Local Urban Legends

ShrimpShady

The One With the Wurlitzer
Joined
Jan 2, 2019
Messages
543
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By virtue of living in a civilized society, we are fated to encounter weird bullshit. Said bullshit may come in the form of a person, an animal, a group, event, or some other form of bullshit. Sometimes we are only second-hand or third-hand witnesses to the bullshit, with no way of verifying its core veracity. Maybe we know a little bit of the story, with the rest filled out by the stupid fucking neighborhood nuisance who looks exactly like his older sister despite being of a different sex, and is also an annoying piece of shit you can't beat up because he's younger than you.

These incomplete narratives often become elevated the more we speak of them, resulting in an inside joke of a more complex kind: the urban legend.

Every community has urban legends, mostly because we're all bored fucks who can't mind our own goddamn business.

This thread is for the diverse community over at the Scribblehub Forums Dot Com to share their local urban legends. And I mean local urban legends. None of that Skinwalker Ranch, Roswell UFO shit. I hope to hear about some real messed up sickos near and dear to your hearts.

As is customary, I'll start with an urban legend of my own. Be warned, it's not very exciting or creepy. Just kinda... sad.

For most of my life, I've lived in a sort of housing complex built specifically for university lecturers and their families. Being a lecturer is a pretty cushy job here most of the time, so you get nicer looking, though not pretentious, homes. That's the case for my stretch of street as well... except for a single house which was unlike anything else. Flanked on both sides by two-floored family homes was this plot of overgrown land with almost nothing but a little shack. How little? Well, actual Shaq would probably bring the whole place down if he accidentally hit his head on the door frame.

And in that little home lived an older man who was almost always shirtless and who was a paragon of stiff joints. No one really knew his business, but he used to spend his time tossing rice and singing hallelujah. When I was a young, I'd often play near his property with the other neighborhood brats. We'd pick some of the weeds growing around his plot of land and pretend we were cooking them. Yeah, maybe we trespassed a little bit. Can you blame us? We didn't have internet, we didn't know what laws there were.

Regardless, even though we spent so much time playing around the man's house, we never figured out what his deal was. The grownups never told us either. That allowed for increasingly fantastical stories to bubble up between us. The prevailing theory was that he was simply a pious man of God who gave up his every worldly possession to the church. I believed it, of course, as I couldn't see anyone voluntarily living in such a condition. He didn't even have a toilet, I believed, as every once in a while, he'd head out from his little shack with a bucket supposedly full of waste to dispose of God knows where. The grownups had choice words to say to him about that, but I don't remember if anything came out of it. He'd sometimes leave fully clothed as well, during the evenings, with a shiny little hat on. That made me think he was part of some secret society.

For the longest time, I thought this man was only known to my little stretch of street, until a kid from the other side of the neighborhood came over and told me that the man ate kids. As an aside, kid killers were a particularly popular scare tactic used by parents where I'm from. Every kid believed that there were just some sickos out there who'd abduct them and cut their heads off. Anyway, the accusation that kid made had pissed me off for some reason, despite my only relationship to this mysterious man being trespassing and hearing him sing hallelujah throughout the night. I think since then, it became more unpleasant for me to speculate about the man's life. It might've also been the fact that I'd grown older and the neighborhood kids stopped playing together.

His singing would come to an abrupt end one day when I was in highschool, when they found him dead in his little shack. It made me remember another thing I'd heard, though I didn't know the truth of, that he was left by his family, either in death or separation. I don't remember who found him, but it couldn't have been a swift discovery, as even the adults kept their distance from the man. From then on, the streets were quieter, but sometimes I think I'd still hear the sound of tossing rice grains and songs of worship if I strained my ears at night.
 

Justhetip...

...of the iceberg.
Joined
Sep 9, 2024
Messages
249
Points
78
By virtue of living in a civilized society, we are fated to encounter weird bullshit. Said bullshit may come in the form of a person, an animal, a group, event, or some other form of bullshit. Sometimes we are only second-hand or third-hand witnesses to the bullshit, with no way of verifying its core veracity. Maybe we know a little bit of the story, with the rest filled out by the stupid fucking neighborhood nuisance who looks exactly like his older sister despite being of a different sex, and is also an annoying piece of shit you can't beat up because he's younger than you.

These incomplete narratives often become elevated the more we speak of them, resulting in an inside joke of a more complex kind: the urban legend.

Every community has urban legends, mostly because we're all bored fucks who can't mind our own goddamn business.

This thread is for the diverse community over at the Scribblehub Forums Dot Com to share their local urban legends. And I mean local urban legends. None of that Skinwalker Ranch, Roswell UFO shit. I hope to hear about some real messed up sickos near and dear to your hearts.

As is customary, I'll start with an urban legend of my own. Be warned, it's not very exciting or creepy. Just kinda... sad.

