Category Archives: Life cycle

Haunted Apartment Complex

Nationality: American
Age: 53
Occupation: Escrow Officer
Residence: Orange County, California
Language: English

STORY:

“I used to live in an apartment complex that was supposedly haunted. I guess there was a stabbing there, with some guy stabbing his wife. I don’t remember if the stabbing happened or not, but I had neighbors who would say that they would see the wife walking in the halls. They said she must be searching for her husband so she could get revenge. I never saw anything, but my neighbors swore they did.”

CONTEXT:

The informant heard this legend when she was younger. She lived in a lower-income apartment complex, which she stated did not have very well kept infrastructure. She heard this legend mainly from neighborhood kids, and she has never double checked if a stabbing had actually occurred.

ANALYSIS:

This legend is an example of an injustice haunt. Many ghost stories originate from an injustice being committed against someone or many people. In this case, a woman was murdered and now she is dedicated to getting revenge on her killer. These stories come about due to people’s desire to see justice for an atrocity, and this is no different. The location being a lower-income apartment complex also adds to the legend. There is an element of systemic neglect that would drive people to focus more on spiritual concerns that they can have more influence over. When people feel neglected by the present world, as the rundown complex would imply, they tend to embrace spirituality which is an area they may feel heard. This ghost story could be a component of this.

Ghost at The Casino

Nationality: American
Age: 24
Occupation: Client Relationship Specialist
Residence: Orange County, California
Language: English

STORY:

“So when I worked at The Casino, we all believed the place was haunted. Chairs and stuff would just fall over after we stacked them, and we would hear like weird noises and creaking too. And it wasn’t just us who thought it was haunted too. We would have customers say something too while planning their wedding. And like the other employees who worked there before me would say so to any new hire.”

CONTEXT:

The Casino is a very old venue in San Clemente that the informant worked at when she was a teenager. She had several strange experiences that aligned with the building’s supposed haunting.

ANALYSIS:

This legend has a few traits that align with literature about ghost legends. First, the venue being for weddings imbues it with spiritual importance. Weddings are one of the three most momentous occasions in a person’s life, often signaling their ascension to adulthood. Thus, hauntings could be seen as a potential concern when planning a wedding. Next, the building itself is very old. Old buildings are seen as having a long history that is often troubled. If this were the case, it would be seen as more likely that the building is haunted. Lastly, it is an example of work folklore. This means that it could be seen as a unifying belief amongst the workers who all get to take part in this legend together. Uniting all these components together is a collection of memorates. When people experience strange occurrences that they cannot explain, people often turn to ghosts to account for the experience.

Pop Rocks and Soda

Nationality: American
Age: 53
Occupation: Escrow Officer
Residence: Orange County, CA

STORY:

“When I was growing up there was a really popular urban legend. Basically, there was this girl who was eating Pop Rocks, which is that candy that like crackles when you eat it, and she drank Coke while she was eating them. That caused some weird chemical reaction that caused her throat and mouth to blow up and killed her. Other kids would be afraid to eat Pop Rocks and drink soda because of that story so it was pretty popular”

CONTEXT:

The informant stated that she heard this story when she was growing up, so presumably as a child. She said the legend was very common and that her peers had heard the story as well. She did not specify who in particular told her the legend, but if it was very famous then she could have heard it from anyone.

ANALYSIS:

This urban legend plays into the anxieties people may have about what they are eating. I believe that it is similar to the legend about razor blades in candy in that both ask the listener to be cautious about an unhealthy snack. Both Pop Rocks and soda are easy targets for this type of legend due to Pop Rocks’s unusual popping effect and soda’s infamously explosive reaction with mentos. This legend also plays with the anxieties a parent may have over their child, as children would be the most likely to eat Pop Rocks as well.

Camarón

Nationality: Mexico
Age: 70
Occupation: None
Residence: Los Angeles
Language: English and Spanish

“Camarón que se duerme se lo lleva la corriente”

My informant mentioned this proverb, “Camarón que se duerme se lo lleva la corriente” which in English means “Shrimp that falls asleep is carried by the current.” The informant told me that their mother would bring up this phrase when they missed out on opportunities. My informant is from Michoacán, Mexico, and learned it from their mother, but has also heard from other regions of Mexico. They now use that proverb and tell their kids and grandkids in order to teach them about how to make the most of their lives.

It is a phrase that warns of the dangers of passivity and inaction. It’s a way to teach a lesson that if you don’t take control of your life, you risk being swept away, just like a shrimp that is carried by the water.

Tale of Struwwelpeter

My informant told me a short German children’s tale of Struwwelpeter. It translates to “Straw Peter” and it is about a young boy who refuses to eat the porridge his parents have prepared for him. Peter refuses to eat the porridge as he does not like it, and the parents refuse to feed him anything else. Struwwelpeter gets skinnier and skinner every day, and eventually he becomes the size of a straw. And after that he disappears into thin air because he is so skinny. The first time my informant heard this story was through their German grandmother while she was recounting the “crazy and funny” German folklore she has grown up with. My informant has been in elementary school at the time. The story was also taught to my informant in their German language class in high school. According to my informant, the tale of Struwwelpeter served as a didactic story for children to get them to eat the food that has been prepared to them.

It is interesting how both Struwwelpeter and his parents both refuse to do something. This symbolizes a friction between the two generations. While nothing happens to the parents by refusing to serve anything else to their son, Peter disappears because of his refusal, so in a way the stubbornness is at the center of the moral of the tale. As he wastes away and eventually disappears, the message is clear: kids who don’t listen or refuse to obey might just vanish from existence. It’s a harsh moral, but it reflects how older generations often tried to teach lessons through fear and exaggeration.The fact that nothing happens to the parents is also telling—it kind of shows how adult authority goes unchallenged, and how the burden of change or obedience always falls on the child. The tale ends up reinforcing this idea that kids should accept what they’re given and not question it, even if it seems unfair.

When my informant talked about hearing this story from their grandmother, and then again in school, it made me think about how these stories are passed down—not just for fun, but as part of cultural tradition. And even though Struwwelpeter comes across as bizarre or funny today, it still carries those old values around discipline and behavior. In the end, Struwwelpeter is more than just a weird story about a kid disappearing—it’s about control, about what happens when you push back against expectations. It uses absurdity to make a point, but that point is rooted in something serious: the fear of what happens when you go against the grain.