I Started Finding Creepy Post-It Notes in My Apartment – Then My Friend’s Brilliant Advice Saved My Life

You ever have one of those moments where something weird happens, and you just brush it off? That was me. I was the queen of ‘eh, it’s probably nothing.’

So, when I found a yellow Post-it note on my desk, written in wobbly handwriting I didn’t recognize, I didn’t think too much of it. It reminded me to pick up cucumbers and crackers, and mail a letter. Things I had considered doing but hadn’t told anyone about. It sat right in the middle of my desk like a message from a ghost.

I checked my phone, wondering if I’d left myself a reminder and forgot. Nothing. Maybe I scribbled it down half-asleep? Maybe my brain was messing with me.

Then I tossed the note in the trash and moved on.

A few days later, another note appeared. Same handwriting. Same yellow Post-it.

Make sure you save your documents.

Now, that was a little unsettling.

I was a freelance writer, working on a big project the night before. The message felt oddly relevant. But I lived alone. My doors were locked. No signs of a break-in. No missing items. Just the note.

I convinced myself it was stress. Too much work, not enough sleep. I crumpled it up and threw it away.

Then, one night, something woke me up. I wasn’t sure what. Maybe the silence, maybe a shift in the air. When I turned on the lamp, another note sat on my bedside table.

Our landlord isn’t letting me talk to you, but it’s important that we do.

My breath caught in my throat. The room suddenly felt wrong.

Who was writing these notes? And why was my landlord involved?

I tore through my apartment, checking the locks, the windows. Nothing. My landlord had a key, but we only scheduled visits for repairs. He wouldn’t just show up. Would he?

Then I remembered—the webcam. After the first note, I had set up an old webcam on my desk, using a security cam app to record any motion.

I scrambled to check the footage. The files were gone. Not just missing—deleted.

My stomach twisted. I hadn’t touched them. Someone had noticed the camera, accessed my laptop, and erased the evidence.

My hands shook as I double-checked everything. The recycle bin? Empty. I grabbed a kitchen knife, double-locked my doors, and sat in bed, heart pounding.

The next day, when I returned from the gym, there was another Post-it. But this time, it was different.

It was blank.

It was stuck to the outside of my apartment door.

A cold dread crawled up my spine. Was this a warning? A message? Someone knew I had noticed the notes. Someone knew I wasn’t home.

As I turned, my breath hitched. Other doors in the building had them too.

Different colors—pink, blue, yellow—but all blank.

I didn’t wait to find out what it meant. I grabbed my keys and bolted.

Jessica opened her front door, rubbing her eyes. “Mila? It’s late. What’s going on?”

I pushed past her, pacing. “I need you to tell me I’m not crazy.”

She yawned. “Okay, but if this is about aliens again, I swear—”

“Jess, this is worse. I think someone’s been in my apartment.”

That woke her up. She sat up, listening as I told her everything—the Post-it notes, the deleted footage, the blank note on my door.

When I finished, she exhaled. “Mila, have you checked for carbon monoxide?”

“What?” I blinked.

“CO poisoning. It can cause memory loss, paranoia. What if you’re writing the notes yourself and just… forgetting?”

I wanted to argue, but the thought gnawed at me. I’d been feeling off—waking up with headaches, struggling to focus, feeling exhausted no matter how much I slept.

I left Jessica’s and drove to a gas station. “Carbon monoxide detector, please,” I asked the cashier.

Back at my apartment, I plugged it in.

The number shot up immediately. 100 ppm.

A wave of dizziness hit me. The air felt heavy, pressing down on me. I grabbed my bag, yanked open the door, and stumbled into the hallway, gasping for fresh air.

“Jess,” I said when she picked up the phone. “You were right. The reading is insane.”

“Get outside! I’m coming now.”

The doctor in the hospital flipped through my chart. “You’re lucky you caught this when you did, Mila. Prolonged exposure could have caused permanent cognitive damage. Eventually, you might have lost consciousness and never woken up.”

Jessica squeezed my hand. “You’re okay now. That’s what matters.”

I called my landlord the next day. He wasn’t surprised. Not even a little.

“We’ll get it checked,” he muttered, hanging up. That didn’t sit right with me, so I called the city inspector myself.

That’s when I learned the real nightmare.

The leak wasn’t just in my apartment. It was coming from the parking garage beneath the building.

And my unit? Directly above it.

I had been breathing in carbon monoxide seeping up from below, trapped in my apartment like a slow-motion death sentence.

When I confronted Greg, my landlord, he barely reacted. “You should move out if you’re concerned.”

“You knew,” I accused. “How long has the leak been there? How many tenants have complained?”

He didn’t answer.

Then I remembered the blank Post-it notes on other doors. Just a coincidence? Or a warning?

I moved in with my cousin across town. The inspector reached out to my neighbors, but apparently, my apartment had been hit the worst.

Now that I’m safe, I keep thinking about what would have happened if I hadn’t told Jessica. If I had dismissed it all as paranoia.

But the worst part?

I still don’t know why I wrote that third note.

Our landlord isn’t letting me talk to you, but it’s important that we do.

Was it my subconscious trying to warn me? A desperate part of my brain screaming for help?

Or was someone—something—else trying to get my attention?

I don’t have answers. But I do have one piece of advice:

If weird things start happening, don’t ignore them. Because sometimes, paranoia isn’t paranoia at all.

Sometimes, it’s survival.

Related Posts

My Husband Gave Me a Bank Card with $2,000 After 50 Years of Marriage – When I Finally Used It Before Surgery, I Learned He Had Hidden One Last Gift for Me

For fifty years, Walter was the anchor of my world, until the day he packed two suitcases and chose a new life, leaving me with nothing but…

My Entitled Neighbor Destroyed My Son’s Bike and Refused to Pay – What Happened the Next Day Left Everyone Stunned

The sound of metal screaming under Carol’s SUV tires was a noise I will carry to my grave, a violent, crunching finality that shattered more than just…

At Christmas, my mother-in-law looked at my 6-year-old and said, “Children from Mommy’s cheating don’t get to call me Grandma,” right after rejecting the gift my daughter had proudly made for her. Then my son stood up and said this. The whole room went dead silent…

At Christmas, my mother-in-law looked at my six-year-old daughter and said, “Children from Mommy’s cheating don’t get to call me Grandma,” right after rejecting the handmade gift…

Major Update On Possible US-Iran Deal to End War

The war may end with a single signature—or explode with a single misstep. As American warships trade fire with Iranian defenses near Bandar Abbas, Donald Trump, JD…

My husband betrayed me on our engagement day and the mistress is my own sister… – Never Lose Stories

The gold-and-white streamers of my graduation party were supposed to be the backdrop for the first day of my new life. I had a computer science degree…

My husband betrayed me on our engagement day and the mistress is my own sister… – Never Lose Stories

The golden glow of my graduation party was supposed to be the backdrop for the first day of my real life. I had spent four years in…