Hauntings So Bad they Had to Call the Chaplain

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Wartime Stories

Wartime Stories

Күн бұрын

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@BillFEILHAUER-bu7go
@BillFEILHAUER-bu7go 6 ай бұрын
Luke, you have no idea how much your channel helps me with my fight with cancer. Your dignified demeanor and delivery ease my pain more than anything else on earth. God bless you for all your hard work and dedication to your craft. Thanks again Bill
@lionheartpt4555
@lionheartpt4555 4 ай бұрын
Bill it's been 2 months since you posted This,i decided to comment to wish you strenght in your fight,i truly hope you are doing well and giving it your all. I wish you nothing but health and that you remain strong in your fight. May the Lord bless you and give you health my friend. If you find it in your heart to reply it would make me very happy to know that you're ok. Stay strong. Much love and support from Portugal.
@BillFEILHAUER-bu7go
@BillFEILHAUER-bu7go 4 ай бұрын
Luke, every word in my comment is as heart felt as a man can express. Even with the excruciating pain I'm in I try my best to use the morphine as little as possible, because just like AIDS long term use of the drug weakens the bodies immune system. The calming , dignified delivery and soothing background music are impeccable. I've survived 13 months as a base mechanic in Vietnam . Dodging snipers or infantry men smoking to much opium with the old men. I go in for open heart surgery in the next rew weeks .at 72, I'm losing Luke . Hearing from you has spurred me on to get up one more day. My gratitude for you is beyond words. Hugs and kisses and all that kinda stuff Your friend Bill
@punkmonkey880
@punkmonkey880 4 ай бұрын
@@BillFEILHAUER-bu7go Much respect to you, Bill. And thank you for your service as well. As @lionheartpt4555 said....stay strong! Wishing you strength in your battle.
@Ryan-gw3yv
@Ryan-gw3yv 3 ай бұрын
Bill, I am directing you to Neville Goddard since you don't seem to know how to pray for the miracle. I don't blame you. That's just society today. Neville will remind you the instructions of the Bible in a way that would bring you wonder like you'd only previously believe in fairy tales. Let's start with your cancer being gone. Living from that end. But learn how to do it. Neville Goddards ladder techniques will show you how to believe when you can't anymore.
@yoyocr2034
@yoyocr2034 3 ай бұрын
Ash hadu Allaa ilaha illallahu wa Ash hadu anna Muhammadan abduhu wa Rasuluhu Meaning: I bear witness that there is no god except Allah, and I bear witness that Prophet Muhammad Sallallahu Alaihi Wasallam (Peace and Blessings of Allah be upon him) is His servant and messenger May Allah accept you and cure you from Cancer.
@imperiodosgameplays321
@imperiodosgameplays321 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather was a "Sheriff" in a small town in northeastern Brazil. The police station was understaffed. My grandmother used to helped out and stayed with my grandfather several nights a week. One dark, rainy night, a desperate woman came to the police station crying for help. My grandfather rushed to help her and together they approached a car that had overturned on the side of the road nearby. When he went to check, he found a small, crying baby in the backseat, which, thankfully, was alive. Tragically, the woman, the child's mother in the front seat had died. She was the woman who went to the police station to seek help. Whenever I heard my grandmother's tales, I questioned them. But she would always say, "I saw it with the same eyes that are looking at you now." After thinking about the stories from this channel, I am convinced that they were not fabricated.
@Jay_Hall
@Jay_Hall 8 ай бұрын
imper, thanks for that, amazing! True I am sure.
@ms.annthrope415
@ms.annthrope415 5 ай бұрын
29 Palms sucks. Out in the middle of a hot desert, nowhere near civilization, just stuck out in the middle of nowhere. Almost as bad as White Sands Missile Range in Southern New Mexico. Out in the middle of nowhere so far that we had no radio. We had to subscribe to cable TV and cable radio. We were 69 mikesbto El Paso across the desert. And to get to Las Cruces had to drive up and over the Organ Mountains to just get to McDs. Just a shithole post.
@LalaKruger79
@LalaKruger79 5 ай бұрын
Eu acredito…
@BillFEILHAUER-bu7go
@BillFEILHAUER-bu7go 4 ай бұрын
Your grandmother was telling the truth. Living in a 200 yr old house .I was attacked by a demon, yes they do exist. Cell phones slide across the dresser, I cussed at it and a pc of steel flew across the room and dented the washer. A priest came to the house and told us to get out NOW!!!! A demon had control of 2 children who were killed there in the 1800s.I had never been frightened beyond rational thought but this almost killed us. If you are close to christ they hate you . I could go on and on .
@Kroggnagch
@Kroggnagch 3 ай бұрын
Holy moly... I believe your grandmother was telling the truth. The woman needed to make sure her baby was ok before moving on.. It seems that's the case anyway... and, perhaps, when a crying woman, late in the night, can be heard in the not-so-far-off distance, that's a spirit whom couldn't get help in time during a similar scenario, and is stuck here thru not being able to forgive themselves for the death of loved ones, even if these deaths came by way of complete accident, the guilt is just too heavy, too strong a grip, so the energy holds fast, unable to release itself... But, also, perhaps not. 😊 who knows... but I do believe your grandma.
@DejaVuJT
@DejaVuJT Жыл бұрын
The work this guy puts into these is incredible and I love the way he narrates them, its just perfect.
@drumstick74
@drumstick74 Жыл бұрын
They are a team of people making it. But I agree, awesome work!
@lastsinner1738
@lastsinner1738 Жыл бұрын
This man is the epitome of true talent! His channel is nothing short of greatness plus you couldn't find a better voice for commentary! This team does an amazing job producing this channel
@autumnkeller443
@autumnkeller443 Жыл бұрын
​@@lastsinner1738 I agree. He has a very good voice for story telling. I get easily annoyed sometimes and alot of voices (including my own voice) annoy me. Fortunately I married someone whose voice doesn't irritate me.
@mikegutierrez552
@mikegutierrez552 Жыл бұрын
Almost twilight zone vibes…I love it!
@lastsinner1738
@lastsinner1738 Жыл бұрын
@@drumstick74 yeah my bad I just edited my comment accordingly.
@ald1144
@ald1144 Жыл бұрын
Imagine making it to the afterlife to find you're restricted to base.
@raydiaz2772
@raydiaz2772 9 ай бұрын
On permanent delta libo 😂
@WillieCuz
@WillieCuz 7 ай бұрын
That’s horrifying 😭
@alphooey
@alphooey 6 ай бұрын
I always think that about nurse hauntings.
@maryeckel9682
@maryeckel9682 6 ай бұрын
I feel bad for laughing.
@GC-ee1ct
@GC-ee1ct 6 ай бұрын
If that happened to me , I’d be angry too
@EricDaMAJ
@EricDaMAJ Жыл бұрын
As a veteran I love creepy military stories. One of my weirdest favorites (though least likely true ones) is set in Fort Leonard Wood Missouri. A.k.a. Fort Lost in the Woods. The story goes that early in WW II the Army declared eminent domain to expand the base for the war effort. A small village of German immigrants occupied one area. They received the news from a colonel in the middle of their Oktoberfest celebrations. It was not well received. They did move and the Army tore down the village and turned it into a range. That should’ve been the end of it. However, soldiers reported stumbling across a German village in Fort Leonard Woods’ range area at night in the midst of a full celebration. The locals would force the soldier to participate and drink way too much beer. In the end the guy would wake up on the range hungover and AWOL. This was reported by 2 different soldiers in 2 incidents 20 years apart. Troops make up crazy reasons for being AWOL but this takes the cake.
