OnRon’s Amazing Storiesit is all about time, space, and mirrors. Sylvia and I will be telling stories from theTerror In The Fabric Of Reality. Does that sound scary? Eh, it is what it is. We cover time slips, time travel, and we even dabble in rips in reality. So sit back, press that play button, and enjoy the show.
About Sylvia Shults: Sylvia is a Librarian, Author, and Ghost Hunter. She has spent a lifetime in the pursuit of the weird and strange. Her non-fiction works includeGhost of the Illinois River,Fractured Spirits,Fractured Souls, 44 Years in Darkness,Hunting Demons,The Spirits of Christmas,and her latest release, BookOf The Dead.All of her books are available on Amazon and you can find out more at her WordPress Home Page.
The Stories Include– The Spitting Revolver, Target Parking Lot Encounter, Man In The Mirror (Review), Terror At 30,000 feet, Voices of The Pioneers, and Filler’ Up.
On the podcast this week, Sylvia and I are going to chat about ripples in time on a show we have titled Terror In The Fabric Of Reality. These are my favorite type of paranormal stories. Over the years you the listeners have sent in many tales with your experiences. I love them all. Here is a story from J.C. Hodges from one of my very favorite cities, Austin, Texas. I tried to track it down when we first heard this one and I couldn’t find it. I think it was in 2016ish. Here is J.C.’s Story:
Hey Ron, I have been listening to the show since the beginning and thought it was high time I tell you that I love it and I share a story with you. I call this tale “Houston we have a problem”.
I was given two tickets to a Rockets game for my birthday. Austin is a little over a two-hour drive away from Houston. My girlfriend was already there for business so the plan was to meet at the arena at 6pm. The game was at 7pm. Good solid plan.
I left a bit early in case of traffic and had traveled about an hour when my car stopped. (And I do mean stopped). It was like someone had thrown the main breaker. It was all I could do to roll to the side of the road. I got out and checked the car over. I couldn’t find anything wrong and I am a repair tech for Ford.
Next, I took out my cell phone to call for a tow and let my girlfriend know. The phone was about as useful as a brick. It had no power, and even stranger my backup power stick was dead as well. I know for a fact that I had charged that up just that morning.
And now for the strange part. The freeway was empty. I should not have to tell you that 71W is never completely empty, ever, and this was 3:30 in the afternoon. I settled in and waited for a car to come. I saw some headlights come towards me and readied myself to wave the car down. That is the last thing I remember.
Next memory? driving up to the Toyota Center where I usually park my car. The sign above the entrance read 5:45 PM. I have tried so very hard to reconstruct what happened to me. Family and friends think I just blacked out. I don’t know. I have no side effects and nothing like this has happened since. It has been a few months now and my girlfriend wants me to seek help.
Thanks for your show. It helps and it is nice to hear other folk’s strange tales knowing that I am not the only one.
J.C. Hodges – Austin, Texas
This Week’s Podcast:
This week we have an episode of Ghost Stories With Sylvia. Sylvia and I tell stories that are lost in time. I will revisit one of the craziest sent in by Jim Richards who experiences the unexplainable during a flight to Houston, TX. You can listen to this podcast on Thursday at Ron’s Amazing Stories, download it from Apple Podcasts, stream it on Stitcher Radio or on the mobile version of Spotify. Do you prefer the radio? We are heard every Thursday at 10:00 pm and Sunday Night at 11:00 PM (EST) on AMFM247.COM. Check your local listing or find the station closest to you at this link
OnRon’s Amazing Stories, “Houston We Have A Problem”. This week we were scheduled to have an edition ofGhost Stories With Sylvia. Sylvia and I recorded just under an hour of good stuff and when I went to edit the audio….. the entire recording sounded just like two robots arguing. So, the bottom line is that I had to come up with a completely different show for this week. We have a special science fiction adventure titledFlight From Tomorrow.To make it even better it is read for us by Audible celebrity and friend to the podcast Mark Nelson. You are going to love it.
