Lady claims she let 'black-eyed children' in her home, now she's dying

Cyre2067

The Living Force
_http://weekinweird.com/2016/01/28/witness-report-i-let-the-black-eyed-children-into-my-home-and-now-im-slowly-dying/

In the last few years, the frightening phenomenon of the Black -Eyed Children visitations has swept the internet. Whether or not the the stories of midnight encounters with with the mysterious Black-Eyed Kids have any truth to them has been a hotly-debated topic, but that hasn’t stopped tales of the BEKs from popping up on message boards, in chatrooms, and on paranormal podcasts. Who are they? Where do they come from? What do they want? We aren’t sure.

No matter who tells it, the encounters always occur the same way: someone home alone in the middle of the night hears a knock on the door. When they peek through the window, children, normally in a pair, are seen standing in the cold. As the resident cautiously cracks open the door to see what might be wrong, a familiar feeling of dread washes over them. The strange children beg to be let inside, but something isn’t right.. there’s something “off” about these kids. As the lonely resident looks closer, they see that these children’s eyes are black as an oil slick, an unnerving detail that causes them to slam the door and deny their pleas for entrance. Some of them call the police, others clutch a weapon, but never, ever, do they let the Black Eyed Children inside.

Until now.

The following chilling eyewitness account comes from a woman who emailed us to say that she made the mistake of letting the Black-Eyed Kids inside her home, and now, she claims, is paying the ultimate price. Her story comes as warning to those willing to open their door more than a crack. I’ve edited the letter for grammar, redacted the identifying information, and slightly altered the introduction, but beyond that, the report is submitted exactly as it arrived.

Honestly, it’s the scariest BEK account I’ve ever read.

I LET THE BLACK-EYED CHILDREN INSIDE MY HOUSE
Let me start by saying that I know how hard this all will be to believe, but now that things have taken a turn for the worse I started looking for stories similar to mine and found Week in Weird. I feel like I should share this story with someone and your website seems like the right place. I made the mistake of letting the Black Eyed Kids inside and now I’m worried that I might die because of it. I hope this will be a warning to everyone who is ever in the position to make the same mistake that I did.

I live just outside of [a rural town in] Vermont. It’s a tight knit community where everyone knows one another and people don’t lock their doors at night. There has never been any need to.

A little over a year ago I woke up because I heard a loud banging on my front door. At the time my husband I lived in a small home on a dirt road just off the rural route into town. It was the middle of a snowstorm and the nearby hills get very slippery in the snow so I thought that someone might have been in an accident and broken down. It’s happened before.

When I looked out the window I could see that out motion spotlight was on. I could see that there were footprints in the snow that had come from our road and into our driveway but there was no car anywhere. The snow was still covering the road and no one had driven on it for at least a couple hours. Our front door was obscured from the window but I could see that someone was standing there. I wasn’t sure what to think so I woke my husband up just to feel safer. While I was telling him what was going on the banging on the door started again and my husband went to answer it while I stood in the hallway.

When he opened the door there were two children standing in the snow looking toward the ground. They were a boy and a girl and could not have been more than 8 years old. They were dressed strangely and had odd haircuts. The girl’s hair was very long and straight and the boy had a dated haircut that looked almost like a bowl cut. They weren’t dressed for winter and my first thought was that they must have been Mennonite children but as far as I know there was never a large community of Mennonites near us.

Thinking back on it I know that my normal reaction to seeing children in a snowstorm would have been to rush them inside and bundle them up with some blankets and hot cocoa, but that’s not how this felt. The children were very unnerving. They would not make eye contact and when my husband asked them if everything was ok they asked if they could come in. My husband looked at me like “what do I do?” and I asked the kids where their parents were.

“They’ll be here soon,” is all they said.

It was around 2 o’clock in the morning at this point so the only reasonable thought in my head was that there must have been an accident or these kids got lost. As much as my instincts told me not to bring them inside I did it anyway.