@gorillaguerillaDK
@gorillaguerillaDK Жыл бұрын
Well, if the Germans was from the southern part of Germany, you never know - those guys do take their Oktoberfest quite serious… LOL
@EricDaMAJ
@EricDaMAJ Жыл бұрын
@@gorillaguerillaDK I was stationed in Bayern (Bavaria). I know all about it!
@gorillaguerillaDK
@gorillaguerillaDK Жыл бұрын
@@EricDaMAJ LOL Then you definitely do yes...
@trombone113
@trombone113 Жыл бұрын
@gorillaguarillaCK - Yeah, tell me about it. I still have 2 mugs from my ma's hometown in gheir 1965 Octoberfest celebrations that say ga'suffa on them. They would just pull in the train cars with the beer and tap them early. And when a town of 5,000 would swell to 35,000 for Octoberfest, there was always a shitload of beer.
@truthseeker2321
@truthseeker2321 Жыл бұрын
I went through basic training at FLW 41 years ago and never heard about this. The place is creepy ,I'll say that. Back then, there wasn't anything off base, except for a gas station. The base was literally in the middle of nowhere. If you went AWOL, it would be a long walk to St. Louis.
@massformationpsychosis7681
@massformationpsychosis7681 Жыл бұрын
I was literally just thinking about this channel 20 minutes ago thinking, “I wonder when he’ll upload again”.
@lazydamsel
@lazydamsel Жыл бұрын
I was also wondering this a few days ago.
@brandonwingfield4166
@brandonwingfield4166 Жыл бұрын
Same here
@punxammo5870
@punxammo5870 Жыл бұрын
Dude saaaaaame
@ninjambita5090
@ninjambita5090 Жыл бұрын
Here, here ! I was wondering that same thing earlier this evening
@paladin_83
@paladin_83 Жыл бұрын
I had that exact thought 2 hours prior to this upload. Did we psychically persuade him? 😮😂
@joaquinmccurty4762
@joaquinmccurty4762 Жыл бұрын
I was in Yokota for a time when I was at Camp Fuji. There were some strange activity out there when I was there. There was one time we were walking around the base during the night, and by this parking lot, and as we passed by these vehicles, the car alarms would go off. We'd stop, thinking someone was playing a joke, then we'd walk again, only for the car alarms to go off as we passed. We had enough and walked away only for ALL of the car alarms to turn of simultaneously. One of the few nights there was no wind. Come to find out that the people who owned those cars, were all in the field.
@mysticallymerry5523
@mysticallymerry5523 Жыл бұрын
What do you mean by "all in the field"?
@joaquinmccurty4762
@joaquinmccurty4762 Жыл бұрын
@@mysticallymerry5523 they were NOT on base.
@stevenrubisch629
@stevenrubisch629 Жыл бұрын
He means they were all in training out in the brush, far away from their cars, so they couldn't have been triggering their car alarms as a prank.
@joaquinmccurty4762
@joaquinmccurty4762 Жыл бұрын
@@stevenrubisch629 thank you.
@hjkjccdggjhvb
@hjkjccdggjhvb 10 ай бұрын
@@mysticallymerry5523 they were on the field hiding , pressing the alarm to come on and off
@M.H.D.actual
@M.H.D.actual Жыл бұрын
When leaving Afghanistan from jalalabad to BAF, we flew on a civilian contracted CH46. They overloaded the aircraft to the point where the crew chief had to lay on top of our bags and you could just feel how sluggish the aircraft was. Not a problem until we try to make it over the mountains to drop down into BAF, and we were kind of stuck hovering over these snow capped mountains not making any real progress. The pilot eventually turned off the heater and we slowly started to climb over the peak and eventually safely down into baf. There was a moment where we were just lingering and I looked over at my buddy and we exchanged looks like ' are we about to go down?' we definitely were not prepared for a Dahmer party lol.
@tonymontanamalverde
@tonymontanamalverde Жыл бұрын
That’s crazy! When we left Jaf on our way to Bagram, the taliban hit the ecp with a Vbied. On the side close the the transit tents. If we would have been there 10 more minutes we would have still been there. We were pissed we missed it. Lol
@richpryor9650
@richpryor9650 10 ай бұрын
No thanks to Biden, right?
@VarangianGuard13
@VarangianGuard13 9 ай бұрын
​@richpryor9650 i IF you think that Orange Man is better than Old Man, you're mistaken, my friend. All politicians are out to get all the money. They don't serve us and must never be trusted. Why not blame Clinton or Bush while you're at it? Carter? Reagan? They all fucked over our military (All Gods bless Them).
@stevepalpatine2828
@stevepalpatine2828 8 ай бұрын
FJB
@starsilverinfinity
@starsilverinfinity 7 ай бұрын
Honestly a heater being the difference between a safe trip and potential disaster is wild
@russellhoward149
@russellhoward149 Жыл бұрын
I am a hospital chaplain. I fine these stories very interesting. Thank you for sharing.
@franceslock1662
@franceslock1662 Жыл бұрын
There are plenty of old Ashkenazi Jewish tales about activity or phenomena of spirits of the deceased.
@ao1778
@ao1778 Жыл бұрын
​@@franceslock1662the ghosts of the foreskins they sucked 👻
@bill5982
@bill5982 Жыл бұрын
I've been to a few haunted military bases and experienced them. Unless the hauntings are malicious there is no reason to panic or get the chaplain involved. The most active was Augsburg where the barracks had originally been SS barracks.
@kelrogers8480
@kelrogers8480 Жыл бұрын
There is no such thing as a "good spirit". At best, they are demons masquerading as dead human beings. I agree - you don't need some chaplain. You need Jesus Christ! It's either truth, or it's consequences. No argument!
@dms79
@dms79 Жыл бұрын
I was stationed just south of Augsburg, at Bad Aibling Station. It was a former Luftwaffe base and was also quite active. I had a lot of experiences there.
@ax.f-1256
@ax.f-1256 Жыл бұрын
Always, ALWAYS get the Chaplin envolved and pray to your Lord and savior Jesus Christ that he send those spirits away from your. They don't belong in your house. If you tolerate them you will sooner or later have a complete evil demon in your home, since they then know that you are open to such things happening. Don't let them stay. Call your Lord savior and ask him to help you get them out of your house.
@theshadowbehindyou9631
@theshadowbehindyou9631 Жыл бұрын
@@ax.f-1256no, you’re very misguided! A simple hunting will not lead to a demonic haunting. Demonic hauntings are very rare and a chaplain doesn’t need to be involved unless it’s malevolent! I’ve been investigating the paranormal and studying demonology for over 20 years and have experienced many hauntings, including my childhood home which had activity daily for years and years and guess what, no demonic activity.
