MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - The Mistake
Episode Date: May 28, 2026Today’s podcast will feature 3 stories about people who made grave mistakes. The audio from all three stories has been pulled from our main YouTube channel, which is just called "MrBallen," and has ...been remastered for today's podcast. Story names, previews & links to original YouTube videos: #3 -- "The New Member" -- A church witnesses something horrifying as their pastor begins a ceremony (Original YouTube link -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3rccx8oyEk) #2 -- "Robinhood" -- He looked at his phone and knew his life was over... (Original YouTube link -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-upHQYZbTs) #1 -- "The Sailor’s Diagnosis" -- A doctor begins to lose his mind after declaring one of his patients dead (Original YouTube link -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S_v2HPbi5hM) You can WATCH all new & exclusive MrBallen podcast episodes on my YouTube channel, just called "MrBallen" - https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallen If you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballen Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
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Today's podcast will feature three stories about people who made grave mistakes.
The audio from all three of these stories has been pulled from our main YouTube channel
and has been remastered for today's episode.
The links to the original YouTube videos are in the description.
The first story you'll hear is called The New Member,
and it's about a group of church members who witness something horrifying
as their pastor begins a ceremony.
The second story you'll hear is called Robin Hood,
and it's about a teenager who looks at his phone and thinks his life is over.
And the third and final story you'll hear is called the Sailor's Diagnosis,
and it's about a doctor who begins to lose his mind after declaring one of his patients dead.
But before we get into today's stories,
if you're a fan of the Strange, Dark, and Mysterious delivered in story format,
then you come to the right place because that's all we do,
and we upload two, three, even four times every week.
So, if that's of interest to you,
please offer to buy the follow button in order of their favorite food,
fried chicken.
But before you hand it over, be sure to remove the crispy outer layer
from each piece. Okay, let's get into our first story called The New Member. At 10.30 a.m.
on October 30th, 2005, a 33-year-old pastor named Kyle Lake stood on a stage inside of the
University Baptist Church in Waco, Texas. Kyle had just finished delivering that morning sermon to his
congregation, which included about 800 people. And now he was about to welcome a new member, a young woman.
So Kyle had been the pastor of this church for the last seven years. And over that time, the church had really
grown and evolved, really directly because of Kyle's leadership. He was known as being a very
thoughtful and educated pastor, who was also known to be quite fun and progressive. He often would
play pranks on the congregation and keep things really light, even if he was in the middle of a very
important sermon. And people like that, it made him relatable. And so because of Kyle's youthful energy
that he clearly gave off, he had sort of gradually shifted the congregation to being a much more young
crowd. Predominantly the folks who attended the church were college kids, or roughly that age.
And also his wife was an attendee at the church, as were his three little kids, who at the moment,
as he was up on stage, they were across the hall attending kids' Bible study.
Now, for Kyle, welcoming a new member into this church had become a very big deal for him.
He in fact had this special ceremony he would perform for each and every new member.
And really, the whole congregation got behind this ceremony. And so today, Kyle was about to do
this ceremony with this new member, this young woman. And so Kyle, you know, in front of the whole
congregation, he calls this woman up, you know, come on up, we're going to do the ceremony to welcome
you to the church. And so the woman, she gets up and she walks up to the front of the stage, she smiles,
and Kyle says hello to her and sort of introduces himself, and the whole church is listening.
And then Kyle, as part of this ritual, moved to the very center of the stage, where the actual
ceremony was going to take place. And he was about to call the woman up to join him in the center
of the stage when there was a malfunction. Now, the malfunction itself was not really a huge
deal. All it did was just stop Kyle for a second and he had to stop talking to the new member and
he had to figure out what he was going to do, but quickly he saw a fix that didn't even require him to
leave the stage. However, the instant he actually made the fix when he fixed the malfunction,
as he was about to start talking to the whole audience again, he just began to scream.
Now, at first, nobody took this seriously because their pastor was known for playing pranks on the
congregation. And so everybody just thought it was a prank, albeit a strange one. I mean, he's
screaming at the top of his lungs, but everyone's sort of looking around like, this is a prank, right?
