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What is an experience you never want to experience again in your lifetime?

625 replies

sooo4455 · 06/04/2026 14:29

The most stressful time in my life started about 7 years ago and went on for 2 years and my mental health took an absolute battering and im still not over it. And now im super paranoid about it happening again.

I had bedbugs and a rat problem under the bath at the same time and pest control were useless.
i had a toddler at the time and their was 7 of us and I was advise to put everything we owned (twice) in the garden while they tried to get the bedbugs under control. I had to wash every soft furnishing and beds, draws, wardrobes had to be emptied and placed outside in bags in the sun. Only thing that was allowed in the house was furniture. I had postnatal depression at the time and I just remember sitting in the garden with everything we owned (twice). With the rats they were running around under the bath and were huge. My bathroom is downstairs and they’d chewed from the outside in, the smell was not normal and the noise all day from them scurrying around 🤮
It finally got resolved after 2 years but at that point I was shot to bits. I don’t think people realise how traumatic it is the live with a bedbugs. I’m so paranoid about getting them again I try and stay away from public transport and hotels or I will research the shit out of them before booking and even then I’m hyper vigilant and can’t sleep.

What is something you never want to go though again?

OP posts:
usedtobeaylis · 06/04/2026 19:01

ObsessiveGoogler · 06/04/2026 18:46

If people found lockdown a relief it’s usually because they find “normal” life challenging in a way many do not -,not because they are arseholes or don’t have empathy for others.

This. How awful to try to make people feel shame because they had a positive experience. It's not like those people who say things like 'I remodeled by whole house and start a multi million dollar business while raising 40 children' - it's generally just people who experienced a slower pace of life, sometimes for the first time in their life. It doesn't mean we don't understand that others had a more difficult time. My then-husband missed out on furlough by a week as he'd started a new job and then lost that job and had a terrible time for some of Covid. We don't need to detract from each others' experiences.

worldshottestmom · 06/04/2026 19:01

Leavemealone66 · 06/04/2026 18:56

Im so sorry your mum is going through that. Its so hard for her. And for you to watch. 💐

Thank you, it really is devastating as she is the kindest person on this planet tbh she is a saint. The least deserving person of this kind of behaviour. You also deserve a life free from abuse, and I so hope you get it ❤️

Booboobagins · 06/04/2026 19:04

HappiestSleeping · 06/04/2026 14:33

The death of my wife. The last week was the most awful thing I can ever imagine experiencing. I am glad I was there to hold her hand, but I never want to go through that again, nor have anyone need to do it for me. It will be off to Dignitas when it gets to my time.

I'm so sorry @HappiestSleeping my condolences.

I was going to say learning that my husband was dying and watching him die 24 hours later. I too was glad I was with him, but it was harrowing. Not wanting to be at risk of repeating this experience again is the reason I've stayed single since too.

Sending you a big hug.

MaidOfSteel · 06/04/2026 19:08

Whoops75 · 06/04/2026 15:16

OMG did you actually type this!!
so much pain and trauma came from Lockdown.

Yes, and we appreciate that. But it wasn’t like that for some of us. In my case, lockdown was no different to my usual daily life as I’m disabled, sometimes bedbound and don’t get out much. I don’t think it’s wrong of people to try making the best of a bad situation .

TheNinkyNonkyIsATardis · 06/04/2026 19:09

Allaboutthecats · 06/04/2026 15:03

A birth like my first followed by paragliding.

I really thought you went paragliding straight out of the delivery ward there...

TheNinkyNonkyIsATardis · 06/04/2026 19:12

Bethany83 · 06/04/2026 18:46

I have always thought this must be so awful. I had morning sickness in my second pregnancy for less than three months and it wasn't all day long so I would have moments free from the nausea but I always remember thinking how awful this condition must be.

