Okay, my aunt and the furnished apartment.
In the late '60s/early '70s, just out of college but not yet married, my aunt, a good friend of hers, and the German shepherd of whom they shared custody rented an apartment in Oakland that was a great deal -- cheap, and came completely furnished, as the last occupant had been an elderly immigrant from China who had no relatives in the US and nobody to take any of his things; he'd kept everything neat and tidy so the landlord was content to just vacuum and rent it furnished.
My aunt and her friend moved in, settled in and were perfectly happy for about four or five days. Then thing started happening. Cold spots. Rattling windows and banging doors. The dog furiously barking at nothing at all, then whining and cringing and hiding under the kitchen table. And one morning near the end of their first week in the place, they were having breakfast when they heard a door slam furiously, and then the roar of a furious wind with no rational source howling through the living room on the other side of the door. They heard things banging, pounding, being flung about, and the shepherd huddled at their feet and cried terrified doggie cries.
And then it all stopped. Dead, utter, breathless silence. They looked out into the living room, and saw everything inside out and upside down. Knick-knack drawers pulled out and dumped, pillows flung from the couch, curtains bunched up on the curtain rods, rug corners flipped over.
Being good Catholic girls barely past twenty, they (a) freaked out good and hard, and then (b) called the rectory of the nearest parish. The pastor listened to them, every word, and instead of pooh-poohing or laughing it off, he just said he'd be over as soon as he could.
And over he came, and looked at everything, and asked about the previous occupant; then he looked around the room again, and said, "He must be looking for something. Let's help him." And then he slowly and methodically began searching the room, tidying up as he went. Along the way he found, smooshed into the back of the sofa behind one of the cushions, a single gold silken tassel, but nothing else of note.
After the room was all tidied up, the priest held up the tassel and addressed the room in general; my aunt says that he said something like, roughly (it was around 45 years ago, and it scared her shitless at the time, so she doesn't remember his exact words): "This is a little thing, but it's beautiful, and it must have belonged to you. I'm going to take it back to my church and lay it in a corner near the candles and the altar. My faith may not have been yours, but it's still a sacred place, and I promise that this one thing of yours will be taken care of and you will be remembered, and if you leave these girls in peace you can come to the sacred space and be near your object of remembrance any time you like. You can follow me out and see where I'll put it; it's a nice quiet place and I think you'll like it."
And then he shook the hands of my aunt and her friend, and took the tassel and left, and tucked the tassel into a quiet corner near the altar, and the ransacking spirit was never heard from again.
JZ, that's an excellent story! Not creepy, just a lonely old spirit looking for one thing to be remembered by.
That is just beautiful, JZ.
What a kind and understanding soul.
This reminded me of an amazing moment, related to a person who had passed, but not a ghost story.
When I was in Lockerbie, after Pan Am 103, I spoke with one of the mothers of a Syracuse student. The young woman's name was Wendy.
When Wendy's mother went to the field where she fell, a man stood near the mourners, quietly offering presence. After he heard Wendy's mom cry, he walked up to her and asked if she carried anything that belonged to Wendy. The mom took out a necklace that had been one of Wendy's favorites.
The man put out his hand, silently and Wendy's mom handed it over without a word. He walked to a tree a short distance away and hung it on a branch, near the trunk.
He walked back and said, "My family has been on this land for 400 years. As long as there is breath in my body and in that of my children, we will care for her spirit here.
I can never think of that stoic and certain kindness without crying.
I can never think of that stoic and certain kindness without crying.
Me neither, now. That's lovely.
That is absolutely lovely. I do something not quite similar, but I like to think it binds the benevolent spirit of my brother to the family. I haven't done it in a while, but for many years after my brother passed I would buy my daughter an angel ornament for the Christmas tree in his memory. She loved the thought and any year I didn't buy one, she'd be disappointed. We haven't done it for a few, I think it may be time to add another to her collection.
The mispronounced word I remember the most as causing me the most embarrassment (and shouldn't, I was around 10) was epitome. I was reading aloud to my mother in the car and came across that word and pronounced it EP-i-tome. When I found out it was ep-IT-o-mee I was quite upset. After that, I started looking up any word I came across that didn't seem to have an English origin and followed a similar pattern. And I didn't find out until I was in my 30s that ennui was AHN-wee and not EN-you-eye. Those damn foreign words that sneak into our vocabulary.
Both JZ and Bonny's stories were lovely.
Hil's story about Coke on FB made me think of something else ridiculous I saw on FB the other day (ok, really, I see something ridiculous daily). You know how people will post pictures of some "old" item like a floppy disk or a washboard or some such and then say, "Like and re-post if you know what this is." Its supposed to make us feel superior for being old, as far as I can tell. Anyway, someone posted one that was a picture of potato mashers. Granted, they looked like they were old ones, but the technology hasn't exactly changed. You can go to Walmart and buy they exact same thing (albeit with plastic handles instead of wood). I was mystified that someone might not be able to identify that, doesn't everyone have a potato masher? Ever since I saw it I have been wondering if there is some newfangled way to mash my potatoes that I am missing out on.
I have been wondering if there is some newfangled way to mash my potatoes that I am missing out on.
You don't use your Food Network-approved brain implant to mash potatoes with the power of your mind? Man, Europe is *weird.*
I saw one of those that was a paper cutter. I used one just like it a couple of days ago in the copy room at work.
I have a really, really old "Webster's Instant Word Guide" that I lifted from a previous job. It's small and a terrific resource to check spelling and where to hyphenate words (which I occasionally have to do manually). I've seen people look at it and try to figure out what it's for (it was created for people who were using TYPEWRITERS, which didn't automatically spellcheck and hyphenate words for them).
The Lockerbie and the elderly Chinese gentleman story brought tears to my eyes. and the little white dog story. (are the spouses of all police officers required to carry guns?)
When I was a kid, when we first moved to Pennsylvania, and while my parents were building their house, they rented in a residential area that was called the park because it was park like and abuts a huge State Park at the base of the big mountain that the entire area is named after. All us kids were allowed to play anywhere in the park. One day we all went beyond the boundaries over closer to the base of the mountain. There were all kinds of things that we hadn't seen before, there were some caves, and it just was different and wilder. One of the girls, a Catholic, said that she saw a white figure and we all shrieked and ran away. She told her parents, who took her to see the priest, and she described it all to him.
the Catholic family and the priest came out to the edge of the park and went into the woods where Heidi had seen the white figure and, since I didn't go with them, I don't really know what they did, but the implication was that he was going to check out what it was and help it move on or help determine what it was. it was such an extraordinary thing to us Protestants that a) Heidi was taken seriously and b) the head of local church came out to do something about it. Pretty cool.