The Dark Somnium - The Moon is Very Angry | Scary Stories from The Internet
Episode Date: January 20, 2026This creepypasta scary story is from the nosleep subreddit, written by Dopabeane, make sure to check out the original story and support the author! "The moon is very angry" https://www.reddit.com/r/...nosleep/comments/kau161/the_moon_is_very_angry/ Send your scary stories to: Darksomniumcontact@gmail.com Or submit your scary story on our subreddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/thedarkgathering Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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On December 19th, 2012, the Eastern Pacific Ocean began to glow.
We thought it was a freak accident, a trick of wind and atmosphere, of fog, and the full moon.
We were wrong.
I still remember how breathtakingly beautiful it looked, how even my old TV screen couldn't
obscure the clarity and purity of that light.
You remember this as clearly as I do.
You don't know it yet, but you will.
This memory is etched deeply into all of us, a permanent stain on the deepest, most immutable
level of our subconscious.
You weren't supposed to remember, not ever.
But trust me, you have to remember it now, because the moon is very angry.
There are memories inside every last one of us.
The glowing sea is one of them, just one of a hundred thousand memories we locked away to
save ourselves.
Memories we weren't even supposed to know we have.
Things you were never meant to remember.
But you have to remember them now, because the moon is very angry.
Admittedly, the memories are a little different for each of us.
It doesn't make sense, does it?
After all, just because we were all at the same ballgame or the same Christmas parade
or witness the same crime scene doesn't mean we all remember things the exact.
exact same way.
We can't.
It's not possible.
But even though we don't have the exact same memories, we all remember the same thing.
We remember that once and twice, three times, ten times, and a hundred times and more, so
many more.
The moon was very angry.
This is my memory.
And earth-shaking, bone-shattering, cosmos-cracking thrum, and then light, smooth, liquid
light, bathing the earth in curtains of silver-blue, spilling and spreading until darkness ceased
to exist, until there was nothing but light, nothing but the moon.
Think.
Remember the thrum.
Remember the way the ground, the earth, reality itself shook until there should have been
nothing left.
how even though there should have been nothing, there were still you.
Remember the light, silver and blue and lovely.
Remember how it flooded us and drowned every shadow in its radiance.
You can remember if you really try.
At first you might only sense an echo of a dream, a shadow of a memory you don't even know
you've forgotten.
Maybe you'll have a glimpse, a fraction of a second of the silver light spilling across
the ground. Maybe you'll remember a loved one desperately covering your screaming mouth as the
light swells. Maybe you'll see a hand, silvered and quick as a startled bird under the
ruptured moon reaching for you. Or maybe you'll see eyes. Wide, dead, empty eyes reflecting the beautiful
silver light. That was the first time the moon was very angry. The second time was different. The first time
was instant, but the second time was slow. So slow we blamed it on the faulty equipment
or broken instruments for months. It started with the strangest lightning we've ever seen. Beautiful,
silver lightning, smooth and blade-like, with none of the jagged edges or ozonic burn of normal lightning.
Then one night, that lightning spread across the sky. A vast and tattered spiders web
Knitting itself together as the world watched in awe.
It grew and grew and grew, overtaking everything.
Our communication systems died.
Our entire grid fizzled into nothing.
And everything went dark.
When the world was fully dark, the moon broke apart and grew and spread.
A shifting mandala of blinding silver that covered the sky, flooding the earth with hungry
light that swallowed the ground, swallowed the darkness.
Swallowed everything until nothing remained but the sea of light.
And us, only the vast ocean of radiant silver and our screams as the light began to eat us too.
There was a third time and a fourth time and a fifth time.
The sixth time there was lightning again, but not on earth.
It had learned, you see.
The moon always learns from the mistakes.
So this time, the lightning came from the moon itself.
Vast, whip-like arcs of blinding light visible from every corner of the earth.
The aurora borealis woven into ropes that danced and spun across the crated surface like
rabid demons.
The lightning blinded those who looked too long and drove the rest of us insane.
When the lightning finally broke open and spilled its torrential radiance, drowning the earth
in a pure silver flood.
We were calmed.
We were happy.
A planet of the insane, soothed and quieted by a thing that existed only to swallow us.
I don't remember that time very well.
In fact, I barely remember it at all.
I don't know how we escaped.
How we outran the moon that time, only that somehow we did.
This will sound insane to you, but it is important and it is true.
There is only one moon, one moon but many Earths, many plains, and infinity of realities.
Think of these realities as threads, an ocean of threads, endless and eternal spreading
in every direction, like a sunset sky with a palette of colors ranging from blinding brilliance
to utter darkness.
The threads that are the farthest apart are so different from each other that we cannot even
comprehend the magnitude of that difference.
But that doesn't matter.
What matters is that each thread is so similar to each of its neighbors that, except for
a handful of the tiniest, most insignificant of details, they're identical.
That is how we outrun the moon.
By swinging our thread into the nearest neighboring thread and sliding into it, joining
it, overtaking it, swallowing it, becoming it.
In becoming it, we are able to forget the night the moon was very angry, and we are none
the wiser for the change, except, perhaps, for a letter transposed here or there, or a half-remembered
product line vanishing into the ether.
Maybe a familiar logo inexplicably altered, a believed cartoon missing an article of clothing,
or a dignitary dying twenty years after you watched their televised funeral at school.
You don't notice these things often, who has time for such tiny, meaningless differences,
but when you do notice, you come dangerously close to remembering a silent ocean of silver
light and dead, wide eyes as numerous as the stars.
And deep in your heart, you decide to keep forgetting.
That is why we outrun the moon, to save ourselves and to forget it.