I had HG, and there's an incredibly long and idiosyncratic list of places, people and things that make me feel sick again three years later. Definitely a traumatic memory.

firstofallimadelight · 06/04/2026 19:17

My 13 year old DDs birthday party. Just awful 😣

Momlife86 · 06/04/2026 19:20

Vintageblueribbon · 06/04/2026 15:50

Being told my grandad had died

My mother is a narcissist,my father and enabler,one brother is the golden child,my other brothers are the ignored children and im the scapegoat

My mother decided when I was very young,that any problems she had where my fault so shipped me out to my darling grandad

He wasnt perfect but he was my rock-he shaped me into the woman I am now and I was his carer from a very young age

We adored each other

Anyway,when I was about 12/13 he fell asleep in his chair and woke up and asked who I was

He also asked for his own name and where was he?

He seemed to understand and I was too young to understand

I went back to my mother and told her what had happened and was told not to be so stupid and to stop telling lies

A doctor was called in for a home visit (i dont know who rang them) and walked in and he asked grandad the day and month and who was the prime minister?

Of course grandad said 'I dont know'

The doctor looked at me and said 'its dementia' and walked out-id never heard that word before and certainly didnt understand it

I noticed he'd started putting rubbish in cupboards,wasnt bathing (he was always a smart man),wasnt shaving (unheard of) and getting angry with me over nothing

About 2 weeks later,he was found walking up and down the street,in his pyjamas,no slippers and it was snowing looking for my granny (who had died long before I was born) as he wanted to say goodbye before he went off to war but he was very upset that he couldn't find her

Family who id never met and certainly hadn't bothered with him for years,suddenly showed up and whipped him into a home

I found out by coming home as normal after school,everything I owned was in a skip and I was told I had 2 minutes to get what hadn't been chucked and to leave

I remember going back to my parents and seeing how my mothers face dropped when I told her-she really didnt want me back under her roof

I'd go see him in the home 4/5 times a week but he didnt have a clue who I was (the family didnt bother going to see him-it was only me) and seeing him go from the most intelligent man I've ever known reduced to a shell almost killed me

My mother got a phone call to say that he wasnt going to make the next 24 hours and if she wanted to say goodbye,now would be a good time (she'd not seen him in the flesh for years and had never visited him in the home)

She never passed that message onto me

This would have been the Monday and I rocked up on the Wednesday-im told he'd hung on,whispering my name and 'pushing' something unseen away while muttering 'not now,my name'

I said the most painful 'i love you' and he opened his eyes and saw me,but I didnt know that was going to be the last time I ever saw him,he knew but I didnt

The next day he was gone

I've never felt pain like it-i was 14 and my rock,the only person that loved me,had shaped me and done everything for me had gone

My mother prodded me awake with 'grandads gone,he'd dead,now get up and get ready for school'

Of course my mother made his funeral all about her,how she was the best dil in the world and how much she'd done for him while I was shoved at the back and ignored like I was nothing by his adult dc and other grandchildren

My family took the line 'hes dead,move on and forget him' and I had zero support-i wasnt allowed to cry or mention his name

I really struggled turning 28 as id lived half my life without him and think of him every single day

I hope I do him proud

This brought tears to eyes 🫂🫂🫂

I’m so sorry your family treated you that way.
I’m glad you got to say goodbye to him.
He loved you very much.

Fernticket · 06/04/2026 19:20

BrianBlessedsTonsil · 06/04/2026 15:25

My worst experience was putting my 8 week old baby to sleep beside me in bed and waking up to find her dead. I tried to resuscitate her on my living room floor but it was too late. It's been 20 years but I can never get over it.

So so sorry. 💔😥😥

Greenfingers37 · 06/04/2026 19:22

Kwondry · 06/04/2026 18:40

Dear Lord, this is horrendous. I would have thought this would be national news. Sorry for your loss.

Thank you. It only made the local Midlands news.
4 years ago next weekend.

Piknik · 06/04/2026 19:24

I have two quite different ones.

The first was getting a phone call to say that my mum had been taken to hospital with an aneurysm and had a few hours left at most. I was about four hours away for one night only for the first and only night in three years, it was chucking down with rain, the car had been making a weird noise on the drive up, I had drunk a couple of glasses of wine and no taxi would take me back to London. I couldn't get to her. She died a few hours later whilst I sat in a strange bathroom with a phone pressed to my ear trying to hear her breathe (my DH rushed to hospital and sat with her holding the phone for me).