But then Kyle's screams began to include words. He began screaming, help, help me! And at that
point, it sort of clicked for the whole congregation that this was not a joke. Something was
terribly wrong. Even though they're looking up at him and nothing appeared to be wrong. Nothing made
sense. And so immediately it was like the church spiraled into chaos and confusion. People are
bowing their heads praying as fiercely as they could, praying for his safety. Others are sprinting
out of the church, not even knowing what to do. And still more were calling 911, like several people
calling 911. And then by the time the paramedics showed up. It was like people still had no idea
what actually was happening. In fact, honestly, the paramedics didn't. It was like, what is this?
But within a few days, they were able to figure out what happened. And it's surprised.
everyone. So the special ceremony that Kyle would perform for every new member was a baptism. And so
when Kyle moved to the very center of the stage and he actually called up the woman to join him in
the center of the stage, he actually was stepping into the baptismal pool. Picture like a hot tub,
waste high water, it's warm water. And so Kyle literally stepped into the hot tub and he's calling
up this woman to join him in the pool so she can be baptized. However, before this woman actually got to
the pool, Kyle has this malfunction. And all it was is his lapel mic? Shut off. It wasn't working
anymore. And because the church he was in was huge and cavernous, sound really didn't travel
well. He needed a microphone to project his voice. And so he had to stop the ceremony for a second
and find another microphone. Luckily, there was a stand with a microphone in it right within
arm's reach. And so, Kyle grabbed it. However, what Kyle didn't know was there actually was a second
malfunction that had happened either at this instant or just before, but either way, there was
another malfunction that he had no idea about. And that was that the heaters of the baptismal pool
that kept the water warm were damaged. And as a result of this damage, the water in that
pool had become electrically charged. And so the instant Kyle grabbed that microphone,
he grounded the electricity in the pool. Basically, he created a pathway for the electricity to travel
through, his body. When he began to scream, that was him being electrocuted. Despite the efforts of
first responders and the medical staff at the hospital, Kyle unfortunately did not survive. As for Kyle's
wife, who literally watched this happen from the front row of the church, she watched her husband be killed.
She ultimately sued the electrical company that installed those heaters in the baptismal pool, and she
would settle for an undisclosed amount of money. Our next story is called Robin Hood. In the spring of
In 2020, right when the COVID-19 pandemic was really kicking into high gear, students at the University
of Nebraska were told to move out of their dorms and move back home with their families to prevent
the spread of the virus. One student, 20-year-old Alex Kearns, who was enrolled at Nebraska on an
ROTC scholarship, was just as shocked as everybody else at how quickly this pandemic had turned
their life upside down. But in terms of going back home again, he wasn't that upset about it
because he was close with his family and he figured some unexpected time with them would be nice.
Once he got back to his hometown of Naperville, Illinois, which is an affluent suburb outside of Chicago,
he quickly fell into a quarantine routine, which consisted mostly of screen time and lounging around.
But in the evenings, he would put his screens away and he would go into the kitchen with his mother Dorothy,
and the two of them would chat for hours about all sorts of things.
One night, he told his mom that he was feeling kind of nervous about what he was going to do with his life after college,
that even though he was studying business out of the University of Nebraska, he didn't really know what he was going to do with that.
All he knew was that he wanted to find a way to help people.
And his mother and everybody that knew Alex would say that that's just Alex.
He was this really gentle, nice, awesome person that everybody just adored.
After being home for a few weeks, Alex was starting to get bored of his quarantine routine,
and he began looking for other things to do.
He had seen a number of ads for a new brokerage app called Robin Hood
that was becoming increasingly popular amongst people his age.
Unlike other trading platforms, Robin Hood was designed for the
the common person. There was not huge fees that needed to be paid by the investor as soon as they
logged on, and the app was very sleek, and it turned trading kind of into a game on the app.
Alex had a few thousand dollars in his bank account, and so we figured, you know what? What the heck?
I'll download Robin Hood and see what I can do. What's the worst that can happen?
After trading on Robin Hood for a couple of days, Alex was hooked, and he showed his family that
he was actually making a little bit of money, and he was learning about the stock market.
