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The Patient Who Wouldn't Leave

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9:28 am
June 20, 2009


Diogenes

NJ

Investigator in Training

posts 18

 I was working the 11-7 shift as a charge nurse in a nursing home.  There was a patient named “Sam“ (not his real name). Sam had come to the home after a mugger had attacked him with a tire iron. The doctors had saved his life by removing the left side of his skull and part of his brain.  Sam’s head looked like a basketball that  was deflated on one side.  Despite not really being able to take care of himself,  he could read, watch TV,  and engage in his favorite pastime, watching the young  female nurses and aides. He wouldn’t do anything but put his arm around a girl’s shoulder to say ‘Thank You‘ when she picked up his dinner tray.  That was it. So Sam became something of the nursing home mascot. But as it happens in this business,  Sam died of a blood infection six months after I started there.
   
The night of his death, we were gathered around the desk for the report from Sandy, the 3-11 nurse to our shift-me and three nurse’s aides.  When Sandy came to Sam’s name, she said “Sam died at about 3:30 this after…”.  Suddenly a call light came on.  Everyone stared at the light board. The call was coming from Room 30. That room had been locked ever since the relatives had taken his belongings away…Sam’s belongings.  The call was coming from Sam’s empty, locked room.

We all went down the hall to see what this was about. We thought that another patient had probably gotten into the room and put on the call bell.  Sam’s room was open, lights were on, call bell was pushed in ( old fashioned call light. Shape like a bell, you had to push the button in the center to call and turn it off by twisting the edge of the bell). Only one problem, no patient was up, the door was not forced,  it was unlocked, all the staff were at the desk, the only one that had the key was the charge nurse and the door was locked when I made rounds not more then ten minutes before.
   
I mumbled something about loose wire. I twisted the call bell off, turned the room lights off, locked the door and went with the rest of the staff back to the Nurse’s Station.  Sandy started the report again.  She didn’t get more than 3 minutes into the report, when Sam’s call light came on again. We went down to find the room opened, lights on and call bell on, all patients in bed. I turned the call bell off, the lights off, and locked the room up again. Back to the desk.  Report started again.  The light came on again. By this time it was more nuisance than scary.  So we decided to leave it on, continue report so that the other shift could leave.
   
After report, I went down to the room, turned off the call bell, replaced the old cord with a new call bell cord, turned off the room lights, and locked the door again. The bell stayed off but the signal on the board stayed on. We went down the longest hall- Sam’s hall- to start our work. As we passed Sam’s room the door was open but the lights were off. The Nurses aides felt a cold breeze up their skirts( remember Sam liked the ladies.)  At that I went into the room to check if someone had opened a window. No window was open and no air conditioner  was on in the room. I closed the door and locked the door again.  And we continued.  After we finished down that hall, we went past Sam’s room again. The door was still closed and locked. By the time we finished  the 1st round it was        2 AM.  Back at the desk, the call light in Sam’s room was off.  We forgot about Sam.
   
We drank our, by now, cold coffee. I did my paper work and the aides exchanged small talk. At 3 AM, we started the second round down the long hall again. This time Sam’s door was open and the females felt an even colder breeze. I went into the room. It was like a vacuum as if the air had been sucked out. I opened the windows but no air could dispel the vacuum. I had had enough. I yelled, “Sam you’re dead!  You spent enough time in this place. Get out of here!”  I closed the windows, locked the door again, and joined the aides for rounds.  I didn’t go in that room until around 6:00 AM. All four of us went for one last look. No vacuum, no breeze, sun shining through the window. Nothing to prove anything happened that morning.  We didn’t want to tell the 7-3 shift and risk the whole day looking at ink blots, so we kept the occurrences to ourselves but this was only the beginning.  We were not prepared for what was going to happen next.
   
The following night, I get a call at home from Sandy. She asked me if anything happened on 11-7 shift. I said “why?” Sandy stated this tale.
   
“Well when we were picking up the dinner trays we were one tray over.  We passed out 26 trays and we picked up 27 trays.”
“Somebody miscounted.” I said.

“That may have happened.  Only the 27th tray was outside Sam’s Room just as he had left it when he was alive…exactly as he left it.”

“Somebody is pulling a prank on you, Sandy”, I said.

“I don’t think so because when I stood up from taking the tray,  I felt an arm around my shoulder just like Sam had put it. I was the only one down that hall.”

I then told her what had happened the previous morning. She said, “Well, it looks like we have ghost to add to the census.”   

That wasn’t the end of the story.  A week later another patient was admitted to Room 30.  A retired university professor. One night her light came on. She had seen a man staring at her from outside her window.  When I asked her what the man looked like, she said that he was not normal looking.  The left side of his head was deflated like an old volleyball (she used to play volleyball a lot in her younger days).  I told her that I would go around the building and see if I could see him. The police were called to look for a potential prowler.  They found no one and no footprints outside the window; no grass disturbed. But I knew who it was.  When I told the Nurse’s Aides, they knew who it was.  Sam was back! Over the years every female patient that was in that room saw Sam staring at them through the window.  No male patient would ever see him.  For you see,  Sam liked the girls.

I left the nursing home some years later so don’t know how long Sam stuck around.  But these events were experienced and/or confirmed by various employees and patients.  In my career working in nursing homes,  reports like this are relatively common.  I don’t know what to make of this, except that we just don’t know what happens after death and maybe some people just want to linger where they felt most comfortable.

