Morgue Employees Reveal Things That Would Scare Everyone
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 16. 02. 2021
- It takes a certain type of person to be able to work in a morgue. Working around dead bodies could make some people sick, but others aren't bothered by it at all, until something strange happens! Check out today's new video all about the creepiest things that morgue employees have ever witnessed! Try not to get too freaked out by this scary new countdown!
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@@jasonliddell2752 isn't that unsafe and unstable?
It's not the dead you have to worry about, it's the living
wow so deep
Facts
R/im14andthisisdeep
@Bacon kingz đ€ Yes
R/im14andthisisdeep
When you're in a morgue, you're seeing life that no longer exists. It gives you an appreciation when you look someone in the eyes, you shake their hands, and you hug your friends, your loved ones, and your family. It just gives you an appreciation for the life that surrounds you. At the same time, you understand how fragile it is, that you realize and learn to cherish your life and never take it for granted.
I seen that with king von after his body was leaked it shook me.
Did palliative care for many, many years. Life is precious, death is inevitable. Be kind, make living count.
Wow thatâs a wholesome way of looking at it
Yeah. Just like when you're in the dissection hall
Unfortunately it can also result in morgue workers ect ect,becoming desensitized to death and suffering.
I'm disturbed by how recent these stories are.
Oink
Btw,in the one of Venezuela. I was there with my dad seeing my grandpa get chewed down
@@javieralejandrotrianapaz6343 oh
@@javieralejandrotrianapaz6343 whatâs chewed down
These things happen more than is reported . This under reporting is done out of respect for the deceased and their families though
The guy surviving being in the fridge for 15hrs is more miraculous then him surviving the pesticide.
True
@Guardian Of Texas No.... Embalming fluid never got put him in, he ended up in the hospital after using insecticides to attempt suicide.
We survive surprisingly well in low temperature, sometimes we survive because we're in low temperature.
@@E-Kat Are you possibly referring to people who died in frozen places like Siberia for several minutes, then were revived with little to no detectable brain cell damage?
@@brianjob3018 no, I'm not from Russia, never been there..
*A person dies and goes to morgue*
Cats and dogs: This is a five star restaurant.
Eww
Go away
I donât think a dog would eat a human and rate it 5 stars, unless he was really really hungry.
My carcass is being incinerated within 24 hours and the ashes disposed of in the garbage. There will be no memorial, burial plot, casket or coffin, or even a mention of my death. It will be like I never existed.
@@indridcold8433 How do You know?
Kenyan doctor: His eyes are not open, therefore he is dead. I am sorry for your loss.
Lol
đ
i am from kenya and such a thing happened bc his heartrate was so low it couldnât be detected by the cheap public hospitals but the private ones are very professional
đ
Now prepare for the coffin dance
The sheer incompetence of people with the power to declare life or death is what the most scariest thing here.
Absolutely. And, those who really don't care, it's just a job and a paycheck.
Sadly, and scarily, declaring someone as dead isnât a very easy process sometimes as there are cases (obviously, watching this vid) where people appear to be dead when they arenât. There are a few ways that doctors use to check that patients are actually dead, but theyâre not always completely accurate. Sometimes itâs very difficult to know that someone is actually alive without certain equipment. And we donât always have that here in Africa.
Just poke them with a stick. Thatâs always a good way to check!
I saw dead people for five years while working at a morgue. I still see them, even though I don't work there anymore. Some left an impression I would like to forget.
It's the smells that get me im pretty desensitised to the visuals but some of the smells i smell when when doing random things not at work that gets me ill randomly smell the scent of the mortuary whilst in the supermarket ect.
@@NoName-kh9ow Smells are pretty crazy. I can visually see anything and not flinch but a smell can nearly make me throw up. Over my six years, I've only thrown up once. It was my 2nd day working there. I then started associating the smell of the dead example; Decomp with dog food. Most (not all) dog food is made by rendering fats of carcasses. It helped.
Whatâs the grossest thing you have ever seen working there?
@@andrewdoesyt7787 You read my mind haha. Iâd love to know too.
Richard, do you believe soul goes away somewhere? Or is it just nothing after death? I'm 25 and I'm thinking of death, I'm scared theres nothing after it, everything wastes.
After binge watching so many Ask A Mortician videos, these stories donât surprise me as much as they probably should.
I work in a mortuary its always quite scary when the deceased grab you when you are pushing them on the trolley.
