Members are sharing personal experiences and stories related to ghosts, spirits, and paranormal occurrences in healthcare settings. Some members discuss encounters with deceased loved ones or unexplained phenomena, while others share their interest in ghost stories and movies like "Doctor Sleep" and "The Shining." There is a mix of skepticism, curiosity, and belief in the supernatural among the forum participants.
Nursing is a profession that often involves long lonely night shifts in eerie hospital wards. It's a perfect breeding ground for ghost stories. These stories often involve sightings of apparitions, strange noises, and unexplained events that are said to have taken place in hospitals, hospices, and other healthcare settings. Some of these stories are believed to be based on true events, while others are purely fictional. Regardless, they continue to captivate and intrigue both nurses and non-nurses alike - providing a spooky glimpse into the world of healthcare after dark.
I know you have seen and heard freaky things. Share your nursing ghost stories...
I volunteer at a hospice with my therapy dog. A couple of weeks ago we went into the room of a very elderly lady who'd had a CVA and had been pretty much unresponsive since. Her daughter-in-law was there and we put my little doggie on the bed. The lady's arm went around him and she started petting him and opened her eyes. She was looking right through me, into a corner of the room where there wasn't anything interesting to look at. Her DIL said she'd been doing that constantly whenever she was awake, and the family was thinking she was just looking that way, but then they started thinking that maybe she was seeing her deceased husband of many decades, and that he was waiting for her.
I don't KNOW for sure (and neither does anyone else) whether there are really ghosts, demons, angels, or gods, and I don't think any of the stories here are blunt lies or exaggerations, and I certainly don't feel the need to belittle others' beliefs. IDK if this woman's looking into the corner was just caused by the actions of an elderly, damaged brain, or whether she was hallucinating, or what. I prefer to think that her husband WAS waiting for her, and that she could see him. She died a few days ago, and I hope they have been reunited, wherever they are.
liberated847 said:OK I'll leave you guys be, sorry is just that blunt lies and exaggerations annoy me. Nevertheless I am meddling in your business. I'm done here, carry on.
Blunt lies and exaggeration annoy you?
Well people who have nothing better to do than be a killjoy annoy me. If you had such a problem with the thread why did you even read it considering it's about GHOST STORIES.
TheGooch said:Blunt lies and exaggeration annoy you?Well people who have nothing better to do than be a killjoy annoy me. If you had such a problem with the thread why did you even read it considering it's about GHOST STORIES.
Lies are lies whether they bring joy or not. I'm trying to turn off notifications for this silly thread. Can an admin help?
liberated847 said:Lies are lies whether they bring joy or not. I'm trying to turn off notifications for this silly thread. Can an admin help?
Hello,
You can unsubscribe a thread by removing the bookmark found above the 1st post/to the far left:
Quote- Bookmark Poll
When you click Bookmark, it will change to a plus (+) sign and you will be unsubscribed/no more email notification of post.
sirI said:Hello,You can unsubscribe a thread by removing the bookmark found above the 1st post/to the far left:
When you click Bookmark, it will change to a plus (+) sign and you will be unsubscribed/no more email notification of post.
Thank you, I just want to leave this thread alone "agree to disagree" principle.
Night Terrors on 9 NorthWest
I was a brand new nurse working graveyard shift on an oncology unit. We also sometimes got sick inmates from the prison; they were placed on our unit on the 9th floor, which was the highest floor in the hospital, so that if they tried to escape it would take them longer to make it out the door.
On this particular night we had no inmates as patients, and all was quiet at 11 PM as we took over for the evening shift. We anticipated a bad night, though, because a full moon shined brightly in the clear, dark November sky.
At 1 AM everything was still calm and quiet. Me and Mary, an older, gray-haired nurse who still proudly wore her white cap, were at the nurse's station doing our charting. A call light went on. It was one of Mary's patients, a very elderly gentleman in the room at the far end of the hall. Mary rose immediately and went to answer the light. A few minutes later my heart constricted in fear as I heard a man's savage, gurgling yells coming from the room down the hall, the room where Mary had gone. I jumped up and ran halfway down hall when Mary came stumbling out of the room, gasping, with her hands around her neck and her eyes watering. She ran to the nurse's station and calmed herself, and then told me that as she bent over his bed to ask him what he needed, he reached up and grabbed the ends of the stethoscope hanging from her neck, wrapped them around, and began choking her. She managed to break away, but she was shaken.
I called security and they came right up. The patient was sound asleep when they entered his room, and he said he had no recollection of the incident. Mary said that he was not confused on rounds, and that she was surprised at his strength for being so frail. He was discharged back to the nursing home the next day. What had happened was unsettling, and the unease stuck with us.
One night about a week later I was at the nurse's station with Nancy, a competent nurse with a lilting British accent. It was 1 AM and the unit was quiet...that is, until we heard a man's constricted screams coming from the room at the far end of the hall. The patient was a man around 80 years old, and his wife was spending the nights at his bedside in a recliner. They had been married for 55 years and couldn't stand spending a moment apart. So imagine our surprise as we ran into the room and saw her bent over her husband's bed, her hands around his neck, attempting to strangle him. It was not easy for the two of us to stop her -- it was as if she was absolutely determined to choke him to death. In the dim light I could see her fierce expression, her browns knit together tightly and her lips pulled back revealing her teeth. Our CNA ran and called security. The moment her grip was released from his neck, she looked dazed and perplexed and asked what was going on. The patient was gasping and he looked at his wife with abject terror.
