So I was going to one of the parades Saturday night called Endymion. I was trying to get close to where my friends were gonna be at so I parked on a side street off of Canal next to a big wall and took the trolley down toward the parade. It got late that night and my phone died so I went back to my car to get the charger.
I was booted up off some molly and I had to piss so when I got to my car I just opened the doors to try to hide myself and I pissed on the big wall.
As soon as the first drop hit the wall I heard so movement on the other side and after about 30 seconds a guy came out of a house behind me and just starts ice grilling the fucc out of me and mumbling some shyt that I couldn't hear.
I finished pissin and grabbed some stuff out of my car and bounced. The dude just kept watching me. I went toward a break in the wall and I was gonna cut through the lot cause the guy was kinda creeping me out at that stage.
When I turned the corner I saw the above ground graves but didn't see an opening on the other side so I didn't want to climb a fence out of the cemetery. I turned around quickly and went back out exiting away from the direction of the house. When I got back outside the wall, the man was walking towards me. We made eye contact and he just said "Go". I gtfo of there but obviously my car was still there so I had to go back to get that.
So, I went back the next day and got it.
Apparently the place that I parked by is one of the most haunted in NOLA: Hope Mausoleum, part of St. Patrick's Cemetery No. 1
"Considered by locals visitors and paranormal investigators world wide as actually the most haunted cemetery No. # 1 haunted Cemetery in all the United States.
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Some of the more interesting tombs in St. Louis Number One are a huge tomb that holds the remains of some of the participants in the Battle of New Orleans; chess champion Paul Morphy; New Orleans' first black mayor, Ernest N. "Dutch" Morial.
But the most famous and interesting tomb here is said to be where Voodoo Queen Marie Leveaux is buried. People still visit her tomb to light candles, perform various religious acts and leave offerings. New Orleans' first black mayor, Ernest N. "Dutch" Morial is buried right next to her."
Since that incident I nearly dodged a DUI and my car got totaled. There have also been some other bad incidents but I can't speak on those right now.
I've moved back from Louisiana to Texas and things seem to have settled down a bit.
But after reading all this stuff in this thread I'm thinking breh that I seen put a curse on me or at least my whip.