Caitlyn's inbox is probably getting a little extra traffic today đ
I love ask a mortician!
Hello Deathling
Thanks for giving me something to watch, will definitely be checking that out
My friend was a nursing student (was) and she was accompanying a nurse to take a recently deceased to the morgue. They get on the elevator & as they go down the body is releasing air & the body jolted up a little. Well she didnât know bodies did that & screamed in the elevator. She decided nursing wasnât for shortly after
Rigor mortis and build up gases lol.
I'm a Registered Nurse and it's always hilarious to see how the students react to things like that. You can usually tell who is gonna make it and who won't đ
I have a friend who grew up in funeral home.
Frankie is one of my all time favorite humans.
He had qualities that only a person who had dealt with death, broken hearted family and being face to face with the horrible things that we do to each other and ourselves.
Frankie, I love you. I loved working with you, laughing with you.
Folks, when you meet someone who tells you exactly what they are thinking, regardless of the consequences. You have met a Frankie. Embrace them.
The truth hurts, but there is a lot less confusion.
Greetings from Colorado Springs Colorado Christopher
đđđđđœ
Where's Frankie?
@@ytsux9259 Kingston NY.
â€
Here is one for you. While working with law enforcement, we had picked up someone who had drowned. They had gone missing several months before found. We had loaded the the body on the swim platform on the stern of the boat. The body had swollen to two to three times the size while living. There was a four lift from the swim platform to the ground where the coroner could take the body away. While lifting the body from the swim platform the body kind of exploded about a foot or so from the Gurney. All sorts of eels and fish came out. The smell was awful! even hours after the coroner left. I remember spending hours spraying the back of the boat and dock areas to attempt to wash away the smell. God bless these people who do this on a daily basis.
I was told the story by a girl that worked in the morgue, freshly out of medical school. She said that sometimes, they attach a small bell to the big toe or the leg of dead people, in case they are not really dead. Because mistakes do happen.
She even asked her superior if the bell ever rings, to which he replied. "In all my years of working and from people I know, never has the bell been rung"
Then one night that she was alone in the morgue, she heard the bell. But when she approached the morgue, the sound stopped and she could not remember any freshly died person being brought in.
That is a really scary story
Seems like a creepy pasta. But I'm a believer in the supernatural...so.
A cat đ± would be feasting
@@jackjwalajoshua6 đđđ I would stop working on there
For whom the bell tows
Doctor: "Oh, thank goodness you discovered he's alive before you cut him open!"
Mortician: "...Yeaaah.... about that..."
I had a supervisor who told me he once saw someone (staff) running from the morgue of the hospital. No one should be doing that unless someone wasnât quite dead yet.
*Next video: Dead People Scare Morgue Employees!*
Superstitious wimps.
A D&D scenerio
@M4A1 Carbine đđ¶
Yes wait....hol up
Don't ruin the 666 likes
As a young nurse I was asked my another nurse to help her move a deceased man to the hospital morgue. The morgue was in the basement and at the very end of a darkened corridor. I had done this a few times, but it was a part of my job that I never got used to.
I donât care what others may say, but it is an eerie feeling walking down a dark corridor wheeling a dead body and if youâve ever watched scary movies, it doesnât help. As we opened the door to the morgue we saw several bodies draped in sheets. We quickly moved the body we had to a space next to the last body. You can usually tell who was placed in the morgue first as they tend to be nearest the door. I secured the stop on the gurney and quietly made our way to the door. As I reached for the light switch to turn it off I heard the faintest âHelp me.â The other nurse looked at me and asked, â Did you hear that?â âYes,â I replied and âI am not hanging around to find out where it came from.â
When we reached our floor we told the charge nurse. She knew we were young and had been frightened. She sent one of our male nurses down to check. When he returned he told us that he couldnât find anyone there who could have spoken.
I was talking to an alcoholic who someone called the rescue for. He remembered them saying something like this guy's too far gone.
He woke up in the morgue and said he was afraid he was going to get in trouble for leaving.
đ
lol
I used to work in a hospital and part of my job was discharging deceased patients and making sure all the paperwork in our books matched up with the deceased patients housed in the morgue. That meant occasionally (once a day) going down to the morgue to make sure that no bodies had been discharged without their paperwork. On one of my trips down there there was a doctor and a porter moving an overweight body with a lift. As they lifted him off the exam table, his head slipped out of the lift harness and the top half of his body hit the tile floor with a sickening smack sound. As if to make things worse, the contents of his stomach then came pouring out of his mouth and nose onto the floor. Iâve seen a lot of dead bodies in my day but that one was one of the worst.
