MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - The Devoted Wife | Campfire Stories with MrBallen
Episode Date: May 29, 2026Tonight, I'm going to tell you a very famous story from Thailand. The story was recommended to me by a fan, and I had never heard of it before. And the second I started looking into it, I knew – tha...t I had to tell this one sitting in front of a campfire. As you listen, you might think you can guess what’s going to happen next – but I had never heard anything like this before, and I bet you haven’t either. Be sure to WATCH this episode on my YouTube channel next Friday, May 29th at 2:00 p.m. ET Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Tonight, I'm going to tell you a very famous story from Thailand.
The story was recommended to me by a fan, actually, and I had never heard of it before,
but the second I started looking into this, I knew that I had to tell this one, and not just tell it,
I had to tell it sitting in front of a campfire, and you'll see why.
This is like classic, scary campfire storytelling.
But before we get into tonight's story, if you're a fan of the Strange, Dark, and Mysterious,
delivered in story format, then you've come to the right campfire because that's all we do,
and we upload two, three, even four times a week. So if that's of interest to you, the next time
that you and the follow button are around the campfire together, offer them some nice hot coffee.
But don't tell them you put hot sauce in it. Also please subscribe to our channel and turn on
all notifications so you don't miss any of our weekly uploads. Okay, let's get into tonight's story.
One morning in the early 1850s, a young man named Mok rode a small boat through a canal in
Prokannon, Thailand, which is a very rural community southeast of Bangkok.
And Mok was rowing as fast as he possibly could, because where he was going was home and
he could not wait to get there.
So Mok had been away for almost an entire year by this point.
And that was because around a year ago, he'd been drafted into the Thai military and forced
to go fight in a war against the neighboring country of Burma. And for Mok, getting drafted had really
come at like the absolute worst possible time, because at the time, his wife, May Knock, had been
just a couple of months pregnant with their first child. And so he had had to just, you know,
basically leave her behind to give birth on her own, which was obviously really difficult for her
and for him. Like, he wanted to be there for her and he couldn't. And also, this is 1850s in rural
Thailand. So once he was gone, like, there were no phones or really any way to send letters
back and forth. So really, ever since Mock had left, he'd had literally zero communication with his
wife. So he has no idea how she's doing, how the baby's doing, nothing. And, you know, he's off
fighting in a war. And in fact, he actually got hurt while he was fighting and had to spend
months in a military hospital recovering. But his wife had no idea. So Mock Road, even
faster, and finally, he saw his home in the distance. It was a wooden house that stood on tall
stilts right on the edge of the canal with a large balcony that overlooked the water, and it was
surrounded by lime trees and thick forest, and it was at least a mile away from the nearest neighbors.
So it's a pretty secluded place, but it was a place he desperately missed. As mock neared the small dock
in front of his house, he began excitedly calling out for his wife. And as he did, he began tying up the boat,
expecting at any moment to see his wife come running outside with the baby. But his wife didn't.
She didn't call back. She didn't come out. It was just quiet. And for a moment, you know,
Mock had this horrible thought that maybe something had happened to her while he was gone. Like,
how would he know? But then he heard the door open and out came his wife with a big grin on her face
and she was clutching their baby against her chest. She began calling out to him and Mock saw there
were tears of joy streaming down her face and he leapt out of the boat and he ran to her.
A few days later, Mock woke up inside of his home and he rolled over in bed and saw his wife
still asleep and he also saw their baby sleeping in a small hammock right beside the bed.
And as Mock looked at his little family, he felt almost deliriously happy.
I mean, ever since he had gotten home, it was like Mock had entered this just perfect life,
like just utter domestic bliss.
his baby would turn out to be a boy, which he was really excited about because he had sort of
secretly wanted a son. And, you know, over the last couple of days, he had had a chance to
basically tell his wife all of his crazy war stories. And she had listened really intently,
and she also had gone out of her way to cook him all his favorite meals. And so he was just
so grateful to be back here that he literally had not left their home at all since he got back.
He just stayed home and just enjoyed this unbelievable home country.
