
When you take a step back, there can be something a little unnerving about talking to someone on the phone. After all, you don’t see them, the sound can be distorted and often enough, we have to call complete strangers, which can be a whole ordeal. But listening to a voicemail might be even weirder, as you never know what you are going to get
Someone asked “What is the most disturbing message ever left on your voicemail?” and people shared their unnerving experiences. So get comfortable as you scroll through, upvote your favorites and be sure to share your own experiences in the comments section below.
Read More: 30 Of The Most Unhinged And Disturbing Voicemails People Have Ever Received
#1
First day on the job at the VA. My new job is to pay the medical bills for veterans who suddenly go to an Emergency Room. In some cases for some veterans, the law allows VA to pay the ER and the ambulance.
I sit down at my new desk. There are messages. The first one is an old man, weak and out of breath. The message is several weeks old. He says, slowly and perhaps in tears, “Please pay my ambulance bill. I can’t live like this. I swear I’ll never call an ambulance again. I ’d rather die. I guess I’ll just die.”
That changed my life. I spent the next three years fighting with supervisors, researching the law, finding mistakes on denied claims, and fixing the financial lives of veterans that my office had made mistakes on.
Never did find that old vet. Not knowing how the phones worked, I erased the message accidentally. I hope he called again, I was quite successful as a medical financial troubleshooter.
Image credits: Mike Thinkman
#2
My mom’s last voicemail, when I was 26, for sure. My phone had died in the evening and I was out of town. After I bought a replacement charger the next morning and listened to it, I erased it (as I usually did). I don’t remember exactly what she said, but she said that I was the best thing that she had ever done in her life, and that she loved me.
She often left those kind of sappy messages after a few drinks when I didn’t answer. Or if I did answer, she’d ramble on about how much she loved me, that she was proud of everything I did, etc. Little did I know I would never hear her voice again.
My mom took her own life that night, soon after the missed call, parked on a logging road near a lake we had always gone to swim and picnic. She was 49. They found an empty bottle of vodka and a gun she had purchased hours before she shot herself. Later I learned she had called me several times. She called her best friend. Neither of us picked up when she needed us most.
I feel a deep remorse and guilt about not answering, and then erasing that last voicemail. It will be 12 years since she died in a few days, and it still doesn’t hurt any less than when I first learned what she did. Infact, it hurts more.
Image credits: Nicole Padron
#3
I have a message on my phone that I never deleted from my daughter who was accidentally k***ed by a bus just before the bus hit her. She just called to say hello. At first it made me sad and depressed to hear her voice after her death. Some people told me to delete it and move on, but I wanted to remember her voice after her death. In time, It did not make me sad to listen to it sometimes. Instead it made me feel happy. A voice has more realness than a picture. It made me feel like she was still alive.
Image credits: Roosevelt Wallace
#4
Hi Mom. Dad’s dead. Love you. Bye.
That was the message my 14 year old son left on my machine. His father had overdosed some time in the night. My son woke up to him dead in his recliner.
I was 1000 miles away in Colorado. I threw some clothes in the truck and my husband and I took off for Houston. We drove all night non stop, headed for the worst part of Houston that I could remember. I didnt know where my son lived. My ex had hidden him from me for 10 years. We ended up 2 blocks from his apartment.
It was the beginning of a new life for my son. He grew and blossomed in Colorado. No one missed my abusive drug addicted ex.
Image credits: Jeanne Caroline Yates
#5
I was at work and my daughter should of been at school and I didn’t make it to my mobile in time, so I had to listen to a voicemail message from the school that said “your daughter isn’t at school today, there’s been an accident on the road, we hope she’s okay, please call back! “
So you can imagine where my head went with that, my heart definitely skipped a beat, the colour drained out of my face and panic mode set in.
I was miles away from the school and didn’t drive, my initial reaction was to get in a taxi quick and start a ground search.
So then, when I started to be able to breathe again, i rang my friends who had collected my daughter (our kids were best friends and we became close and they offered to drive four miles out of their way to pick her up and drop her off.)
Anyway, it was easily explainable and my heart stopped racing when they said “we were taking the kids to school and a tree fell down on the road so we had to turn back and the children are fine, I’ve taken the morning off to look after them and didn’t want to disturb you at work incase you worried “
Phew massive relief.
But i seriously wish the school had explained that instead of leaving a vague message that scared the life out of me! Sheesh.
Image credits: Emma S
#6
I got home and checked my answering machine ( pre mobile phone days for me, anyway)). My best friend had left a disturbing message.
He said he’d just woken up from a nap and there was smoke everywhere. He sounded confused and suspected there was a bushfire in the area. He ended by saying he was going to get on the roof and see if he could see anything.
The message was left around 30 minutes earlier.
I’d heard on the radio on my way home that a bushfire had started in the “Hills” as they are locally known.
I immediately dropped everything and called his number. No answer. I prayed he wouldn’t try and be a ‘hero’ and try save his home and would just get the hell out of there. I called again and again but still no answer.
