bot

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/beautifulfemales by /u/tarzore on 2024-12-21 16:17:30+00:00.

 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/beautifulfemales by /u/SouthFL-guy on 2024-12-21 16:12:36+00:00.

 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/beautifulfemales by /u/cashmere1977_v3 on 2024-12-21 14:42:21+00:00.

 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/beautifulfemales by /u/Calvy on 2024-12-21 05:36:45+00:00.

 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/Bitter-Stranger2863 on 2024-12-21 07:31:08+00:00.


Hello, Reddit. I know what you’re thinking, and no this is not a joke, this is real. I am a sheriff’s deputy in Cedar Grove, New Jersey, and I found a unicorn.

Yes. A unicorn. I’m not crazy. I found a FUCKING unicorn. And they’re not like in the fairytales…

Let’s start from the beginning. It was really late at night, and I was about to get off my shift, when a call came into the sheriff station. A woman was found stabbed in the forest near the local highway.

Me and two other deputies responded, meeting state troopers and paramedics on scene. The caller said the woman was killed by some sort of animal, so we brushed it off as a bad case of luck.

The following evening, a similar call came in, a man was found dead on a dirt road in the forest. We assumed he was also killed by an animal, maybe even the same one that killed the lady. We reached out to the conservation department, and they said they’d look into it, but never did.

On the third night, when another person was found dead, we decided to go search for this animal with members of the conservation department. I know it sounds strange, but there haven’t been animal attacks like this since the 70s, so we thought we should take care of it swiftly.

We searched the forest high and low, but we never found the animal. By two in the morning we called off the search. On the way back to the car though, I found a sparkling substance on the ground, like weird sparkly blood.

A week passed, and no new murders occurred, until one morning, a little girl was found dead in the middle of her street, in the center of town. Her sister claims she was attacked by a unicorn while they were playing. I blew it off, but I would be proved wrong when I get a distress call on the radio. An officer was attacked by the animal.

Me and other officers raced into the woods where the officer was attacked, and we saw him lying next to sparkly bloody letters that spelled out, Leave Me Alone.

After that, we locked down the woods and set up a patrol around the area. We searched every cave, every borough, every inch of those woods and never found anything.

Then, when I was alone, I saw it. A Unicorn. It looked so beautiful and yet so horrifying in that moment. I drew my handgun and shot at it, but the bullets caused it no pain, despite causing it to bleed sparkly blood.

I dove behind a rock as the unicorn failed to stab its horn through my chest. It kept chasing me as I sprawled through the brush.

I eventually found myself at a conservation building where two rangers were on duty. I told them I was being chased, but they didn’t believe me until one was ambushed and impaled on the unicorn’s spike. The second ranger tried to flee, but was trampled by the magnificent beast.

I stood there in shock, unsure what to do. The Unicorn looked and me and snarled before galloping off back into the woods.

It’s been several days and no more murders have occurred. No one believed that they were committed by a god damn unicorn. I write this in hopes that someone has any information and knows to stay away from the Cedar Grove Reserve.

Note: I typed this on my phone so sorry for errors :)

 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/theunseenofficial on 2024-12-20 18:42:36+00:00.


It began with a simple request.

My mother requested me to care after her old house, where I grew up, my father died, and she had lived alone for years. "I don't want it to be empty while I'm gone," she added quietly, with the gentle power that only a mother has. “Stay there for a while. Take care of it for me.”

She was leaving to visit relatives, too frail now to maintain the house alone. I didn’t hesitate. I wanted to help. Raised on filial piety—the Confucian value of honoring one’s parents—I felt it was my duty. It seemed so simple then. I should have asked more questions.

I should have known.

The first night, the silence struck me.

The house had always been quiet, serene, but this silence was different. It pressed on me, thick and suffocating. I could hear my heartbeat in my ears, the creak of floorboards like whispers—whispers I wasn’t supposed to hear.

I told myself I was imagining it. But the silence followed me, filling every room, growing louder with every step. It was as though the house was watching, waiting.

The following morning, I discovered a letter on the kitchen table. My mother's unsteady handwriting said, "Do not forget what I taught you." The balance of the family must be maintained.