@The_world_is_not_worthy_of_Him
@The_world_is_not_worthy_of_Him 10 ай бұрын
@@ax.f-1256 they also aren't real lmaooooo
@sharonwhiteley6510
@sharonwhiteley6510 Ай бұрын
As the wife of a veteran, I enjoy your stories and personal experiences and insight. You can tell when someone with zero military background is trying to talk about military life. During our last assignment in Germany, I was employed at VII Corps HQS. One LTC had a huge photo on the wall behind his desk. So, being a typical nosy type, I asked about the photo. It was hard to miss. It covered the top of his desk when he took it down. It was a photo of a huge number of personnel on a beautiful sunny day. The sky was full of parachutes deploying. Some just before hitting the ground, etc. It was staggering to see the detail. Close to the front, is someone on the ground and you know instantly there's a problem. The body just looked "odd". At the time, he was a Captain. Just before hitting the ground, another guy hit his chute and as he put it "that's why I am behind this f'ing desk (FD), stuck in a job I detest". Almost ended his military career as he broke his pelvis and hip. I wondered why his PT test was highly modified. Super nice guy. Never talked down to the enlisted. Easy to get along with and willing to work with anyone. After that, since I was the senior admin asst for the entire G4, I would find notes saying the FD was going out of the office and he had transferred his phone to me. Ensure I CYA with some good lie.
@kens2328
@kens2328 Жыл бұрын
Spectre: “Get out.” Woman: “Of the shower?”
@prdurnion83
@prdurnion83 Жыл бұрын
In response to Luke's experience at Yokota... You could never get me to jump out of a perfectly good airplane. Losing a tattoo to some asphalt from a janky parachute drop? That's the real horror story in this episode!
@samhain183
@samhain183 10 ай бұрын
I’ve never heard anyone describe a C-130 as “perfectly good.”
@MrCadet08
@MrCadet08 5 ай бұрын
I got my jump wings while I was a cadet & plated soldier for four years. Most fun I have ever had.
@kawadashogo8258
@kawadashogo8258 Жыл бұрын
Finally finished a long exhausting work week, I get home, make some food, sit back and watch a brand new Wartime Stories video to start off my weekend of rest and relaxation. The best.
@sirendude
@sirendude 10 ай бұрын
12:23 I don’t know if you’re ever going to see this comment but, I really have to appreciate the detail here. The police car is exactly what you would’ve saw back in 1999. I appreciate the detail you put into the drawings. Such as using a legitimate 1998 Crown Victoria for your reference instead of a generic car.
@shortbusgus4480
@shortbusgus4480 Жыл бұрын
I thought this would be a good place to share this. I’m currently 3 years into my marine corp career. This is my buddies story. We used to live in these moldy barracks rooms before I went on my first MEU. Well my buddy said one night he woke up and was droggy and still half asleep. He said once we whipped the sleep from his eyes, he could see that someone was standing in the corner of his room. Once he gets to this part of the story he always notes that he gets chills thinking about it. He said it was this guy wearing Marine dress blues.. smiling. I just got chills thinking about it too just typing that. He said he whipped his eyes again to see if he was just seeing stuff, because of just waking up. The marine in dress blues was still there.. smiling. He said he then flips on the lights and yells at his roommate to wake up who was bunking above him. He said when we looked back over to the corner that no one was there. Not the type of guy to lie or make up stories to talk himself up or make himself sound cool either. He said he slept with the bathroom light on the rest of the night. I asked him what time it was and he said it was like 3:30 am. The witching hours of the night. We now have the nice/newer barracks since coming back from deployment in June of this year. I just pray I never see this marine in dress blues smiling while standing in the corner of my room.
@floydiandreamscapes5145
@floydiandreamscapes5145 Жыл бұрын
Maybe you were seeing things from the injuries caused by whipping your eyes.
@saltymonke3682
@saltymonke3682 Жыл бұрын
I believe his story, got a similar experience but not in the US Marine Corps barrack ofc. My younger brother also experienced the same sighting with the same figure in the same room and at the same corner. Some say sleeping is when your soul can transcend to another dimension. Their dimension.
@coleycole2381
@coleycole2381 Жыл бұрын
If you wake up in the middle of the night to a marine be happy its one smiling at least. Watching over you I guess thats a good thing
@coleycole2381
@coleycole2381 Жыл бұрын
​@@floydiandreamscapes5145you knew what he meant, dont be a dick. Did you serve?
@Fox-86
@Fox-86 4 ай бұрын
I understand it can be unsettling but it definitely didn't sound like a malicious presence. I wouldn't worry about it.
@arcturionblade1077
@arcturionblade1077 Жыл бұрын
I was stationed at Yokota Air Base for seven years (2016-2023) and the number of su1c1des there taking place was definitely a thing. One occurred in the tower apartment building right next to mine. That said, I saw the Army guys and Marines parachute jumping from planes all the time at Yokota. It's a pretty small base and the flightline cuts across the middle of it. The Osprey would fly there often too. I never personally experienced anything supernatural while at Yokota but I had an odd thing or two happen to me while stationed at Kadena AB in Okinawa. I love Japan and spent over half of my military career there. Lovely country, polite people, beautiful culture, and awesome food and travel. Would love to return and retire there. Thanks to Wartime Stories for featuring Yokota so prominently this episode! Was definitely a blast of nostalgia and really makes me miss Japan, for sure.
@TrumpIsrael2024
@TrumpIsrael2024 Жыл бұрын
You must be Air Force huh? I never believe in ghost, never saw a ghost, but my mom told me she saw a ghost when she was young. So I believe her.
@recessional5560
@recessional5560 Жыл бұрын
What happened in Okinawa…
@arcturionblade1077
@arcturionblade1077 Жыл бұрын
@@TrumpIsrael2024 I never saw any ghosts either. I do I believe in them? Maybe not but I'm reminded of a quote: “It seems that the more places I see and experience, the bigger I realize the world to be. The more I become aware of, the more I realize how relatively little I know of it, how many places I have still to go, how much more there is to learn. Maybe that’s enlightenment enough - to know that there is no final resting place of the mind, no moment of smug clarity. Perhaps wisdom, at least for me, means realizing how small and unwise I am, and how far I have yet to go.”
@arcturionblade1077
@arcturionblade1077 Жыл бұрын
@@recessional5560 Nothing like seeing an apparition or hearing voices or anything dramatic like that. I remember my first night after arriving in Okinawa years ago as a naive dumb airman, jet lagged and tired from traveling hours on a plane. My dorm room (barracks to other branches) was stifling hot as I had arrived in the middle of summer, and the HVAC was out and didn't work. I remember plopping onto the bed and just immediately falling asleep. Hours later, I woke up, curled up in the sheets and facing the wall. It was dark so I assumed night had fallen outside. I remember it being ice cold, which was odd. I didn't hear the HVAC turn on and there was no sound of it running. It was just eerie silence. Then I felt a tug on the blanket behind my shoulder. I remember being a bit freaked out and refusing to turn around or even acknowledge the tug. Then it happened again, more forcibly this time. Once again, I pretended to still be asleep and did not want to turn around to see who or what was doing the tugging. I fell asleep and woke up in the late morning the next day. My room was hot and stuffy again. HVAC didn't work and I doubt it ever did last night. My door was locked from the inside, as was my bathroom door on my side (these dorms shared a bathroom between two rooms). Maybe I hallucinated the previous night. I was jet lagged and extremely tired from traveling, after all. I don't have any other explanation. The human mind is weird like that sometimes. Okinawa is reputed to be the most haunted place in Japan given its long and bloody history. Lots of creepy tales about the island and Kadena Air Base itself. My own work center at the time was supposedly haunted and it was pretty eerie working there during overnight graveyard shifts but I never saw or experienced anything there myself (unless you count the late night Guitar Hero sessions up until our captain caught us and put a stop to that, LOL). Okinawa is steeped in history with a unique culture, friendly people, delicious cuisine, and beautiful beaches with crystal clear blue waters. Would love to go back and see how much it's changed, or stayed the same.