The other one was the most frightened I have ever been. Was on a road-trip with my mate and we booked to stay a night in this quirky little place called Little Ale-Inn in the Nevada desert close to Area 51. It's in the middle of literal nowhere - just desert and a small motel with a lot of Alien paraphernalia and questionable 'evidence' etc up on the walls. A bit of fun. This was about 30 years ago so probably quite different now, but back them it was run by a couple of guys that had big ZZ Top vibes - biker leathers/beads/tattoos - friendly enough though. There was hardly any one else staying so we played pool with the two owners and made a bit of small talk and were about ready for bed. And then suddenly about 20 x clones of them arrived on bikes and were trying to make us drink tequilla and get high with them. The atmosphere changed acutely and me and my friend just caught each others eyes and both knew we felt like we were in trouble. Definite Jodie Foster in The Accused vibes.

We didn't want to show fear and we felt we were on a bit of a precipice and that might be triggering so we casually said we were going to bed and after a couple of them trying to block our path out, we managed to get to our room and shut the door. A few minutes later they started knocking on the door and banging on the window asking us why were being so 'stuck up' and didn't we want to have a 'little fun' (hard no) and we got really frightened. This was pre mobile phones and we were literally in the desert in pitch black. One of them tried to prise the window and a few of them were rattling the door handle but worst of all, we knew they were mates of the owners who would have spare keys.

We ended up moving the bed and all the furniture to barricade the door and just sat up all night, our hearts racing as they periodically came back and tried to get in or get us out.

We left at first light - as soon as we could see to drive - but the fear of that night is something I will never forget.

whatisforteamum · 06/04/2026 19:26

Sympathy to anyone who has lost a child or partner 🥲.
My medical ones are kidney stones....
Anxiety so bad I couldn't cross the road to work when df died.
Silly one is my lovely kitten...ok bit bigger bringing in a large rat dead on the living room floor and me finding it at 5 am 🤮

tartyflette · 06/04/2026 19:29

Probably TMI but an episiotomy done in a rush before the local anaesthetic had taken effect.
The sound of it and the sensation was just like cutting through a thick piece of raw meat.

Fernticket · 06/04/2026 19:31

Fetchthevet · 06/04/2026 16:07

Having a termination for medical reasons and then instantly regretting it. Trying and trying to justify it to myself but I never can. Still feel the regret and heartache to this day and it was 12 years ago. I chose to do this to myself - I ruined my own life. What a stupid, stupid person I am.

@Fetchthevet . No you are not stupid. You had to have it for medical reasons. I can't imagine how awful it must have been to go through that. Sending you hugs.

Vintageblueribbon · 06/04/2026 19:35

Momlife86 · 06/04/2026 19:20

This brought tears to eyes 🫂🫂🫂

I’m so sorry your family treated you that way.
I’m glad you got to say goodbye to him.
He loved you very much.

I hope so (and thank you)

My mother (months later) told me that the manager of the home (a schoolfriend mum-lovely lady) had told her at his funeral that he was laid on his bed,wired up to god knows how many machines,making pushing motions with his hands and was whispering 'no' 'not yet' 'my name' and 'not ready'

Apparently this isnt unusual

He was 'due' to die on the Monday,hung on until the Wednesday and died early Thursday morning-i got poked and shoved awake at 6am that morning to be told the news

She told me this while laughing and telling me it was bullshit

'He was such a vegetable/spastic (god I hate that word but im just repeating her evil words) he didnt have a fucking clue'

I know he did-i saw him turn his head and I know he saw me

Once he'd said his goodbyes to me,he felt he could go be with my granny

I will spend the rest of my life missing him and trying to make him proud of me

When my mother goes,it'll be business as usual and the world will be a better place without her in it

tropbelle · 06/04/2026 19:37

Miscarrying ivf twin boys at 20 weeks. One was born as I went for a wee in the loo and I had to catch him in one of those sick bowls they have in hospital. Had to waddle back to the bed carrying him as the other twin was coming. Me and my then husband holding them as they gasped to breathe then died. Being in the labour ward hearing newborn babies crying around us. Walking out after being discharged with no babies and being told by the staff “hope we see you back here again in happier circumstances”. Being at the funeral with the smallest coffin disappearing through the curtain broke me. 17 years ago now and I can remember it so vividly.