His parents would later recall when they found out he was using Robin Hood, they weren't concerned
because Alex had always been incredibly careful with his money, saving most of it and very rarely
spending much of it.
And so they figured, you know, he might lose his savings, but he's certainly not going to fall
into significant debt.
That's just not Alex.
Also, there was a safety mechanism in basic accounts on Robin Hood that protected first-time
users from going above $10,000 in debt.
So even if Alex tried to lose more than that, the app wouldn't allow him.
so long as he was using a basic account.
As the weeks went on, Alex got more and more confident in his trading ability and he got really
familiar with the Robin Hood app.
And one day he noticed there was one function he had not tried on the app called Options
Trading.
For context, traditional trading goes like this.
Somebody identifies a stock that they like and then they gamble on it.
And the way they gamble on it is they buy shares of that stock and if the stock increases
in value, they make more money.
If the stock loses value, they lose money.
Very simple.
But some people either can't afford the shares or don't want to buy the shares,
but they still want to get in on the action of the stock market.
And for those people, they can use something called options trading.
Instead of buying shares, options traders will basically sell an insurance policy
to other traders who have already purchased shares.
And this insurance policy they're offering is known as an option.
These option traders will go up to these shareholders,
and they'll say, for example, I'll give you $500 in exchange if your stock tanks and you're losing a ton of money,
you can exercise your option, i.e. cash in your insurance policy, and I, the option holder, will cover all of your
losses. But if your stock stays steady or gains in value, I still get to keep your $500. That's non-refundable.
Naturally, these options traders, they need to be savvy about which stocks they're prepared to cover with their
option because if that stock tanks and the shareholder decides to sell, sell, sell, i.e. exercise their
option, then the option holder is obligated to immediately buy all of the shares at a premium.
And if that shareholder has, let's say, hundreds of thousands of shares, well, too bad,
the option holder is buying all of them. So when Alex clicked on the options trading button
inside of his Robin Hood app, it brought him immediately to an application because Robin Hood
had to make sure anybody on their app that was going to be buying or selling options, they needed to be an
experienced trader. And they needed to understand the risks because they were much higher than a basic
account. There was no limit to how much debt someone could fall into in trading options.
Alex was a smart guy and a motivated trader, but he knew nothing about options trading. And so when he
saw this application, I'm sure he thought to himself, yeah, I know nothing about options trading.
There's no way I could possibly get into this. But he decided, you know, what the heck, I will apply
to go on to their options trading side just to see if they'll accept me.
So he fills out the application and almost immediately he is accepted onto that side of the platform.
It would later turn out that application was kind of a sham.
It did not really do very much to restrict access to that side.
Alex was surprised at his acceptance, but he was also very excited.
And right away, he started trading options and he was pretty good at it.
And pretty quickly he was making a little bit of money.
But then on June 11th, he got a notification on his phone from Robin Hood,
And so he pulled his phone up, he opened the app, and he saw his account was restricted.
He couldn't make any new trades, and he couldn't make any withdrawals.
And so as he looked at it, he scrolled down to the bottom of the page, and he saw his current balance.
And it read negative $730,000.
A trader that Alex had sold an option to was exercising his option because his stock had tanked.
And he owned over $700,000 worth of shares that now Alex was obligated to buy.
Alex couldn't believe what he was looking at and he immediately fired off an email to Robin Hood customer support saying there had to have been a mistake that he had done the math before he had sold that option and he thought at most he was exposed to losing maybe $10,000, certainly not $700,000.
And so after he sent this email, a couple of minutes later, he got a message back from Robin Hood, but it was just an automated response that just said, hey, you know, we got your email and we're busy and we'll be sure to be in touch with you as soon as we possibly can.
And so at this point, Alex is starting to panic a little bit because he's looking at his phone,
and this looks real. He's trying to go through his phone to find someplace that would show him this was a mistake,
but there's nothing that indicates this is a mistake.
So after a couple of hours, Alex is just laying in his bed, he can't sleep,
and he sends another message to the customer support team at Robin Hood,
pleading with them to please check his account.