Wow I'm so scared..
@@felicianozipho5528 cool, mission accomplished! Thanks for your input!
đ€ź
@@felicianozipho5528 sometimes you have to be there in the moment to really appreciate the horror Keir Hamilton is describing! A Hoyer Lift is hard to get the hang of! Keir Hamilton I know that horrible splat noise on the tile floor. Always the Hoyer Lift was used on really obese patients and sadly I was there when the lift would break or the air would drop and the patient would fly down hard splat! I hated it then but it made a better person out of me. I can handle a lot! There are no surprises in life for me! I have seen it all working in a huge LA hospital for 25 years!
@@MelesaEFary That must be hardd
Witness â I donât believe in ghosts, except when I saw that ghost.â
When I was still in medical school, me and a few students volunteered to help our professor with a study he was doing on a dead body. It was a bit creepy at first but then a janitor was cleaning something at the back of the room (we couldn't see him) and accidentally dropped a metal bucket. The professor looks at us directly and says "IT WORKED HES ALIVE" and we all just screamed and left
HAHAHAHAHHAAH I LOVE IIITRR
Is this really true lolđ€
It would have been really funny if the professor's name was Herbert West.
My uncle used to work in morgue. Ive hear lots of stories from him but one story freaks me out. One day one of his friend from collage or highschool arrived at his work just to meet him during its breaktime of work. They had cup of tea in cafe etc, like normal and simple and she left for her work. 5mins later uncle got a work call said âwe got new body coming up be ready in frontgateâ He went there, and yeah it was his friend who left just 5-6mins ago. She left my uncles work and was heading to bus station like 50m away while she crossing road, bus just went through her (over her). Uncle said he couldnât identify her from her face, body but from her clothes he noticed.
(Sorry im bad at stories also english is not my first language)
This is very sad, I'm here if any of you want to talk
@@deffri4065 i agree. Imagine if it were YOUR friend. That is so terrible to think aboutđ„ș
That escalated quickly. Its very unexpected
@@pauloazuela8488 Me puso retriste
In certain jurisdictions, circumstances like this would not be acceptable at identifying a dead body where the face has been mutilated. Every attempt would be made at identification by fingerprints, dental comparison, and/or DNA analysis. Crazy things happen.
Death asked life why does everyone love you and hate me , life replied ; because I am a beautiful lie, and you are a painful truth đ
Nice
Bittersweet honest joke
wow so deep, thanks for your knowledge đđđ
Iâve pretty sure Iâve seen this exact quote in like 35 different places...
Its the opposite but yea sure
I hate it when I am getting fingerprints of the dead, and the body suddenly twitch
Homie you work as a morgue?
@@izlitty5674 yep
:( i just saw possession of hannah grace and now u say this
Ughh
I hate it when the nerves make them shake a bit during sanitizing .... I'm not even ashamed to admit it
Actually the one person I worked with who used to BE the "eye guy" was the most disturbed person I have ever worked with. It took a huge toll on her. First working with the family to get permission. Then cutting off the cornea herself. Eyes are the window to the soul. She told us over and over and over again how important the work was to help others. Almost daily. Not everyone is cut out for it.
'Not everyone is cut out for it' well done!
I have a funny morgue story .
I'm an electrician.
A few years ago we were upgrading all the lighting in a hospital to led lights.
We had to work at night to minimize disturbing normal hospital stuff.
Including the refrigerated room they store bodies before they go to the funeral home.
We had a laborer helping us load parts and trash as we worked.
There was another electrician and myself working outside the room they kept the bodies.
I waited until they were not watching and layed on a gurneys and threw a sheet over myself.
Then they made their way to where I was and jumped up and yelled
I never laughed so hard while working.
I'm going to remember this next time I'm in the funeral home rewiring lights đ
Imagine how many of them were not dead but was undiscovered and they had to be "buried alive".
I once read an article where they had to relocate the dead to another cemetery. While doing so, they discovered that one of the coffin had scratch marks all over it. The only explanation was that person was wrongfully pronounced dead, and somehow woke up and tried to escape.
I can't imagine the final moment of whoever that person was.
So sad! I'm sure it's not the only time.