For most of my life, I've lived in a sort of housing complex built specifically for university lecturers and their families. Being a lecturer is a pretty cushy job here most of the time, so you get nicer looking, though not pretentious, homes. That's the case for my stretch of street as well... except for a single house which was unlike anything else. Flanked on both sides by two-floored family homes was this plot of overgrown land with almost nothing but a little shack. How little? Well, actual Shaq would probably bring the whole place down if he accidentally hit his head on the door frame.

And in that little home lived an older man who was almost always shirtless and who was a paragon of stiff joints. No one really knew his business, but he used to spend his time tossing rice and singing hallelujah. When I was a young, I'd often play near his property with the other neighborhood brats. We'd pick some of the weeds growing around his plot of land and pretend we were cooking them. Yeah, maybe we trespassed a little bit. Can you blame us? We didn't have internet, we didn't know what laws there were.

Regardless, even though we spent so much time playing around the man's house, we never figured out what his deal was. The grownups never told us either. That allowed for increasingly fantastical stories to bubble up between us. The prevailing theory was that he was simply a pious man of God who gave up his every worldly possession to the church. I believed it, of course, as I couldn't see anyone voluntarily living in such a condition. He didn't even have a toilet, I believed, as every once in a while, he'd head out from his little shack with a bucket supposedly full of waste to dispose of God knows where. The grownups had choice words to say to him about that, but I don't remember if anything came out of it. He'd sometimes leave fully clothed as well, during the evenings, with a shiny little hat on. That made me think he was part of some secret society.

For the longest time, I thought this man was only known to my little stretch of street, until a kid from the other side of the neighborhood came over and told me that the man ate kids. As an aside, kid killers were a particularly popular scare tactic used by parents where I'm from. Every kid believed that there were just some sickos out there who'd abduct them and cut their heads off. Anyway, the accusation that kid made had pissed me off for some reason, despite my only relationship to this mysterious man being trespassing and hearing him sing hallelujah throughout the night. I think since then, it became more unpleasant for me to speculate about the man's life. It might've also been the fact that I'd grown older and the neighborhood kids stopped playing together.

His singing would come to an abrupt end one day when I was in highschool, when they found him dead in his little shack. It made me remember another thing I'd heard, though I didn't know the truth of, that he was left by his family, either in death or separation. I don't remember who found him, but it couldn't have been a swift discovery, as even the adults kept their distance from the man. From then on, the streets were quieter, but sometimes I think I'd still hear the sound of tossing rice grains and songs of worship if I strained my ears at night.
Unrelated, but every single time I see your username, I misread it as Slim Shady. :sweating_profusely:
 

Justhetip...

...of the iceberg.
Joined
Sep 9, 2024
Messages
249
Points
78
I am in fact just a crustacean who participates in questionable business on the down-low.
I don't believe it.
Screenshot_20250417-112948.jpg
 

ShrimpShady

The One With the Wurlitzer
Joined
Jan 2, 2019
Messages
543
Points
133
Seeing this post has convinced me to step out of character for a bit and act seriously for once. Sadly, I was the urban legend.

Before I was born, my parents decided to raise their family in a predominantly Jewish and Chinese suburb. The reason being it happened to be close to the airport because my dad had to travel a lot for work.

When I was young, I remember that I was deemed "highly gifted," but I also know I had a lot of undiagnosed mental disorders which I hid out of shame. If I was properly tested, I think the term they would've used would be "unevenly gifted" instead. I was smart, but in terms of grades, I was only slightly above average. Same thing when it came to sports.

Combine that with fighting parents and the fact I'm neither Jewish nor Chinese, and you know I was probably not the most friendly kid growing up. I got into trouble almost every month. What started with me having a big mouth later turned into violence and a generally unstable personality.

When I finally punched my way into high school, I had become infamous. I never knew exactly what people said behind my back, but I knew they were scared, both adults and kids. I was known for picking fights, and hiding my hate for pretty much everything by lying and joking. Knowing martial arts didn't exactly help my case either.

It took a long time for me to put all that behind me. It does make for a very good backstory, though. Luckily, I did end up moving to a city in a different state for a fresh start where I intend to plant roots for good. So, happy end, I guess.
Damn, that definitely sounds rough, friend. I can't even imagine the inner turmoil of grappling with both mental disorders and lack of belonging.

I'm glad you could put it behind you though. Now you can carve out a new legend :blobthumbsup:, or something
 

Hans.Trondheim

Low energy is king!
Joined
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Messages
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As a teacher, I have this pesky urban legend among my students from both my workplaces (the old and new ones) where they would accuse random white vans of kidnapping children. Tbf, there's really a problem with disappearing kids in both cities where I worked and currently working. It didn't help that random idiots in SocMed would sow fear by posting unverified bullshit in community group pages.