I went into the kitchen to make them some hot cocoa while my husband took them into the living room. While I was fixing the kettle I could hear my husband talking to the kids. He was asking them if they were ok, where the came from, how far they walked, if their parents’ car was broken down, things like that. But they always answered “our parents will be here soon”. They spoke in a sing-songy voice. They weren’t afraid to be in a stranger’s home at all.

I started to notice that our cats (we had four) were all hiding except Pigeon who was in the kitchen with me. Normally our cats are very curious and friendly and we have to be careful that they don’t run out the door when we leave. This time none of them even tried to see who was here which I thought was very strange. All of the hair on Pigeon’s neck was standing up and his tail was puffed up while he looked in the living room. When I bent down to pet him and see what was wrong he hissed and started growling and backed up until he had hid himself under the kitchen island. I have never seen him do that before.

When I walked back into the living room the kids were sitting on the couch as still as can be but my husband was holding his head in his hands. I asked him what wrong and he just said that he felt very dizzy all of a sudden but that he was fine. I turned back to the children to give them their cocoa, but when they looked at me I gasped. It took everything inside of me not to drop the mugs and run away. When they looked at me their eyes were completely black. They had no whites just giant black pupils.

When they saw that I was scared they stood up and asked if they could use the bathroom. I tried to be as composed as I could be and showed them down the hall. They went into the bathroom together and I hurried back to my husband to ask him if he had seen their eyes. He had seen them too and said that it looked like his brothers badly bruised eyes after a car accident. We were in the middle of talking about whose children they could be when my husbands nose started to bleed. He’d never had nosebleeds as long as I had known him. I just knew inside myself that this had something to do with the kids in the bathroom and I started crying while I ran to get [my husband] some tissues.

That’s when the power went out. I heard my husband yell my name from the living room and as I started to walk back through the hallway I stopped dead in my tracks. The two children were standing at the end of the hallway. They weren’t moving and I have never been so scared in my whole life. They just stood there in the dark.

After what felt like forever the boy said “our parents are here” and they walked to the door, opened it, and walked out leaving it wide open. My husband jumped up to go close it and almost fell over. We looked out the window and saw two men standing by a black car idling at the end of our driveway. The men looked like they were wearing black colored suits and were very tall, at least 6 feet. When my husband waved at them they just stared at us, got into the car, and drove off.

Our power came on about a half an hour later but nothing was the same after that.

Over the next few months three of our cats went missing. We can only assume that they ran away somewhere and never came back but the worst thing was coming home to find Pigeon in a puddle of blood on the living room floor. He looked like he had been vomiting blood. The vet told us that he had some kind of hemorrhage.

After my husband’s nosebleeds became a regular occurrence we went to see the doctor. He didn’t know what to make of it other than “dry nasal passages” but my husband was diagnosed with an aggressive skin cancer. When the doctor asked us if he used tanning beds we both thought he was joking, but apparently this kind of melanoma is linked to over-use of indoor tanning. The doctors think he will recover but don’t understand how it got so bad so quickly. My husband has never worked an outdoor job and spends relatively little time in the sun.

Since we let the Black Eyed Kids inside our home I’ve also suffered from regular dizzy spells and nosebleeds on a regular basis. I’ve had other issues which I won’t mention here but trust me when I say that I am suddenly in the worst condition of my life and no one can do anything about it. I know that all of this is because I let the Black Eyed Children into my home. We’ve told everyone we could about the strange kids that showed up that night but no one else saw them and some laugh at how scared we were of the “Mennonite kids” but we know what we saw. I wish my husband had never opened the door.

Feel free to publish this as a warning to others about the Black Eyed Kids. My advice would be to lock your doors, call the police, and wait for morning. Don’t make the same mistake that I did.

As I said, it’s the most frightening report of the Black Eyed Kids I’ve personally read, and the first one I’m aware of that covers what happens to those unfortunate souls who let them in. Still, the story leaves us with more questions than answers. Who where the tall men that came to pick them up? Why were the cats so afraid of these children? Were they truly to blame for nosebleeds and cancer?

