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The unavoidable reality is that everything we’re doing is temporary. We will all pass away. And when your life is nearing its end, you start to realize what the most important, fundamental things are. Suddenly, there’s no real reason to keep lying, neither to yourself nor to others. However, the truth isn’t always pleasant to hear.

Internet users have been opening up on Quora about the most shocking, sad, and wild deathbed confessions that they have personally witnessed. Scroll down to read what they heard.

Just be warned, many of these stories are very sensitive, emotionally intense, and potentially triggering.

#1

Elderly man sitting on bed, deep in thought, reflecting on heavy confessions he refused to take to his grave. I was working in a nursing home some years ago, and we had the nicest gentleman there. I mean he was the best patient we or any nurse could ask for. So, after get pneumonia and declining he had only days to live, he asked me if he could tell me something that he never told anyone. Of course I agreed and was happy to hear whatever he had to say. Well he proceeded to tell me that his grandfather s**ually a**sed his little sister and his grandmother knew about it and protected his grandfather, so he put poison in their food when they had to stay there for the night. The next morning they both were dead. No autopsy was performed and everyone assumed they had passed from old age. He smiled at me and said, “It was my job to protect her.” I just simply smiled and told him he was now my favorite person, moments later he passed on. I will never forget him.

Lynda Parisi , cottonbro studio Report

Luke Branwen
Community Member
3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

A man of focus, commitment and sheer f@cking will.

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    #2

    Three owl-shaped containers in white, gray, and brown colors arranged against a plain blue background. I have an amazing one:

    My great grandmother lived a very long and interesting life. She was in her 20s in the great depression. She had a wild streak from those days that we don't know much about, to the point that we actually don't know our great grandfather's name. Just the husband she took later.

    Over the course of her nearly 100 year life, she had collected owls. Literally thousands of owl figurines. She had clocks, wall-hangings, potholders, lamps, stained glass art, salt shakers, and more little figurines than you could imagine, all depicting owls.

    We all wondered the importance of the owls. She never talked about them, we just all knew she loved owls.

    Well, when she was nearing death, at the age of 98 or 99, and the docs said she had days, my grandparents went and talked to her and they asked her if she had anything she wanted to share or ask before she goes.

    She thought for a moment, then said, "I never understood the owls."

    It turns out, she didn't really give a s**t about owls. Near as we could piece together sometime in the 40s or 50s perhaps, she bought either a trivet or a set of salt/pepper shakers that were owls. Then someone got her the other. Those were the oldest owls anyone could remember. But from there, someone got her an owl to match, probably a potholder or place mat. And all the sudden her kitchen was owl themed. From there, it snowballed. The owls flowed like wine, baffling her for 60 years, eventually taking over as the bulk of her personal belongings.

    The moral is: if you're not actually into something, mention it early.

    Fearlessleader85 , William Warby Report

    Daisydaisy
    Community Member
    Premium
    4 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I kind of love this story!

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    #3

    Old brown bottle of ant poison on a wooden surface, symbolizing heavy confessions and untold secrets. My friends mom confessed to us two days b4 she died that she had k**led my friends dad many years prior with poison. she claimed that she found out he was m**esting their neighbor who was a disabled kid and she fed him rat poison. Everyone thought he had just got sick and died. We said yea but he was in the hospital for a month b4 he died, and she replied, “that’s why I told him not to eat that horrible hospital food and that I would bring him food.”

    Vanessa Ingrid , Evin Ershock Report

    Losing your loved ones is already one of the worst things that can ever happen to you in life. But learning that they might not have been the people you thought you knew can be even more devastating. Not only are you dealing with grief, but now you also have to come to terms with this new information. Even though the person has passed away, if they’ve spilled some sensitive secrets in their final moments, they fundamentally changed your relationship with them.

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    While we all keep secrets, some of them are more devastating than others. And there is a big difference between secrecy and privacy. A good rule of thumb to follow is that if a piece of information directly impacts another person, you should tell them. Meanwhile, if you feel ashamed or guilty about withholding some information from your loved ones, it might be a sign that you’re being secretive rather than simply private.

    #4

    Older woman embracing younger man, sharing a heavy confession moment in an intimate and emotional setting. I had a patient, 96yo woman. She had one son who always looked after her, came to see her and took care of her. She would tell me stories about her life, WWII, and her family. One day she confessed that her son is not really her son and actually is her nephew. She couldn’t have kids and her sister gave him away to her. She said he doesn’t know and should never know. Felt weird to know this.