Lifeomars · 06/04/2026 19:42

This thread is bringing tears to my eyes, I want to put the kettle on and make a massive pot of tea to share with people. Of course it will not take anyone's pain, trauma or distress away but I want to toast the courage and tenacity of people who somehow manage to still keep putting one foot in front of another in the face of some almost indescribable suffering. It has really brought home to me that we often have little idea of what others have been through

Tillow4ever · 06/04/2026 19:44

So many awful stories on here - I’m so sorry for everyone’s pain.

Mine:

Being raped
Being sexually assaulted
Miscarriage
Sciatica in both legs leaving me unable to walk and being in constant agony
Emotionally abusive marriage
2 years of being virtually unable to stay awake. I thought I must have cancer or something - the drs couldn’t find what was wrong with me but I just felt so, so unwell
My best friend suddenly deciding they didn’t want to have anything to do with me anymore and me still not knowing why

Lifeomars · 06/04/2026 19:47

tropbelle · 06/04/2026 19:37

Miscarrying ivf twin boys at 20 weeks. One was born as I went for a wee in the loo and I had to catch him in one of those sick bowls they have in hospital. Had to waddle back to the bed carrying him as the other twin was coming. Me and my then husband holding them as they gasped to breathe then died. Being in the labour ward hearing newborn babies crying around us. Walking out after being discharged with no babies and being told by the staff “hope we see you back here again in happier circumstances”. Being at the funeral with the smallest coffin disappearing through the curtain broke me. 17 years ago now and I can remember it so vividly.

Edited

I am so very sorry to read this, and gasping at the insensitivity of the comment made by the staff, just devoid of any understanding of your loss.

1983Louise · 06/04/2026 19:51

HappiestSleeping · 06/04/2026 14:33

The death of my wife. The last week was the most awful thing I can ever imagine experiencing. I am glad I was there to hold her hand, but I never want to go through that again, nor have anyone need to do it for me. It will be off to Dignitas when it gets to my time.

I'm so sorry for your loss, I held my husbands hand as he suddenly passed away 17 months ago. I'm in a lot better place now but I'll never get over it x

Commodus · 06/04/2026 19:52

Watching my dad die in horrible suffering in a nursing home. I was early 20s at the time, he was an old dad, in his 80s (second marriage, big age difference with my mum), the staff thought he was my grandad. It took him 36 hours to die and he was in agony and terror the whole time. Because it was a weekend the staff couldn't get a doctor out to administer morphine via a pump, they only had oramorph which stopped working because his organs and digestive system were shutting down. Every minute or so he would do a big exhale and every time we thought he had finally gone, then he would suddenly gasp back to life in panic. It was 20 years ago and I remember it clear as day, how skeletal he was, the catheter bag with blood in it. On the Monday morning when they finally got him a morphine pump he finally drifted off and was gone an hour later. But what a horrible, pointless end to a life.

TheHillIsMine · 06/04/2026 19:52

Divorce. Heartbreak. Moving house.

Flushitdown · 06/04/2026 19:54

backagainohdear · 06/04/2026 14:40

I quite enjoyed the pandemic. 😂 Lockdown was lovely especially with that summer we had, was so peaceful!

Same here. It's not an opinion I openly voiced though as so many people had awful experiences.

For me it's the first 6 months with DC1. No amount of money in the world could entice me to relive that time. Horrendous!

Second is the suicide of my friend. When his wife called me immediately upon finding him, awful day.