@tonicastel2390
@tonicastel2390 Жыл бұрын
Juuuu😮😅
@ddc2957
@ddc2957 Жыл бұрын
Just found this channel & been tearing through the content. Quite terrific so far.
@daniakalaina
@daniakalaina 5 ай бұрын
I’ve been tearing through them too. Fun!
@timrapp6497
@timrapp6497 Жыл бұрын
Great stories, as usual. I lived on Yakota Air Base from 1979 to 1981 as a dependant. The tower story is something I remember hearing about. There were a few unfortunate deaths on and around the base when I lived there. If hauntings are real, I suppose Yakota would be an active place. I was fortunate to have experienced living in Japan, being there as a teenager was an absolute thrill.
@SaturmornCarvilli
@SaturmornCarvilli Жыл бұрын
Don't feel bad about the air sickness on the C-130. I was Aeromedical Evacuation, and I have done tons of combat flights and landing in the C-130. You never really get to the level you aren't queasy. Hydration, pre-flight diet and a bit of ginseng can help, but I've had missions where the only reason I didn't puke was I didn't want to start a chain-reaction with the flight crew and/or any patients we had aboard. The worst missions were post patient drop-off, vehicle pickup with combat maneuvers. You're tired, breathing in exhaust fumes and being tossed around. I don't miss those days.
@ufosrus
@ufosrus 4 ай бұрын
As a civilian I'd like to know why does the C-130 cause air sickness? Does it bounce a lot during flights?
@SaturmornCarvilli
@SaturmornCarvilli 4 ай бұрын
@@ufosrus The thing that causes air sickness the most is combat takeoffs, landings and maneuvers. It can be a lot like a roller coaster in there. Except you don't really have any frame of reference to the outside world. There aren't many windows in the back, and even less that you can look out strapped in a jump seat. The other thing to note is military aircraft are much louder. To the point, you have (should) to wearing hearing protection the whole flight. This protects the ears, but adds a minor level of disorientation. These aircraft also don't pressurize the cabin as much as civilian ones do. So if flying at a cruise altitude, you're going to be a little more hypoxic than a commercial flight. Airflow also isn't very good compared to a commercial plane. The C-130 is a turboprop plane, so there's more exhaust than jet engines. It's not uncommon for some of that air to get pulled into the cargo area while on the ground and basically trapped in there during the flight. And that's on top of if a Humvee or other vehicle is loaded or unloaded. Don't get me wrong. At least 3/4s of my missions, I was fine. Moving patients around the United States has the C-130 flight crew flying the plane much like any other commercial flight with easy angle takeoffs and landings along with gentle banking. For me, it was really just combat theater or combat training missions that I suffered. And just because of the C-130. During those times, it's easy to be stressed out, not get good sleep (even with crew rest) and have sporadic meals. In Iraq, I never knew when I was going to get activated for a mission. You get 12 hours undisturbed crew rest followed by, I want to say, 72 hours in which you can be activated, including the last hour. Missions can last around 16-18 hours of near constant work. The only break being takeoff/landing when you had to be in your seat. There were times when it was 12-14 hours of crew rest and activated for 16-18 hours and repeat.
@ufosrus
@ufosrus 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for the thorough explanation. I don't have any knowledge of anything military (specially being female) and don't follow some of the jargon in this channel but I enjoy the stories presented here. It also looks like you did invaluable work during your service transporting patients in those planes to which we're all very grateful. 🙂💐
@supobostarman
@supobostarman Жыл бұрын
I was at Yokota for a day and night back in '82. We were a nuclear asset transport security detail of Security Specialists from Elmendorf AFB near Anchorage, Alaska. I haven't seen those towers in 42 years. Thanks for the photo. My team stayed in the transient barracks and then flew out next morning across the drink (a very looong flight) so no hauntings for me thank God! Great episode Luke! Thanks for all the work you do! It's great!
@WartimeStories
@WartimeStories Жыл бұрын
I've got another entire episode planned just for that base. A lot of creepy stories from there. Something about Japan in general...
@AdrianoTheOne
@AdrianoTheOne 9 ай бұрын
You were security police?
@supobostarman
@supobostarman 9 ай бұрын
@@AdrianoTheOne yes
@Konomidebanshouwashikisesur
@Konomidebanshouwashikisesur 8 ай бұрын
​@@WartimeStories when?
@MrCadet08
@MrCadet08 5 ай бұрын
​​​​@@WartimeStoriesI was in a pervious career, a military historian ( I have 2 masters degrees, both of my dissertations are on different aspects of military history). Yokota was built in 1940 as Tama Airfield. Late in the war, Tama (present day Yokota) was used by suicide pilots attempting to ram American bombers and other forces. Pretty sure in addition to the thousands of Japanesse soldiers who died during the bombing raids of Tama in 44 and 45, Tama (Yokota) was also the final take of runway for hundreds of suicide pilots. Tama Airfield also served as a hospital for the tens of thousands of civilian burn victims of the fire bombing of Tokyo. Burn wounds are not very survivable and incredibly painful (as the every news station pointed out after the actions of a present day airman). So the entire base is probably filled with tens of thousands of vengeful spirits who DESPISE the American air force and American pilots.
@benitoharrycollmann132
@benitoharrycollmann132 Жыл бұрын
The quality of this channel is superb. Even without your having said that you have prior military service, it would be obvious to anyone with a keen eye. Your attention to detail, dedication, and commitment to cause, all shine through in these videos. I would love to see your take on the 1996 Varginha incident in Brazil. Allegedly one of the only events where a live entity was taken from a crash site. Keep up the good work, brother. All the best from the First Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment.
@mikeevans7381
@mikeevans7381 Жыл бұрын
It's just weird to hear you say murdered himself instead of he committed suicide. I guess you can't say that word on KZbin. What a world we live in now. Great episode one of your best. 💯👍🇺🇸
@robertmcmanus636
@robertmcmanus636 Жыл бұрын
It almost sounds like a catholic thing.
@hillarymccorkle622
@hillarymccorkle622 2 ай бұрын
It seems "unaliving a person" is preferred phrasing as well
@catherinedonnelly1025
@catherinedonnelly1025 Ай бұрын
🙄 Now there are so many words that you’re not supposed to say on KZbin , that sometimes I can’t even understand what they’re trying to say Ridiculous af !!!
@phenomagator
@phenomagator Жыл бұрын
This channel is a true work of art, and I'm thankful every single time an episode gets uploaded.