    Ila Na , Ron Lach Report

    Leena Petrich
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    she raised him, loved him. as far as I'm concerned shes his mom

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    #5

    Hands shaping meatballs over a bowl and plate on a green tiled surface, representing heavy confessions theme. My grandpa, a Sicilian man with blessed cooking skills, told us on his deathbed that his meatballs were actually frozen meatballs from the grocery store.

    orangestar17 , TIVASEE Report

    BrunoVI
    Community Member
    4 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Never go in against a Sicilian when death is on the line. (Too obscure? How about "Inconceivable!")

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    #6

    Elderly woman in a cream turtleneck sweater, reflecting on heavy confessions people refused to take to their graves. My parents went through a very bitter divorce. Admittedly my mother lied about several things which led the courts to awarding her half of my fathers assets plus alimony.

    The day he died he told me he wished he’d never met my mother. His said she was the biggest regret of his life.

    The only solace was him telling me that he never once regretted having me as his son.

    He was a man of integrity and honor. My mother used him for his wealth.

    His estate was divided between me and my sister. My mother tried to sue the estate demanding that she was entitled to ongoing alimony. She didn’t succeed. We have not spoken to her in 15 years. I don’t know if she’s alive or dead. I’ve never been happier to have her out of our lives forever.

    Doug Martin , cottonbro studio Report

    BrunoVI
    Community Member
    4 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Whenever parents say they "stay together for the kids," it makes it sound like they did it strictly for the benefit of the kids. How often do they mean that they were willing to sacrifice anything, to be certain that the kids aren't taken away from them, even part-time?

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    As Michael Slepian, PhD, the Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. associate professor of leadership and ethics at Columbia Business School, told the American Psychological Association, people have around 13 secrets at any one time. It’s estimated that around 5 of those are things that they have never told others.

    According to Slepian, some of the most common secrets that people keep include having told lies and not wanting others to find out. Other common secrets include romantic desires and things related to intimacy and money.

    #7

    Elderly man with oxygen mask resting in hospital bed, illustrating heavy confessions people refused to reveal. My uncle had been in a car accident. It was bad. In the ambulance on the way to the hospital, he said "tell my wife that Wendy is my daughter and I love her" (name changed for privacy). He died a few minutes later because of internal bleeding.

    Wendy was the neighbours' then 5 year old child. That caused a huge s**tstorm, I can tell you.

    MartijnCvB , engin akyurt Report

    TruthoftheHeart
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The girl deserved to know, clearly her mom wasn't gonna tell.

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    #8

    Elderly woman in hospital bed sharing heavy confessions with a visitor she refused to take to her grave. As a nurse, I've been with many right as they pass. The confession came from a 102-year-old lady. She was so nice and polite and would never ask for a thing. She outlived her children and husband; the rest of the family lived across the country. I sat with her for a few minutes after giving her pain medication. She stated, 'I love the Lord, but I'm not going to see him.' I told her that she had a spot in heaven waiting for her. She still said, 'No.'

    Turns out that she got pregnant at 17, while unmarried, with a boy she didn't even know well. Which would have been a big deal back then. She hid her pregnancy and gave birth in the family barn. Scared and knowing that if her family found out about any of this, she would be kicked out and labeled, she wrapped up the baby and placed it in a pond on the family farm.

    I thought my heart stopped when she told me her story. Soon, she fell asleep and passed about an hour later.

    Brittany Poplin , Curated Lifestyle Report

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    #9

    Elderly man with gray hair and plaid shirt, deep in thought, reflecting on heavy confessions he never was charged with. My dad was adopted from a woman who went to my grandparent's church and got pregnant out of wedlock. My grandpa confessed on his deathbed that he had actually had an affair with that woman and he was my dad's real father, which was why he suggested adopting him in the first place.

    tay-lorde , Tim Doerfler Report

    Ka Se
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    At least he was honorable enough to take care of the child.

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    The psychologist notes that keeping secrets from others indicates that you may not be comfortable enough to be yourself around others. Overall, it’s healthier to feel guilty (for example, thinking that you’ve done something bad) than ashamed (believing that you’re a bad person). It’s in the latter case that your secrecy starts taking a toll on your well-being and health because you keep returning to your secrets over and over again.

    If you feel burdened by the secrets you keep from your loved ones, you might want to consider talking to a neutral third party. Ask them for advice. Get their perspective. Step outside of your rumination.

