The Night a Jinn's Shadow Entered My Room
A night of terror that blurred the line between real and unreal.

It was a humid summer night in Lahore, the kind where the air feels thick and everything moves a little slower. I had just returned from my evening shift at the local bookstore and collapsed on my bed, exhausted but unable to sleep. The ceiling fan above me squeaked with every rotation, and outside, the occasional honk of a rickshaw echoed through the street.
At around 2:17 a.m., I was awoken—not by a sound, but by an overwhelming sense of presence. You know when someone stares at you silently, and your instincts scream even before your eyes confirm it? That was the feeling. I opened my eyes and saw nothing. My room was as I left it—dimly lit by the yellow glow of a streetlight slipping through the curtains.
I turned to face the wall and pulled the blanket over my shoulder, trying to convince myself it was just a dream. But then it came—the cold. A sudden drop in temperature that didn’t belong in a summer night. My breath turned visible. I could see the misty vapor escaping my lips. That’s when I froze.
There was a shadow on the wall, standing upright. But there was no figure in front of it.
I blinked hard. Maybe I was still dreaming?
No.
The shadow moved—slowly at first, like it was testing me. Then, as I watched in paralyzed horror, it slithered across the wall, stretching, growing taller, darker, until it reached the corner of the ceiling where two walls met. It stopped and turned its "head" toward me, though it had no face.
Suddenly, the fan stopped. My phone screen flickered to life and died again. A low humming sound, almost like a whisper, filled the room. Words—guttural and ancient—crawled through the air like smoke. My ears rang, and then I heard it, loud and clear, not in the air but in my mind:
“You saw me.”
I wanted to scream, to move, to cry out to Allah—but my body was frozen like marble. I could feel my heart pounding so violently I thought it might burst. Then, the shadow began to descend—not walk, not fall—just float downward toward me.
That’s when something deep inside me sparked. Maybe fear gave way to instinct, maybe something divine awakened, but I forced my fingers to move and clenched them into a fist. I whispered, “A’udhu billahi min ash-shaytan ir-rajim.”
The moment I said it, the shadow shrank, pulling inward like a vacuum was collapsing it. The room suddenly felt lighter, warmer, like someone opened a window that had been sealed for years. The whispering stopped. The fan resumed its rotation. And just like that—it was gone.
I jumped from bed and turned on every light I could reach. I called my older brother and made him stay on the phone with me until Fajr. For days, I didn’t sleep properly. My family dismissed it as sleep paralysis or stress. But I know what I saw. What I felt.
Since that night, I’ve become deeply spiritual. I never sleep without reciting Surah Al-Falaq and Surah An-Naas. I don’t keep mirrors in my bedroom. And sometimes, when I forget my evening duas, I feel that same cold creep back in.
They say jinns exist in a parallel realm, only crossing over when boundaries are weakened. That night, something crossed into mine. And now... I wonder if it's still watching—just waiting for me to forget.
Because once you’ve seen it, you’re never truly alone again.
About the Creator
Noman Afridi
I’m Noman Afridi — welcome, all friends! I write horror & thought-provoking stories: mysteries of the unseen, real reflections, and emotional truths. With sincerity in every word. InshaAllah.



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