31 Ghosts – Vardøger

About a week ago I was in the kitchen making dinner. I heard Andy’s key rattling in the front door lock, then the signature squeak of the front door opening followed by Andy calling, “Hey babe!”

“Hey Sweetie,” I called back. “I’m in the kitchen,” I said but got no response. I thought it was odd he wouldn’t have come into the kitchen – he normally does and gives me a quick kiss, it’s just our pattern. But I was busy sautéing some vegetables and figured he’d come into the kitchen when he was ready. But he didn’t. Ten minutes later I heard the front door lock rattling and the signature squeak of the front door followed by Andy calling, “Hey babe!”

“I’m still in the kitchen,” I said with possibly a little irritation in my voice.

Andy came in and gave me a quick kiss. “What do you mean ‘still’ in the kitchen?” he asked.

“I told you I was here when you got home ten minutes ago. Did you go back out?”

Andy looked at me quizzically. “I just got home,” he said.

“Right, but you came in ten minutes ago, too.”

“No, I didn’t,” he said. “I literally just came in a moment ago.”

I chalked it up to my mind playing tricks on me until the next day. We were going out to dinner and I was doing my makeup ahead of Andy getting home. I heard the lock rattle followed by the door squeak and “Hey babe!”

“I’m doing my makeup,” I called back. But when I didn’t hear anything else from him I wondered if this was the same thing I experienced the day before. I waited, and ten minutes later the lock rattled again, door squeak, “Hey Babe,” and Andy came in the room and kissed me.

“It happened again,” I said.

“What happened again?”

“I heard you come in ten minutes ago.”

“But I just came in now…”

“I know,” I said, “but it’s like I told you yesterday – I heard you come in earlier and you weren’t here.”

Realization finally dawned on his face. “Oh! This is a case of Vardøger.”

“Var what?”

“It’s a phenomenon where you hear someone or something before it actually happens. It’s like a physical manifestation of Déjà vu.”

That made sense. And it was good to have a name for it, too, because it was a regular occurrence. Every day for a month I’d hear Andy come home and shout “Hey babe” ten minutes before he actually came home and actually called “Hey babe!” It got to the point where I stopped replying to the initial “Hey babe!” knowing it wasn’t actually him.

Until the time it didn’t happen.

I heard the lock rattle, heard the door creak, heard “Hey babe!” and didn’t respond. A moment later Andy walked in, gave me a quick kiss, and asked, “Are you okay?” as I stared at him confused.

“You’re here.”

“Vardøger?”

“That’s the thing,” I said. “Today was the first time in like a month where there wasn’t Vardøger.”

“Huh,” Andy shrugged. “Maybe it’s run its course,” he said and didn’t think anything more of it. But I couldn’t let it go.

Andy was a pretty regular person in terms of when he got home, so the next day just before I had been hearing the Vardøger, I set down the bowl and whisk I had been using and went into the front room and stared at the door.

Nothing. I texted Andy, “Where are you?”

“Just getting off the subway. About ten minutes,” he wrote back almost immediately. Maybe Andy was right, I thought as I turned back to the kitchen, the phenomena had just run its course. Then I entered the kitchen and saw myself standing there whisk in hand staring back at me.

31 Ghosts – Dead

Almost done with my crazy work schedule!

“Hey,” I started the conversation casually. “If you hang around cemeteries as much as you are people are going to start thinking you’re a ghost!” I gave a mock laugh at the end.

The woman stared at me as if I had a second head. Then she said slowly, as if I were a child, “Yes… that’s because I am a ghost…”

I sighed. “Yeah, I know. I am too… ghost to ghost…. Kinda obvious… that was the joke – get it? I know you’re a ghost and I’m joking about you being… you know, nevermind,” I gave a dismissive wave of my hand. “They say explaining a joke is like dissecting a frog – you can learn parts and label them but you still have a dead frog. Or two dead women…” The woman just gaped at me, so I just plowed on.  “Seriously, though, why are you hanging around here so much? It’s depressing…”

“I’m sorry,” she shook her head. “Who are you?”

“Sam. Well, Samantha, but everyone calls me Sam.”

“There’s others?”

“Ghosts? Oh yeah, but most of them don’t actually say anything. Mostly just,” I let my face go slack and held my arms out in front of me and took several stiff steps. “You know, they’re not all there.”