    #10

    Passengers wearing masks at a train station platform, representing heavy confessions and stories untold. I met a lady on a train to Edinburgh who was really nervous because she was on the way to meet her brother for the first time in 70 years. Her parents had told her that he died when he was one, but they'd given him away because they couldn't afford so many kids. She didn't find out he was still alive until her Mother confessed it on her deathbed.

    ignoramusaurus , Ayelt van Veen Report

    Mike F
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It's sad but it was also not uncommon in the US during the depression. I was doing an online search for a place that my step-dad used to talk very fondly about and discovered that they also took in children that families could not afford to feed. A very sad situation all around.

    #11

    Man holding hands with woman in hospital bed, sharing emotional moment and heavy confessions conversation. When I was in school I was shadowing an ICU nurse and we were taking care of an elderly woman dying of brain cancer. One day when her family went home for the night and we were getting her ready for bed she randomly blurts out “should I tell him they’re not his.”

    She was referring to her children and husband who had just left. She elaborated and told us that their two children are both another man’s! And not just any man’s, but her husbands childhood best friend!!! What made this even crazier was that her children were probably 50 years old! I have no idea how this had stayed a secret for so long.

    Fast forward to the next morning and I see an unfamiliar older gentleman in her room. Before I said anything to anyone the nurse I was shadowing whispers to me that that is the childhood best friend! I don’t know whether or not they were still messing around but I don’t think I have ever seen a secret 50-year-old love triangle.

    We told her that she should not tell the husband and children. If it’s been a secret this long, there’s no point to tell them on your deathbed. But were we right for that? What would you have told her?

    Nilfie Alvarado , Getty Images Report

    Lost Panda
    Community Member
    4 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    At that point, I think it would do more harm than anything. You're the one passing, your conscience will go with you... leave them be.

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    #12

    Woman in a gray shirt covering her face with hands, symbolizing heavy confessions and secrets not taken to graves. I'm a medical student and I had a female patient who was new to our practice who was HIV positive. I needed to ask her how she got the virus. She tells me it was s*xually transmitted, and the only reason she got tested was because her partner of 3 years last words to her as he was dying in hospice was "I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I wanted to tell you; forgive me." Heavy stuff.

    Edit: to be clear he died of cancer.

    Pleasebeunique27 , Karola G Report

    Batwench
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Hopefully with the treatment of HIV now, they can live a long and happy life.

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    What is the most shocking secret that you have ever heard a loved one, friend, coworker, or acquaintance tell you? Have you ever heard someone’s last-breath confession, as they were passing away?

    How many secrets would you say that you’re keeping from your nearest and dearest? If you feel like sharing, feel free to do so in the comments at the bottom of this post.

    #13

    Man with surprised expression wearing a blue shirt, symbolizing heavy confessions people refused to take to their graves. Me and all of my cousins were gathered around my grandfathers hospice bed as he laid dying. Each and every one of my cousins (there's a lot of us) gave him a kiss and tried to talk to him/said they loved him, etc. But he wouldn't respond to any of them, just stared.

    Until I came up. I sat on the edge of his bed, holding his hand. Everyone was watching us. He looked at me and said, "I don't like Mexican food."

    And that was it.

    momocazzo , Ketut Subiyanto Report

    amy lee
    Community Member
    4 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I wholeheartedly disagree... But if that's the only thing he needs to get off his chest it sounds like he did something right.

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    #14

    Close-up of tacos filled with seasoned meat, onions, and fresh cilantro on a rustic surface for heavy confessions feature. My husbands aunt (Mexican family) confessed to him on her death bed that she spiced her tacos with Kroger brand taco seasoning. He’s still a little shocked about it sometimes.

    missladyface , Amy Farías Report

    #15

    Older man with glasses and beard, arms crossed, in a dark setting conveying heavy confessions and untaken charges. From 1976 to 1982 I worked my way through NYU part-time as an EMT for FDNY Ladder 20 in southeastern Manhattan. I remember going on one call one winter, about 2–3 AM, where an older European man in his late 70s was dying of COPD and heart failure.

    He lived alone with one cat, which hadn’t been fed in awhile, and when we arrived, he was almost unresponsive, with weak pulse and shallow respiration. We attended him, took his vitals and started to strap him in to the gurney. There was a Catholic crucifix on one wall and some old pictures of German castles, street scenes and cross country skiing parties. The man had a soft and vague, mostly discarded accent, which might have been German, Austrian, Swiss or possibly Hungarian.