There has to have been a mistake.
There's no way I would have exposed myself to $700,000 of debt.
But again, all he gets is an automated response that says we're busy and will be in touch with
you soon. A couple hours later at 3.26 a.m. Alex is still awake, probably pacing around his room,
totally panic-stricken, and he looks at his phone and there's another email from Robin Hood. And he's
thinking, oh my goodness, thank you. Someone's gotten in touch with me to tell me this has been a horrible
mistake. And so he opens his email and the header of the email is immediate action required.
And what it was was a notice for him to make his first payment on this enormous debt. It was going to be
about $170,000 that he had to pay in the next couple of days. And if he'd be, he'd,
didn't make this first payment, they would seek legal action against him. Alex was probably terrified,
and also he was ashamed and didn't want to tell his parents. And so all alone in his room, he writes
a third email to Robin Hood, now straight up begging them, someone please look at my account. This has
got to be wrong. But again, he just got the automated message. And so for the rest of the night,
Alex probably laid on his bed thinking the world was just crashing in on him. He knew there was no
way he could pay this enormous bill and if he didn't pay it he would either go to jail or hand it off
to his family which would financially ruin them and just the idea of doing that to the people he loved
made him sick he just could not face that as one of his options and so by the time the sun came up the
next morning Alex had come to a conclusion about what he was going to do he started by pulling out his phone
and pulling up the Robin Hood app and screenshoting the dashboard that showed his enormous negative balance
And then he went on his laptop and he wrote a long letter to his family,
and he put it on his desktop so they would understand why he did what he was about to do.
And then he left the house, hopped on his bike, and peddled away.
A couple hours later, a police officer arrived at the Curran's household,
and he told them that their son, their brother, Alex, was unfortunately deceased.
He had thrown himself in front of a train.
The family was beyond devastated.
This caught them so completely off guard. It didn't make any sense.
Alex was a happy, funny guy with plans for the future. He had shown no indications that he wanted to harm himself. It really just didn't make any sense. And so at some point that day, they went to his laptop, they opened it up, and there was that note he wrote. And in this letter, he explains to his family how he had fallen into this enormous debt on Robin Hood. He attaches the screenshot that showed his huge negative balance. And he said it was just crazy that this company would allow a 20-year-old with no income to be exposed to over $700,000 of debt. He thought that was crazy.
but he admitted he didn't know that much about options trading and probably shouldn't have been accepted into their program to begin with.
And then he tells his family that he did want to live, but unfortunately this was the only way he could get out of this problem without inflicting enormous financial penalties on his family.
And so he believed he was protecting his family when he took his life.
24 hours later Robin Hood sent Alex another email and it said, oh, that $730,000 debt that we said you owed, that was a mistake.
mistake. You don't know anybody any money. The next and final story of today's episode is called
the Sailor's Diagnosis. One morning in the summer of 1876, a doctor named Lewis Allard walked down
the hallway of a hospital in Pepit Tahiti. Tahiti is an island east of Australia.
Lewis was just about to step into his office when he heard the hospital doors open, and he looked
over to see a few policemen walking in carrying this unconscious man on a stretcher. Just from the looks of
the way this guy was dressed, Dr. Allard could tell he was a sailor. So a lot of Dr. Allard's patients
were sailors because Pepit was a port town. So if people got sick or injured at sea and then docked
in Pepete, they would come to the hospital right there. So Dr. Allard walked over to the police
and asked them what was going on with the sailor. And the officers explained that this man's
friends had found him unresponsive that morning apparently after a very long night of drinking.
Dr. Allard nodded and then motioned for the police to follow him and bring this guy with him,
and he led them over to an exam room where he had them lay out the sailor on a table so that
Dr. Allard could look him over.
The sailor appeared to be pretty young.
He was in his 20s maybe and he appeared very healthy and strong, but when the doctor checked
for a pulse, there was none.
And so after checking a couple more times to make sure it wasn't just a very weak pulse,
the doctor ultimately concluded that, you know, this sailor was not just unresponsive.
The sailor was dead.