Two interesting things that stand out immediately are the obvious resemblance of the tall men in dark suits to the notorious Men In Black encounters. Second, the skin cancer diagnosis seems reminiscent of the radiation burns, or “Moonburn Syndrome”, commonly suffered by UFO witnesses. Could the Black Eyed Children be part of an emerging trend in extraterrestrial contactee cases?

Whatever the case, the warning remains the same: don’t let the BEKs inside.

So Creepy...
 
Very creepy, too bad we do not have instincts like animals.
But I think that neither locks the doors would not help much in this case, nor called the police :/
 
When I read stories like this, I think about the number of people who have been caught faking cancer, or faking having a kid with cancer, to get sympathy and money from internet readers. Where's the proof? And if proof is provided, is it verifiable via independent third parties?
 
casper said:
Very creepy, too bad we do not have instincts like animals.
But I think that neither locks the doors would not help much in this case, nor called the police :/

How do you explain this sense of dread then?
After all, it is a common theme in these kind of stories that the person recounting their experiences mentions that they were either scared or felt a sense of dread washing over them, as they encountered something or entered some strange place with a dark vibe.

This brought two sessions to my mind:

Session 11 October 2014 said:
(L) Okay, is there any reality to these "children" people are witnessing?

A: Window fallers at approach of the wave or at points of realm border weaknesses due to some related phenomenon. Things like jumbo jets exiting and other things entering. Things will get a lot more interesting along this line soon.

and

Session 21 March 2015 said:
Q: (L) Well, let me ask... Is it possible that this rash of Black-Eyed Children and other strange entity-related phenomena is a side effect or a result of having so much technology around?

A: Now you have opened a real can of worms!

Q: (L) So, basically by having so much technology, microwaves, and all that kind of stuff, we're basically feeding entities in other realms and enabling them to enter ours?

A: Pretty much! Fun for materialists galore!

Q: (L) In other words, people who believe only in technology are in for a big surprise?

A: Yes

In other words, if these are window fallers and the wide distribution of wave emitting gadgets and the approach of the Wave enable them to cross into our dimension much more so than before, these kind of stories, fake or not, should become much more common.
 
Eulenspiegel said:
casper said:
Very creepy, too bad we do not have instincts like animals.
But I think that neither locks the doors would not help much in this case, nor called the police :/

How do you explain this sense of dread then?
After all, it is a common theme in these kind of stories that the person recounting their experiences mentions that they were either scared or felt a sense of dread washing over them, as they encountered something or entered some strange place with a dark vibe.
Puck said:
When I looked out the window I could see that out motion spotlight was on. I could see that there were footprints in the snow that had come from our road and into our driveway but there was no car anywhere. The snow was still covering the road and no one had driven on it for at least a couple hours. Our front door was obscured from the window but I could see that someone was standing there. I wasn’t sure what to think so I woke my husband up just to feel safer. While I was telling him what was going on the banging on the door started again and my husband went to answer it while I stood in the hallway.

When he opened the door there were two children standing in the snow looking toward the ground. They were a boy and a girl and could not have been more than 8 years old. They were dressed strangely and had odd haircuts. The girl’s hair was very long and straight and the boy had a dated haircut that looked almost like a bowl cut. They weren’t dressed for winter and my first thought was that they must have been Mennonite children but as far as I know there was never a large community of Mennonites near us.

Thinking back on it I know that my normal reaction to seeing children in a snowstorm would have been to rush them inside and bundle them up with some blankets and hot cocoa, but that’s not how this felt. The children were very unnerving. They would not make eye contact and when my husband asked them if everything was ok they asked if they could come in. My husband looked at me like “what do I do?” and I asked the kids where their parents were.

“They’ll be here soon,” is all they said.

It was around 2 o’clock in the morning at this point so the only reasonable thought in my head was that there must have been an accident or these kids got lost. As much as my instincts told me not to bring them inside I did it anyway.