    He told my partner he knew his time was coming and he wanted to die at home, and in order to delay us he told my partner to look into a corner closet and take out a brass and leather trunk. In it there were 4 magnificent German hand carved boar and stag horn hunting knives with ornate, deeply etched blades of finest Prussian steel, plus some medals, including an Iron Cross, rings and papers. He told us we could have the contents and he told us his name was Dietrich, and he had risen to the rank of Standartenfuhrer (Colonel) in the SS.

    He told us, through hypoxic, rattling gasps, that in 1942 he ordered and supervised the death of over 4,000 civilians, mainly women and children, somewhere in Hungary. He said he never was charged with war crimes and escaped the Nuremburg war crimes trials because the Hungarian army, acting under SS auspices, directly participated and was responsible, and their were no witness or paperwork to tie his orders directly to the SS. He told it without emotion, without deception, as if he was telling you where he had parked his car. He had kept that secret for 40 years and needed to release it, like a confessional, before he died. We got him into the ambulance, but he was DOA by the time we got to the ER at Beth Israel.

    My partner and I each grabbed one of the hunting knives. I was struck by how easily it was to talk about and confess the most horrible deeds to a perfect stranger once he knew there would be no repercussions. Makes me realize we are all just a hair’s breadth away from being monsters.

    Steve Fortuna , Malcolm Broström Report

    Razill
    Community Member
    Premium
    4 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I hope someone took care of the poor kitty

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    #16

    Elderly man and woman hugging closely, expressing comfort and emotional heavy confessions in a home setting. There was a cold case m**der in our hometown back from the 50s. No suspects. Never solved. It was my aunts husband who a**sed her.

    On my oldest uncle's death bed he confesses to k**ling him for a**sing his sister.

    Dee , Curated Lifestyle Report

    #17

    Close-up of a person covering their face with hands, expressing heavy emotions and confessions in a dimly lit setting. A woman who ran a local outlet shop confessed to human tr**ficking and had built-up quite a nest-egg for her and her husband. When the husband learned of this. He gave the money to charity after her death.

    Joshua Light , cottonbro studio Report

    JoRo
    Community Member
    2 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    How one human can purposefully put another human through trafficking, knowing they will be a****d to the point of death in whichever field they have been trafficked into is just horrific. Any and all traffickers should get the same sentence as serial killers. It's beyond redemption.

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    #18

    Woman in beige sweater covering her face with hands, expressing heavy emotions and deep confessions indoors. I didn't see it, but my aunt watched her elderly mother fall down the stairs and confess just before she died that she wasn't her biological mother.

    She told my aunt that her oldest sister was actually her mother. The sister had gotten pregnant too young and the mom said it was hers. A common way of handling it back then. She revealed it in her very last breath.

    usf_edd , MART PRODUCTION Report

    JoRo
    Community Member
    2 days ago

    This comment has been deleted.

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    #19

    Elderly man lying in hospital bed with pulse oximeter on finger, symbolizing heavy confessions and untold truths. My grandpa told my dad he loved him for the first time when he was dying from cancer. Grandpa was a drunk all throughout my dad's childhood and had a strained relationship with the family. So this was pretty surprising to hear from him.

    dhbobers , Curated Lifestyle Report

    Andrew Keir
    Community Member
    1 day ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Now that is a message that needed to be shared. People were happier knowing it. I'm only sorry that it took till a deathbed for your dad to be told he was loved.

    #20

    Elderly woman in hospital bed looking thoughtful and concerned, reflecting on heavy confessions and untold stories. In my time as a registered nurse I've heard many deathbed confessions. The most lighthearted one was from a lady dying from cancer. Her confession was that she'd once stolen a tin of butter from the store and she asked me if God would forgive her. I told her what I tell everyone, yeah he will forgive you for sure. I don't believe in God but if I can make their death any easier for them then I will. Saying things like that gives the patients peace of mind.

    Angelica Blake , Getty Images Report

    Mike F
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Personally I believe that stealing food is not theft. I know retailers will disagree, but fvck em, they're the "haves" and hungry people are the "have-nots". Fight me.