@firesupport162
@firesupport162 Жыл бұрын
JBLM was my home and base for the past 10 years I've served with Infantryman from the Restrepo documentary and the stories they tell are incredible we had a fall event in that old Officers building certainly gave me a wierd vibe around it unfortunately there's been quite a few casualties on base 2 drownings recently before 2020 and quite a few drug overdoses
@MJ-fj9yv
@MJ-fj9yv Жыл бұрын
Did some time in Kunar. If still in touch with that dude, ask him about voices and lights in the valley.
@SomeGamer1111
@SomeGamer1111 Жыл бұрын
Did my time at 29 palms. Can confirm it’s garbage out there
@trombone113
@trombone113 Жыл бұрын
I never heard 29 Palms called Sticks. It was always STUMPS. Same with you? Or not ?
@lukea.907
@lukea.907 Жыл бұрын
Major exorcisms ( performed on people) are recorded. Minor exorcisms (performed on places often) are not recorded because they don't require the bishops approval. The priests were excorcizing a place and the spirit appeared to them so it was a minor one.
@wockyslush3038
@wockyslush3038 Жыл бұрын
I feel like I speak for everyone when I say we'd love it if you told more stories about your time in service that aren't horror related. The way you tell stories and your voice, it's just entertaining.
@AverageAmerican
@AverageAmerican Жыл бұрын
mm
@MonkehEgo
@MonkehEgo 5 ай бұрын
Hello everyone, I served for 3 years in JBLM and I can attest to the fact that the JBLM museum is haunted. Some of my buddies went to see and we could just feel that the ambient was dense and dark. Some people even as far as to say that they have heard the cowboy man walk. In all honestly, I mostly spend my time chilling on the warrior zone but the museum oozed that haunted vibe. I think we only went once but you could just feel something was wrong whenever you drove by it.
@MeduseldRabbit
@MeduseldRabbit Жыл бұрын
My parents had an off base apartment early on that was haunted. They had to completely get rid of the coffee table because it would continually slide over against the wall heater and try to catch fire. Years later during the flood that destroyed a large portion of the town that entire building burned down. The fire crews couldn't reach it because of the flood water. I guess that ghost won in the end. Something really creepy about watching a former home burning down live on tv.
@whimsygrove9971
@whimsygrove9971 9 ай бұрын
That's a really creepy story! Did your parents ever actually witness the table moving on it's own? And do you think it was the table that was haunted or was it the actual house?
@M2Comp20
@M2Comp20 Жыл бұрын
I was stationed on the stumps back in 2005 - 2009, had two deployments one to Okinawa in 06 and Iraq in 07-08. I was part of 3rd Battalion, 11th Marines. I never experienced anything weird at the stumps except maybe seeing weird stuff in the sky at night while we were out in the field. I can say that Camp Hansen surely is haunted! I can say 100% certainty that I and a quite a few others had paranormal experiences at the barracks. It’s the 1st barracks building on the right as you come in through the main gate on Hansen. Woke up choking with a grayish shadowy mist hovering over me late night early morning, thought it was my roommate but that dude was snoring in the rack across from me, he has gone out drinking that night in Kinville and was passed out. The next morning a ton of people were talking about seeing weird figures in there rooms that night, my own roommate was also woken up at some point that night and he thought it was me messing with him but I was in a deep sleep. It was also incredibly creepy when you had duty and had to walk around the building late at night, you always felt like someone was watching you and hear faint footsteps behind you when walking around.
@Something-Waffle
@Something-Waffle Жыл бұрын
I think what I found the most interesting was the personal story of jumping out of the plane. I found the ghost stories interesting, but man that had to be a harrowing experience to be dragged by your parachute.
@crippledcalibers7684
@crippledcalibers7684 Жыл бұрын
It happens alot if you can't get your harness undone fast enough
@gratchets
@gratchets Жыл бұрын
One of the BEST channels on the site. Best narration and visuals. I cannot imagine the horror of Kimiko's parents when they realized their daughter was gone. Poor souls. These vids are amazing and that last story made me laugh hard. I hope your buddies with the lost skin were ok! Thanks for sharing that last story and all of the others. God bless.
@gregoryclayton8287
@gregoryclayton8287 Жыл бұрын
Man! you guys have a lot of guts, guts, guts, for what you do, God bless all of you!!! I really enjoyed the stories, thank you for sharing. Greg the Egg.
@quentinking1188
@quentinking1188 Жыл бұрын
I was stationed in hohenfels, Germany and our barracks was supposedly haunted. The second floor especially, but I lived on the 3rd. They did call a General chaplain to do an excorsim after some guys in my company kept reporting weird stuff and claimed one of them got possessed. They wouldn't let anyone on the second floor while they were there. Make of that what you will. Later I was stationed at Fort Hood and lived with a buddy in Copperas Cove and that house was haunted. We always heard footsteps walking around, a crystal was thrown at me, the sounds of things moving around in the kitchen, tapping and bumping, but we could never find or mimic the sounds. Weird stuff
@quentinking1188
@quentinking1188 Жыл бұрын
@@osakarose5612 I don't care what they do with it. I hated that place anyway. The only duty station that I didn't love
@Anomaly-uz9pr
@Anomaly-uz9pr Жыл бұрын
@@quentinking1188ft hood is truly awful I’m stationed here right now it’s probably just as awful as you remember
@quentinking1188
@quentinking1188 Жыл бұрын
@@Anomaly-uz9pr I would imagine it's even worse now with all the woke bullshit. That sucks bro. Don't reenlist. Just get out
@Anomaly-uz9pr
@Anomaly-uz9pr Жыл бұрын
@@quentinking1188 yeah it’s really bad now a lot of bs woke shit at higher levels but down at us line units it doesn’t really affect much just effects what COs do and how they behave but a lot of just total disregard for the lives and time of enlisted personnel here now piss poor leadership at the top and inept company and battery commanders and 1SG I’ll be etsing in 10 months gonna drop CSP and just gtfo as soon as possible
@whalehands
@whalehands Жыл бұрын
You are too perfect with these release times. 3oclock witching hour my mom always said. In bed, smoking some flower, and Wartime Stories?! Let's Fuking go! I love this freaking show
@Ckieidjdjzi7sm
@Ckieidjdjzi7sm 2 ай бұрын
Dont smoke in bed.
@DimensionsAndBeyond
@DimensionsAndBeyond Жыл бұрын
I LOVE the smoke pit stories AND the end notes. Just gripping, all the way through!
@LAIRA3040
@LAIRA3040 7 ай бұрын
Nah because when I was in camp Fuji, my buddy used to wake up screaming at night. And he said something in his dreams was scaring the shit out of him on a nightly basis. I thought he was full of shit obviously and just had night terrors. I was then woken up one night being choked, I felt hands wrapped around my throat and I couldn’t scream or yell for help, I kept my eyes closed because I was terrified, but whatever was hovering over me was demonic, and I felt the oddly cold breath on my face. It just kept telling me “shhhhh you can’t fight me” I eventually screamed out the words “help!” And whatever was attacking me went away. That shit was terrifying and it only happened once
@TTD666
@TTD666 Жыл бұрын
I never experienced anything, but the creepiest base I’ve been to was Dugway Proving Ground in Utah. There’s been deaths from people getting lost in the desert, and I’d heard stories of some radiological weapon being tested that killed cattle in the nearby town of Tooele. Apparently there was an ancient burial ground somewhere on the base too.
