supernatural
The hidden world of all things supernatural; a look inside witchcraft, spells, vexes, black magic and other spine-tingling supernatural phenomena.
The Overtoun Bridge Dog Suicides
The Overtoun Bridge near Milton, Scotland, is a beautiful Victorian structure built in 1895 that arches gracefully over the Overtoun Burn fifty feet below, offering scenic views of the Scottish countryside, and it should be an unremarkable example of nineteenth-century engineering except for the deeply disturbing fact that since the 1950s over six hundred dogs have jumped from the bridge to their deaths or serious injury, and the dogs almost always jump from the same side of the bridge, almost always at the same spot between the final two parapets, and many of the dogs that survive the fall and are rescued have attempted to jump again, returning to the bridge and leaping a second time as though compelled by some force their owners cannot understand or control, creating one of the most bizarre and unsettling mysteries in the modern world. The phenomenon has been documented for decades, with local residents and visitors reporting seeing dogs suddenly break away from their owners, jump up onto the parapet wall, and leap over the edge without any apparent provocation or warning, and the consistency of the behavior across hundreds of different dogs of various breeds and temperaments suggests something about the specific location triggers this suicidal behavior rather than individual psychological issues with particular animals, though what that triggering factor might be has never been definitively determined despite extensive investigation by animal behaviorists, scientists, and even paranormal researchers.
By The Curious Writerabout 16 hours ago in Horror
The Villisca Axe Murders
The small town of Villisca, Iowa, population around two thousand in 1912, seemed an unlikely setting for one of America's most brutal and mysterious mass murders, but on the night of June 9, six members of the Moore family and two overnight guests were systematically murdered with an axe as they slept, their skulls crushed by an attacker who moved through the house methodically killing everyone inside, and despite an extensive investigation that considered numerous suspects and even resulted in two separate trials, no one was ever convicted of the crime and the identity of the person who committed these horrific murders remains unknown over a century later, making the Villisca Axe Murders one of the most infamous unsolved cases in American criminal history. The victims were Josiah Moore aged forty-three and his wife Sarah aged thirty-nine, their four children Herman aged eleven, Katherine aged ten, Boyd aged seven, and Paul aged five, and two friends of Katherine's, Lena Stillinger aged twelve and her sister Ina aged eight, who had been invited to spend the night after all the families attended a children's program at the Presbyterian Church that evening, and neighbors would later report that everything seemed normal when the families returned home around 9:45 PM, with lights on in the Moore house and no sounds of disturbance, and sometime between then and dawn every person in the house was murdered.
By The Curious Writerabout 16 hours ago in Horror
Elisa Lam's Death
The death of twenty-one-year-old Canadian student Elisa Lam in the water tank on the roof of Los Angeles's Cecil Hotel in February 2013 became an internet obsession and urban legend due primarily to the disturbing surveillance footage from the hotel elevator showing Elisa's strange behavior in the minutes before she disappeared, behavior so bizarre and inexplicable that it sparked countless theories ranging from mental health crisis to paranormal activity to murder involving unknown assailants, and while the official investigation concluded her death was an accidental drowning complicated by bipolar disorder, the circumstances surrounding how she accessed the locked roof, how she entered a closed water tank, and what caused the erratic behavior captured on video have never been adequately explained to the satisfaction of many observers who continue to believe there are missing pieces to this puzzle that authorities either cannot or will not acknowledge. Elisa was on a solo trip through California, staying at the Cecil Hotel in downtown Los Angeles, a location with a dark history including multiple murders and suicides and a past connection to serial killers Richard Ramirez and Jack Unterweger who had both stayed there during their killing sprees, giving the hotel a reputation as a place with bad energy though Elisa likely chose it simply because it offered budget accommodation in a central location.