And if Dr. Allard had to guess, he very likely died from alcohol poisoning, given his friend said, you know, the night before, this guy had had a really heavy night of drinking, and here he was, so alcohol poisoning.
So this hospital had a policy for how to handle the death of foreign sailors in Tahiti.
Basically, the doctor who pronounced the sailor dead would then arrange for them to be buried in a public cemetery.
And in fact, the hospital kept these cheap wooden coffins in the hospital morgue for this exact purpose.
And so Dr. Allard followed protocol and asked the police to go inform the sailor's friends of his death,
and then the doctor went to the hospital's morgue to arrange for a coffin.
A few hours later, Dr. Allard was back in his office when he heard a knock at his door.
He told whoever it was to come in, but when the door swung open, the doctor was surprised at who he saw there.
It was the four local gravediggers who he had called earlier to bury that sailor who had just died.
Now, generally speaking, Dr. Allard had virtually no interaction.
with the grave diggers after he hired them.
He would tell them to bury the body and they would do that and go on their separate way.
Like there was no reason for the gravediggers to come back and check in with the doctor.
But as the doctor is looking at these four guys trying to figure out what was going on here,
he quickly assessed that, you know, these guys weren't here just to chat.
They were here because they looked spooked.
And before Dr. Allard could ask any questions about, you know, what was going on here,
one of these grave diggers began to speak.
And then sort of a rapid and sort of anxious tone, he said,
said, you know, as we were carrying the coffin over to the grave site, it began to shake like
the person inside the coffin was alive.
And then we heard all these moaning sounds coming from inside of this nailed shut coffin,
and we all got so panicked that we just dropped the coffin and we ran here to tell you.
Now, Dr. Allard was pretty surprised by what he was hearing, but he's also thinking that,
you know, when he hired these four grave diggers, they were at a local pub and they were drinking.
And so he's thinking to himself, you know, maybe something strange happened, you know, with this
coffin, or much more likely, these four guys are drunk. And that what they've sort of said here
is just some figment of their imagination, that they're not professional. They're just drunk guys
who are coming here screwing up my day. And so sort of annoyed, Dr. Allard's like, hey, I'm telling you,
that guy is dead, okay? This isn't a ghost scenario. But if you're so worried about it,
why don't you go get a police officer, have them come over and inspect the coffin, you know,
make sure the person is really dead in there. And then once they confirm that, please,
do your job and bury the sky.
And so the gravediggers, they kind of, you know, look down sort of awkwardly and they're like,
okay, you know, we'll go do that.
Then they turned and they left.
And then Dr. Allard got back to work.
And then a few hours later, Dr. Allard heard another knock on his door.
And this time when the door opened, it was a police officer.
And it was actually the officer that the four gravediggers had gone and found at Dr. Allard's suggestion.
And he had gone over, checked the coffin.
And, you know, the coffin wasn't moving.
It wasn't making any weird sounds.
It was sealed shut.
There was nothing going on.
And so the officer eventually instructed the gravediggers, you know, to go ahead and bury it.
There's nothing going on here.
And so the gravediggers had at that point buried the coffin and that had been that.
And so the officer was here just to tell Dr. Allard that, hey, it's all good.
You know, he's buried.
We can move on.
About a week later, Dr. Allard had basically forgotten about this whole snafu around the coffin
and whatever was going on with it.
He was sort of onto the next thing.
and he was out like he normally was at night to go for a walk.
And the area that he liked to walk in the most was actually the cemetery,
not because he had some sort of morbid obsession,
but because, you know, it was often, you know, vacant.
There was nobody there.
And so it was a peaceful place to go walking.
And so, you know, he's strolling through the cemetery, like usual,
and he's not seeing anybody like usual.
But as it began to get dark,
he was walking down this one row of headstones,
and he looked up ahead,
and he could have sworn he saw somebody standing behind a tree
with their body sort of half out of the tree, half behind the tree, sort of half obscured.
And he stopped and he's looking and the whole thing just sort of felt off.
Like, what is this person doing?
Is that a person?
Like, what's going on here?
And so he's staring.
And as he's looking, sure enough, this dark silhouette steps out from behind this tree.