Featured Story – Flight From Tomorrow
Our featured story is absolutely absorbing. It was written by H. Beam Piper who was a science fiction author popular in the 1950s. He specialized in short stories but also wrote several novels. He is best known for his extensiveTerro-Human Future Historyseries. Our story comes from the pulp-magScience Fiction Storiesdated September/October of 1950. It is a time travel tale, but not like anything you have ever heard before. There was no stopping General Zarvas’ rebellion. Hradzka, leader of the known world, is hunted and hated in two worlds. He had dreamed of a monomaniac’s glory but was stranded in the past with his knowledge of the future. However, he didn’t know the past quite well enough.
Our story this week comes from my brother James. Jim donated many stories to this show over the years, but this one has always stuck with me. My brother recently passed away and I wanted to present his story in his own words. Here is the original manuscript of a story that he titled The Scream. It is not for the faint of heart.
-Ron
The Scream – Edvard Munch
There are many ways in which people encounter the ineffable, some of them are terrifying. Ron gives us, his fans and listeners, opportunities to share these encounters through his show. I know that it’s sometimes difficult to tell these stories because our memories disturb us. I know that because I find no pleasure in recalling this particular event. But I’ve told the tale in one of my books and the feedback I got showed me that it helped some readers who had similar experiences. So I’m reluctantly sharing it with all of you now.
One of the great privileges of my life was the opportunity to work as a hospice chaplain caring for hundreds of dying people over five years. Death is the boundary of life as we know it and like any borderland, the order that normally governs daily life fails at the edges of things. The approach of death can be an occasion for ecstatic joy but there are also passings shrouded in oppressive darkness. One thing can be counted on, death is always an event filled with discernible spiritual energy.
Knowing that I was always careful when approaching a death setting. As a chaplain, I worked for a government-sanctioned For-Profit hospice company. I was part of a team that included a physician, nurse, nurses aides, a social worker, a chaplain, a music therapist, nutritionists, and so on. I believed that caring for my team was as much a part of my job as comforting the dying and their families. As part of that care, I made it a practice to deal with the spiritually unsettled nature of death by offering on their behalf a silent prayer for protection every time we approached a place where someone was actively dying. That prayer, rooted deep in the ancient church, was simple: “Lord, let your holy angels take charge of us and that the wicked one has no power in this place.”
One Wednesday I was called to a nursing home where a young female client was dying. I was told that three members of my team were already present in her room. On this visit, I forgot to offer my prayer. That, as it turned out, was a mistake. What I saw when I entered the private room staggered me. The patient was sitting up in bed but was not conscious. That position was unusual enough but wasn’t what caught my eye. I was shocked by her face. It bore the expression made famous by Edvard Munch in his painting titled “The Scream”. Which was later made famous in advertising for a movie bearing the same name.
Now, don’t misunderstand me. Her expression didn’t resemble the image it WAS that image precise in every angle and detail. I will never forget it because it’s burned into my mind. But there was more. Below her head and shoulders, which were oddly propped up against the headboard, was the rest of her body. It was encircled by polished round black stones spaced several inches apart. At the foot of the bed, a dark candle flickered, slowly melting into a pitch-black pool of wax. The drapes were closed so the room was a dusky gray. Presiding over the scene was a man in a black cloak that concealed his face and body completely. That man, who I took to be her spiritual advisor, sat in stony silence in a corner of the room and never said or did anything to acknowledge our presence. The air near the bed was cold and clammy. When I looked at my hospice team I could see we were all suffocating in the evil atmosphere presided over by that silent dying scream.
After this had gone on for a while I started to feel sick. So, I resorted to a hospice worker trick. When a patient was just hanging on, seemingly forever, we would sometimes explain to the family that people often waited until they were alone so they could let go of life in privacy. The idea was partly true but was mostly a way to give a worn-out family or tired team members an excuse to get out of the death room. They could breathe some fresh air, go to the bathroom or get something to eat. Families usually accepted the opportunity with gratitude. In this case, I offered the idea entirely for the sake of my hospice staff and they all thought it was definitely the thing to do.