By The Curious Writerabout 16 hours ago in Horror
Hinterkaifeck Murders
The farmstead of Hinterkaifeck sat isolated in the Bavarian countryside about forty-three miles north of Munich, and in the cold early days of April 1922 the six people living there were brutally murdered with a mattock, a pickaxe-like farming tool, and their killer or killers remained in the house for several days after the murders, feeding the livestock, eating food from the kitchen, and sleeping in the beds while the bodies of the victims lay undiscovered in the barn and house, creating one of the most disturbing and puzzling unsolved murder cases in German criminal history. The victims were the farmer Andreas Gruber aged sixty-three, his wife Cäzilia aged seventy-two, their widowed daughter Viktoria Gabriel aged thirty-five, Viktoria's children Cäzilia aged seven and Josef aged two, and the family's new maid Maria Baumgartner aged forty-four who had only arrived at the farm on the day of the murders and whose terrible luck in accepting this position would cost her life within hours of her arrival, and the previous maid had quit six months earlier claiming the house was haunted, hearing strange noises in the attic and experiencing events she could not explain, details that would take on sinister significance after the murders were discovered.
By The Curious Writerabout 16 hours ago in Horror
The Dyatlov Pass Incident
The frozen slopes of the Ural Mountains in Russia hold one of the most disturbing and inexplicable mysteries of the twentieth century, a case so strange that sixty-five years after it occurred, investigators, scientists, and amateur sleuths still cannot agree on what happened to nine experienced hikers who died under circumstances so bizarre and violent that the lead investigator officially closed the case by attributing their deaths to "an unknown compelling force," a conclusion that raised more questions than it answered and that has spawned countless theories ranging from rational explanations involving avalanches and hypothermia to wild speculation about secret military tests, radioactive contamination, indigenous attackers, and even paranormal or extraterrestrial involvement. The tragedy began on January 23, 1959, when a group of ten students and recent graduates from the Ural Polytechnical Institute in Yekaterinburg set out on a skiing expedition to reach Otorten Mountain, a challenging winter trek that the group leader Igor Dyatlov had planned meticulously, and all the members were experienced hikers and skiers who had undertaken similar expeditions before, making the disaster that befell them all the more incomprehensible because these were not novices who made foolish mistakes but competent outdoorspeople who understood winter survival.
By The Curious Writerabout 16 hours ago in Horror
The Station That Wasn't There: A Japanese Liminal Space Horror Story
There is a phenomenon in Japan called Satoru-kun, a legend about a ghost who knows everything. But there is a much quieter, more terrifying reality that commuters rarely discuss: the "Ghost Stations." These are the liminal spaces—the cracks between the A and B points of our daily lives—where the world hasn't finished rendering.
By The Glitch Archiveabout 22 hours ago in Horror
The Pilot Who Vanished Into the Pacific and the Clues He Left Behind...
On November 14, 2019, Captain Richard Ashford took off from Los Angeles International Airport piloting a private Gulfstream jet carrying three passengers to Tokyo, and somewhere over the vast emptiness of the Pacific Ocean, the plane simply disappeared from radar without a distress call, without wreckage, without a trace, and the only clue to what happened was a handwritten note discovered in his apartment three days later that read "By the time you find this, I'll be somewhere they can't follow" followed by a series of numbers that investigators still haven't been able to decode....
By The Curious Writera day ago in Horror
The Girl in the Dark Room: How I Survived Three Years of Captivity.
The darkness was not the worst part, though I spent one thousand and ninety-five days in a windowless basement room where artificial light became my sun and moon, where I forgot what natural daylight looked like and began to believe that the world above me might have disappeared entirely, replaced by the concrete ceiling that became my sky and the locked door that separated me from everything I had once known and loved and taken for granted in the casual way that eighteen-year-old girls do when they believe themselves invincible and the world fundamentally safe. The worst part was the silence, not the physical silence because my captor visited regularly, bringing food and water and his presence that I learned to dread more than hunger or thirst, but rather the silence of the outside world that had no idea where I was, the silence of search parties that eventually stopped looking, the silence of a life that continued without me while I remained frozen in this underground tomb, and the silence of my own voice that I gradually stopped using because there was no one to hear me and screaming only brought punishment.
By The Curious Writera day ago in Horror