And the way they stepped out, it was like they stepped out, turned and faced Dr. Allard
and just stood there, clearly looking right at Dr. Allard.
But they're pretty far away from Dr. Allard.
Like, there's a good distance between them.
But immediately, Dr. Allard felt threatened by this person, or whatever it was.
He didn't even know if it was a person.
He couldn't tell if it was his mind playing tricks on him or not.
He's just staring at this thing that looked like it was looking at him.
And so Dr. Allard, instinctively, who's now feeling a little bit frightened, turned and just
started walking away, like he was done walking in the cemetery for the night.
And so he turns and he starts walking, but then it's like the hairs in the back of his
neck stood up.
He just felt like this person, whoever it is, they're still watching me.
And so he stopped after just.
a couple of steps and he turned back around and now this figure is clearly marching directly towards
Dr. Allard. They're almost running. They're walking real fast right towards Dr. Allard. And so now Dr.
Allard's terrified. He knows there's something happening here. Why would this person be doing this?
Like, is it a person? Like what's happening here? And so Dr. Allard, he turns and starts to run.
And as he's running, he hears this horrible high-pitched scream echo across the entire cemetery.
And then he looks back one last time, and he sees the face of this figure, this person charging
towards him.
And it's the same guy who died a week ago, the same sailor that he buried, the one who presumably
was moving around in the coffin, the grape diggers were so scared of.
It was him, and he jumped on Dr. Allard and began throttling him.
And Dr. Allard's on the ground staring at this ghastly face, this scream is coming out
of him.
He had no idea what was going on.
And then Dr. Allard just blacked out.
A few minutes later, Dr. Allard came to, and he sat up suddenly and he's looking around,
and there's nobody there.
It's just a dark, vacant cemetery, no sign of the dead sailors, ghost, or whatever, or whoever it was.
They're gone.
And Dr. Allard's just sitting there, his heart's racing still, and he's telling himself,
like, did that even just happen?
Like, it felt so real his neck was sore from, you know, what he felt was this guy, this thing
attacking him.
But at the same time, he was so sure that the face that he had seen on this person,
was the dead sailor's face, but how could that be? He's dead. He's buried. How could that be?
And so ultimately, Dr. Allard, he got up and he hustled back to his house.
But over the coming weeks, Dr. Allard sort of spiraled into madness.
Because it was like every day, all the time he would see out of the corner of his eye for a second, like a glimpse,
of this dead sailor's ghost. And it was always that face, that ghastly face, that shrieking face,
looking right at him and he'd turn and, you know, the face would disappear.
But Dr. Allard, he just felt like he was almost being haunted, that something had happened,
you know, like that attack in the cemetery, it had felt so real.
He felt like now this ghost was literally haunting him.
But he couldn't tell anyone.
I mean, he's a doctor.
What's he going to do?
Tell people that a ghost is haunting him?
He didn't know what to do.
And so what he ended up doing after several weeks is he just began staying home and laying
in bed, basically feigning illness to avoid leaving the house.
And he would just lay there with his eyes closed basically all day.
because as soon as he opened his eyes, he would see this dead sailor's face.
You really was losing his mind.
And then eventually, when Dr. Allard knew he had to stop basically staying in bed all day
and go back to the hospital and sort of function in society again, go back to work.
You know, otherwise people were going to start asking questions here, like, what's going
on with you?
And he didn't have an answer, you know?
When that time came and he knew it was sort of like, okay, go back to normal or tell
people about this, well, what Dr. Allard ultimately did is he decided to,
walk up to the roof of his house and throw himself off. He literally couldn't live with what he
believed was this ghost haunting him 24-7. When the doctor's close friends found out that the doctor
had taken his own life, they immediately went to the police and said, hey, wait a minute,
like, we think this has something to do with what he was dealing with over the past several weeks.