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    #21

    Stack of vintage silver cutlery on folded linen napkins over a wooden surface, symbolizing heavy confessions and untold stories. My mom told me about the death of her father, my grandfather, and his last words to her. She said he was on his deathbed and it was obvious he was nearing the end. He motioned her over to tell her something. She went over, leaned in close, expecting some declaration of his love for her or some deeply insightful. He said "The good family silverware is hidden in the ventilation system about 15 feet out from the furnace." She looked at him like he was crazy. He said "What!! We travel a lot and that's where I hid it. That stuff is expensive!" He died the next morning.

    picksandchooses , Debby Hudson Report

    Anonymouse
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My wife's Aunt hid hers in a bag of bird seed in the garage, whole family knew, she was afraid of burglars. Always amazed me about people who had "good silverware or china" and never used it.

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    #22

    Medical professional in scrubs and mask sitting thoughtfully, reflecting on heavy confessions with serious expression. One guy was in after a heart attack. He thought for sure he was going to die in the next few days. He wanted one of our security officers to come talk to him. When the officer arrived the patient wanted me to stay in the room as a witness. Seems about 10 years back (about 25 now) he k**led a guy and buried him. Our officer had the police come to see the patient who then repeated what told us before. Told them how he ki**ed him and where he was buried. That patient survived to stand trial. Second patient was a female in after a bad car accident that was dying. She confessed to her husband while I was in the room that she had been having an affair with two other guys- one was his brother.

    Mike Hughes , Jonathan Borba Report

    Val
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Is there a statute of limitation on m****r? Genuinely asking.

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    #23

    Vintage military aircraft flying against a clear blue sky, symbolizing heavy confessions and untold stories. My dad, who was a B-17 pilot in World War II, looked at me, his eyes in tears, and said that the biggest thing in life he regretted was flying b**bing missions that may have ki**ed innocent people. He had held that in since the war. He died at 91 years old a few days later.

    Michelle S. , Mike LaChance Report

    Shark Lady
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Over 40,000 civilians died during the blitz, mostly in London, I've always wondered how the German pilots felt; were they pragmatic or did it affect them for the rest of their lives.

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    #24

    Black and white silhouette of a mysterious creature in water, linked to heavy confessions people refused to take to their graves I’m not a nurse, but the most famous deathbed confession I’ve heard was probably 20 years ago or so. The Dr. That took the still famous photo of the Loch Ness Monster admitted decades later that it was a fake. He attached a toy dinosaur to a toy submarine. This pic is still used in stories about “Nessie” even though it’s a known fake.

    Joseph Fulginiti , M. A. Wetherell Report

    Capn Dad
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The original pic is much bigger and includes the shoreline, it's obviously a fake. Which explains why the zoomed-in version is so grainy.

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    #25

    Person walking towards a yellow house outdoors with greenery, evoking themes of heavy confessions and secrets revealed. When I was a teenager I helped an older lady with painting and the like in her home.

    Decades later one of her sons passed away.

    Before dying he revealed that his Mother had k**led his brother decades before and buried him in the garden under the roses.

    So I had been cleaning up after a m**der…

    The son who revealed this was Sean Mayes.

    Chris Lockwood , Ron Lach Report

    BrunoVI
    Community Member
    4 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Sean Mayes was a pianist who toured with David Bowie. He revealed that he and his father cleaned up his brother, Roderick's m****r. Mayes was dying of AIDS when he revealed the m****r and his complicity to the police. His mother and father were long dead, and he would shortly be dead of AIDS, so the crown declined to prosecute him.

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    #26

    “He Never Was Charged”: 46 Shocking Last-Minute Truths People Revealed After A Lifetime Of Silence My hospice patient admitted r**ing his daughter. The daughter told her Mom when it happened, but the father kept up denials for 20 years. This young woman had grown to adulthood with her family believing she was a liar. On his deathbed the truth came out. I just thought it was sad, what a shame lives were changed in a bad way.

    Mary Brown , Austin Guevara Report

    LinkTheHylian
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Hopefully he was on his deathbed "lying on his stomach" and had problems with his pillows "covering his face".

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    #27

    Person holding the hand of a patient in hospital bed, symbolizing heavy confessions and emotional support. I’m not a nurse but on my granny’s death bed she looked at each of us clearly while holding our hand and told us assuredly - “I know who k**led him”. With tears in her eyes as it seemed she was going to answer - “who k**led who”, she died.

    No idea. As far as we know there were no “unsolved” death or m**ders in her circle. Maybe someone got away with the something it or it was not known it was a mystery!

