the haunted room experience
i’ve heard the stories. i just never paid attention.
when i found out i have to stay in room 1 the whole shift, because a patient needed to be watched constantly, i didn’t even think about the room’s reputation. yeah, that it is the haunted room.
nurses confirmed the authenticity of the claims. call light goes off even if the room is empty. it also goes off even when all three patients were physically unable to press the call button. blood pressure cuffs automatically inflate without being started. telemetry monitors turn on and off without being touched. unusual sounds heard were interpreted as moaning, sighing, begging, lingering. sounds of souls long dead but still living, souls lost and never found. some even went to the extreme by saying they actually saw somebody/something who/that gave them the chills. you know, some sort of a white floating human image outside the window.
i was watching a female patient in her early 80s who has advanced alzheimer’s and was very uncontrollable before admission. in ER, they had to literally watch her constantly to keep her safe. she was not combative, she was not trying to pull IVs and catheters out, she was just constantly trying to get up and get out of bed, wanting to go. where? anywhere. she kept talking, mostly in french, and would occasionally raise her voice to make a point. since she just fell and had a hip fracture, walking was not really a good idea, but that didn’t seem to register, because the ER nurse told me she was just very determined to get out of the gurney the whole time.
well, it could be my lucky stars aligning a certain way. or, it could be the pain medication. whatever it was, the lady was really sleepy when she got to our unit. we placed her in bed 1, right at the door, and i sat on a chair next to her bed. i was ready to repeat the line “stay in bed L, it is not safe for you to get up”, the whole night, but she didn’t really let me. she slept like a baby on the first hour. and the second hour, and the third hour, and…the whole night.
i got up and checked my patient in bed three, when something caught my attention. outside the window, there was something. or someone. i looked closer, adjusting my eyes to the usual darkness. i looked more… and i saw her! blurred face but definitely a face. a face that looked troubled and pained. she was wearing what looked like a white something. a gown, a robe, a something. her hair flowing loosely on her shoulders and her feet unseen, she looked like she was sort of moving away, very slowly.
i closed my eyes and shook my head a couple of times.
i defintiely felt that chill. you know, that feeling when you thought you just saw something out of the ordinary, and you are extremely terrified, but you just have to look again. slowly, acting like if i turn my head faster i will scare her, i looked at the window again, expecting to see that lady in white, floating, outside the 6th floor. it was blurred, but it was real. moving away, but real. i heard my heart beating like it will explode. for a moment, i realized that my usual smug statement “i’m not afraid of ghosts” was a lie. there, i was, scared out of my wits, i could have peed in my scrubs!
i didn’t know what i will do next, but i noticed that my body appeared like it was going to start running out of the room. only, my eyes were shut, it would have been stupid. slowly, i opened my eyes, looked over the window for the last time, and the image was gone!
i could have let it rest and just got out of there, but that wouldn’t really be me. so, being the proverbial brave person that i was, i wanted to know what it was that scared the living daylights out of me. i reasoned she or it can’t just scare me like that and then leave me clueless! in slow motion, i walked to the window and looked outside. there was the expected 2 o’clock in the morning darkness, but it was not really dark. there were lights everywhere, enough to kind of kill total blackness.
there was nothing.
all i saw was me. the reflection of me. i stood there breathing heavily, thinking. actually, pondering. maybe there was nothing! maybe it was just me. the reflection of me. it was probably what i saw. the ghost that was within. the things that scared me most. the thoughts that occupied me. the emotions that drained me these past days. maybe, those were the things i saw. the image was not real, the stuff that i am terrified of, were real. the ghosts within were the ghosts that followed me. i told myself this, but i got more scared. mostly, of the things that were real, more than the things imagined.
i sat next to my sleeping patient’s bed, my knees still shaking. i told no one in the unit. i will not give them the satisfaction of gloating, claiming their stories were real, nodding their heads in unison, saying “we told you so”. and i will not embarass myself by claiming their stories were not real, because there i was, still feeling all the goose bumps all over.


