20 People Share the Saddest Place They’ve Ever Been
Not every place can be Times Square or the Vegas Strip, but some parts of the world are truly desolate.
Published 5 months ago in Wtf
Not every place can be Times Square or the Vegas Strip, but some parts of the world are truly desolate.
From sites of historic tragedies to towns the world has passed by, here are the 20 places that made these folks sadder than any other.
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“I worked for a while very near a Native American reservation, one of the very poor reservations. I’m a firefighter and we’d respond onto the reservation somewhat frequently for fires or medical emergencies and it was just insane to me how impoverished these people were, it felt like I was walking around a 3rd world country and just a few miles away were people so wealthy they created a private road from the local airport to their gated community because they didn’t want to drive on the roads with the poors anymore.”8
“Pripyat, Ukraine, near Chernobyl, was one of the most depressing places I’ve ever visited. The abandoned apartment buildings, schools with children’s toys left behind, and an eerie silence made it feel like time had stopped after the nuclear disaster. It was haunting to see how life had been completely erased from an entire city. There used to be 50,000 people there.”12
“Westbury. It's a town in southern England, and I don't have anything against it, it just happened to be the train station I was always at at 10pm traveling home. Maybe it was the closed cafe that looked like it would be nice when open, maybe it was the hanging baskets of flowers under moonlight and artificial light, maybe I was just homesick, but the place always made me sad.”13
The downtown, east side of Hastings, Vancouver. I lived downtown there and you could leave an office building that’s full of law firms and walk three blocks to east Hastings which is just open drug use everywhere. The transition is crazy.I left 15 years ago but go back to visit family and it’s definitely worse than it used to be. And it used to be really bad.”15
“I went to Dachau and I know what you mean. We took a 20 minute train ride to the camp, which was filled with 18-20 year old Europeans. Spirits were high, lots of laughing and joking amongst them. Once we got there was a memorial park before you entered the camp and it was deathly quiet. No birds chirping, no insects humming, just an eerie silence and it was in the middle of the afternoon.”16
“Majdanek utterly destroyed me. Many of the facilities were still intact. We were in the gas chambers, where the walls were blued from the zyklon b, and you could see prayers scratched into the walls. When you walk out (which, mind you, nobody was ever fortunate enough to get to do), you see the city of Lublin, a mere few meters away. On the other side of the camp, you can find an open monument, with the ashes of up to 78,000 people.”