One time it got so worse our students starting throwing stuff on a white van that was parked in a corner near our school. It was a mistake; the damage has been done, though. We had to trace every single student who threw something at the vehicle coz the poor driver was understandably furious. Good thing we got CCTVs in school grounds.
 

Rezcore

Kell-Wnown Timber
Joined
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So the town I was born in, was founded in 1875. It's the home of the oldest Brick church in Georgia, was an HQ for the Klan until they were ran of in the 80s, Walt Disney actually considered it for Disneyland, and it houses the Devil's Church. Regular clapboard a frame church. During the day time it's normal, but at night there is an unmistakable sense of dread. Normally, we'd just pass it off as our minds connecting myth to location, except we got dumb and forced our friend who knew nothing of the place to stay overnight with us. Around the alter we sat, as a strange sulfur smell permeated the air. At the entrance stood a very handsome man offering us protection. By morning he was gone and we got the fuck out.
 

ShrimpShady

The One With the Wurlitzer
Joined
Jan 2, 2019
Messages
543
Points
133
As a teacher, I have this pesky urban legend among my students from both my workplaces (the old and new ones) where they would accuse random white vans of kidnapping children. Tbf, there's really a problem with disappearing kids in both cities where I worked and currently working. It didn't help that random idiots in SocMed would sow fear by posting unverified bullshit in community group pages.

One time it got so worse our students starting throwing stuff on a white van that was parked in a corner near our school. It was a mistake; the damage has been done, though. We had to trace every single student who threw something at the vehicle coz the poor driver was understandably furious. Good thing we got CCTVs in school grounds.
At... least... no one's getting kidnapped by white vans...? :blob_unsure:

So the town I was born in, was founded in 1875. It's the home of the oldest Brick church in Georgia, was an HQ for the Klan until they were ran of in the 80s, Walt Disney actually considered it for Disneyland, and it houses the Devil's Church. Regular clapboard a frame church. During the day time it's normal, but at night there is an unmistakable sense of dread. Normally, we'd just pass it off as our minds connecting myth to location, except we got dumb and forced our friend who knew nothing of the place to stay overnight with us. Around the alter we sat, as a strange sulfur smell permeated the air. At the entrance stood a very handsome man offering us protection. By morning he was gone and we got the fuck out.
This one's actually spooky. I guess that's to be expected in weirdo southern towns.

The fuck even happened over there? Someone ripped a fart so crazy it got you seeing a hot guy with a protection racket?
 

Rezcore

Kell-Wnown Timber
Joined
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At... least... no one's getting kidnapped by white vans...? :blob_unsure:


This one's actually spooky. I guess that's to be expected in weirdo southern towns.

The fuck even happened over there? Someone ripped a fart so crazy it got you seeing a hot guy with a protection racket?
Personally, I'm sure it was due a cross of shared hysteria and my SBC upbringing. We were taught that the normal Horns and clover hooved devil was a lie, and that the devil would be the most gorgeous being you'll see. Which actually makes sense, you're not tempted by ugly but by clean. Unfortunately for me it was a perfect storm. Though eventually the city burned the church, don't know why, but we did hear screams. Fire department claimed it was the wood.
 

Doctah_Quack

The Big Bad MotherDucker
Joined
Mar 8, 2025
Messages
92
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This
I became an urban legend at the camp I work at. It started with me going for walks in the woods every night. Eventually, some campers and Counselors started talking about seeing a shadowy figure roaming the woods and how it would disappear and reappear at random. Because one of my friends knew it was me, they decided to make a joke about it being "the nightwalker," a ghost that roams the property in search of it's body. Since it came from a counselor who had been there for years, most of the kids believed it and for the past 3 years, it gets spread around the campfire by past campers and Counselors alike. I still keep up with my night walks through the woods in the spring, summer, and autumn so kids keep seeing me and spreading the legend. I kind of feel like Ray L. Wallace.

My point is, a lot of urban legends and myths start with this sort of thing. Do something strange and people will gossip and exaggerate to their hearts content. Though if it's interesting enough, it'll stick for generations. People desire the unknown and interesting.
 

ShrimpShady

The One With the Wurlitzer
Joined
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Messages
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Makes me wonder if anyone's ever made a wacky urban legend about me. Maybe the people back at my flat in college thought I was the weirdo ghost singing Radiohead at all hours of the day :blob_hmm:

That last part of ol' Paul's post definitely rings true. Now that I'm a lot older, thinking about my neighborhood's urban legend made me realize that he was probably just a kind of eccentric guy living an ascetic lifestyle. He never did anybody any harm, even if the bucket thing was a little weird. He didn't even mind me and the other kids playing in his property.

Reminds me of Boo Radley from To Kill A Mockingbird actually. Wish I knew more about the guy before his lonely departure.
 
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