Korean haunting

Korean haunting
23 October 2024 J.W.H

AND she came to South Korea to be with my husband who serves in the military. I've been here for 5 months. I have been living in my apartment for over four months. About two and a half months ago, I started feeling icy chills, as if someone was watching me. This continued uneventfully until last night. My husband trains in the field. I'm home alone, just like any other night, I changed, went to bed and called my husband. I went to bed around 12:30.

I had been sleeping for about two hours when I started having the dream I had earlier. But instead of what usually happened in dreams, an unknown force pressed two handfuls of hair onto my back and held me down. I woke up and found that my head was where in the dream this force had my hair. I ignored it, thinking it was my imagination. After a while I fell asleep again. The dream resumed where it had been interrupted. This happened again before I decided to just stay awake. It was about 5:00 in the morning, I'm not really sure. I heard the voice of a Korean man speaking, it was very deep, I couldn't make out any words I knew. It sounded like he was hissing the words. By this time I was already terrified. I heard knocking and chairs being moved. It took about an hour. Then it started scratching at my walls. It started out silent and compact at first, I ignored it, until it got louder and louder, more and more each time.

Finally I couldn't stand it anymore, my heart felt like it was going to burst, it was beating so difficult. I got up and turned on all the lights in the house. It stopped. I got dressed and looked around to see that all my chairs had moved, little things had moved, and then I saw scratch marks on the wall. When I left it was around 6:30 in the morning. I'm looking for another apartment. There's no way I'm staying there and letting the situation get worse and more brutal.

  • J.W.H

    John Williams is a blogger and independent writer focused on consciousness, perception, and human awareness, exploring topics such as dreams, intuition, and non-ordinary states of experience. Driven by a lifelong curiosity about the nature of reality and subjective experience, his perspective was shaped in part by structured study, including the Gateway Voyage program at the Monroe Institute. His writing avoids dogma and sensationalism, instead emphasizing critical thinking, personal insight, and grounded exploration. Through his work, John examines complex and often misunderstood subjects with clarity, openness, and an emphasis on awareness, choice, and personal responsibility.