the first time i saw that was when my friend rented it the first july it was out, it's not as scary then.
there were these really freaky stone statues in some cartoon i saw once... i couldnt sleep for days. i dont even know what was so scary about them, and it was in a small childrens series. and there was a sign on a resteraunt that had almost the same picture. also, i was afraid of something coming out in the dark. not dark in general, just when i was trying to sleep. other than that, pretty much nothing.
I was always scared ****less of papercuts and i still am. Wether it be getting a paper cut or watching someone else get a paper cut, it scares me so badly. i cant really explain the feeling i get, its just scary and crazy! And i think we can all agree that clows are just scary as frickin' hell.
Where I live would be your worst nightmare. Nothing but big open fields and thick forests. Nothing like walking thru the woods and finding a bear den . Found one today while I was going thru the woods looking for places to play paintball. Oh yeah and all I had was a pellet pistol .
When I was a kid scared to tears of Bee's, Wasps, and Yellow Jackets. They still make me quesy a little but I've conquered that fear! I've always been scared of porcelin dolls, and I think they are still staring at me And I guess now the only thing I have a fear of is suffocating while I'm asleep if the covers are over my head, so no matter how cold it gets I will not put the covers over my head!!!!!! -Fiz
When I was about 7 or so, I was terrified that Godzilla or some other giant Japanese movie monster would step on our house while I was sleeping. I would constantly wake up in the middle of the night and have to carefully peek out the curtains to make certain they weren't outside. I told my mom about it once...she mentioned it to my older sisters...they found a Godzilla movie poster, cut out Godzilla and taped him up on the outside my bedroom window one night. I woke up, peeked outside and there was Godzilla staring me in the face. It took hours before my mom could convince me that it was just a poster and then I still couldn't sleep in that room for days. I lived in California at the time and just loved to watch "B" horror and science fiction movies, so my subconcious was probably translating all the little earthquakes into the footsteps of giant monsters.