Once outside the room all four of us instantly formed a tight and frightened circle. We didn’t say anything except a few muttered oaths like “Oh my God!” I offered a prayer including the one I should have said much earlier. But it was too late, a spirit of fear and hopelessness had found its way into each of our souls. The only thing we knew for sure was that we did not want to go back in that room. We also knew that as professionals that we had to do something. So, we made a plan. Each of us, one by one, would enter the death room, spend a few minutes doing what we had to do then leave to be replaced.
I was in the room as the labored breaths that accompanied death slowly expanded fully followed by the deep sigh that marks the moment of death. Looking at the body I saw that the terrible scream remained. Her dead eyes were wide open and fixed in a baleful stare directed straight at me. At that moment I came close to screaming as well but turned my back instead.
After that, it was all routine. One of our nurses pronounced her, our social worker arranged for the body to be picked up and we each escaped to our cars. I learned later that all four of us attended various churches the following Sunday. This was unusual because two team members never went to church. I suspect it was partly because the dark mood we picked up that day just wouldn’t go away.
That Sunday the two of us who were active in our respective churches experienced the same extraordinary event. In my case, as I walked into the sanctuary my head reeled and I fell to the ground in a dead faint. I quickly recovered and was aware that a crowd had gathered and someone was urging people to call 911. That woke me up fast. I stood up, claimed I had just slipped, apologized, and headed straight for the parking lot. At that moment the oppressing spirit dissolved and never returned.
This story has a kind of funny postscript. Government regulations require each hospice team to provide a full year of support services to bereaved families. This includes having a staff chaplain preside at the funeral of the deceased if requested. To my amazement, relatives of this woman asked for me. They wanted a service appropriate to the faith she was following at the time of her passing. Now, I’m an ordained Lutheran pastor and I was sure there was no way I could do that. Unfortunately, the company I worked for insisted that my contract required me to perform whatever service was demanded and that if I refused I would be fired. The situation created quite a stir in the office. But my fellow team members risked their careers by standing with me in my refusal and the company eventually backed down. I will always be grateful not just for their support but for the fact that I could end this terrible story on a note of grace.
Jim Thompson – Rio Rancho, New Mexico
This Week’s Podcast: On the program this week we recover from a crazy event. We were supposed to have a Ghost Stories With Sylvia, but the entire recording was corrupted and I didn’t know this until late. So, I have to scramble to put together a replacement show. So, please tune in this week and find out what I did! You can listen to this podcast on Thursday at Ron’s Amazing Stories, download it from Apple Podcasts, stream it on Stitcher Radio or on the mobile version of Spotify. Do you prefer the radio? We are heard every Thursday at 10:00 pm and Sunday Night at 11:00 PM (EST) on AMFM247.COM. Check your local listing or find the station closest to you at this link
OnRon’s Amazing Storiesthis week we have a lot of original content. We open with a creepy encounter with Lizzy Borden and follow that up withA Moment In Timefrom June 6th, 1944. Then we have a horror/detective radio drama from the seriesThe Inner Sanctum. It is titledThe Screamand should keep you guessing. We will end the show with Sarah Lockwood Pardee andThe Winchester Mystery House. So, press the play and enjoy the show.
Featured Story – The Scream
Our featured story is a horrific “who done it” from the creative minds ofThe Inner Sanctum. What does that mean? It is a part horror story, part detective story, and with some ghastly humor thrown in. All of which were trademarks of the old-time radio series.The Inner Sanctum Mysteryaired from 1941 to 1952. It was created by Himan Brown and was based on input given to him by the mystery novels ofSimon & Schuster. They, at the time, were the leaders of print media and inspired many of the classic radio shows of the time. Our story comes from their later broadcasts and explores the mind of the serial killer. It is titledThe Screamand first aired in January of 1950.
Other Stories Include– Murder Under The Big Tent, When Worlds Collide, My Dad and Lizzy Borden, A Moment In time – June 6th, 1944, The Scream, and Our Amazing Stories – The Winchester Mystery House