    Bill Coffey , Curated Lifestyle Report

    Patricia Steward
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Maybe Granny was a character and was just messing with them.

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    #28

    Older woman sitting on bed with hands under chin, appearing thoughtful and reflecting on heavy confessions without charges. My grandmother on my father's side told me that she had two other children that had died before my father and his sister were born. After she passed when my father and aunt asked me what her big secret was, I told them that she had two other children that died before they were born. Turns out that they already knew about it but didn't say anything because they didn't want to trigger her. Turns out that they died in a house fire when they were toddlers. My grandmother always felt guilty but my father was a police officer and he said that the fire wasn't my grandmother's fault, this was at the time that wiring was going from knob and two to continuous.

    Kenneth Ferrari , RDNE Stock project Report

    Norm Gilmore
    Community Member
    4 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Out of professional interest had to look up 'kn,ob and two'. It's actually kn,ob and tube :-) And it's....archaic (edited because the article can be uncensored but ooh don't you dare try....)

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    #29

    Man in medical coat and gloves sitting on stairs looking stressed, illustrating heavy confessions and untold secrets. I was a medic in Vietnam and a badly wounded guy was brought into the ER via medevac. He knew that he was going to die and asked if he was going to hell for k**ling people that were civilians. He started to give me details but the morphine put him out. He died peacefully maybe 5 minutes later.

    Lee Weidner , Getty Images Report

    Rahb in Oz
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I don’t believe in hell, and I really hope I am right, for his sake.

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    #30

    Man with curly hair in black leather jacket covering his mouth, symbolizing heavy confessions people refused to take to their graves. My grandfather admitted to me and only me that he "accidentally" [slept] with a man.

    Aggravating_Fish_169 , Ekaterina Belinskaya Report

    #31

    “He Never Was Charged”: 46 Shocking Last-Minute Truths People Revealed After A Lifetime Of Silence My mom’s mom (my Nana) wasn’t on her deathbed but she wasn’t feeling well at all and we were visiting her for a little bit; I think it was shortly before she went into the nursing home where she spent the last few years of her life. Anyway, I was talking to her a little bit, and she said that before she met my Papa, she had been married as a teenager to a different man when she lived in Ireland. I didn’t know what to make of it and I didn’t get to ask her any more about it before we left, so I just kept it to myself, especially since I wasn’t sure if it was really true, but also because I wasn’t sure if I should tell my mom or not.

    A few years ago I was visiting my parents when my dad showed me that he had come across Nana and Papa’s marriage certificate, that had her maiden name listed as something different. I told him that she had said something to me about it once before but I didn’t know what to do with that information so hadn’t said anything. It was interesting to find out that what she had told me was true,

    Tara Glaese , Erva Nur Report

    #32

    Man in black shirt covering his face with hands, expressing heavy emotions related to confessions and charges. A man who ran a day-care and had allowed m**esters onto his staff - who paid him for access to the children, and over thirty of the boys age 2 and 3 had been a**aulted repeatedly over the course of ten years. Nobody ever knew and the kids’ memories were not developed enough to recall even under hypnosis.

    Joshua Light , Ketut Subiyanto Report

    TheWickedOne
    Community Member
    2 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    These mother f*****s deserve the most brutal, gruesome, t*****e ever witnessed.. give me 10 minutes with them

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    #33

    “He Never Was Charged”: 46 Shocking Last-Minute Truths People Revealed After A Lifetime Of Silence I worked as a hospice nurse for many years. I heard about m**ders, s**ual a**aults, abandoned families and thefts. They needed to reconcile something before they left. I listened and offered kindness. I keep their secrets.

    Julie Washburn , Getty Images Report

    Renay T
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I hear a lot about ******* and *********$_4÷6$_^ too. Fưčƙ censors.

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    #34

    “He Never Was Charged”: 46 Shocking Last-Minute Truths People Revealed After A Lifetime Of Silence A couple of days before my grandmother passed away she was really confused and was talking about my mother having a child a year or so after my own birth that was sent for adoption. She was talking about how sad and horrible this was and that I deserved to know. After my grandmother passed I confronted my mom about it and she neglected this, and I truly believed her. Couple of months later it turns out my grandmother was the one adopting away a baby girl who was born between my mother and aunt.

    Thornbeach , ottonbro studio Report

    Ursula S.
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    And that's why all confessions or stories from people who are confused or on meds should be taken with a grain of salt.