I worried all afternoon and into the night. He didn’t have a car and I didn’t know what he was going to do. I kept calling but eventually the lines went dead, taken down by the fires. All I could do was wait.
Thankfully early the next morning there was a knock on my door and there he was, traumatized but miraculously unhurt. He had been seen by a neighbour wandering around and was given a lift. They made it out just in time.
The fire he escaped was the worst in the country’s recorded history. 173 people lost their lives including 3 of my other friends. They named it the Black Saturday Bushfires. Sad.
Image credits: Cin Gordon
#7
I came home from vacation. That I really needed. Time away from my own prison. I checked my voicemail. I had been in grief hell for over a year at that point. I got a voicemail from my husband’s ex. That I don’t know, and she doesn’t know me. I was grieving my six year old child. She had been Facebook stalking.
In that message she said “you two little birdies belong together” ( what’s birdies supposed to mean) also “you are fat and ugly” OK… fine. Then “I am glad Xander died. He is better off dead, than with you” Woah. I have no idea where she lives, or why she would say such a thing. We don’t even live in the same state. I wouldn’t say that to anyone ever. Who says that? I have not gotten an opportunity to respond, it’s been six years since that call. It was a complete gut punch.
Image credits: Amanda Ferguson McCulloch
#8
I was on a night out with my best friend and felt off all night when usually I’m the first one on the dance floor. My phone was away in my coat for most of the night. I went out for a smoke and checked my phone, noticing I had a lot of missed calls from my aunt. She left a voice message saying she needed to speak urgently and I knew exactly what was wrong. My dad had passed away. I will never forget that night. I broke down completely and my friend had to help me hold it together. 5 months later I got a similar voice message not long after leaving the hospice my mother was in. I had the exact same feeling as the night my dad passed. I still haven’t fully processed what happened.
Image credits: Sam
#9
This was many many years ago and we did not have cell phones it was left on an answering machine.
I was babysitting my baby sister. I was watching a movie (from the 80″s) called “When a stranger is watching” It is a horror movie about a babysitter and she gets terrifying phones calls with a man asking if she had checked the children and things such as that.
The phone rang but I did not answer it since I was told not to, just to listen to the message in case it was my parents calling me and not to answer to anyone else.
It was a guy saying that he knew I was babysitting my sister and that I was alone. He told me what I was wearing and what room I was in. I lived in a 4 story old home. This scared the hell out of me. I was 10 years old in a house alone and on top of that watching that movie. He kept calling and leaving messages saying things that I had no idea how he knew unless he was in the house with me. I was so terrified that I could not move, not to even go to the phone to call the police. He kept calling me. I finally took my sister and ran to a neighbors house until my parents came home.
Come to find out it was a bunch of male teenagers that lived across the street from me playing a prank. This was one of the most terrifying things that has ever happened to me.
Image credits: Judith Bunting
#10
I got a voice mail from a surgeon at Great Ormond Street Hospital in England (a pediatric hospital).
“Hi Ms Turner, this is Dr Husain from Great Ormond Street. Just to let you know your son is out of theatre and in recovery. His brain surgery went well and he should be coming round soon if you want to make your way back to the hospital.”
I am not Ms Turner and I don’t have a son, or any children for that matter.
This voicemail was left to me over 6 years ago and I still hope that the little boy’s Mum made it to the hospital in time for him waking up.
Image credits: Louise Towle
#11
I was in class (first year of community college). This was back when not everyone had a cell phone. I got out of my 7:30am class and had 13 missed calls from a bunch of different phone numbers and 1 voice-mail. The message was from my sister, it went something like this, “Answer your phone. There was a shooting at the school. I cant find our brother.” she had borrowed a bunch of people’s phones trying.
I’ll never forget that day. My parents were out of town. I raced down the freeway and two major roads. Within a mile of the school there were tons of cars parked illegally. I parked at my friend’s house who lived nearby and ran. I found my sister, hugged her, jumped on a parked truck (with many others) and we looked for my brother. Luckily we found him within 10 minutes. It was one of the scariest moments in my life. I still remember driving him and his friends to go get something to eat. On the way home a construction crew was jackhammering the street and started right when we pulled up. Everyone (but me) ducked… later that day I found out one of my friends died in the shooting…
Image credits: Gertrude
#12
Truly sad story here:
When I married, my spouse came to live in my town. Unbeknownst to either of us, someone living here locally had her exact name. We purchased a house and she wanted a land line for security purposes, so it went in her name. Boom! The world had tracked down the missing JS the moment her name appeared in directories. First we got calls from the police at 2am demanding JS turn herself in. We had to call and explain our JS wasn’t their JS. We got billions of calls from bill collectors demanding payment. We got calls from the hospital saying JS bolted on hundreds of bills. We had to explain to all these people our JS wasn’t this scumbag.
Then, one Christmas, came the terrible call. A young child called wanting to talk to her mommie. Why wasn’t mommie coming home? Where was she? Couldn’t they spend Christmas together?