@@judechima4047 It isn't. When my mother was in school it happened to a girl that she knew. :-(
Yeh they put bels and strings attached to graves because of that
the stuff of nightmares. One thing tho, surely the scratch marks would be inside. did they actually open the coffin as part of the move.?
@@kareneloisehughes6694 I also wonderedđ€đ€đ€đ€ the precise thingâŒïžâŒïžâŒïžâŒïžââââ
My grandmother in her medical school years said she enjoyed study alone in the morgue because its quiet and kept reminding mortality of human and her duty in future as a doctor, to save lives. She said wierd and strange things happened all but she just loving it lol.
As a morgue keeper/body recovery specialist I have to say I really enjoy this work. It is something else when you are on a call and are talking so calm and casually to your work partner about work and day to day stuff while everyone around you is still reacting to and processing the fact that there is a dead person within the vicinity. People crying and emotionally reacting. As a body bagger you get really use to seeing all types of death in all shapes, smells, and sizes. Everyone reacts differently to death of a loved one, co worker, or just someone near by. One woman said, âare you sure heâs deadâ. Like wtf, thatâs so messed up and sad. The things I have the privilege of being apart of really humbles you. The best part is itâs completely random and you never know where you are going to get. I wish I had a body cam but there is too much personal information and laws between the dead humans. Not very many people can stomach this type of work, at least not for a long period of time. I want to make a career out of it but it doesnât pay enough to. I recommend trying it but not if you are unstable and have poor mental health or are not mentally tough. You see things I wouldnât wish on my worst enemy to have to see or go through. But definitely a job for you thrill seekers. I remember what it was like to see my first body. Unreal
Oh my god wow
Exactly i'm a mortuary assisten too and i do love my job i don't think it's wierd some one need to do this job too
I can first hand say that I know bodies can sit up from the contracting in the muscles of the abdomen and the expelling of gases. And it's horrifying.
Now we know where Frankenstein came from, lol.
Especially the expelling of gas...that made me throw up in my mouth a little bit.
@@izysly6051 Corpse farts. Lol
@@izysly6051 thats pretty much how i describe people i dont like
i worked at a funeral home for 6 months but got fired fr selling organs on ebay. but yes i too have seen this
first hand. also can get you a kidney cheap
You should talk about what happens when an astronaut dies in space
I think they already have a video about it?
đđđ
Yeah, there's a video about that.
Lolol oh u wanna know about something? Infographics has the videooo
No one can hear you scream!
I'm from Kenya and have actually heard the rising from the dead story severally... Definitely true stuff
Tell us about it
No matter how you struggle and strive, I'll never get out of this world alive" Hank Williams Sr
I read a âfunnyâ funeral home story that occurred in the 50âs.
Apparently at the time the funeral director had just hired a young man not 48 hours prior. They young man was understandably nervous.
They got a call that a elderly woman just passes away and went to pick her up.
Well, they put the body up to be prepped later...and the director had to do something outside, and told the young man to sweep up.
As the young man was sweeping, he heard âgroaningâ. Initially spooked, he thought the funeral home director was pranking him by hiding by the old womanâs remains, under the sheet.
He stormed over, pulled back the sheets to tell the funeral director to âcut it outâ, but the woman suddenly opened her eyes, gasped and partially sat up.
This terrified the young man so much that her ran out of the building, past the confused funeral director, past his parked car, and just ran home a few miles away.
A few hours later the funeral director was able to reach him via the phone.....and the the young man made it clear HE QUIT.
No word on what happened to that poor lady, who had a bit of a scare no doubt.
I can see it now, an awkward phone call to the hospital,while an old older lady sits, wrapped in clean sheets, embarrassed in an office sipping tea.
I bet it scared the life into her!
What
Well, apparently not.
Îmm.. morgues, forensics, undertakers etc. Well, this is a true story : About 20 or so years ago in Greece, there was a widely acclaimed university profesor of philosophy, named Dimitris Liantinis. He was hightly respected by his students and many other people for his depth of his thought and speech. Suddenly he disappeared leaving behind him a note, saying among other things : "No doctors, no forensics, no priests, no undertakers will touch me. Wild animals, birds and insects will be my pallbearers". His bones were found scattered in a cave on the Peloponesian mountain of Taygetos, about 6 years after his diappearence.
Bodies of homeless people being treated like that is heartbreaking đ„đ.
At least they're beyond caring
You should go claim them since you feel so bad.
