Episode Summary

The Ghost Who Wasn't Scary πŸ‘»πŸŒ™A haunted house should have one very clear purpose. Be scary. Properly, bone chillingly, scream inducingly scary. This particular haunted house has a ghost called Lumpy, and Lumpy is trying his absolute best, but unfortunately he is a bit wobbly, a bit bumpy, and not frightening a single soul.There are creaky floorboards. There are shadows flickering in exactly the right spooky way. There are whispers echoing through empty corridors. There is moonlight streaming through dusty windows creating perfect ghost lighting. Everything is set for a proper Halloween fright. The house has done its job beautifully. The atmosphere is thick with menace.And then Lumpy drifts into view and immediately ruins the entire mood.Because Lumpy is not terrifying. Lumpy is oddly adorable. He floats with all the grace of a slightly deflated balloon. He attempts dramatic poses but ends up looking like he is doing gentle yoga. When he tries to moan ominously, it comes out more like a worried hum. He is less like a vengeful spirit and more like a flustered marshmallow who has accidentally wandered into the wrong job.Tonight is Halloween. Children are arriving with torches in hand and brave faces carefully arranged. They have come specifically to be scared. They want shivers. They want jumps. They want to run screaming back to their parents with thrilling stories about how terrifying the haunted house was.Lumpy is determined not to disappoint them.He practises his scariest moves. He rehearses his most chilling wails. He positions himself in a beam of moonlight like it is his big theatrical moment, ready to sweep forward with maximum spookiness. He has a whole routine planned. It is going to be magnificent. Terrifying. The sort of haunting that gets talked about for weeks.Then the children arrive, Lumpy launches into his carefully prepared performance, and everything goes spectacularly wrong.He drifts forward with what he hopes is menacing purpose but trips over his own ghostly tail. He attempts to loom dramatically but accidentally floats too high and bonks his head on a chandelier. He tries for a blood curdling scream but it comes out as a surprised squeak. The more he tries to be frightening, the more chaotic it becomes. His sheet gets tangled. His timing goes completely off. He knocks over a candelabra, apologises immediately, then remembers he is supposed to be terrifying and tries to un apologise, which somehow makes it worse.The children start giggling. Then they start properly laughing. That helpless kind of laughter that makes it completely impossible to be scared even if you were planning to be.This is a gentle Halloween story that is spooky in the fun way, not the nightmare way. Perfect for kids who want haunted house vibes without actual fear, and for parents who want a funny audio story that still settles down at the end instead of causing bedtime chaos. If you are looking for a bedtime story podcast episode with wholesome humour, a kind ending, and Halloween atmosphere that stays playful, Lumpy is your ghost.The silliness builds beautifully, the failed scares pile up in the most delightful way, and then it lands in a warm place that makes it safe for bedtime. Perfect for family listening during Halloween week, for kids who are nervous about spooky season, or for after school wind down when you want seasonal fun without nightmares.Mr Morton's Barmy Book of Bonkers Bits is family storytelling with wholesome chaos, performance first, and not a mean bone in it.Episode length: approximately 11 minutesAges: 4 to 400Best enjoyed: bedtime, car journeys, after school wind downIf your household enjoyed Lumpy, follow the show for more calming bedtime story mischief that makes everyone smile.
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