First thing in the morning, Nancy and I met with our head nurse, a big-boned, no-nonsense woman who was the type that wasn't afraid to roll up her sleeves and get things done. She decided that the patient would be transferred immediately, and that the room would be kept empty for the time being. She called the chaplain assigned to our unit and asked him to come up. She wanted to talk to him about blessing the room.
She told him this:
Two weeks earlier, a prison inmate had been a patient in the room where both choking incidents occurred. The prisoner died. At 1 AM.
He had been convicted 25 years earlier of strangling three people to death.
.
I work at a LTC for people with intellectual disabilities. One overnight shift, I was mopping the kitchen floor when I looked up and saw one of my coworkers, call him Jim, sitting at the kitchen table working on his documentation just like he always did. The only reason there was anything strange about this was the fact that, well, Jim had died two months previously. I'd attended his funeral, so I was pretty darn sure he was dead. I jumped about a foot straight up in the air, dropped the mop, and yelped "JIM??" Somewhere in there I blinked or glanced away for a split second or something, and when I looked back, Jim was gone, like nothing had ever been there. But he had BEEN there, in the same spot he always was, doing his books just the same as he always did when he was alive! My personal theory is that he came back to help. Earlier in the night, we'd had to send out a resident that he'd been particularly close with to the ER. The resident wound up being OK, just a minor injury, but I still feel like Jim came back to check on them and make sure we didn't need any extra help. That was just the way Jim rolled.
Once upon a time, way back in 1987, I was a travel nurse with a cushy job on a telemetry unit in Hawaii. I worked night shift, and this particular hospital allowed nurses to sleep for two hours (with pay!) during our shift.
The unit I worked on had one room that was closed and kept empty, come hell or high water, as it had been for two years prior. The reason? Over a period of a few months, several patients in that room (it was a private room) experienced terror as they saw a large, shadowy black figure at the foot of their bed, looming over them and filling them with a feeling of impending doom. Each of them described the same menacing presence, and they had no doubt this apparition was evil and meant to harm them. What's worse is that each of those patients died during their hospital stay, even though they were expected to recover.
At first, I didn't believe the nurses when they told me this -- I figured that maybe the room was closed due to a plumbing problem, and they were just trying to scare me.
But when I saw how they took their two-hour paid naps, I realized they weren't kidding around...
Instead of sleeping in that nice, empty room on an actual bed, they slept on a rusty old gurney that was placed outside on a balcony.
Several years ago, my dad passed away after a battle with prostate cancer. Since I was a hospice nurse, I took care of him and then stayed for a while to help my mom through a period of disabling grief.
Two nights after he died, my mom walked into her bedroom and then came out abruptly, walking backward, screaming "Dad's here! Dad's here!" The cog wheels in my brain froze up for a moment as I tried to comprehend what she was saying. I went into her bedroom and I didn't see my dad -- all I saw was my dog sitting on the bed.
My mom came in and pointed out the way the linens were turned down into a fancy W-shape. She told me that she and my dad had gone on a cruise several years earlier, and that each night when they were at dinner an attendant would turn down their linens JUST LIKE THEY WERE RIGHT NOW and leave chocolates on their pillows.
And she said that every single night since then, my dad turned down their bed just like it was done on the cruise, to show her that every day with her was special to him.
I thought that my mom, in her semi-delirious mental state, had done the turn-down herself and just forgot that she had, but she vehemently denied it.
What was curious is that my dog was sitting on the bed......and her footprints were all over it......as if she had done some real maneuvering......
My mom said, "Prissy did it! Now all she needs to do is fluff the pillows." My dog looked my mom in the eye for a few seconds......and then she turned and fluffed my mother's pillow.
So you know I am not lying, I somehow had the presence of mind to take photographs, and here is one taken just as Prissy did her pillow-fluffing stuff:
(Prissy, seen here apparently possessed by my dad's spirit, putting the finishing touches on her fancy turn-down. Admittedly, this turn-down does not meet Royal Caribbean standards, but it's pretty darn good for a poodle.)
When Prissy began fluffing the pillow, my mom lost it and went into hysterics. I looked at Prissy and said, "Dad, please tone it down because you're going to give mom a heart attack!"
Well, dad did tone it down. Every single night for the next six weeks, 'Prissy' only turned down my MOM's side of the bed. No more fancy-shmancy, all-out, luxury cruise ship turn-downs...just simple, modest little turn-downs. Every night, like clockwork.
Now I will say that my dog is no slouch. She's much smarter than the average dog. She can shake hands and she can do a double rollover. But she does NOT do fancy cruise-ship turn-downs, or even less fancy ones. Those are simply not in her repertoire.
One day after 6 weeks of this bed-turn-down phenomena, Prissy suddenly stopped doing it. It was as if a switch had been flipped to "off," and that was that.
A friend of my mom's came from out of town to visit, and my mom told her the turn-down story. The woman gasped and said, "Don't you know? The Tibetan Book of the Dead says that after death, a person's spirit stays in an "in-between place" for approximately 42 days before departing for the next realm." That's exactly how long my dog turned down the bed -- 6 weeks, or 42 days.
What else can explain what happened, except that my father's spirit was acting through my dog, Prissy, to tell my mother how special he thought she was?
Prissy has never turned down another bed since that time. But I guess that's because she doesn't have a clue how to do turn-downs.
But my dad did.
©2014 All rights reserved. Please don't publish this story or photo, as I am planning to at some point. Thank you.
Wow, Missy, that is an amazing story!
All my dogs do is hog the bed...
thomas81z
19 Posts
Ttt since its Halloween