriously. :D Enjoy~

lol199712 said...

dude that sounds like what i did to my little cousins!!! the little deamons just cant be scared while im stucck being a absolute chicken!!!!

Alex said...

New favorite story. :)

Kristina C. said...

Reap what you sew, little mister!
I am uplifted!
Congrats on the bloggie!

Sleepless in Seatle said...

I was pretty sure Darth Maul and Carmen Sandiego lived under my bed, and they would grab me and pull me under my bed if I didn't stay in it. Imagine to my horror when I woke up with my head stuck under my bed. Twice.

Kristina C. said...

. . . oops, I mean "little missy!"
I didn't know - I'm new to your blog!
So glad I found it!

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