 

The Greatest Emotion Man Can Experience is the Mysterious. It stands at the Door of True Science. He that knows it not, No longer can dream, no longer can wonder, is as good as dead and his eyes are dull – Einstein

10:46 am
June 20, 2009


Revenant

Hopelessly Locked In A "Fear Cage"

Lead Investigator

posts 1393

A very interesting story.  Thank you for sharing it.

It was a very detailed account, which I liked very much.  I also like how you reacted in a very reasonable and logical fashion to some very unusual circumstances.  I only have a couple of questions.  In Sam's hall, whether a room is occupied or not, are all the rooms still locked?  Also, in this same hall, did any patient have any sort of background in lock-picking?  Such as a trade or perhaps having a criminal background in which breaking and entering was common for them at one time?  You can see where I'm going with my last question.  Was there a patient on that floor who could have really missed Sam, gotten out of his own room, and kept entering Sam's?

Well, even if there was…it doesn't explain the man with an odd-shaped head outside the window.  It's the shape of the head that really throws a wrench in any hoax theory.  Very weird…and a bit creepy too.  I'm sure the ladies who frequent our forum will love that imagery.  I can hear blinds being lowered and curtains being drawn as I type this…

Again, thanks for sharing the story.  Very unusual… 

"Skepticism is not a position, it's a process." -Dr Michael Shermer

11:30 am
June 20, 2009


Queen of the Nerds

Orange County, CA

Investigator

posts 105

What an awesome story! It sounds like Sam had a loving home at the end of his life… so loving that he doesn't want to leave, haha.

If you believe in telekinesis, raise my hands.

1:33 pm
June 20, 2009


Diogenes

NJ

Investigator in Training

posts 18

Revenant said:

A very interesting story.  Thank you for sharing it.

It was a very detailed account, which I liked very much.  I also like how you reacted in a very reasonable and logical fashion to some very unusual circumstances.  I only have a couple of questions.  In Sam's hall, whether a room is occupied or not, are all the rooms still locked?  Also, in this same hall, did any patient have any sort of background in lock-picking?  Such as a trade or perhaps having a criminal background in which breaking and entering was common for them at one time?  You can see where I'm going with my last question.  Was there a patient on that floor who could have really missed Sam, gotten out of his own room, and kept entering Sam's?

Well, even if there was…it doesn't explain the man with an odd-shaped head outside the window.  It's the shape of the head that really throws a wrench in any hoax theory.  Very weird…and a bit creepy too.  I'm sure the ladies who frequent our forum will love that imagery.  I can hear blinds being lowered and curtains being drawn as I type this…

Again, thanks for sharing the story.  Very unusual… 


No, most of the patient in that hall had  Organic Brain Syndrome and Alzheimer’s. We did have some, as we call in the trade,  “Houdinis” Patient that could get out of any restraint we would put them in.  By restraint I mean a vest  designed to keep someone in bed with the lease amount of force.  But no patient down that hall capable of finding a lock let alone picking it.

About the doors.   Patient were never locked in a room because of safety and legal reasons. Some of these people would climb over the bed rails and fall or attack their room mates.  This was a nursing home not a psychiatric hospital were the rules are somewhat different. It would be imprisonment to lock these patients in their rooms.  So all the doors were opened except the empty rooms which were locked.

The Greatest Emotion Man Can Experience is the Mysterious. It stands at the Door of True Science. He that knows it not, No longer can dream, no longer can wonder, is as good as dead and his eyes are dull – Einstein

6:03 am
June 21, 2009


Learjet

Australia

Lead Investigator

posts 1122

I really enjoyed the account of your time there and with Sam. Thanks for posting this.

OD'd on EMF

7:40 am
June 21, 2009


alicat

Lead Investigator

posts 1215

Thanks for posting "Sam's" story.  I wonder if Sam is still on that census.  It certainly makes one think.  I guess I'll be shutting my blinds and closing the curtains earlier from now on.

8:08 am
June 21, 2009


Oubliette

Igloo in NJ

Lead Investigator

posts 574

Just a note about nursing homes in general: on the old TAPS 18+ board (the one that was wiped out and never archived) I (with my hubby's permission) had started a thread about this story.  To my surprise, health care workers of all types (nurses, aides etc) began to chime in about their own experiences.  There was such a vast amount of weird goings on in nursing homes that we even got to the point of maybe putting them together into a book of some sort.  Of course, HIPPA would be a huge barrier.  But the fact that there were so many posts regarding apparitions, cold spots, phantom call lights etc. indicates that something has been going on in these places where people come basically to die.

Some even found these incidents so common they ceased being amazed and just accepted that there are strange happenings going on.  Sam's story is just one of many, but it has always interested me because his weird head shape certainly made him stand out where a sighting was concerned and there was no doubt about who it was.  Patients who were assigned his room and were never told about him would report seeing him. 

Guess all that can be said is "it is what it is"-whatever that might be.

If 50 million people believe a foolish thing, it is still a foolish thing.
Anatole France

10:32 am
June 21, 2009


Diogenes

NJ

Investigator in Training

posts 18

alicat said:

Thanks for posting "Sam's" story.  I wonder if Sam is still on that census.  It certainly makes one think.  I guess I'll be shutting my blinds and closing the curtains earlier from now on.


Alas, the Nursing home has changed hands a couple of times.  The old crew has retired.  It’s now a rehab center.  Maybe Sam went on or maybe he is still around.  I have no way of knowing.

The Greatest Emotion Man Can Experience is the Mysterious. It stands at the Door of True Science. He that knows it not, No longer can dream, no longer can wonder, is as good as dead and his eyes are dull – Einstein

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