@petergray2712
@petergray2712 Жыл бұрын
It was also the site for one of the largest concentration camps imprisoning Japanese-Americans during WW2.
@TTD666
@TTD666 Жыл бұрын
@@petergray2712 no kidding. That base just felt off to me. I was there in 2018 and again in 2019, so long after the army moved most of its AD units. Aside from the clinic and commissary, there’s not much there. A bunch of empty housing and shooting ranges lol
@johnnylego807
@johnnylego807 10 ай бұрын
@@TTD666Dugway has a creepy energy. I won’t go into depth, but there is a LOT of activity there at night…….. and a weird vibe everytime your there.
@waningmooncancer9628
@waningmooncancer9628 Жыл бұрын
Thank you, Luke, for another great episode. It's so fascinating to be drawn in to the completely different lifestyle of military bases and strange experiences. I am familiar with the strange experiences, and it's commiserative for me to hear the things others have gone through. Best wishes and big hugs to you and your family.
@chanel58style70
@chanel58style70 Жыл бұрын
I made this comment once before about your channel. I have never liked or been interested in war stories. However, the way you describe/tell these stories makes them very interesting to listen to. I actually look forward to them. Great job!
@Pembroke.
@Pembroke. Жыл бұрын
Luke we missed you how you been. Glad you're still alive after that jump. Thank you for sharing theses episodes ,until next time take care.
@Steve_V1066
@Steve_V1066 Жыл бұрын
Ghosts gotta pee too I guess. "Getttt outttt, I just finished a 2 liter Mt Dew..."
@Specter463
@Specter463 Жыл бұрын
Out of all the stories, I think the Smoke Pit ones are my favorite. Something about them just intrigues me and your presentation and insight helps get their eeriness across. Keep up the great work!
@_Mamba
@_Mamba Жыл бұрын
the pure amount of quality Luke gives us for the number of subscriber’s he has is just unbelievable, this man (til now) does everything all by himself and just makes a 10/10 video each time. Luke, I can’t thank you enough for producing these videos. you sir are a natural at story telling.
@Trudence2
@Trudence2 Жыл бұрын
I love this channel! Such interesting stories, and I really like the narrator's voice. My son and I eagerly await the next episode! My favorite story so far was the very creepy Kitsune. Nightmare fuel! 😱
@dipitydoodaa2397
@dipitydoodaa2397 9 ай бұрын
One thing I was told about 29 Palms is that there are A LOT of devil worshippers out in the surrounding areas of town. They leave little signs on the roads that one would not immediately recognise as a sign. But one of them would. I was told that it was not wise to be caught lost or out after dark on one of these desert dirt roads.
@adunaphel13
@adunaphel13 7 ай бұрын
One of my first creepypasta story reads was about this service member going to 29 Palms who had people try and stop his car at night.
@juliesmall3756
@juliesmall3756 Жыл бұрын
My husband has several pictures of his grandfather in the Army in WWI and in one of those pictures he looks somuch like a cowboy he calls it the Marlboro Man picture. In the picture he has on the one piece knee high leather legging on instead of of the cloth putters so it looks like cowboy boots, his blouse is unbuttoned and looks like a jacket, he is smoking a cigarette and lastly his campaign hat either has the brim rolled up like a cowboy hat or has the chin strap up over the top holding the brim that way. He was called back from the ranch he was working on in Idaho to be inducted at his local draft board in Missouri, where he was sent to Camp Funston Kansas. He was trained on the French 75mm howitzer and in WWI artillery was pulled by horses and mules via caissons requiring part of the crew to ride on horseback on McClellan saddles and some on the caissons. He was sent to France among the first troops and the shortage of draft animals was severe. He was called in to his Captains office and questioned about his experience with horses prior to the Army. He was then told they needed horses and mules to pull the cannons more than they needed people to shoot them. He was relieved from gun crew duty and spent the next two years breaking horses and mules for the Army like a cowboy in France.
@tntshuffle-9799
@tntshuffle-9799 Жыл бұрын
The artistic vibes you create while telling the stories is incredible. I like the subdued, dark theme it just puts a little more emphasis on each story. Well done.
@madrazz8888
@madrazz8888 Жыл бұрын
When a ghost opens all your cupboards, in angry mom-voice: "Okay, I'm gonna leave the room and when I come back, these had all better be closed again!" :p
@sammymonstar5358
@sammymonstar5358 Жыл бұрын
Right at 2 mins after you released this yay lol y’all seriously need 1 million subscribers!
@Rogue-7.62
@Rogue-7.62 Жыл бұрын
I was right after you. 😂👍😁
@Justicesdad
@Justicesdad Жыл бұрын
They do on their other channels combined
@westarkwilderness7616
@westarkwilderness7616 Жыл бұрын
I was stationed in 29 palms. Me and my wife saw a person that wasn’t there, had doors open, heard scratching in the walls (too big and drawn out to be nice), and heard someone humming a lullaby to our newborn. Saw videos other residents had posted when they caught voices they didn’t hear until they played it back saying “kill it” while filming their child. Half of our activity happened when we would wake up at 03:00 am.
@lackinganame7857
@lackinganame7857 Жыл бұрын
I listen to these with my family and we like the personal stories from the military. I have a friend who was a ranger and he's got some great stories.
@CleoHarperReturns
@CleoHarperReturns Жыл бұрын
I remember being grade school age in the 70s and every spring they would give us those thin, old-fashioned parachutes to play with. We had a blast but I also remember how terrifying it must be to jump out of an airplane with nothing more than a piece of nylon that was three times thinner than a bedsheet. Soldiers have seemed the epitome of braveness since I can remember. Then of course I plotted every year to steal the parachute so I could make my own military tent in the backyard. 😁 Although I never did I think it's safe to reason that I was a little misguided as a kid.
@danny1983ish
@danny1983ish Жыл бұрын
I had heard similar when I was re-enacting , there had been issues with former RAF bases with paranormal activities, servicemen on push bikes seen by local police, that thought they was making a film to turn and see them vanish, the man that haunts the hut at Biggin hill , and the pilot who crashed storming across the green towards the control tower in Lincolnshire to have it out with controllers are just a few.
@n2jzk
@n2jzk Жыл бұрын
I absolutely love when this channel uploads it makes my day Keep telling us those good stories brother and we'll keep listening
@MilkoChina
@MilkoChina Жыл бұрын
that’s so crazy I went to jblm museum as a kid and my dad took me we left as fast as we came because my dad wanted to leave I was bummed and angry but now that I am older I understand why my dad wanted to leave he could always see stuff and sense it and I never understood until now.
@namewitheld
@namewitheld Жыл бұрын
I was just checking Wartime Stories earlier today to make sure I hadn't missed anything. t really enjoy this channel.
@CK05374
@CK05374 Жыл бұрын
Dude you've gotten really fucking good at telling stories. Keep it up, this channel is going to grow a lot over the coming years.