But on this particular morning, Mock knew he would have to leave because he had to go to the market because their kitchen was basically empty, so they needed food.
And so Mok, he climbed out of bed and as quietly as he could, he got dressed, you know, trying hard not to wake up the baby or his wife.
And then when he was ready to actually leave, he walked over to his wife and he gently leaned down and just told her that, like, hey, I'm going to leave now, you know, I'll be back soon.
Now, Mock didn't really expect much of a reaction from his wife.
his wife. He figured she would just sort of say, okay, you know, see you soon, but no. As soon as she
heard he was leaving, it's like her eyes opened wide and she almost looked panicked. And she
sat up in bed and she grabbed Mock's arm and she actually shouted, no. And in fact, she said
it so loudly that she woke up their baby. And so the baby's crying and Mock at first,
he just stared at his wife in total confusion. Like, what is she doing here? And then he said,
you know, like, what's going on? Why, why do you?
care so much if I leave? Like, what's wrong? And Maynach, his wife, you know, still clutching his
arm. She just kept shaking her head saying, no, you can't leave. And then she looked away like she was
like trying to find the words or something. And then finally, she looked back at him and it was clear
she had sort of calmed down a little bit. And she said to him that, you know, you've been gone for
so long. She just didn't want him to leave again. She said what she wanted him to do was just stay
home right here. Like, don't leave her, don't leave their son, please. Like, something bad's going to
happen if you leave. You've got to stay here. And when Mahered this, it was actually kind of touching.
The idea that his wife was, you know, so protective of him that she didn't want him to leave.
You know, he liked that. But, you know, he smiled and he told her, like, yeah, but somebody has to
go get his food here. So I'm going to go. I'm going to get his food. I'll be back, you know,
in a few minutes. This is not a big deal. And then he gave his wife a hug and a kiss. And she's
looking at him like, don't you do this, but he said, look, I'll be back as soon as possible,
and then he turned, and he left. A little while later, and Mock had arrived at the fruit stand
in the market. The market was in the village center, which was a few miles from his house,
but he had walked here as quickly as he could because, you know, he had promised his wife,
he'd be back as quickly as he could. And when Mock went to the man who owned the fruit stand
to purchase, you know, the items that he had picked out, the owner of the fruit stand looked at
Mock and seemed genuinely surprised to see him. And then he gave Mock an almost sympathetic look and then
asked him, like, how are you doing? Now, Mock and the fruit stand owner were not friends, but this
village was so small that everybody who lived there knew everybody else. And so, like, an
interaction like this was not unusual. Not to mention the fact that basically everybody knew
Mock had gone to war, but they didn't know he had just gotten back. And so Mock assumed that
what he was asking about was basically like, hey, you know, I can see you're back from the war.
How are you doing?
Mock told the owner that, you know, the war had been terrible, but, you know, now he was finally
home.
He was back with his wife and his son.
You know, he's so happy to have a son.
And so really, you know, despite the war, he'd never been better.
Like, his life was perfect right now.
But the owner of the fruit stand when he heard this, he actually looked back at Mock with
a pretty confused look on his face and was like, your wife is home?
And Mock was like, yeah, of course. Like, where else would she be? The fruit stand owner was confused for a second and then just sort of shook his head and said, you know, I thought I had heard something different. So I was just confused. And then sort of awkwardly, the fruit stand owner changed the subject and just said, okay, you know, what do you want to buy? Later that morning, Mock returned to his home now carrying several bags of food. And as he approached his home from a distance, he saw his wife out on the balcony feeding their
baby. But from the looks of it, his wife was just sort of staring off into space. Mock called
out to her, and it kind of snapped her back to reality, and she turned to him, and she broke
into this huge smile. And then she got up, and she walked off the balcony into the house.
And then when Mock got inside, she found her waiting for him in the kitchen. And for the
most part, she looked really happy and relieved to see him back. It was like, few, thank goodness,
nothing happened to you while you were away for 20 minutes. You know, her panic was gone.
She was happy to have him back.
