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The Noisy Portrait



Estimated reading time — 6 minutes

Your mother had been sick for years. You never did know exactly what was wrong with her though. Countless doctors had examined her and all had to admit she was suffering some something they had never seen before. However, even though they could not pinpoint the disease itself, they all seemed to agree on one thing: it was terminal. Eventually, this mysterious illness would take your poor mother’s life.

You can remember back when your mother fist got sick. It happened after visiting family in a small town in West Virginia. The trip had ended abruptly when your aunt became furious with your mother for accidentally breaking a picture of your grandmother. You never did understand why your aunt had become so upset, it was just a photo. Regardless, your family had to pack up and leave that next morning. On the drive home, your mother seemed to be dealing with some allergies. Assuming it was just some of the local fauna getting to her, no one thought much of it. Everyone assumed it would clear up shortly after returning home, but it never did. Weeks, and then months after returning, your mother’s new “allergies” were still steadily growing worse. It was always a slow, but she never got even a little better even for a day. Back before it really got bad she always used to joke that “those darn allergies must have moved in and loved me so much they decided to stay and take over!” Eventually though, she stopped joking about her sickness. It took so much out of her that it made her angry and bitter. She would snap and yell at you for the smallest things, and she would become exhausted and just fall asleep at random times. A few times you even saw her fall asleep while walking. She would be walking one way, then her eyes would slowly close as she drifted off in another direction before jerking awake. You tried to help make things easy on her as much as you could, but there wasn’t much you could do. Every time she yelled you tried to remind yourself that it was just the disease and exhaustion talking so you wouldn’t start yelling back and just make her feel even worse.

The disease affected more than your mother though. Her slow deterioration began to wear out the rest of the family emotionally; as she grew worse, you watched your father and little brother grow worse as well. You felt yourself crumbling too, but you did your best to fight it and pretend like nothing was wrong. Eventually, it became too much for your father. You woke up one Thursday morning to find a note from him explaining that he couldn’t stand to be in the house with your mother anymore. He said he had left for good and taken your brother with him. The note didn’t say where he intended to go. He was gone, and you were left to care for your mother alone.

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For years, it was just the two of you. Every day she continued to worsen, and every day you fought harder and harder to keep from breaking as your father had. Every week more and more doctors saw her and gave you the same clueless, useless answers. It was something they’d never seen before. It worked in unusual ways they couldn’t understand. It didn’t make any sense. It was terminal.

It was terminal. There was always that. Eventually, you gave up on doctors completely. Your mother was almost entirely bedridden by this point, and there was nothing they could do anyways, so why should you waste what time you had left with them? Instead, you stayed home everyday to care for her. In those brief moments when you were not occupied by some household chore, you would sit and try to read. You never did process very many of the words anymore, but it was easier to deal with books than it was to deal with television. Besides, if the tv had been on you might not be able to hear your mother when she faintly called out for you because she needed something. As the months dragged on, those calls became much more frequent and much more faint.

In those final few years, there seemed to be only one thing you could do to bring a tiny smile to your mother’s face: take her picture. She had always loved having her picture taken, even as a little girl. You could remember all the stories she and your grandmother had told you about how she would run to anyone she saw with a camera and beg to have her picture taken, even if the person was a complete stranger. As she grew older, she obviously learned not to approach random strangers for photos, but she never lost her love for being photographed. So, every single day you would get out the camera and go into her room. You would sum up all the cheerfulness you could as you raised the camera and called to her, “Time for your picture, Mom! Say cheese!” That faint smile you came to know all too well would slowly crease her face, the flash would go off, and then you would put the camera away until the next day.

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One evening, while your eyes were sliding over the words of a book whose title you could not even remember, you realized you hadn’t heard your mom call for you in a while. Concerned that you had zoned out and missed her call, you put the book down to go check on her. As soon as you entered her room, your heart dropped. She was dead. After all these years, the disease had finally claimed her life. In a small way, you were glad because she no longer had to suffer, but that did not change the immense sense of loss you felt. Now you were completely alone.

With your mother gone, you had no idea what to do. For years, taking care of her had consumed your life, but now she was gone. Unsure of what to do, you remained in the house alone most days, still running your eyes through books without ever realizing what you were reading. A day or two after your mother was buried, you remembered the camera and all the photographs you had taken. You printed out that final picture, dug out an old picture frame from a dusty box in the attic, and hung it above the headrest of her bed. You stood there and cried for hours after you first hung it; you couldn’t believe she was gone. Some nights, while you were “reading,” you even thought you could hear her faintly calling you as before. You would close your book and start to stand before it would hit you again–she was gone, you were just imagining things. Most of the time, this realization sent you into another uncontrollable fit of tears.

One night, as you were making your way to your bedroom, you thought your heard your mother’s voice again. You knew that you were imagining things, but still you decided to go and look into her room. On your way, you absentmindedly grabbed the camera and took it with you. You poked your head into her room like you always had, but this time you looked up to her picture instead of her bed. Noticing the camera in your hands, you brought it up to your face, aimed it at the photo on the wall and said, “Time for your picture, Mom! Say cheese!” choking on every word as the tears began to well up in your eyes. Just before you took the picture, you almost thought you could see the smile forming on her face again, and that was when you lost control completely. In a fit of tears, you threw the camera to the far side of the room where it bounced harmlessly off a pillow. You dove onto your mother’s bed and ripped the picture from the wall and hurled it into the ground. As the glass shattered and spread across the carpet, you fell down on top of it on your knees, snatching up the now-broken frame. Cutting your hands on the bits of glass that remained in the frame, you tore the picture out and began ripping it to shreds, sobbing. You spent that night curled up on the carpet crying, clutching firmly to the shreds of the photo.