The first time I went to a morgue to a dead see a dead friend, I couldn't erase his dead looks from my mind everytime I sleep I dream about him alive but with that dead look. It goes on for 3 months even after he was buried. Thankfully my mind learned how to ignore the thought but it was tormenting me. Never would I go inside a morgue again.
And I will never look at a dead body again after my.mother. Never.
Mom grandma died last year December they asked did I want to see the body...I said no and my aunt (grandma sister) went. The last I saw her was at the funeral I cried and this month is her birthday. So today Iâm grieving
I've worked in morgues & around the dead for over 40 yrs. At first families were allowed to view their loved ones in person. Later we found it best to allow them to look at a pic of their faces. It's sometimes too traumatic for people to see someone they love/care about who's dead before they are prepared for viewing in a FH.
Captain Ike đđđđđđđœ
@@squalli1297 but you cannot legally stop them from viewing the body if they are determined to, no matter the condition.
Morgue employees should get more reward for doing what some people don't want to
Yes but we are paid less than teachers and work far more hours.
đŻ
Iâm a Body Removal Technician in a metropolitan city. I transport between 20-30 bodies a week and so far no one has âwoken upâ. If something like that happened to me the first thing I would do is transport the decedent-now-patient directly to the ambulance port of the closest ER. I love my job because I get to help families but hope that never happens.
Note to self: do not die in Kenya or Venezuela
đđ
Or Mississippi đ
Stories of "resurrecting" here in Kenya are common.đ
Or in a bathtub or with your pets in same room! Poor kitties (& pups). Personally knew a woman who died & her dogs ate her (because nobody checkd on her). Was 2 wks between someone seeing her alive & her remains being found :( i was a young kid & it gave me nightmares for years! (She was elderly).
@@nyawina3431 tell us one
I worked at nursing homes and only experience a close call once. I tried to see if a resident was breathing cuz he was cold and stiff. When I didn't feel a heartbeat either, I started shaking him and yelling his name and he took a breath and immediately the warmth came back to him. I would have been in big trouble, otherwise, for shaking him.
Wait why you be in trouble for shaking him if he was dead? But hey you can say you shook a dude guy back to life once though. I would word your story a bit differently though to make it a bit more exciting.
@@Watcher413 if they have a do not resuscitate order.... Mostly i just said his name kind of loud not picked him up off the bed and shook him. I'm not happy i shook someone back to life or woke him back up to live, so much as that he didn't die when I was there. He did die a couple of days later, but not a shift that I was working. He may have been happier with no pain, sooner. So I understand about DNR order. Luckily he didn't have one, though. Especially since I had went and told on myself.
@@misty5805 thanks for your reply. I honestly didnât know shaking someone would be deemed against a DNR.
People are hard to work with...hateful, gossiping, back stabbings, making you miserable, being unfair....its better to work with the dead.
I will NEVER look at my dog the same way.
I'll trust my dog over any human ANY day. Look up Sunset Mesa funeral home...and donor services. Should be a clue, eh?
Dismembering and selling body parts. No joke. For money.
And it's NOT illegal. Although BS'ing people about donating your body to science is a breach of contract...
**now letâs get creepy*
Me: đ____đ
How did you do that?
@@laurieannrodriguez4551 2 eye emojis with underscores in between đïž_____đïž
Imagine dealing with morbidly obese severe decomp on 102° days in Georgia ..... Let me mention that these bodies are known for popping/slippage very very easily . The smell can linger for weeks or months even . And that used car you drive , could've been the last place a person took their last breath ..... very detailed professional cleaning and repairs and no one is the wiser . And no unlike real estate .... car dealerships don't have to inform you of death(s) occuring in a vehicle
Living people scares dead people in the morgue
My mom died last month, and I kept thinking, "Is she really dead? Is she freezing?". I know. Denial.
Sorry for your loss.
Sorry for ya loss..đđđ
I lost my dad 2 weeks ago, I can relate so much
@@nc6379 I'm so sorry for your lossđąđąđą
Sorry for your loss....I'm praying u stay strong â€ïžâ€ïžđđ
Put down my crime novel and this is uploaded. Timing!
Letâs see how many subscribers I can get from this comment currently at 318
Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could that they didn't stop to think if they should. - Jeff Goldblum.
Jurassic Park
Jeff speaks the truth. Love Jurassic Park đ»
@@TashaBryanUK He sure does. đ
@@officialjikozy I'm so sure I need a Jeff Goldblum shower curtain. Majestic đ
@@TashaBryanUK that way he can see me while I shower. Perfect
Me: Iâve been through 2020._. Thatâs baby stuff.