And Mock was happy to see her, but at the same time, he also couldn't stop thinking about that
strange interaction he had had with the fruit stand owner, how he had been like, oh, your wife's home?
Like it was a question as if he knew something that he wasn't saying.
And, you know, Mock was just thinking about it.
And so as he put the food away, he told his wife, you know, what the guy had said and how odd it was.
And Mock's wife, when she heard this, she got really angry.
And she told Mok that this was exactly why she had worried about him leaving the house in the first place.
She said that ever since he had left to go to war, people in their village had been talking about her nonstop, spreading all kinds of horrible rumors.
And so Mock asked her, like, what kind of rumors? What are you talking about?
But his wife did not elaborate. She just angrily shook her head and then stormed back out onto the balcony.
A couple of days later, Mock was out in the forest that surrounded his home chopping down trees for firewood.
He and his wife had not talked any more about the situation with the owner of the fruit stand
and the rumors that people in the town were supposedly spreading about her.
Mock was ultimately just sort of puzzled by his wife's behavior.
Before he had left for the war, she had always been very logical and independent.
And so the fact that she suddenly seemed to care so much about what other people were saying about her
and the way she never wanted Mock to leave her sight was just odd.
The only reasonable explanation Mock could come up with was that, you know, for the last year,
his wife had spent a lot of time all alone with a brand new baby and with lots of fear that
her husband was never going to come home.
Like, that would take a toll on you.
And so his hope was that, you know, now that he was home, that she would just, you know,
get better.
So he was trying his best to just go about his life like normal.
But, I mean, just that morning when he had told his wife he was going to go out and get some firewood,
she had started sobbing and begging him not to go.
And it had taken him like a full half an hour to calm her down and convince her to let him go because they needed the firewood.
And so Mok really didn't know what to make of this.
He just hoped that, you know, in time, this would get better.
And so Mok just went about his morning, you know, chopping down trees to get some firewood.
and at some point, as he was literally chopping down a tree, he heard footsteps coming from behind him.
And when he turned around, he sort of half expected to see his wife, but he didn't.
He was sort of surprised to see it was this elderly man in a long robe walking directly towards him.
Like clearly, this guy is coming to talk to him.
Now, for a second, Mok actually didn't know who this guy was, but then he realized, based on what he was wearing, that he was a monk.
And then as he got closer, he could see that it actually is someone who lived and worked at a Buddhist temple.
in their village. And so this was not a total stranger. In fact, this monk was more like a community
leader of sorts. And so as Mock is sort of putting this together, he figured that the reason this guy
was coming over was just to, you know, welcome him home from the war. And so Mock lowered his axe and
smiled and waved. But the monk didn't smile back. Instead, he walked right up next to Mock, really
close to him and he looked around the forest in sort of a paranoid way and then in almost a whisper,
he asked Mock if he was alone. Mock was definitely weirded out by this and didn't have any idea
why this guy was acting this way. But, you know, Mock said, yes, I am alone. At this point,
the monk seemed to relax and he told Mock that he really needed to tell him about his wife.
And Mock kind of perked up, like, what are you talking about? And the monk said,
that Mock's wife had become convinced that people in their village were spreading rumors about her.
And she'd begun going around town terrorizing people to get back at them.
At this point, the monk leaned back and gave Mock this expectant look,
like he thought maybe Mock was going to apologize for his wife's behavior or something.
But to Mok, this information didn't make sense.
His wife definitely had talked about people spreading rumors about her,
and she was acting pretty strange and paranoid.
But to Mock, this information didn't make any sense.
On the one hand, his wife had mentioned
that she believed people were spreading
these awful rumors about her,
so Mock had heard that.
But the idea that she was really doing anything about it
other than being upset was just false.
I mean, how could she be out-terrorizing anybody
when she literally was at the house with him, like all day long?
She couldn't.
He was with her.
He would have seen it.
So, as respectfully as he could, Mock told the monk that he must be confused because there was just no way his wife was acting on any of her suspicions.
She might be upset about this stuff, but she's not terrorizing anyone.
But the monk just shook his head and told Mok straight up that, no, you're wrong.