DaisyDuke74 · 06/04/2026 19:56

Vintageblueribbon · 06/04/2026 15:50

Being told my grandad had died

My mother is a narcissist,my father and enabler,one brother is the golden child,my other brothers are the ignored children and im the scapegoat

My mother decided when I was very young,that any problems she had where my fault so shipped me out to my darling grandad

He wasnt perfect but he was my rock-he shaped me into the woman I am now and I was his carer from a very young age

We adored each other

Anyway,when I was about 12/13 he fell asleep in his chair and woke up and asked who I was

He also asked for his own name and where was he?

He seemed to understand and I was too young to understand

I went back to my mother and told her what had happened and was told not to be so stupid and to stop telling lies

A doctor was called in for a home visit (i dont know who rang them) and walked in and he asked grandad the day and month and who was the prime minister?

Of course grandad said 'I dont know'

The doctor looked at me and said 'its dementia' and walked out-id never heard that word before and certainly didnt understand it

I noticed he'd started putting rubbish in cupboards,wasnt bathing (he was always a smart man),wasnt shaving (unheard of) and getting angry with me over nothing

About 2 weeks later,he was found walking up and down the street,in his pyjamas,no slippers and it was snowing looking for my granny (who had died long before I was born) as he wanted to say goodbye before he went off to war but he was very upset that he couldn't find her

Family who id never met and certainly hadn't bothered with him for years,suddenly showed up and whipped him into a home

I found out by coming home as normal after school,everything I owned was in a skip and I was told I had 2 minutes to get what hadn't been chucked and to leave

I remember going back to my parents and seeing how my mothers face dropped when I told her-she really didnt want me back under her roof

I'd go see him in the home 4/5 times a week but he didnt have a clue who I was (the family didnt bother going to see him-it was only me) and seeing him go from the most intelligent man I've ever known reduced to a shell almost killed me

My mother got a phone call to say that he wasnt going to make the next 24 hours and if she wanted to say goodbye,now would be a good time (she'd not seen him in the flesh for years and had never visited him in the home)

She never passed that message onto me

This would have been the Monday and I rocked up on the Wednesday-im told he'd hung on,whispering my name and 'pushing' something unseen away while muttering 'not now,my name'

I said the most painful 'i love you' and he opened his eyes and saw me,but I didnt know that was going to be the last time I ever saw him,he knew but I didnt

The next day he was gone

I've never felt pain like it-i was 14 and my rock,the only person that loved me,had shaped me and done everything for me had gone

My mother prodded me awake with 'grandads gone,he'd dead,now get up and get ready for school'

Of course my mother made his funeral all about her,how she was the best dil in the world and how much she'd done for him while I was shoved at the back and ignored like I was nothing by his adult dc and other grandchildren

My family took the line 'hes dead,move on and forget him' and I had zero support-i wasnt allowed to cry or mention his name

I really struggled turning 28 as id lived half my life without him and think of him every single day

I hope I do him proud

This genuinely brought a tear to my eye. I hope you have gone on to have a happy life.

Midlifecrisisaverted · 06/04/2026 19:56

InterviewGhost · 06/04/2026 16:48

Being managed out by a toxic senior manager. I was off work with stress for four months and in that time I was told - by my direct manager - that when I got back, I would be on a PIP. I eventually decided to face the music and went back: the PIP had loads of targets that I’d never be able to achieve, for example, ensuring a member of my team achieved xyz. They started it the moment I got back from sick leave despite me being on an extremely phased return.
Then every time I completed a target, a new few got added. This went on for months.
I asked for a WP conversation about an exit agreement, they told me to resign.

I couldn’t as I, you know, needed a job. I wasn’t getting anywhere with job applications.

eventually my Union got involved and the PIP went away. Then four weeks later I was told my role was at risk, and you know the rest.
They were determined to get rid of me and they managed it. I’d been there for 14 years and only got statutory minimum redundancy.

I have a new job now but I am riddled with anxiety and imposter syndrome.

I've been through that. I was pregnant at the time. It was horrendous, I sympathise.