You guys have an amazing channel and Iâm glad to be a long term subscriber. Keep it up!
I would like to thank the Infographics Show đ§đ€ for keeping me and my State of Texas entertained. We've been hit by the WORST Winter storm ever!! Binge watching my favorite show has helped morale!đ
Dogs and cats at the morgues:
âItâs free real estate.â
Before I retired, I was a small town police officer and fingerprint specialist. I've assisted in autopsies and I have fingerprinted dead bodies. I had another officer helping me fingerprint a deceased unknown subject who had died in the emergency room waiting room who reportedly had no identification. After the police response and detective primary investigation, I was called in to lift his prints for identification. The hand of the subject spasmed during the process and clamped down on my assistant's hand. He almost dragged the body off of the examining table and, after freeing himself, ran from the hospital morgue screaming. His nerves were so rattled that he had to go home. While I was replacing the body on the table I found that he did have a wallet with identification in his back pocket.
Holy moley!
That reference though đ€Łđ€Łđ€Łđ€Łđ€Łđ€Ł âI see dead peopleâ đ€Łđ€Łđ€Ł
My father accidently slept in a morgue beside dead bodies, he was very tired and sleepy, he saw an open room and a white bed so he slept there, after an hour his friend found him sleeping there and woke him up, when he saw the bodies he was so scared that he couldn't sleep alone for a month. He is okay now.
Reminds me of the funeral home employee who went to sleep on a stretcher and the funeral home assumed he was dead and creamated him... Good thing that didnt happen to your dad!
Morticians work Ungodly hours and are so exhausted we will sleep anywhere lol. I have slept on cots, prep tables, caskets, etc. It doesnât bother me.
Imagine just waking up from what you assume is a normal sleep and you're in a medical environment with loads of doctors running away screaming!
Nobody:
Absolutely Nobody:
Me ( at 3:30 am in India): That seems interesting!!
Arrey sojao bhai
Same it 2Am here
Sameeee đ
Same đ
Bhai sahab
If I was the guy that committed suicide I would think that I was reincarnated
The old story about the bell above a grave with a rope going into the casket so dead person waking up can ring it to day "I am alive."
đ€Łđ€Łđ€Łđ€ŁHAHAHAHA đđđđ
That man from Kenya was just unconscious..... But he later passed after one week
This is my favorite video youâve ever uploaded on this channel. Lol awesome!
This is so much fun! Thank you!
I worked as a delivery driver for years and on my route was the morgue. One time I delivered some boxes of body bags for children sizes. It had the size on the outside of the box.I said a quick prayer and delivered them . That was đ knowing that no matter who those children were they should of had more time on this earth..
My grandma was terrified that she might "wake up in the grave" so demanded she be embalmed before being put in the ground so as to make sure she was dead first. This wouldn't be an issue if dead bodies were left out at room temperature until it was sure to begin rotting. Then you would know for sure they are absolutely dead.
There's lots of ways to be VERY sure you're dead. Embalming ruins the environment. And health of workers.
What about green burial? Cheap. Easy.
@@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 I'm all for leaving a body out at room temperature until sure signs of rot begin, then chunk it in a hole and plant a tree on top. I would not be offended in the slightest if that is how my corpse was treated.
If only she knew...
Or when rigor mortis sets in
Loved this episode
A part 2 would be nice
Fun fact: just because there is a walking dead person doesnât mean they are going to attack the alive people.
They're just going to vote. LOL
Why take the chance?
My friend worked on the morgue preparing bodies. When hired him they took him to the back to look
At bodies that got progressively worse ending with decapitated baby. To see if he could handle the job. He worked a couple years but it got to him. And ended up in rehab from drinking to much.
Growing up in the ghetto I've witnessed death in front of me a few times never pretty still haunts me.. but respect to those in the mortuary and hospital business
Reminds me of a story I once heard about a worker fresh out of college and working his first night in the morgue alone, a model who had been killed in a car accident and a piece of shrimp. It lead to a call to his supervisor late that night as a result of his confusion and an honest mistake that was finally cleared up when the supervior made the trip to the morgue to see with hs own eyes...
Thanks dude
for the update
The one about the pregnant woman was one of the grossest and the đ„ saddest.
i think we would all really appreciate as many stories like #1 as you can find, same with more "kids who remember their past lives" videos. Basically, please report as many of these paranormal stories as you can find with such validity.