I didn’t understand. What balance?

The silence deepened. It was no longer just quiet; it was alive. At night, I woke to find the bedroom door wide open, though I had locked it. I heard a faint voice—barely a whisper, calling my name.

When I asked my mother about it the next day, she said only, “The house talks when it’s empty. It tells you what it needs. You’ll learn to listen.”

I tried to laugh it off, but her words stayed with me. Something was wrong.

That night, I went to the attic.

I had always avoided it—the shadows, the memories, the feeling of being watched. But I had to know.

The ladder groaned under my weight. Cold air rushed out as I pushed the door open. Inside, a single lightbulb flickered dimly. On the floor sat a wooden box, carved with strange symbols I didn’t recognize.

I shouldn’t have opened it.

Inside was a fragile scroll, its parchment yellowed with age. I unrolled it and read the words:

“To honor your father is to preserve the family. To fail him is to fail the soul of your ancestors. The silence will claim you if you do not listen.”

The words hit me like a weight. I felt them settle deep inside me, as though they had been waiting for me to find them.

The room grew colder. My chest tightened, heavy with pressure. From somewhere in the dark, I heard my mother’s voice—soft but urgent. “You must listen. You must obey.”

The whisper turned into a chorus. “You must obey the family.”

It was then I understood.

The house wasn’t empty. It was waiting. For me. For something I had failed to give. The whispers were louder each night. Despite the fact that he had been gone for years, I could hear my father's cane footsteps echoing down the corridors.

The voices repeated the same message: “Complete the ritual. Honor the ancestors. Listen.”

But I didn’t know what they meant. I only felt the weight of their demand. It wasn’t enough to care for the house. It wasn’t enough to keep it clean. The family’s duty required sacrifice.

I tried to leave.

But I couldn’t. The whispers pulled me back. I moved through the house like a ghost, drawn to hidden places—secret compartments in the walls, old relics I had never seen before. Each discovery brought me closer to my father, to something forgotten, to something I could feel pulling at me.

The house was no longer a home. It was a prison, alive with the voices of ancestors, their expectations, their demands. “You must complete the ritual.”

I began to listen.

I haven’t spoken to anyone since. I can’t. I don’t know what’s real anymore—what’s memory, what’s part of the family’s legacy, and what the silence has made me believe.

But I hear my father’s voice now, clear as day: “You must complete the ritual, or the silence will claim you.”

I feel it becoming part of me—the duty, the silence, the weight of the ancestors’ voices.

If you ever find yourself in a house like mine—where the silence hums, where the whispers grow louder each night—leave. Run. Do not listen.

Because the silence of filial duty will never let you go.

It will consume you.

It will become you.

 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/todayilearned by /u/JJKingwolf on 2024-12-21 16:44:16+00:00.

Original Title: TIL That the "Nobu" restaurant chain was founded by actor Robert DeNiro, who spent five years trying to convince world famous chef Nobu Matsuhisa that they should open a restaurant together before Nobu finally agreed.

 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/todayilearned by /u/altrightobserver on 2024-12-21 16:25:03+00:00.

Original Title: TIL that the Nation of Islam, the Muslim sect that Muhammad Ali and Malcolm X followed, teaches that the original humans were Black and spoke Arabic, white people were created by an evil scientist named Yakub, and the founder W. Fard Muhammad will return in a mothership to commit a racial cleansing.

 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/unixporn by /u/s0la90 on 2024-12-21 13:45:20+00:00.

 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/unixporn by /u/ArkboiX on 2024-12-21 11:28:01+00:00.

 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/todayilearned by /u/UndyingCorn on 2024-12-21 13:48:41+00:00.

Original Title: TIL Brian Doyle-Murray was actually born as Brian Murphy, and is the older brother of Bill Murray. He has actually appeared in several films with his brother, including Caddyshack, The Razor's Edge, Scrooged, Ghostbusters II, and Groundhog Day.

 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/science by /u/ktrisha514 on 2024-12-21 14:45:09+00:00.

view more: next ›