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In the following days, you returned to your habit of attempting to read. Everything seemed normal, or at least as normal as things had been since your mother had died. However, you no longer thought you heard her voice. You guessed that your tantrum with the photo had served as some sort of release to help you accept her death, and that that had gotten the illusion of her voice out of your mind. You were extremely grateful for that, as it was easily the worst part of your suffering. Now the only suffering you had to cope with was some minor new allergies.

Credit To – SnoringFrog

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46 thoughts on “The Noisy Portrait”

  1. i kind of identified with this pasta a bit, but certain misused words and poor grammar almost prevented me from enjoying it. For example: the word “fauna” was used when i think you meant to use “flora” as flora refers to plants while fauna refers to animals. Over-all a 6/10 for me

  2. I enjoyed it, but I don’t like the fact that you told it in 2nd person. I feel like it would sound better if it was in 1st

  3. I didn’t think this was scary at all – it was just awful what he had to go through. Very sad, definitely not a creepypasta.

  4. I nearly cried. This is very well-written. It follows a good storyline, isn’t too cliche considering the nature of the piece, and holds the reader’s interest – partly due to the emotional factors and partly due to it being creepy enough to wonder what comes next without being blatantly obvious that somethig will happen eventually. The ending was great, too. It was that point where you know the main character is screwed. I kind of like that we never know the cause of what’s going on with the pictures and why breaking them is bad, rather that we simply think, “that’s creepy, what would I do if it were me?” Thank you, author, I enjoyed this one. :)

  5. I liked this pasta, but I feel like it could have been a little more creepy but overall it was good! 8 Stars!

  6. i really liked this Creepy pasta because it’s not a ghost story of like oh shes gonna kill ou and how the sickness is passed down im making one but can’t post it so i’ll put it on youtube

  7. After watching my family die in a similar fashion (each taking care of each other til one died and the next get sick and die within a couple of years) this made me sad. I abandoned my home because of that and survived.

  8. When a deceased mother’s picture is broken the sickness begins.. This was a sad Pasta for me and I was reading it on my phone when I was watching TV right next to my mother, after reading this I got a feeling of happiness that I was right next to my mother, I have a lot to be grateful for, I like this pasta, I give it a 8/10

  9. Well, wouldn’t the grandfather have suffered the same illness as the mother? The kid gets sick after breaking his mom’s picture, and his mom got sick after breaking the grandfather’s picture, and I would assume the grandfather would have gotten sick after breaking someone’s picture, right? Or I’m just over thinking it. But good story, not really creepy, just kind of sad.

  10. Pretty good. The last part was predictable, not that it’s a bad thing. I tend to smile when I read the predictable parts hehe :D
    Nice story, but felt too… light.
    8/10!

  11. I’m sorry guys, but I thought this was on the awful side of the cohesiveness spectrum. Using second person instead of third or, even better, first, feels like you’re telling me about my own poor mother’s ailment. The use of “you” should really be restricted to ritual pastas and other very specific genres, like an amnesia story where the narrator is retelling what you did. I feel like I might have connected more if it was first person or some ambiguous fictional character.

    That being said, what on earth kind of person am I supposed to be that I don’t have to go to work or school (and don’t tell me my character is supposed to be too old for school, still living with my parents).

    Couple that with literally no attempt at an explanation as to why this might be happening (urban legend, strange family prophecy, etc.), an ending you can see coming from miles away, and a bipolar character (strong enough to stay with the mother but breaks down and assumes the fetal position upon destroying the photo [this last one can be forgiven though due to being really crushed by the death, etc.]), and we’re left with a pasta that has potential but ultimately fails on too many levels for me to ever eat again.

  12. This was just plain depressing to me. Good, though- I felt like I was living it, which is partly why it was so sad. More sad than scary, however.

  13. I didn’t really like the story,it seemed a bit choppy for me and it didn’t really explain the painting.It sounded like a mirror type of story and the ending wasn’t scary at all.7/10

  14. The story progressed very slowly and there wasn’t much to it. Moreover, it wasn’t very creepy because the idea of “a terrible consequence from breaking something seemingly harmless” is extremely overused. I’d say this is a solid 5/10.

  15. Oh also, I don’t know if second person was the best choice… that might just be my bias, but most readers are predisposed to insert themselves into a narrative anyhow, especially if the character isn’t too alien to their experiences.

  16. I found the lead-up to anything creepy was a bit longer than some people might be willing to give. Nicely done overall though, aside from a few typos etc.

  17. Amateur writing, predictable story, not remotely scary. When will people learn that writing in this perspective hardly ever works?!

  18. Big deal over a broken picture frame

    And the dad was an arse hole

    But the pasta was very descriptive, I liked it

    7/10

  19. THEN WHO WAS....nevermind o.O

    I liked it…though for some reason I expected a little more. Like some detail on the mysterious illness….or some more crazy happenings regarding pictures..the mother and whatnot. Wasnt a bad pasta but I feel like ive been fed DIET pasta. <does diet pasta even exist????

    1. Some Indian cultures believed that a photograph would steal the person’s soul, although this isn’t very common anymore.

      In Australia, the natives there have strong cultural taboos against viewing a photograph of a dead person; so much so that some documentaries and videos made by the Australian Government carry a disclaimer that deceased people may be on the film.

      1. During Victorian times in the UK, there was a practice of taking a photograph of a persons face afte rthey had died. It was thought that when a photograph was taken as soon as possible after the person had died, their soul would indeed be kept in the photo, which was then given to any family they may have had.

        Such things at this time were largely believed, although the idea itself is a little morbid.

        Interesting side note: The first of one of these ‘Death Mask’ photo’s was that of a prostitute named Annie Chapman. You may know that name because she was the first victim of Jack The Ripper.

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