So the doctor, despite not wanting to tell anybody about, you know, his haunting, he did sort of
begin to tell a couple of his close friends. Now, he was sort of subtle about it, but he began
telling people that he's like, yeah, I just keep seeing that dead sailor's face. Everywhere I go,
I just keep seeing him. Now, he didn't highlight the fact that he was basically losing his
mind over it and thought it was literally a ghost, but a couple of his close friends were aware
that it almost seemed like, you know, Dr. Allard was effectively having a mental breakdown over this
dead sailor. And they did sort of connect that Dr. Allard sort of felt haunted by this dead sailor.
said close friends, ultimately went to the police and said, hey, I know this is a stretch,
but the doctor kind of thought he was being haunted by this dead sailor before he died.
We think that has to do with why he took his own life.
And sort of amazingly, the police, the way they responded to this was, okay, we're going to look
into this.
We're going to investigate the haunting, so to speak.
And what they did is they exhumed the coffin of that dead sailor.
They didn't know what else to do.
They just decided they would do that.
And so they raised the coffin out of the ground, and they open it up, and they cannot believe what they see.
So it would turn out those four grave diggers had been totally justified in being scared about what they thought they heard and felt in that coffin when they were going to bury it.
Because the sailor was not dead.
He was just so drunk that it felt like he was dead.
They couldn't feel his pulse.
Dr. Allard had been wrong.
The sailor was not dead.
He was totally alive.
And so as he was being carried over to the grave site,
to be buried, he really was moving around inside the coffin and moaning because he was horribly
hung over, but totally alive and grappling with the fact that he's now, you know, confined
inside of this coffin. He likely had no idea what was going on, so you can imagine the types of
sounds and things he might be doing. And so the gravediggers, they were right to be scared.
They did get a police officer. The police officer came over. And for whatever reason, when he inspected
the coffin, you know, he saw it was sealed, there was no movement inside the coffin. It was totally
quiet, so, you know, the sailor inside, he just wasn't moving or making any sound. And so the police
officer greenlit burying him. So the living sailor inside the coffin is buried underground by these
gravediggers and they go their separate ways afterwards. But then that sailor wakes up again.
You know, he begins thrashing around after being buried in the ground and he actually managed to
break out of the coffin and climb out of the ground. He saved himself. He literally, you know,
survived being buried alive. But he was furious at the doctor who so cavalierly just decided he was
dead and now go bury him. And so he decided he would play a prank on the doctor to get back at him.
So what he did is he filled his coffin up with rocks and he sealed it back up and he reburied it so
nobody would know anything. And then for the next week or so, he just kind of hit out and didn't
let anybody know that he was actually still alive. And then after about a week, he knew the doctor
took his walks in that cemetery, and so he hid behind a tree in the cemetery and waited for the
doctor to be alone making his walk. And when he saw him, it was the sailor fully alive in the flesh,
stepping out from behind the tree, looking at the doctor. That was him. It really was the
sailor. And he really did run forward, shrieking, pretending to be a ghost. And he attacked
Dr. Allard, basically giving him the impression that his angry ghost was attacking him. And then after
Dr. Allard passed out on the ground, the sailor ran off.
But for Dr. Allard, who fully believed that sailor was dead,
can you imagine what he thought when he saw, you know, the sailor attacking him
and shrieking in the middle of the cemetery?
He fully believed that was the sailor's ghost,
and he had this totally real experience getting attacked by the ghost.
And so even though he survived the encounter, it drove him mad.
He began seeing the dead sailor, the ghost, everywhere he went,
and it eventually drove him to kill himself.
And so when the police,
opened up that coffin, all they saw were all the rocks the sailor had left behind. But following
the doctor's suicide, that sailor apparently skipped town and was never seen again. 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 Lacassio. Research and fact-checking by
Shelly Scho. Samantha Van Hoose. Evan Beamer. Abigail Schumway. Camille Callahan, Alex Paul,
Ben Fasiano. Research and fact-checking supervision by Stephen Ear. Audio editing and post-produced by
Whitel and Jordan Stidham. Production support by Antonio Manata 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
an 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
listen to episodes one week early and ad free, you can subscribe to SiriusXM Podcast Plus on Apple
podcasts or visit seriousxm.com slash podcast plus to listen with Spotify or another app of your choice.
So that's going to do it. I really appreciate your support. Until next time, see ya.