I went into the kitchen to make them some hot cocoa while my husband took them into the living room. While I was fixing the kettle I could hear my husband talking to the kids. He was asking them if they were ok, where the came from, how far they walked, if their parents’ car was broken down, things like that. But they always answered “our parents will be here soon”. They spoke in a sing-songy voice. They weren’t afraid to be in a stranger’s home at all.

I started to notice that our cats (we had four) were all hiding except Pigeon who was in the kitchen with me. Normally our cats are very curious and friendly and we have to be careful that they don’t run out the door when we leave. This time none of them even tried to see who was here which I thought was very strange. All of the hair on Pigeon’s neck was standing up and his tail was puffed up while he looked in the living room. When I bent down to pet him and see what was wrong he hissed and started growling and backed up until he had hid himself under the kitchen island. I have never seen him do that before.
I just pointed out that we do not have the same instincts as animals, I think that their much more pronounced, their "radar" is much more efficient, it can be seen by the behavior of her cats :)
 
casper said:
...
I just pointed out that we do not have the same instincts as animals, I think that their much more pronounced, their "radar" is much more efficient, it can be seen by the behavior of her cats :)

We have them, but they are probably dampened by our rationalizations. Remember we suppress some of our instincts so that socially we don't come out as impulsive. If the woman were to have seen these children as non-human she would have never let them in.
 
mantype3 said:
casper said:
...
I just pointed out that we do not have the same instincts as animals, I think that their much more pronounced, their "radar" is much more efficient, it can be seen by the behavior of her cats :)

We have them, but they are probably dampened by our rationalizations. Remember we suppress some of our instincts so that socially we don't come out as impulsive. If the woman were to have seen these children as non-human she would have never let them in.
I misspoke, we have urges, but animal instincts are "stronger".
For example, the animal will feel the coming earthquake, a man will not.

Quote from Wikipedia:
"According to psychology, human beings do not have instincts, but urges. The difference is that the instincts, as such, motivate behavior in a way that can not be prevented, while the drives are subject to human will."

Human behavior depends mainly on learning and gaining insight into what it is.
 
casper said:
...
I misspoke, we have urges, but animal instincts are "stronger".
For example, the animal will feel the coming earthquake, a man will not.

Quote from Wikipedia:
"According to psychology, human beings do not have instincts, but urges. The difference is that the instincts, as such, motivate behavior in a way that can not be prevented, while the drives are subject to human will."

Human behavior depends mainly on learning and gaining insight into what it is.

Ok. Well, maybe thats why we dont have instincts. I'm not 100% sure but i would think that those "urges" would be "instincts" - if we were to trust Wikipedia - if not for the brain's frontal lobe that enables you to make "conscious" decisions upon those urges.

This might be a little off-topic but I recently read about an interesting concept:

[quote author=Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sublimation_(psychology)]
In psychology, sublimation is a mature type of defense mechanism where socially unacceptable impulses or idealizations are unconsciously transformed into socially acceptable actions or behavior, possibly resulting in a long-term conversion of the initial impulse.
[/quote]

Could be what was happening to her - "repressing" her seemingly irrational fears to be able to help what she initially thought were children in need.
 
Laura said:
When I read stories like this, I think about the number of people who have been caught faking cancer, or faking having a kid with cancer, to get sympathy and money from internet readers. Where's the proof? And if proof is provided, is it verifiable via independent third parties?

I agree. This reads more like an urban legend type story. There may be some truth to the BEK cases, but stories like this tend to 'run the train off the tracks', as it were. The skeptic in me would say, "where is her proof?", "Is there really no logical explanation for the cancer, nose bleeds, dizziness?", "show the reports from doctors that state how unusual these disorders are" and "did she take any pictures of the dead cat?" The believers of the other BEK cases would then be further known as kooks, loosing any possible scraps of truth to the murky waters of this story and others like it. And so it goes.

mantype3 said:
casper said:
...
I misspoke, we have urges, but animal instincts are "stronger".
For example, the animal will feel the coming earthquake, a man will not.