Everyone else in the village knew there was something seriously wrong with his wife.
Like, everybody knows it. You're the only one who doesn't.
And before Mock could say anything else, the monk said to him, if he was smart, he would leave his wife right now and he would never look back.
And when Mock heard this, he did not believe the monk.
Instead, he actually realized that his wife must be telling the truth about how awful everybody was being, spreading these terrible rumors about her.
Like she wasn't being paranoid at all.
She had all the reason in the world to think people were out to get her or something.
So at this point, Mock dropped the polite act and just told the monk to leave him and his family alone.
And then Mock gathered up the wood that he had chopped down and began heading back towards his house.
But the next morning, Mock just couldn't get the conversation he had had with the monk out of his mind.
I mean, mostly he was just angry at whoever was making up these weird rumors about his wife that was causing, you know, people like the monk and maybe the fruit stand owner to say the weird things they were saying.
but also Mock didn't know what these rumors actually were.
He just knew that something was being said about his wife, it was upsetting his wife,
but he didn't know what the details were.
He figured if he did have the context, have the details,
then he could shut the rumors down much more effectively.
But he also really didn't want to bring this up to his wife again
because he knew it would just really upset her.
So he decided that what he needed to do was go back into the village,
market and go talk to that fruit stand owner. Clearly he knew more than he was letting on. So that morning,
Mock got up and as quietly as he could, he snuck out of the house while his wife and son were still
asleep, and he hurried off to the market. And even though it was barely dawn by the time he got there,
there was already a bunch of people that were setting up their stands. However, when Mock made his way
over to where the fruit stand had been when he had gone there a couple days earlier, he found it was
empty. And for some reason that Mock just couldn't even explain, this immediately gave him a really
bad feeling. So instead of waiting around to see if maybe the owner of the fruit stand showed up later,
Mock decided he would just go to the guy's house since he knew where he lived. So Mock left the village
center and jogged to this guy's house. It was a wooden building up on stilts, just like Mock's house,
except it was further away from the canal. When Mock got there, he climbed up a ladder to the porch,
and then he knocked on the front door.
But nobody answered.
And so he knocked again, but still there was no answer.
And then Maq pressed his ear to the door,
but he heard nothing.
It was like eerily silent.
And at this point, Mock just could not shake this feeling
that something was really wrong here,
like with the fruit stand owner.
So he just reached down and tried the doorknob,
and the door swung right open.
But as soon as it did,
Mok smelled something absolutely rancid inside of this
home. And so at this point, Mock, he covered his nose with his hand and continued yelling for the
fruit stand owner and began walking slowly into the home, looking around for the guy. But there was
no movement inside of the home, and he's calling out over and over again. And then eventually he
notices something on the ground. And he looks down and he sees, it's the fruit stand owner.
And he was just covered in blood and obviously dead. Mock sprinted out of the house. He climbed down
the ladder and just began running away as fast as he could, and he knew that what he should be
doing is going back to the village center to tell someone about what he had just found. But
Mok just couldn't bring himself to do it, because he just had this gut feeling that even though
he had no idea if his wife was in any way involved with this death, he just felt like based
on the rumors and the weird stuff with his wife, that everybody was going to blame her. So,
instead of running towards the village center, Mock just began running towards
his own house. And when he got close, he slowed down, sort of caught his breath, and he hoped that
it was still early enough that his wife and son would still be asleep and he could just sort of sneak
back in and figure out what to do from there, but without alerting his wife and having to explain
what was going on. However, just then, he was close enough to his house that he could see the balcony
that overlooked the water. And he looked up and he saw his wife was clearly awake. She was out on the
balcony with the baby on her hip. However, she didn't seem to notice Mock approaching. And so Mock,
you know, he's just walking slowly towards the house, thinking, you know, how he's going to explain
where he's been to his wife. He figured she's probably upset with him. He didn't know. But he's
watching her. And she, again, not aware of Mok, she reaches up and she grabs a lime off a nearby
lime tree that was sort of dangling over the balcony. And so she grabs the fruit and she pulls it
off the tree and she drops it. She fumbles the lime and the lime falls on the balcony and actually
goes and falls between one of the slats on the floorboards. And this balcony is up on stilts,
like the whole house is. And so the balcony was seven feet off the ground. And so when the lime
fell through the floorboards, it actually fell seven feet to the ground below. And so Mock, you know,
he's watching this happen. And this is not like some meaningful event to him. He's just sort of, you know,
clocking that she's dropped this lime and he's thinking she's going to, you know, grab a different
lime, right? But no, he watched as his wife sort of almost robotically kneeled down and then
put her arm into the slat that this lime had fallen through. Again, she still has not seen
mock yet. And he watched as her arm began to like stretch away from her body and down her arm
went. It stretched nearly seven feet until her hand grabbed the lime on the ground. And then our
arm was making these horrible crackling sounds as it retracted back up, back up through the floorboards,
and then she had her lime. And it was at that point that she turned and looked at Mock.