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    #35

    “He Never Was Charged”: 46 Shocking Last-Minute Truths People Revealed After A Lifetime Of Silence In Texas, a man confessed to having brokered high-end dr*gs to his friends and family, and put himself through college on the proceeds. He also had a nice home, cars, a family, and quit the dr*g trade to make an honest living. He confessed to ki**ing and burying five of his competitors over the years, the least recent over 30 years ago, and the most recent over 20 years ago.

    Joshua Light , Karola G Report

    Earonn -
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    How horrible, to learn that you live in a house bought with blood money. Those "competitors" were Human beings, too, as much as the guy who admitted their mur.der.

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    #36

    Two people whispering closely in a dimly lit setting, hinting at heavy confessions nobody was charged with. A husband and wife - the wife had died some years prior, but the husband confessed that he and his wife ran a swinger’s club for married couples to come to parties and swap their spouses for that of another, and they had conscripted prostitutes from the local area, male and female. pretending to be another married couple - to spice things up - and confessed that a number of these were under-age, and at least two females were sophomores in high school. He also confessed to ki**ing one of them but offered no reason.

    Joshua Light , cottonbro studio Report

    BrunoVI
    Community Member
    4 days ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    And every client believed "it's nobody's business what consenting adults do." Money ALWAYS blurs the line as to what constitutes "consenting adults."

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    #37

    Person driving a car at dusk with a focus on the steering wheel and dashboard, symbolizing heavy confessions. One of my residents admitted to running over 2 kids with her car. One died. She said that these kids on bikes were in the street. She blew the horn and they would not move. She then said that she just ran over them. She said she was never caught. At first we didn't believe her, but she repeated this story word for word each time she told it. We believed her and she died a few days later. She had been a mean woman when she was younger and was very cantankerous in her old age. We all really liked her though. It was a shame she had to take that secret to her grave.

    Yasahme AL-Satiif , Briana Tozour Report

    BrunoVI
    Community Member
    4 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Flat out m******d a kid in cold blood (and God knows what grevious harm to the second), and OP says they all really liked her, though?

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    #38

    “He Never Was Charged”: 46 Shocking Last-Minute Truths People Revealed After A Lifetime Of Silence My father, in his death bed, told me it was us the rest of the family who ki**ed him. And I’m not denying this.

    Biologically, it was myasthenia gravis that took him away. Mentally, it was the broken family relationship.

    Clockscene Chou , Getty Images Report

    Andrew Keir
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    There's a difference here. The Coroner would look for a physical cause.

    #39

    “He Never Was Charged”: 46 Shocking Last-Minute Truths People Revealed After A Lifetime Of Silence One was a young man who told me that while driving he felt the urge to ram other drivers who had annoyed him. I think he had not always resisted the urge.

    Giles Elrington , Vitaly Gariev Report

    Kelly Scott
    Community Member
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    He's not the only one. My bucket list includes putting a bulldozer blade on the front of my car and pushing slow drivers out of my way.

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    #40

    Elderly man in hospital gown sitting on bed, reflecting on heavy confessions people refused to take to their graves. An older man, a white immigrant to the UK, who had difficult psychiatry. It emerged he had been a t**turer, I think likely an executioner, in a civil war many years ago.

    Giles Elrington , Curated Lifestyle Report

    #41

    “He Never Was Charged”: 46 Shocking Last-Minute Truths People Revealed After A Lifetime Of Silence In Texas, a man confessed to having robbed a town’s bank. He shot and k**led the bank guard in the process. 40+ years had passed.

    Joshua Light , Etienne Martin Report

    Earonn -
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    He was still a swine who ended the life of someone who got up that morning with hopes and dreams, just so he himself could have some fvcking money that he could have made as a prostitvte as well.

    #42

    A priest wearing a cross talks with a woman inside a dimly lit church, symbolizing heavy confessions and secrecy. I was told the following story by a friend. His pastor told him the following. An elderly member of their church had just been told by her doctors that she only had about two more weeks to live. Her pastor visited her to offer prayers and comfort. During this meeting he asked her about her life and if she had any regrets. The lady told him that before she died she wished she could have one more good sc**wing.

    Steve Cox , Ron Lach Report

    #43

    “He Never Was Charged”: 46 Shocking Last-Minute Truths People Revealed After A Lifetime Of Silence I was in hospice, caring for an older woman who seemed to be really suffering.