When I worked in a major Burn Center there were several instances of unexplainable noises,drawers opening suddenly,bottles of NS for irrigation sort of launching across the supply room.I’m sure there were unquiet spirits there.During the episodes that I witnessed,I also had that uncomfortable realization that there was something “else” present.There was even a rhythm on a monitor w/ no cables,leads anything.When the rhythm went away both double doors out of the unit bumped as if someone left.
I’m freaking myself out.Glad I work in PACU now.
Comment by Cinder — February 2, 2007 @ 3:48 pm
“There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.” Hamlet, Act I, Scene V. I’d say this applies here….
Comment by The Curmudgeon — February 2, 2007 @ 5:41 pm
I am an RN who works the overnight shift and I have experienced the creepy feelings when the call light goes off in an unoccupied patient room. One time, we all went into the room and the call bell was not even connected to the wall but was still sounding at the nurse’s station! Talk about weird!
On another instance, I was helping one of elderly female patients with her covers when she said something strange to me. Yes, she was somewhat confused, but at the same time her comment was creepy. She was lying in bed and I was standing beside her bed, when she looked past me and said “What is that?” and I asked her, “What is what?” to which she answered, “Standing behind you?”. Well, that creeped me out! I turned to look at the wall behind me as we were in a darkened room and I saw nothing.
I can’t remember exactly what all was said after that, but her comment stood out in my mind for the rest of the night. I wondered if in her altered mental state, she really did have abilities to see what I could not. Perhaps it was just the meaningless ranting of a confused, elderly patient…but at the same time, I remember an odd feeling when she said it.
Comment by Linda Gilliam, RN (US Angel Girl) — February 3, 2007 @ 1:37 am
Reading it gave me goose bumps too.. you were too brave even not to run out of the room. If that was me I’ll be running faster than speedy gonzales.
Comment by luisa — February 3, 2007 @ 2:59 am
reading your post made me remember my own experience back in the philippines… it was my first day at work as a staff nurse. i was asked to go to ER to help. after all the work was finished at 3am, i sat in the nursing station, looking at frog pictures while the CN in ER went inside one of the rooms to do some cleaning. i couldn’t remember why, but i suddenly looked up at the glass door and saw this male reflection. he was looking at me and i remembered thinking that he might be looking for a relative who was a patient that was seen that night. i kept staring at him and that was the time i realized that he had cotton in his nostrils and tie around his face (which is like the “epitome” of a corpse back home)! i cursed under my breath and prayed Our Father. i think, i counted to 10 before i even had the courage to looked at the glass door again. he was gone. just like that.
Comment by Drei — February 3, 2007 @ 9:22 pm
Really creepy! And the way you wrote it, it’s like I’m reading a horror novel. But I do enjoy this kind of stories since I grew up with my lola telling me all this kinds of stories. But I do I have a friend of mine who could see them actually and told me that hospitals are really hotspots for these earthbound spirits.
Wow! you actually saw her. Next time invite her for a coffee early morning. At least you’ll have a companion in your shift
Comment by Ferdz — February 4, 2007 @ 5:00 am
y’all are freakin’ me the hell out.
dont get me wrong-i love these sorts of stories, but still…i gotta pee now.
Comment by kimmyk — February 4, 2007 @ 7:11 am
i thought they were all in hospitals here at home only
one of them must have migrated, too
Comment by Rygel — February 4, 2007 @ 7:49 am
At one of the nursing homes I worked at we had a resident that spoke to angels. She had serious dementia, but when she said she was up all night talking to the angels we all believed her. Everytime she said that, someone living in the facility died. At first I thought it was conicidence, perhaps she overheard another nurse talking about a critical patient. That theory was quickly blown out of the water when she also saw angels before unexpected deaths.
Comment by Joe — February 4, 2007 @ 2:23 pm
Not sure how I got to your site, but this story really touched me and scared me. Thanks for sharing.
-S.
Comment by -S. — February 4, 2007 @ 5:02 pm
I just had that the other night at work… room 12’s call light kept randomly going off, and there was no patient in room 12! I couldn’t help but think “Ghosts!”. Creeps me right out.