Mock at this point was horrified. And he just turned and ran. And this time, he went directly
to the center of the village, to the Buddhist temple, where that monk had come from, the one that
had basically tried to warn him about his wife. And so mock, he begins pounding on the door of this
temple, begging the monks to let him inside and to hide him from his wife. And eventually the
door is open. The monks immediately let him side, and they do hide it. And for a little while,
he's just, like, beside himself, Maq, he, like, can't even process what he just saw. He's,
he's telling himself that, you know, that couldn't have happened. Her arm couldn't have stretched that
far, but like it looks so real. He just, he couldn't reconcile what he had just experienced. And the monks,
for the most part, just kind of let Mock have his moment of just being totally upset. But then eventually
when Mock kind of calmed down, the monk who had originally come to him to warn him about his wife,
he came over to Mok and he said, I've got to tell you the truth about your wife. But they told Mock
that in order to do that, Mock was going to have to agree to do something that
was going to be incredibly painful. They would need him to allow them to exhum his beloved wife's
long-dead corpse. It would turn out that what everyone in the village knew, but Mok did not know,
was that his wife and son had both died during childbirth while he was away in the war. His wife's
body had literally been in the ground for months, but apparently her ghost was still around and
very attached to Mock and would not let anybody get between them. It was not until Mok did give
the monk's permission to exhum his wife's body that they could finally stop this haunting. And so
the monks ultimately carved out a circular-shaped piece of her skull and performed a Buddhist ritual
to trap her spirit inside the bone. Today in Prakonong, the village where Mok and his wife and his
son had lived, is now home to a permanent shrine to
may knock. She's seen by some as a very dangerous and terrifying ghost, and by others as a symbol of
love that is so powerful, it transcends death. A quick note about our stories. They are all based on
true events, but we sometimes use pseudonyms to protect the people involved, and some details
are fictionalized for dramatic purposes. The Mr. Ballin podcast, Strange, Dark, and Mysterious Stories,
is hosted and executive produced by me, Mr. Ballin. Our head of writing is Evan Allen,
Produced by Jeremy Bone and Cole Lacosio.
This episode was written by Karas Pash Cooper.
Research and fact-checking by Shelley Shoe, Samantha Van Hoose, Evan Beamer, Abigail Shumway, Camille Callahan, Alex Paul, Ben Fasiano.
Research and Fact-Checking Supervision by Stephen Ear.
Audio editing and post-produced by Whit Lacasio and Jordan Stidham.
Production support by Antonio Manada and Delana Corley.
Artwork by Jessica Clogston Kiner, theme song, Something Wicked, by Ross Bugden.
Thank you for listening to The Mr.
Ballin podcast. And just a reminder, every new and exclusive episode we put out on the Mr. Ballin podcast,
you can also now watch on the Mr. Ballin YouTube channel that very same day. And trust me,
some of these stories you truly have to see to believe. Again, my YouTube channel is just called
Mr. Ballin. If you want to listen to episodes one week early and ad free, you can subscribe to
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So that's going to do it.
I really appreciate your support.
Until next time, see you.
