Things That Go Bump In The Night

posted in: Motherhood 3
Me (on back) riding our (Arabian/ Welsh) horse named Silver with my sister Theresa. We are posing in the huge pasture of our Langham acreage in Saskatchewan. It was beautiful land, many poplar and willow bluffs to explore. The soil under the grass was sand. We lived in the city (Saskatoon) during the week and spent weekends on our acreage–so many memories, so many adventures.

Silver was the most gentle, loving horse in the universe. When I rode her bare back I would lie back and rest my head on her bum. She was the best friend a girl could ever have. And if she was facing the camera you would see how beautiful she was. Her face was so pretty (the Arabian in her), with big, kind and beautiful brown eyes. I still remember how good she smelled and how soft her velvet nose was.

The above pic was taken when I was about nine years old at our Langham acreage in Saskatchewan. By that age, I was already quite a seasoned sleep walker.

I am lucky that none of my children have inherited my sleepwalking tendencies. They have occasionally called out in the night and have been up in the hall, unsure of why they were up, but no serious cases of night walking.

I was a sleep walker, a horrible sleeper walker as a child. One time ( I was about age 7), my mom heard the front door shut in the night. She got up to check and there I was in my nightgown, putting away my bike and coming inside. I’d gone for a middle-of-the-night bike ride around the neighborhood while still
asleep.

Another time, around age nine, in the middle of the night,  I walked from the top 3 rd floor of our house to the basement and was sitting on the sofa watching a blank T.V. screen. My mom came down stairs and asked me what I was doing. I replied that I didn’t know.

In the same house–a large old character house–my mom heard something on the stair case in the night. She found me sleep walking yet again, sitting on the bottom stair quite distressed. When she asked me what was wrong, I pointed in terror into the darkness and said, “that man, he’s trying to hurt me!” She was totally terrified and turned around to search the darkness for what she feared was an intruder. She saw no one.
“Where? Where is the man?” she asked me.
I pointed into the dark and very insistently said,”Right there! That man is going to hurt me!” She was sure I was seeing a ghost that she couldn’t see.

Though, the strangest thing happened to me when I was 18. I was living with 12 other teenagers in a huge old farm house near Lake Huron in Ontario (I was on a language exchange co-op program). I slept on a top bunk. In the morning I discovered myself sleeping on just my mattress. My pillow and all my blankets were tossed on the floor. But the odd thing was the head ache I had. I never get headaches (and no, for the record I had not had any alcohol or drugs). I  got out of bed and looked in the mirror and discovered, to my horror, a giant, blue, goose-egg sized bump on  my forehead. Obviously my head hit something very hard in the night. I had no memory of anything happening in the night. To this day I have no idea what happened to me that night.

Lately, I am up for a few hours in the night for no reason. Thus, I was reminded of these events from my childhood and thought it was time to write them down. And for all those parents of sleepwalkers out there, don’t fret. Look at me, I was a sleepwalking princess and I turned out normal…sort of 😉

3 Responses

  1. Sandra hart
    | Reply

    Sounds like you feel out of the bunk! yes, Silver was a great little pony!

  2. theresa_hart
    | Reply

    Darling Silver.
    I like the “normal – sort of”

  3. Mix Hart
    | Reply

    Sandra: yes, now that you mention it, that is probably a likely conclusion–but I never fall out of bed so I didn;t entertain the thought.
    Theresa: She was a saint
    and thx 🙂

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