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I Miss the Auras Most

Monday 29th July, Story #211/366

By L.C. SchäferPublished about a year ago Updated about a year ago 3 min read
Top Story - July 2024
I Miss the Auras Most
Photo by James Wainscoat on Unsplash

I know everyone thinks I'm crazy, or lying. But it's real. I see things. Or I used to.

The auras were my favourite. So beautiful. I could tell so much about a person by looking at their aura. It's like listening to a complex piece of music. I get a feel for them.

The local police department won't admit to using me. They'd be a laughing stock. What's weird is, I can't be specific. Not because I "don't know jack-shit", either. No, because it makes people more suspicious that it isn't real. She's a charlatan. It's a trick. She must've known some other way.

I give nudges. Hints and hunches. I point, guide, and whisper. How ironic, that I was so knowing, so fucking smug about so many things... and yet oblivious to the thing growing in my own breast, and spreading.

I found the lump eventually. In those moments, I was just the same as anyone else. Afraid. Alone. I could feel the lump even when I wasn't feeling it. My tears arranged around it, like a rock in a stream.

A CT scan was arranged. I exchanged smiles with the nurse setting up the IV. Her aura was a comforting one, and I leaned on it, drank from it... then... it started fading away. I panicked. She looked at me with concern, asked, "Are you OK?" but I couldn't explain what was happening.

"What's in that?"

"Iodine," she said. "For the contrast."

I had no idea iodine was a sort of kryptonite for me. I gaped, horrified, at the cannula in my hand. I scrabbled at it, but knew it was already too late.

I sobbed during the scan.

"You must stay still Ms Hamer," they said.

They took the cancer away, burned it out of me, but they cauterised something else as well, something precious I never consented to lose. So I sued them, for emotional distress and loss of earnings. Everyone laughed, of course. But I already told you I was cosy with the police department. I knew the right people, who could talk to the right people, who could pull strings...

I walked away with a tidy half mil and change.

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Word count excluding note: 366

Submitted on Monday 29th July at 11.44

*Very Quick Author's Note*

First of all, and most importantly: thank you so much for reading my story! The ha'penny that Vocal will toss in my hat for your eyeballs landing on this humble piece will be well-spent.

If you enjoyed this one, the very best compliment you can give me is to
share it, or read another!

A Year of Stories: I'm writing a story every day this year. This one continues my 211 day streak since 1st January.

Please do consider lending your support to the other creators who are also on this madcap "a story every day" adventure. They are putting out excellent content every day!

Rachel Deeming

Gerard DiLeo

Please do leave me a comment. I try to reciprocate as many as I can. Leaving a comment makes that easier.

The story behind the story: This is based on a true story. Judith Richardson Haimes worked as a psychic. She claimed iodine used prior to a CT scan disabled her psychic gift, and sued the hospital. She won! $600,000! The rest of the story is stitched together from my own embellishments. I invented the rest, including the reason for the CT scan, how her talent manifested, how she managed to win, and all her thoughts, feelings and experiences around her gift and the loss of it. I also changed her name.

If you enjoyed this one, maybe have a look at these as well:

I am Jack's tumour - the character faces losing his psychic ability if he accepts the medical treatment he needs.

To Live in Colour - the character has to make a choice between her ability and something else of value.

Thank you!

Thank you again, most sincerely. Especially if you are one of the wonderful people who has been staunchly reading these daily scribbles since the start of the year. I see you, and appreciate you very much indeed!

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About the Creator

L.C. Schäfer

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Glass Dolls

Summer Leaves (grab it while it's gorgeous)

Never so naked as I am on a page

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I'm not a writer! I've just had too much coffee!

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Sometimes writes under S.E.Holz

Reader insights

Nice work

Very well written. Keep up the good work!

Top insights

  1. Excellent storytelling

    Original narrative & well developed characters

  2. Compelling and original writing

    Creative use of language & vocab

  3. Expert insights and opinions

    Arguments were carefully researched and presented

  1. Eye opening

    Niche topic & fresh perspectives

  2. Heartfelt and relatable

    The story invoked strong personal emotions

  3. Masterful proofreading

    Zero grammar & spelling mistakes

  4. On-point and relevant

    Writing reflected the title & theme

  5. Easy to read and follow

    Well-structured & engaging content

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Comments (27)

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  • Katherine D. Grahamabout a year ago

    good tale!

  • Crystal Caneabout a year ago

    Such a good read!!!

  • Lamar Wigginsabout a year ago

    Interesting stuff! Great Job with the embellished reenactment!

  • Hannah Mooreabout a year ago

    Such an intriguing premise. Can you sue for loss of earnings if no one believes in the skill you sell.

  • sleepy draftsabout a year ago

    Wow, LC!!! This was something magnificent. Congratulations on Top Story!

  • Testabout a year ago

    LC you're really hitting your stride with these twisted tales lately!! Great work and congrats on Top Story!! I didn't see the bit about cancer coming, nor what it actually took from her!

  • Cyrusabout a year ago

    Congrats on TS!

  • MaxineHiteabout a year ago

    this story is a powerful exploration of identity, loss, and the complexities of human experience.

  • Rachel Robbinsabout a year ago

    This took me by surprise in such a good way. Congratulations on Top Story.

  • Andrea Corwin about a year ago

    oh boy. A cool payout! So this has 2 things that pertain to me (not that your poem is about me), so I relate. I could see auras sometimes, concentrating hard. I'm allergic to shellfish, so in the past, medical personnel freaked out regarding iodine. Now they know it isn't related. Loved, this and congrats on TS.🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉 🚫🦞 LOL

  • R. B. Boothabout a year ago

    Delightful. Congrats on TS.

  • Esala Gunathilakeabout a year ago

    Congratulations on their TS.

  • Varnika Agarwalabout a year ago

    Oh my god, the story is fabulous but what's even more worthy of appreciation is your extremely interesting way of presenting a story. Love it and congrats on top story.....

  • Back to say congratulations on your Top Story! 🎉💖🎊🎉💖🎊

  • Melissa Ingoldsbyabout a year ago

    Good she got her cure and money we don't usually get happy stories that feel in touch with pain

  • Caroline Cravenabout a year ago

    This was FAB! I love the twists and spin you put on true stories. Gosh poor lady though - I’m glad she got the dosh.

  • Okay the fact that this is based on a true story blew my mind even more than your story did!

  • John Coxabout a year ago

    As always, simply wonderful storytelling, LC! Loved it!

  • Isla Griswaldabout a year ago

    Ooo that nugget in the blurb about this being based on a true story was unexpected. A neat spin!

  • Gerard DiLeoabout a year ago

    Good one, L.C.

  • Interesting. There's a lot to think on with this piece!

  • Silver Dauxabout a year ago

    Honestly, that's terrifying. I can't imagine seeing a colorful world just to have it taken away. Well-written!

  • Kendall Defoe about a year ago

    Mess with my head, why don't you? ;)

  • Lana V Lynxabout a year ago

    Losing that type of ability is indeed life-changing. I knew a healer who could describe people’s auras in color. Art therapy was a part of the treatment.

  • Another excellent daily drop

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