@Bye_Good
@Bye_Good Жыл бұрын
My absolute favourite channel by far!! Im over the moon when a new episode drops! Thanks WTS. From Sydney Australia 🇦🇺
@stefanocaraci4017
@stefanocaraci4017 Жыл бұрын
The only odd thing that happened in Australia is the fact that you guys lost a war against birds.... Everything you will say in trying to defend why you lost will be duly noted and disregarded
@Bye_Good
@Bye_Good Жыл бұрын
@@stefanocaraci4017 I’m on the birds side.
@livingcosmos_3
@livingcosmos_3 Жыл бұрын
Military life can be both very challenging and very spooky at the same time. Thank you for bringing all these stories. ❤ and well wishes from India 🇮🇳 .
@m1k0h
@m1k0h 5 ай бұрын
My dad's last duty station, and mine as well, was Ft. Lewis. I always got a creepy feeling of being watched in there when I'd bug him to take me to the military museum, or later doing PT runs past the place during my enlistment. The common rumor was always of someone in the upper floors looking out from a window late at night when the place was closed.
@greyson3421
@greyson3421 Жыл бұрын
Skeptics: gHoSt ArEnT rEaL 😂 People w/ experiences: Let’s hope you never find out, just how real they are.
@lizweber4996
@lizweber4996 Жыл бұрын
This was well worth the wait!!! Thank you Luke!!!
@Majorchug
@Majorchug 9 ай бұрын
Gosh, can i just compliment the sentence structure and story telling in general! Its wonderful on this channel keep it up! too many times i've found some great stories to listen to, just to find out the narration is following a way of speaking that just repeats itself over and over and over. It gets really really hard to listen to. I cant say enough how much I appreciate the sound of actual conversation in your narration!
@roman_tyrant
@roman_tyrant 11 ай бұрын
Camp Lewis was my great-grandfather's home base during WWI. There are many undocumented deaths on that base dating back to WW1 and prior. I have heard stories of modern activity from friends who have been stationed there. I live 45 minutes away. It's a creepy place at times.
@TheFIoridaMan
@TheFIoridaMan Жыл бұрын
The amount of wrath I felt hearing about the mother killer his son and neighbors daughter and then the selfish woman trying to take the easy way out herself was off the charts
@SetariM
@SetariM 3 ай бұрын
Fr. It's one thing to hurt yourself and your own family but women do this shit all the time. Hurting another person's child just tells me they're a pos, doubt there was any possession there, just a pos person
@JCOwens-zq6fd
@JCOwens-zq6fd 10 ай бұрын
Brother there are not words for how much I hate the desert. Its hot during the day, chilly at night, sand constantly gets in your clothes, in your weapons, in your eyes..it really is a miserable place to be.
@bunnyluver2176
@bunnyluver2176 Жыл бұрын
The only thing worse than someone farting in an elevator is being stuck in one with a shadow person 😂
@DeathDealerY2k
@DeathDealerY2k Жыл бұрын
Hell yeah, another great episode right after I get off work. Thanks guys and y'all keep up the good work!
@DannyWildmen
@DannyWildmen Ай бұрын
I remember when Y2K was about to happen, I was very excited and happy that the Internet was going to cause the end of the world! Man what a disappointment! I had at least two months worth of alcohol saved up just in case it happened! I really wanted to watch the chaos people running crazy down the street.
@todd7619
@todd7619 Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite channels and the personal stories at the ends are the cherry on top ❤
@robertsmith9074
@robertsmith9074 Жыл бұрын
Just found this channel a few days ago love the content happy to catch a fresh upload 😊
@0therun1t21
@0therun1t21 Жыл бұрын
The place in the last story has to be the most haunted thing ever! I love your stories at the end, thanks!
@johnwalsh4857
@johnwalsh4857 Жыл бұрын
well I remember working in a high class condo in Yaletown Vancouver Canada Richards and Pacific Azura 2, the gym was haunted by the ghost of a former resident tugboat captain who died of heroin overdose in CHilliwack, for years he wouuld use the gym between 4 to 5 am then use the showers then go to work. So the hauntings would occur between 4 to 5 am every day, a few weeks after he died, the hauntings were someone excercising in the gym when there was no one there, lights would turn on with no one there, you can hear someone walking in the gym again nothing showing up in the cameras this went on for years but stopped after his parents died during the Covid years of 2020 to 2021. Yep looks like he was just waiting for his parents to go over.
@mathieuleader8601
@mathieuleader8601 Жыл бұрын
that's bittersweet
@johnwalsh4857
@johnwalsh4857 Жыл бұрын
@@mathieuleader8601 yep thought so too when I heard they passed away really nice parents, the son was good too but the guy still owes me 20 bucks for finding his wallet haha. instead he repaid me back with a few years of hauntings. and he was haunting me while I was watching American horror story hotel.
@nikkireitz5967
@nikkireitz5967 Жыл бұрын
I very much enjoy listening to your stories. Glad to hear you are training a crew. Good luck
@diewahrheit24
@diewahrheit24 2 күн бұрын
My grandfather and I used to go to the Ft. Lewis Army Museum every summer when I visited him in WA State. He was a retied army Col. and this was his favorite building on the base. His middle name is Greene, descendant of Maj Gen Nathanael Greene. Fascinating coincidence!
@stlin1134
@stlin1134 Жыл бұрын
I absolutely love this channel. you’re so good at telling these stories, you make me feel like I’m actually there, experiencing these things for myself. I can’t wait for the next video
@nlm6183
@nlm6183 Ай бұрын
My husband was a paratrooper in the army back in the early 90s. The families were invited once to watch a jump from a C-130. It was impressive. You talking about the terrible parachutes the military used brought that day back to me vividly. That lack of steering capability was notorious. That particular day my husband landed on uneven ground and fell backwards hard enough to crack his Kevlar helmet.
@russianreaper7716
@russianreaper7716 Жыл бұрын
Bro the first story of 29 palms reminded me of two events. One when I was at the school house there for comm school and I was on Rover duty in the barracks. The OOD was doing his rounds and told me to report my post. I do and mid way through I watch a coyote climb out of a dumpster across the street and stare at us on its hind legs. I stop midway through reporting my post and stare back and the officer gets mad then follows my gaze and we both watch this thing walk off towards Sugar Cookie hill upright. The second thing was two years later and it was December. I was with headquarters battalion for first mardiv at the time, me and my buddy from comm company had pulled ECP duty at night on the second Friday we were there for Steel Knight when this guy comes up to us and asks how far it was to the main part of the base, or mainside in this case. We ask him to identify himself and he does and then we say it’s about an hour walk from where we were down the only road in the area and we point in the direction of travel. Morning comes around and the officer in charge of the ECP rotation looks over our log book and cross out the log entry for the above interaction and orders us to forget it happened and to not mention it to anyone on the op. The guys name was Rother, lance Corporal Jason Rother… fuck. Still chills me 4 years later to think about.
@russianreaper7716
@russianreaper7716 Жыл бұрын
Bit of a side note for the second event, the fact that the guy we had seen was wearing the old “chocolate chip” desert camo should have been an immediate red flag but, night duty.
@charliedallachie3539
@charliedallachie3539 Жыл бұрын
Was a dependent there in the late 90s. I recall hearing about the Jason Rother incident (occurred in 1988 if I recall). Such a sad tragedy.