    I was struck by how often she called for pain medicine. What we give there isn't the weak stuff. I'm 'narcotic naive' (meaning no built-up tolerance to narcotics), and I thought to myself “wow…if I took this much in the course of my shift, I don't know if I'd be breathing by the end of it.”

    The fourth time she was my patient for the night, I was taking in another dose of morphine — and out of nowhere I was impulsively struck to ask her a question.

    Have you forgiven everyone?

    That sprang out before I could even consider it.

    She stopped everything. In the silence that fell on us, she looked me square in the eye — and with a drawn-out reply coupled with a slow back and forth of her head, she said

    Ohhh … that's hard.

    I stayed in her room a lot that night. She related a long, complex story about the grief and torment her ex son-in-law had delivered to their family, and to her in particular.

    He had been out of her life picture for better than a decade and a half, but the bitterness was well and deeply rooted. She got out all the details. She said, “I can never forgive him.’

    We had a long talk about forgiveness, what it is, what it's not, and why it was so very, very important.

    I was back a couple of days later, and noticed she hadn't asked for any pain medicine. As soon as I could, I stopped by her room, walked in and said,

    “You forgave that man, didn't you…?”

    She replied, “Yes, yes I did.”

    That shift, she slept so well, and looked so ... peaceful and eighteen tons lighter. I was so happy for her. I was off the next few days.

    When I got back, she wasn't there.

    Confession done. A round of forgiveness bought for the whole house. Lightened up, it was time to fly.

    Steven Bobulsky , Getty Images Report

    Peeka_Mimi
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Bullsh¡t. I have forgiven a lot of people and I still have chronic pain.

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    #44

    Man in a dark suit sitting thoughtfully in a leather chair, conveying intense and heavy confessions atmosphere. Not a nurse and not my story, but my cousin’s story. His own father confessed to him on his deathbed that he had worked for the mafia and had [unalived] 3 people. This was alarming to the family, to say the least. His mother was my aunt. He turned out ok and did not work for the mafia. He wasn’t rich enough. But as a child, he likely benefited, unknowingly.

    Glem , cottonbro studio Report

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    #45

    I'm not a nurse, but my grandpa's war buddies have some very funny, strange and terrifying stories. One gentleman told this experience. “His grandpa was a handyman doing all sorts of odd jobs for money during the depression. Home repair, horse shoeing, fence repair, just any job he could get. He had a smoke house he turned into a tool shed to store his growing tool collection. After a job he came home to find his tool shed opened and cleared out, all of his tools were gone. He eventually discovered that a nearby farmer had one room shacks he would rent out to passers-by for a dollar a month. People going to the next town, helping to harvest crops for board, or just needing a place out of the rain. With more questions and inquiries he narrowed his search to one particular shack. At 2 am on a moonlit night grandpa walked through the woods and knocked on the door of that shack. A younger man opened the door and grandpa asked him for his help with something. Getting him away from the shack out into the woods this is what happened. Pointing a gun at the young man, he told him to understand that he was going to die. Nothing he could say or do was going to prevent this, cry and beg all you want. Now when he opened the door of the shack grandpa saw a young lady with two kids asleep in the bed. If the young man was honest and told grandpa the truth, this would end with him. But if he decided to be a coward and lie grandpa would come back. The horrifying part of this story is that as a 9 year old kid I had to hold the flashlight for grandpa as he walked through the woods. Grandpa was able to recover enough of his stolen items that he didn't return to the shack…but I still remember the sound of that single gunshot.”

    Jem Key Report

    #46

    “He Never Was Charged”: 46 Shocking Last-Minute Truths People Revealed After A Lifetime Of Silence The American Judge at The Nuremberg Trials confessed to his wife on his deathbed that he had sent many innocent men to their deaths as, he had been given a list prior to the Trials of what the judgements should be.

    James Taylor , Yunus Tuğ Report

    BrunoVI
    Community Member
    4 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    What kind of H*******t-denying b******t is this? There were two American judges. One was Francis Biddle, famous for his opposition to Japanese Internment camps and for a ruling upheld by the Supreme Court that N**i spies could be tried in military courts, creating an exception in pre-existing precedent. The other, John J Parker had been nominated for the U.S. Supreme Court. It's inconceivable they would have been cowed by a list given to them saying what the judgments "should" be. (In U.S. law, no-one goes to trial unless the government believes they "should" be found guilty. That's what an "indictment" establishes. Both judges found tons of high-profile, politically charged defendants innocent.)

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