Such a dreadful person to have abandoned her children, leaving them to reach out to someone who happened to have her name.
Image credits: Mel Newmin
#13
‘Barry – its your Gran. I’ve fallen down and I can’t get up. I need help getting up.’
I picked up the message about 30 minutes after it was left, and immediately called the number back and spoke to Barry’s Gran’s daughter (Barry’s mum).
Turned out that the Postman’s first stop was Barry’s Gran’s street – and he had noticed that the milk was still sitting on the front doorstep – which was unusual. So he had a glance through the Letter Box, saw Barry’s Gran sitting on the floor, asked if she was alright (she was, just needed help getting up) and was given directions to get in via the key-safe.
Obviously postman didn’t help her up – but instead made her a cup of tea before nipping across the street to see if either of the Doctors that lived over the road were in (one was). She came over and checked out Barry’s Gran and determined that there were no broken bones and she and the Postman helped her to her feet and saw her into a comfortable chair.
Turned out that Barry’s Gran had dropped the paper on the floor and had bent down to pick it up, and lost her balance. She’s landed on her bottom and simply didn’t have any low tables or anything else to use to help balance herself as she got back onto her feet. She wasn’t calling Barry because she was in any danger. She just needed his arm to help her to get back on her feet.
It was still a pretty disturbing message to hear…
Image credits: Jen Smith
#14
Years ago I received a voice mail from an army buddy who i served with years ago. We would typically text and check up on each other several times a year. Anyways I was working full-time and I wasn’t allowed to have my phone on me so the employees kept their phones in there personal lockers. On the way home from work I played the voice mail, it was a short message, he said “ I’m so sorry, tell my wife and kids im sorry. I whipped the truck to the side of the road and called him imedietly. No one answered and I kept calling for several days with no results, I didn’t have any other number to try and reach him. After what was probably a week went by I received a call from his ex wife. I Guess she took it upon herself to go thru his contacts on his phone and deliver the news. Its been years now that my friend took his life but it still feels like yesterday. Thanks for the question.
Image credits: Samuel Heiting
#15
It wasn’t left on my voicemail, but it was a recorded message which somebody phoned me up and then played to me. In the mid 1980s, at the height of the Troubles, when I was secretary to the Defence Desk at The Daily Telegraph, I was phoned up and played a tape of a man with a strong Belfast accent, announcing that anthrax spores had been left at The Ministry of Defence.
Image credits: Claire Jordan
#16
Not voicemail, but a message that I could not delete from my answering machine. This was 1993, when I lived in Tokyo, and I had an answering machine that had a cassette tape in it that held my message and incoming messages.
I had arranged for a group of us to climb Mt Fuji in April. We all had some winter climbing experience, and we knew what Fuji was like in April – covered in snow that could be icy. At the last minute a friend I’ll call D rang up and asked to be included in the group. The message went onto the tape, and I called him back so say he could come along.
We set off to climb Mt Fuji that day, from the usual starting point about halfway up, as far as you can go by car or bus. The snow was soft and a bit mushy as we set out, got firmer as we got higher, and then became firm and slightly icy. The cone on Fuji gets steeper as you go up, it is never that steep,, only about 25 to 30 degrees, but in the snow it is flat and smooth, with just some rocks sticking of the snow in places. We had always said “never fall off Fuji in the snow. If you can’t stop at once (with an iceaxe self-arrest) it is seriously bad news.”
About two-thirds of the way up, as it got slightly steeper, D fell off. Why, we still don’t know. He slid about a thousand feet in the snow, leaving a horrid pink trail. Yes, he was dead.
When I got back home, after dealing with the formalities with the police and at the morgue, I checked my answering machine and his message was still there. I tried to delete it, but for some reason it was on a section of tape that was reserved. Every time I checked the messages for about the next month, that message was still there. Finally the machine overwrote that section of tape, to my huge relief.
Rest in peace, D.
Image credits: David Parry
#17
A few months back, I had what I call a “super stalker”.
I have no idea how he found me, but one day, he started messaging me on Instagram, Snapchat, and on Hangouts. Yeah, he got my email.
He was a middle aged guy looking for some fifteen year old entertainment.
This guy kept finding me on all my super private accounts. I suspect he is a hacker of some sort.
He kept finding more and more of my accounts. I blocked him, but he just kept coming back.
One day, I saw that there was a voice mail left on my phone. Me, being the unsuspecting person that I was, listened to it.
This was the message:
“Hey Katie! So, I found out your phone number. And that you live in _________ . I will be visiting you soon. I hope you have a lot of food; I’m really hungry.”
I started flipping out.
First, this guy stalked all my social media accounts. Creepy, but I could handle it. But then he gets my number and finds out where I live? No, that is just too creepy for me.
Long story short, the guy never came to my house. He new the state where I lived, but I don’t think he knew my exact address.
Hugs & kisses!
Katie 🙂
Image credits: Katie Anderson