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re: Your best kid-safe camping ghost stories?

Posted on 6/16/21 at 11:12 am to
Posted by Adam4848
LA
Member since Apr 2006
19014 posts
Posted on 6/16/21 at 11:12 am to
The legend of the liberals who never paid taxes
Posted by concrete_tiger
Member since May 2020
6060 posts
Posted on 6/16/21 at 11:13 am to
I get asked to tell ze vindow viper story all the time, lol.
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
124545 posts
Posted on 6/16/21 at 11:14 am to
Oh I love Zee Viper.


This picture terrified me as a child
Posted by LaLadyinTx
Cypress, TX
Member since Nov 2018
6073 posts
Posted on 6/16/21 at 11:31 am to
We played Bloody Mary and it would be story about a young girl away at camp (if that's were we were) or at a sleepover (if that's where we were) who was murdered (like stabbed a bunch of times...it must be gruesome!)

Here's a description below. Change it up however you need to.

You can see her in the mirror if you do the following:

Game: Bloody Mary

Risk Level: High

Additional Warnings: Fire

Objective: Summon Bloody Mary

Reward: Proof of your bravery

The roots of the mirror game known as Bloody Mary stretch back to a folk tradition practiced by young people in the 19th century. It was said that if you walked backward up a staircase in a darkened house at night, passing a mirror as you went, you would see reflected in the mirror one of two things: the face of the person you were destined to marry, or a skull. If the skull appeared, it meant that you were destined to die before you got the chance to marry anyone.

Bloody Mary itself, meanwhile, appears to have come along somewhat later, although exactly when is a little hazy. We do know that the legend was firmly established in the United States by the 1970s: Folklorist Janet Langlois’s essay, “Mary Whales, I Believe in You,” published in Indiana Folklore: A Reader in 1976, features several versions of the legend which Langlois had gathered throughout the early ’70s.

And as for who Bloody Mary is? Well, that changes depending on who you’re talking to. To some, she’s Mary Worth, who may have been either a Puritan woman who was tried and executed for witchcraft, or a woman who was killed in a car crash more recently. To others, she’s Mary Whales, who might be the aforementioned car crash victim or a vanishing hitchhiker-type spirit. Some say she’s the vengeful spirit of a mother who lost her child. Still others say she’s Mary Tudor, the Queen of England who reigned from 1553 to 1558 and became known as “Bloody Mary” for the executions she carried out against Protestants in an effort to restore Catholicism to England.

For what it’s worth, some have suggested a scientific explanation for the spirit’s appearance: It’s said that staring into a mirror in low-light conditions for lengthy amounts of time causes our perception of what we’re seeing to distort and become monstrous. Perhaps the true monsters are simply reflections of ourselves.

ARTICLE CONTINUES AFTER ADVERTISEMENT
No matter what you believe, though, one thing is absolutely clear: If you try to summon Bloody Mary, you do it purely for the challenge of surviving the encounter.

HOW TO PLAY:

Choose your playing space. You may play this game in virtually any indoor setting; the only requirement is that your playing space be capable of total blackout conditions, with no light bleeding in from the outside. An interior room without windows, such as a bathroom, is ideal. If the only options available to you have windows, be sure to block them fully.

Gather your supplies. You will need a candle, matches or a lighter, and a mirror.

Wait until nightfall, then bring your supplies to the playing space and enter it alone. If you haven’t already, prepare the room: block the windows, set up the mirror if necessary, turn out the lights, light the candle, and place it in front of the mirror. You can also use a small and not very bright flashlight.

Face the mirror. Make eye contact with yourself. We also said to close your eyes. Be brave; be fearless. Take a deep breath. And when you are ready, begin repeating the name “Bloody Mary.”
Say it aloud, beginning softly, but adding volume with each repetition. Repeat it once, twice, three times—all the way up to thirteen repetitions.

Thirteen is the magic number. Speak the thirteenth repetition with finality. Then, stop.

Look in the mirror.
Look harder.

What do you see? Is it just yourself?

Are you sure?

Look again—but stand back.

Do not place yourself within arms’ reach of the mirror.

She might scream at you, but you can handle screaming.

If she’s able to grab you, though? There’s no coming back from that.

If you survive the experience, extinguish the candle, turn on the lights, and leave the room.
Do not use the mirror again.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

A flashlight may be substituted for the candle; however, the success of the summoning may be somewhat less predictable.

Should the method described here fail to achieve the desired result, several variations may be employed in subsequent attempts:

ARTICLE CONTINUES AFTER ADVERTISEMENT
Begin the game precisely at midnight.
Chant the name “Bloody Mary” three times instead of thirteen.
Chant the name “Bloody Mary” seven times instead of thirteen.
Run the water in the sink while chanting Bloody Mary’s name.
Instead of gazing into the mirror while chanting Bloody Mary’s name, spin slowly in place. After the twelfth repetition, stop spinning, face the mirror, and chant the thirteenth repetition while looking into the mirror.
Replace the chant of “Bloody Mary” with the chant “Bloody Mary, I stole your baby.”
Replace the chant of “Bloody Mary” with the chant “I believe in Mary Worth.”
There are no guaranteed ways to dispel Bloody Mary once she has been summoned, although various methods have been proposed. Some sources recommend drawing a cross on the mirror with soap for the three nights following the completion of the ritual. Others recommend burning sage in the playing space or flicking vinegar in the four corners of the room. You may, of course, try these methods, but don’t count on them working.
Do not break the mirror.
You wouldn’t want to let her out, would you?
Posted by LaLadyinTx
Cypress, TX
Member since Nov 2018
6073 posts
Posted on 6/16/21 at 11:41 am to
Did you ever play "Light as a Feather?" We loved this one at slumber parties.

Whoever is going to be picked up lays down and everyone else kneels around them. You all do the following:

Everyone puts 2 fingers from each hand under the dead person.

The leader (at the dead person's head) says, He's sick. you go around the person with each one saying He's sick till you get back to the leader.

Repeat the process by going around and saying each of the following phrases:

He's dying. (everyone going around the circle and repeats)

He's dead.

He's light as a feather, stiff as a board.

Leader says, "On the count of three we will lift him up."

Everyone counts...1, 2, 3. Then you lift. You can lift a person easily. It seems freaky, but it's just everyone doing it together.

I loved this one as a kid.
Posted by LSUBFA83
Member since May 2012
3367 posts
Posted on 6/16/21 at 11:42 am to
Shexter, those are good and are not too scary for cub scout age.
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