Quote from Wikipedia:
"According to psychology, human beings do not have instincts, but urges. The difference is that the instincts, as such, motivate behavior in a way that can not be prevented, while the drives are subject to human will."

Human behavior depends mainly on learning and gaining insight into what it is.

Ok. Well, maybe thats why we dont have instincts. I'm not 100% sure but i would think that those "urges" would be "instincts" - if we were to trust Wikipedia - if not for the brain's frontal lobe that enables you to make "conscious" decisions upon those urges.

This might be a little off-topic but I recently read about an interesting concept:

[quote author=Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sublimation_(psychology)]
In psychology, sublimation is a mature type of defense mechanism where socially unacceptable impulses or idealizations are unconsciously transformed into socially acceptable actions or behavior, possibly resulting in a long-term conversion of the initial impulse.

Could be what was happening to her - "repressing" her seemingly irrational fears to be able to help what she initially thought were children in need.
[/quote]

Probably, but I think what Casper is getting at, is that we humans do not listen very well to our instincts, if we have them at all. Gut reactions tend to go unnoticed or blown off because reacting in such a way would not normally be socially acceptable. Since we are, by default, generally self-conscious, and worried about how others may judge us, we do tend to "repress" these initial feelings or instincts, unlike animals who use instincts as ways of survival.
 
I am somewhat skeptical that this woman is the first person to let the black-eyed children inside. To me this has the hallmarks of horror fiction writing: nearly everything she mentions in itself is a kind of red flag, but she still stumbles toward the proverbial swamp thing anyway. Notice how suspense is paced and built up over the course of the writing as well. That at least is my opinion.
 
I dunno. It doesn't sound very convincing to me. I've read quite a few books of accounts of high strangeness events and ghostly encounters and even though this has a few typical elements, there's something about it that reads fictional to me. The thing is, this world is FULL of those kinds of things! Window fallers, chupacabra, bigfoot, MIB, spirits, etc. and people don't usually die from seeing them in this way. Not that it can't happen, of course.
 
Well, questions of authenticity aside... we could see it as

a) Classic fear-mongering (either to gain notoriety via authoring a spooky story...or, if one is into a more sinister spin, priming the population for future BEK visits to guarantee maximum fear generation)
b) Classic warning of the community by a genuine victim (ie, ye olde 'Knowledge Protects' pro-social impulse)
c) ...?
 
CNS said:
mantype3 said:
casper said:
...
I misspoke, we have urges, but animal instincts are "stronger".
For example, the animal will feel the coming earthquake, a man will not.

Quote from Wikipedia:
"According to psychology, human beings do not have instincts, but urges. The difference is that the instincts, as such, motivate behavior in a way that can not be prevented, while the drives are subject to human will."

Human behavior depends mainly on learning and gaining insight into what it is.

Ok. Well, maybe thats why we dont have instincts. I'm not 100% sure but i would think that those "urges" would be "instincts" - if we were to trust Wikipedia - if not for the brain's frontal lobe that enables you to make "conscious" decisions upon those urges.

This might be a little off-topic but I recently read about an interesting concept:

[quote author=Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sublimation_(psychology)]
In psychology, sublimation is a mature type of defense mechanism where socially unacceptable impulses or idealizations are unconsciously transformed into socially acceptable actions or behavior, possibly resulting in a long-term conversion of the initial impulse.

Could be what was happening to her - "repressing" her seemingly irrational fears to be able to help what she initially thought were children in need.

Probably, but I think what Casper is getting at, is that we humans do not listen very well to our instincts, if we have them at all. Gut reactions tend to go unnoticed or blown off because reacting in such a way would not normally be socially acceptable. Since we are, by default, generally self-conscious, and worried about how others may judge us, we do tend to "repress" these initial feelings or instincts, unlike animals who use instincts as ways of survival.
[/quote]
Yes, exactly, thanks CNS (my first language is not English and it's hard to sometimes transform what I mean)
 
Seems like a complete bogus story.
A lot of stories like that are shared on Reddit nosleep for example, then republished somewhere else and passed as a true story.
 

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