“I don’t know. You’re the first ghost I’ve talked to.”

“I can tell,” I said.

“Why?”

“Because – and this brings us back around to the beginning of our conversation – all you do is hang around a cemetery!”

“But…” she started, “This is where I’m buried.” She pointed to the headstone that read “Melissa Taylor” and listed her birth and death dates.

“Uh huh,” I nodded in agreement, then looked up at her and said, “So?”

“So… I should be here.”

“Why?”

“To… bear witness to my life? To see my loved ones come visit?” she said more in question than statement.

“Look, Mel – can I call you Mel?”

“No, no one calls me Mel….”

“Okay, Mel, first you’re dead. What’s the point of the dead bearing witness to life? And to your second point… honey, we need to get you out of here – you don’t want to hang around for the living to visit…”

“But my husband and family were all here just the other day. It was beautiful!”

I looked at the headstone again. Died October 5. “Mel, you just died. They’re going to come out here for your funeral and because, I don’t know, it’s new and all. But they’re going to realize that they’re visiting a piece of marble and manicured lawn and what’s the point of that?”

“I’m below that manicured grass!” She yelled.

“Uh huh,” I said. “Below. As in ‘not visible’. They put you in the ground, what? A week ago?”

“Ten days.”

“Yeah,” I said, “It’s still new – I’m sure they told themselves they’d come every day or every other day or once a week – whatever it is, I’m sure they said it with the best of intentions. But they’re going to stop coming regularly. They all do. And they should – they’re alive!”

“But…” she countered, “I see an old man visiting his wife’s grave every day. It’s really sweet!”

“No, it’s pathetic. What kind of life is he living now?”

“One where he remembers his wife!” She emphasized.

“And what of it? She’s still dead. He’s alive – he can go out and live!”

Melissa rolled her eyes exasperated. “What do you even want?!”

“I want to help you, Mel. I want to take you on a proper outing outside the cemetery gates!”

“Can… can we do that?”

“Nothing stopping us!” I said. “Want to see what’s in the big dead world out there?” I asked.

She seemed dubious, looking from me to her headstone, then to me again. “Okay,” she said with a nervous smile. “Let’s go.”

“That’s the spirit, Mel! Get it, spirit… we’re ghosts?”

“Yeah, I get it…” she said as we started walking to the cemetery gates.

“But you didn’t laugh.”

“That’s because it wasn’t funny.”

“I like you, Mel!”

“Stop calling me Mel,” she said.

“We’re going to have a great time, Mel!”

31 Ghosts – Waking Ghosts

Just about through my crazy-busy work stretch! I’ll make it! About to go get some much-needed sleep. Here’s hoping I wake up without any unwanted guests…

I used to call them the “waking ghosts.” At least that’s what I used to say to my mom when I finally got away from whatever it was that came into my room at night and sat on my bed.

“Mom! The waking ghosts came again! Mom!”

“Julie, you were just having a nightmare,” she’d say. But I knew it wasn’t a nightmare – I was definitely awake.

When the Waking Ghosts persisted for years my mom finally took me to a sleep therapist. I described the Waking Ghosts and told them about how they would come in my room in the morning and sometimes they would just sit on my bed and watch me or walk around the room or – in a few cases – one would put its head close to mine as it pet my hair. I don’t know what that one looked like because I was too scared to open my eyes, but I know the hair petting was real – not a nightmare.

The therapist listened and took notes. He didn’t seem surprised or disbelieving. Pretty quickly, though, he said, “Julie, what you have is called ‘sleep paralysis.’ It’s what happens when you wake up during the dream phase of REM sleep. Normally, during this phase your brain turns off the signals that let your body move so you don’t act out your dream. But since you wake up you’re now fully conscious but you’re still dreaming. It’s what we call hypnagogic or hypnopompic hallucination.”

With every term or big word I felt more and more relief. I wasn’t being held down by a ghost – it was “sleep paralysis!” And it wasn’t a ghost petting my head, it was a “hypnopompic hallucination!”

The next morning when I woke up and the Waking Ghost that sits on the bed and leers at me was there sitting on my feet I actually smiled as I thought to myself, “You’re not real!”

Then the voice came right next to my ear, cold and dangerous, “Wanna bet we’re not real, Julie?”