It's what I've dedicated my life to, me and a thousand others, building bridges to other
threads to save our reality, changing planes of existence the way actors change costumes,
clawing desperately at the threads of reality to outrun something that should not be.
There's more to it, of course, but it doesn't matter.
In the end, all that matters is that outrunning the moon is the most important work in
the history of our civilization.
maybe even the history of our universe.
It is the most important thing anyone has ever done, and we messed up.
The moon was angry a seventh time, and an eighth, and a tenth, and a twentieth, and a hundredth,
and a thousandth, and more.
The moon was angry a seventh time, and an eighth, and a tenth, and a twentieth, and a hundredth,
and a thousand, and more.
So many, many more, and we outran them all.
So many worlds drowned in light, so many threads overtaken, so many realities swallowed by ours,
swallowed by us.
Now, something happens when you start combining threads.
Any knitter or seamstress can tell you that when you pull threads or twist them together
or snake them around each other, they tangle.
Once they've tangled long enough and badly enough, they fray and they break.
time when the moon was angry, the problem started with geomagnetic storms.
Small ones, we thought, barely blips on our radar.
But then they kept coming, and they kept growing, growing and growing and growing, and growing.
Solar storms, cornal mass ejections of sizes and impacts that until that point had only ever
been theoretical.
Events that wiped out everything we'd ever built, that burned holes the size of the size of
of countries in our atmosphere, leaving us broken, burned, and dying.
We were so relieved when the moon finally came for us, that glorious light, cool, silver
blue, spilling through the holes in the atmosphere like ghostly waterfalls and flooding
the ruined earth, like water extinguishing a wildfire.
And as soon as the light drowned the world, the moon grew.
It grew into something it shouldn't be, something it wasn't.
Something that was somehow everything, something that was not and had never been our moon,
something that was triumphant, something that had won, but something that was still very, very angry.
We thought there would be enough threads to last forever, an eternity of realities, an endless
supply of worlds just beyond the moon's bleeding light, but we were wrong.
We've tangled the threads together for too long now, creating a Gordian knot so ruined it no longer has a beginning or an end.
It no longer even remembers what it was like to be threads.
Now it only knows what it means to be a knot.
It is insanity on an incomprehensible scale, a scale that makes our entire universe barely
a cell in comparison.
But as any doctor can tell you, it takes just one cell, a single,
solitary, disruptive cell to disease an entire body.
And in our panic to outrun the moon, we have diseased everything.
We all know it.
We all feel it.
Things are not where they should be, or they are where they should not be.
Things are not quite what we remember.
Sometimes it feels like they change before our eyes in ways we can barely bring ourselves
to examine.
is right, and the more we try to fight it, the worse it seems to get. In the end, it was all for
nothing. While we can outrun the moon for a time, we can never escape it. There are many worlds,
but there is only one moon, and it always finds us. The moon, or whatever now pretends to be our
moon, whatever swallowed our moon, always learns. And it learned that coming from the sky was perhaps
not its best option, so it decided to come another way.
And one night, in December 2012, the Eastern Pacific Ocean began to glow.
It shone a breathtaking silver blue.
At first, we thought it was a freak occurrence, a trick of atmosphere and clouds and moonlight
that conspired to infuse the ocean with such rich silver radiance.
But then the light spread down, down, down, flooding the abyss its sea.
itself with light, eating darkness that had always been, darkness that was older than the earth
itself.
Animals died.
Millions of them, billions of them.
Fish, crustaceans, rays and urchins, starfish and eels, sharks and whales, all dying
and rising to the surface, carried upon the tides in a gargantuan raft of dead white eyes
and slick, rotting flesh.
I still remember how the light bled between the bodies.
lining each bloated carcass in cleanest burning silver.
Then one night the light came out of the sea, rising like a sphere, like a second earth,
until it exploded, a great pulsating blister that burst and drowned everything in radiant
silver.
Something full of dead, flat eyes, something that gave those eyes to us.
I know you don't want to remember.
I know you believe that you don't remember.
But you have to remember anyway.
You have to remember because there are no other places for us.
No neighboring thread that can absorb our reality.
We've gone as far as we can go.
We've tangled every thread we can.
This is our last thread.
Our last plane.
Our last reality.
Our last hope.
We are at the end of the line and the moon is waiting for us.
You have to remember that where there was,
were once threads, there was only a knot.
You have to remember this because within the knot are strands.
Small, hidden places big enough for one or two or ten or a hundred of us.
Broken, twisted pieces, frail rope bridges swinging over the bright and howling silver
chasm of reality.
You need to find those bridges and you need to get out.
But you can only find a bridge if you remember.
So, do what you have to.
Lucid dreaming, regression therapy, meditation, even drugs, whatever it takes to remember,
whatever it takes to find a bridge, whatever it takes to remember.
Some of you will find good worlds.
Happy lives and safe threads hidden deep within the knot, so deep that the moon might never
find you.
Some of you will enter bad worlds, old worlds, nightmare worlds.
I am sorry for that.
I can't help you.
I would if I could, but the knot is always shifting.
There's no way to predict which bridge you'll find, but trust me.
Any world, yes, even a nightmare world, is better than a world where the moon is very angry.
Now the moon is angry again.
One night very soon, you will look up the sky in awe because the stars will be beautifully
bright, pure, clean, and lovely.
And then they will begin to bleed.
So will the moon.
Their blood will be silver.
It will be radiance.
It will cover the earth.
And when it has flooded us for the final time, as we scream and drown in its sea of light,
the moon will open all of its eyes.
I know you don't want to know this.
I know you have decided that it isn't true, but it is true.
It is, and it's time to remember that the moon is very angry.
