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SLEEP DEPRIVATION?
This didn’t happen to me, this is an account from an
ex-coworker, who said this happened to her friend a
few months after she moved into a new apartment. It
should be noted she never drank anything stronger
than soda pop and never touched illegal drugs, nor
was she even taking any legal ones...
The building she lived in was an older one that had
been renovated and redecorated to make nice
apartments. For the first few months all went well, she
was able to walk to classes and bike to work.
Then my coworker’s friend began having trouble
sleeping due to work and school related stresses, and
especially thanks to the upstairs neighbors’ teenage
son who had been throwing loud all-night parties
almost every night ever since his parents left town on a
month’s vacation. While, to her relief, someone called
the parents and they came back early, mercifully putting
an end to the wild parties, the insomnia only worsened
over the next month. It was to the point she was only
getting a few hours’ worth of sleep every week, but
despite all this she was too proud to see a doctor, and
thought it would run it’s course on it’s own, so she put
off making an appointment.
Early one morning she awoke after only an hour’s
sleep feeling nauseated and nursing a pounding
headache. She decided it was finally time to see the
doctor, so she called to make an appointment for later
that morning. After making the call she went into the
kitchen to get some water and aspirin to tide her over
until the doctor could see her.
As she entered the kitchen she noticed an odd smell,
like that of sun warmed fresh asphalt mingled with a
slight scent of decay. She thought it odd, because there
was no road construction nearby that she knew of. In
fact the windows were not even open to admit such a
smell even if there was. Then she saw something on
the kitchen counter not three feet away that made her
stop in her tracks in astonishment. Disbelieving, she
blinked slowly and rubbed her eyes, but it was still
there.
She couldn’t tell much about the thing except that it was
slightly bigger than a large house cat and covered in
thick, shaggy brown hair that was matted and snarled
with leaves, twigs, and dirt. As she stared it began to
move away, but not in a shuffling manner like a cat or a
dog, rather, it floated across the counter without
seeming to move any limbs, as if it weighed no more
than the air itself. It hesitated at the sink, then it
bounced lightly to the floor and glided toward the
balcony door. As it reached a patch of early morning
sunlight, she saw it more clearly.
There was nothing about it to suggest it *was* a cat or
a dog or *any* animal she recognized. There was a
slight bulge at one end that might have been a muzzle
or a stumpy tail, but any other features it might have had
were completely hidden by it’s shaggy coat. It bumped
gently against the glass door, then it seemed to melt
into the floor and disappeared from view.
Now thoroughly unnerved and not sure if what she saw
was real or a result of her headache making her eyes
play tricks on her, she decided to go on to the doctor’s
office an hour early, simply to just be out of the
apartment. She was greatly reassured, however, when
the doctor asked her if she had had any hallucinations.
She told him her tale, and he nodded knowingly. Yes,
that sounded exactly like the kind of illusion her
exhausted mind would conjure up, he told her, a
waking dream, so to speak.
So he prescribed her some strong sleep aide and sent
her home with orders to rest for the next few days. Her
boss was understanding and told her to take all the
time she needed. She could get her class’
assignments off the Internet so she wouldn’t get too far
behind in school.
That might have been the end of it, but for a phone call
from her landlord that came just as she was going
back to bed. He told her to be on the lookout for a small
stray dog that he, the janitor and another tenant had
seen wandering around in the building, and that if she
saw the dog, to chase it outside if she could, as no
animals were allowed in the building.
She asked what the dog looked like. The landlord
paused. It was an odd-looking little brown dog, he
said... at least he *thought* it was a dog. It was so
shaggy it’s features were indistinguishable, and it was
very unkempt, dirty, and smelly, too. And somehow it
kept eluding anyone who tried to catch it, as if it were
simply vanishing into thin air....
She had packed up and moved to her parent’s house
by the end of the week.
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