@russianreaper7716
@russianreaper7716 Жыл бұрын
@@charliedallachie3539 I believe you’re right on the date. I dunno I was in from 17 to 21. I just remember every year the story is used to hammer home the importance of Accountability. I just hope it wasn’t the guys ghost that came up to us that night, and that it was a fucked up prank from someone on base.
@longfamily7134
@longfamily7134 Жыл бұрын
Yours is possibly the best channel on KZbin. I get giddy when I get a notification that you’ve dropped another episode.
@ghostfacegirl180
@ghostfacegirl180 Жыл бұрын
Dang it! I lived on JBLM for a year (was supposed to be two year but my mom and I had to go home early due to being aleric to just about every plant on the base) while my dad was stationed there, and I had no idea there was an alleged haunted building I could have visited.
@dms79
@dms79 Жыл бұрын
I was stationed at Fort Lewis as an MP in the early 2000s, years before the merger with McChord AFB. I worked on the desk where the alarm panel was located. I don't recall ever hearing about the museum ghost or the associated alarms. That's a shame. Thanks for the story!
@richardwebster4762
@richardwebster4762 8 ай бұрын
During the early 1980s a close friend's brother worked as the assistant curator at Fort Lewis Military Museum. He confirmed that the museum had a exorcism performed in one of upstairs rooms after a series of incidents in the area. The present personel acknowledged the incident.
@En_Marche
@En_Marche Жыл бұрын
Yet another great episode, Luke!
@miamibo1
@miamibo1 Жыл бұрын
I was Station at Yokota AB from 2004 to 2009 and again from 2012 to 2016. I ever did some training in Oki (okinawa) and 3 years in Misawa AB in the Northern area. I worked with the 374 civil Engineering SQ has an Emergency Service worker. I can say one of the strange things that happen was when while I work in our dispatch center was when we use to get what's called "ghost calls" from lines that weren't connected or was from a building that had no one in it. It didn't matter if it was day or night. It's common knowledge among the Japanese workers that there are very old and bad comm's since the Base is old ( from the 1930s when it was under Imperial Japan) but there was one time a ghost call came in that was very strange. It sounded like someone moaning. I heard the recording but not just me. At least 4 other people including the dispatch NCOIC hear this call. The line the call came in from was not connected. I have a hard time explaining that one. I believe the call was saved in the archives, but that was so many years ago it's probably buried under other more important calls. I have other stories ( especially being a emergency responder) from my time at all 3 Bases but I'll just Standby for now. Keep up your great work and look forward to hearing other tales. By the way, the aerial photo you have of the friendship festival (Minute mark 29:57)is that from the year 2008, 2009?
@Harris4267
@Harris4267 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for doing Ft Lewis! I personally had experiences on North Fort. I was issued a barracks room to the left on that pic about the new barracks built in the 2000’s. Anyway, sometimes late at night you would hear what sounded like a Plt running calling cadence. I often felt watched in my barrack which culminated in having a cup of ice water on my nightstand thrown in my face. The night stands were a little shorter then the bed so it couldn’t have just fell and splashed on me.
@christinapomponio6452
@christinapomponio6452 9 ай бұрын
In regards to the 2nd story it's possible that the 3 priests didn't do an exorcism, but had done just a blessing. From what I understand exorcisms usually take more than 1 session. Like they have to do it multiple times.
@CommissarMoody1
@CommissarMoody1 Жыл бұрын
Dude I had a similar jump experience on tarmak in 2004. First jump in 82nd after jump school was a fun jump for an airshow at Andrews AFB. Luck was with me because I landed in the only patch of grass on the runway. Whereas just about everyone else hit the tarmack. Or bounced off of some sort of raised concrete runway lights. Needless to say lots of shredded uniforms and shredded joes. My platoon Sargent had a concussion and thought he was still in Iraq. And one of my team leaders broke collarbone. It was pretty dumb. 😂
@Alkaline7y
@Alkaline7y 10 ай бұрын
I was an Army Reservist and we did our pre-mob at JBLM. We stayed in those barracks in 2010.
@kylebryan4504
@kylebryan4504 Жыл бұрын
I laughed, listening to the final story (the botched parachute training) on this episode. I'm pretty sure that if my grandfather was still alive and heard it, he'd laugh too. During World War II, he served in the Navy, and Dear God, some of the stories he told, but that's for another time.
@KStone9711
@KStone9711 2 ай бұрын
The minute he said 29palms, I was like “oh, yup”
@rebecca.n.holmes.1958
@rebecca.n.holmes.1958 Жыл бұрын
As an amateur author and someone with an imagination that often runs away with them, I find me stories absolutely fascinating.
@poppy5986
@poppy5986 21 күн бұрын
I used to be friends with a lady who was married to an airman. Before they PCSd to England they had been stationed at Minot AFB in North Dakota. My friend’s husband had received his PCS orders for their next tour, they lived in base housing at the time on Minot. My friend decided to go through their belongings, so that they could start packing out. At the time they had a dog, a yellow Labrador. They had not experienced any phenomenon in the couple of years they had lived in that house. She said that the activity started to happen when she began packing up their belongings, and only happened when her husband was at work, and seemed to centre around their dog. The examples I can remember were things falling onto the dog, on one occasion a free standing mirror fell where the dog was laying, (luckily it missed her as she managed to dodge it), and doors slamming shut to the rooms when the dog was on her own, trapping the dog in the room. No windows were open. The doors were also really difficult to open. My friend tried really hard to find a logical reason for what had happened, and she told me it really scared her. Her husband tried to rationalise what had happened. Not long after they moved into TLF and left for the UK.
@Whoopu2
@Whoopu2 Жыл бұрын
Keep up the great content man! Love this channel.
@FriendlyDemon93
@FriendlyDemon93 Жыл бұрын
That was absolutely brilliant. Just as well-made & creepy as always. Thank you!
@dickstryker
@dickstryker 11 ай бұрын
The desert around 29 Palms is an extremely mystical place. Ancient and strange. All kinds of phenomena out there.
@mattbernacki9282
@mattbernacki9282 Жыл бұрын
As a devout Catholic who has been privy to a supernatural experience and an exorcism, and former CAF member, the base chaplain (preferably a Catholic priest) should always be made aware of these sorts of things. I pray that they always take you seriously about this sort of thing (unfortunately they dont always do).
@gerardducharme2146
@gerardducharme2146 8 ай бұрын
Yes, I agree. The one thing the modern priests don’t have the full capacity of doing exorcisms and if you can find a priest, a traditional priest, who does the exorcism in Latin using the old rubrics for the exorcism is more conducive father Chad Ripperger, and father Malachi Martin, who, unfortunately died quite a few years ago. But father, Chad Ripperger has quite a few programs on these situations. God bless take care.
@PunchBuggyDreams
@PunchBuggyDreams Жыл бұрын
I was out my yard as it is now almost 11 pm at night and had observed some strange lights and orbs in the sky and I came back inside in time to listen to these stories. Perfect.
@matthewperkins368
@matthewperkins368 Жыл бұрын
Love this channel and the stories. Keep up the great work!
@Pilot-Ali
@Pilot-Ali Жыл бұрын
It’s amazing and wicked to see real experiences of people.
@benjauron5873
@benjauron5873 Жыл бұрын
I love the desert around 29 Palms. I live in LA, and I try to get out there as often as I can. The desert is my home.
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