Comment by Cura, RN — February 4, 2007 @ 8:26 pm
We’ve all heard of the movie “City of Angels”…right? and where does it take place? in a hospital? Hospitals are a common place for angels, and “ghosts”. I Believe.
Comment by Carolin — February 6, 2007 @ 11:32 am
Another great blog, thanks!
Comment by pam — February 7, 2007 @ 9:23 pm
Wow.. creepy!!
Comment by nurse m — February 8, 2007 @ 6:16 am
Wow, that freaked me right out at almost 2 am while I am thinking of going to bed. I better stay awake now for awhile. You can really tell a story.
I did a post not long ago about ghosts and premonitions.
Great post May!
Comment by cathy — February 10, 2007 @ 10:56 pm
I like your story it is one of the best storys that i have ever read.
Comment by ann — October 11, 2007 @ 1:35 pm
Yep, it seems all hospitals have a haunted room, and it’s always at the end of the hallway. I’ve worked with nurses who claim that strange noises were heard from the haunted room when nobody was in there, or furniture was moved, or that they even saw the ghost(s). Everyone gets the chills hearing about these things even if they don’t admit to being scared.
(OK, this may be silly, but it does seem to calm down some people, especially if they have to walk down the hallway to the haunted room in the middle of the night!)
My solution: shine your pen lights!
Great story! (I’ll even admit to getting the chills.)
Comment by Susan — January 6, 2008 @ 4:12 pm
This is very odd…. I just happen to researching this on the net for a story very similar to yours. I work at nursing home and have for 2 years now. I work double shifts day/eve, I have not personally witnessed anything because all of the happenings are on night shift. I have not yet formed an opinion on paranormal activity or decided if I believe or not but I am very interested in what my coworkers have experienced. There have been many sighting (by staff and residents) of a lady with no face, long dark hair falling over her shoulders and a white top on. She is most often seen through a window in the facility kitchen but also has been seen in resident rooms and occasionally in hallways. Sightings are sometimes accompanied by loud thumps and footsteps heard coming from the attic. I just thought I would share the similarities
Comment by Wendy — January 6, 2008 @ 10:17 pm
I’ve been a nurses aid for about 13 years, and had many unusual experiances that could not be explained. One that I’ve noticed many times over on here is the ringing call bell, with no one that could of rung it. I too have had that experiance. Accually an entire shift it wen’t off over and over again, with out anyone in the room. But there is a story that sticks out for some reason. There was a particular resident who was well known throughout the nursing home, mainley because he liked to wonder. We let him because that was one of the things that made him happy. We just watched him closley, making sure he didn’t get hurt in his travels around the home. So we all knew and were familiar with the little things he did, one of them was, standing in his bathroom door way and just looking off to wherever. We would try to direct him to the toilet when he did this, but when he did it he would not let us move him out of that spot. So we would just take turns making sure he was allright. He was a big man, and if he didn’t want to move….. well he wasn’t going anywhere. Besides he wasn’t hurting any one. When he passed we all felt the loss because he was there for so long. Of course as you all know it doesn’t take long to fill a room, and his room was filled quite quickley. That very first night around 1 or 2 in the morning, a very alert resident, who occupied our old friends room…. screemed!! Of course we all flew in there at once. She was sitting in her bed staring at the bathroom door, pointing.”Get that man out of my room”!!! We all looked and saw nothing. And after the man from her room passed away, there were no other wandering residents at the time on our unit. She wen’t on and on all night about the man standing in her bathroom door way. We all knew who it was, but didn’t have the heart to fill her in on the details. I guess till this day mabe he still wanders the halls of that nursing home. Who really knows how many past residents wander the halls of the last place they knew as home. We just happen to be guests in their home. There is a tip that I was told about by another aid years ago. That we should respectfully crack the window after someone dies, letting their soul move on to where it should go. I don’t know if it works or not, but what could it hurt. So I’ve done it everytime since. Take care =)
Comment by Barbara — February 29, 2008 @ 8:15 pm
[…] i convinced myself it was just my imagination. i had that uncomfortbale feeling in my gut, but i forced myself to ignore it. i scolded myself for being such a wimp, and decided i was just tired. after all, i wasn’t in the famous haunted room. […]
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