I love infographic. You guys are awesome. Keep it going!!
Iâve seen pictures of the man soup that was mentioned; Easily one of the most disgusting things ever and one could only imagine what the smell was like. Years ago in my old town, the morgue got shut down after it was discovered that the internal organs were being tossed out in regular trash bags in alley dumpsters.
the infestation part is a no-go zone for me
especially the roaches.
Sometimes you'll get rats , termites , ants , birds ( they love eyes ) , and we've even had pigs and the odd one ... a komodo dragon
@super salty sIx blinb kid
Oh yes it can, does, & has happened here in the US.
This happened to my aunt years ago, she gave the mortician's assistant a mild hear attack..
It is actually wild how yall keep pushing so many videos
I'm in bed, watching this, feeling scared and grossed out, but can't stop watching.
"This one will give you nightmares!"
The add: *Cute Little Ducklings*
I am a pathologist & did over 500 autopsies. Never had a dead one come back to life, but the rest, except for the ghost, are fairly common.
You guys are great!
Greer video guys u really enjoyed listening bout these odd occurrences was very interesting even though was but gory lol
Me: asking where the bathroom is
The morgue employee: ?!?!?!???????
Awesome video! Any chance for another of the Medal of Honor top 10? Kyle carpenter, John Chapman to name 2 that would be cool to hear.
Work for two small county Medical Examiners & and a Funeral home. Seen a lot and honestly not much has bothered me. High profile cases and green sheets. What I can say annoys me the most is when I get to a scene and the police don't turn the heater off. No one wants to walk into a hot room with a body. The smell seems to get into your pores. Been on the news a few times in the background scanning over scenes or kneeling trying to figuring things out. A lot of comical things have happened as well... of course, people may thing "that's wrong to laugh at a time like this." Laughter is what keeps me going and why not joke about something that will come for us all. My coworker says when he dies he's going to cover himself in peanut butter and cooking oil and wedge himself under the table between his fridge and the wall.
I like how all the ghost stories that are ever told are from the past century...
Actually there are many modern ghost stories, you can look them up on you tube. Also the discovery channel had a series called "A Haunting" and a lot of their stories were about people whom had passed away as recently as 2005.
@@tenabarnes3269 Share one, please!
My dad was an undertaker part time. He and and a coworker had to pick up a guy once. He was in. A recliner, box of Red Bull on one side, box of beer on the other, watching tv and he had been there for weeks. My dad was mostly upset because he was only in mid 30s. I asked what was on TV, and told my dad if he was watching Jerry Springer I wouldn't stop laughing
I'm waiting to start work at one. And am beyond exited!
Wow , I enjoyed it thanks.
I worked in a hospital as maintenance for a decade, and the one place you could refuse to work was the mourge. Few did and one thing we always did to new guys was practical jokes. Youd send em down to pat test a refrigerated unit and have one of our colleagues hiding under a sheet. 2 men passed out and 1 lashed out and attacked the "zombie" as far as I know it still happens. I womt name the hospital or its location
Wait... The gun was firing inside her hooha? Is that what they're saying? How tf? Lol
Not a chance.
Embalming wouldn't do that.
As someone who had to clean the house of a recently deceased hoarder I can uncomfortably relate to the smells and filth described in the video.
And that's just your lack of hygiene. When the corpse awakens holding it's nose and says "pull my finger".
My friends family owns a funeral home and he's worked on family and friend's. He said he never feels uneasy because they're gone, he said he has more fear walking put the door and back into the outside world than he does fpinf to work because the outside world is where the bad stuff happens.
#5 was very disturbing and sad considering she had an unborn child.
I'm eating my lunch
My brain: Perfect video
Firefighter friend would take pictures of the worst or the worst. One that haunts me is the old man found weeks after he had passed. The photo shows a little dog next to his owner which the owners face was eaten down to the skull. It looked so neatly eaten. Kept telling myself it wasn't real, but it was very real.
My father in law, was a police officer he had one of those bathtub cases in where they died in the bath.
He said when they opened the door to the apartment you knew that someone had died!
The only way to transport such a person was to cut out the entire bathtub and transport it in the bathtub.
If you try to lift the person youâll just rip off their skin.
Itâs impossible to successfully transplant organs from a donor who has been dead, without blood and oxygen going to the organs. Harvesting is done in a hospital, not in a morgue.
"This is one smelly lady!" đ I laughed way too hard at that.