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The Box of Oddities

Awake on the Autopsy Table

The Box of Oddities

John Elliott and Kat Walls

Society & Culture, True Crime, Comedy

4.8 • 3K Ratings

🗓️ 18 February 2026

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

What if death isn’t a clean switch—off, then on—but something messier? In this episode of The Box of Oddities, Kat and Jethro dig into a deeply unsettling early-20th-century medical case involving a European woman who was pronounced dead… and then woke up during her own autopsy. Not metaphorically. Not dramatically. Literally on the table. Declared clinically dead by the standards of the time, her body was wheeled from the ward, stripped, positioned, and cut open by doctors who had no reason to believe anyone was listening. But when she revived, she didn’t describe darkness, tunnels, or visions of light. Instead, she calmly and accurately recounted what the doctors had done and said after she was declared dead—details she could not have seen, overheard, or reasonably guessed. The case appeared quietly in early medical journals, written in careful, restrained language, and then largely disappeared from discussion. Long before near-death experiences entered popular culture, this account suggested something far more uncomfortable: that awareness may linger longer than we think, and that consciousness doesn’t always follow the tidy rules we assign to it. From there, the conversation widens into the blurry boundaries of clinical death, historical accounts of awareness during catastrophic injury, and why medicine—especially in its early modern years—may have preferred to quietly file away cases that didn’t fit the model. Then, because this is The Box of Oddities, things take a turn. The episode also explores unlucky days across cultures—Friday the 13th, Tuesday the 13th, Friday the 17th, and other calendar dates humans have decided are cursed—and why we seem so determined to assign meaning to randomness. And finally, the story of Vincent Coleman and the Halifax Explosion: a railway dispatcher who knowingly stayed at his post to send a final warning that saved hundreds of lives, moments before one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in human history leveled much of Halifax, Nova Scotia. It’s an episode about presence where none was expected, warnings sent too late—or just in time—and the uncomfortable possibility that the line between being here and being gone isn’t as sharp as we’d like to believe. Fly it proudly, you beautiful freak. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

What do you get when you take two childhood friends with the passion for unexplored history and a whole lot of booze?

0:05.6

You get us, Queens podcast.

0:07.5

And here at Queens, we are spilling the tea on all kinds of women from history.

0:11.6

From New Orleans voodoo queen, Marie Levo to Marie Antoinette, and everything in between.

0:17.6

Each queen is paired with a cocktail recipe that will totally get you in the mood to hear

0:21.5

the fun, dramatic, and juicy stories of fascinating women from history. Listen wherever you get your

0:27.0

podcasts. Cheers. Hello everyone. My name is Wesley Levesay from the History of the Second

0:34.2

World War podcast. Join me on a journey to the most destructive conflict in human history,

0:39.8

a journey that will take us not just through the famous campaigns and cataclysmic battles,

0:44.3

but also to the lesser well-known corners of the war that touched millions all over the world,

0:49.3

as we try and answer not just the questions of what and where, but how and why. You can find History of

0:55.8

the Second World War on all major podcast platforms or at history of the second world war.com.

1:03.0

The Box of Oddities. Got an email or actually was a message from somebody that said that they

1:10.0

were listening to all of the

1:12.3

suggested shows that show up in our feed drop because they thought we got paid for it.

1:17.7

This was on a post where I had asked, hey, have you noticed this? Do you like it? Do you not like it?

1:23.9

And when I saw that, I was like, oh, no, we don't get paid for that.

1:27.8

We don't get paid for the listens.

1:29.4

So I let them know that.

1:30.9

But I also let them know that allowing those feed drops is something that we got paid for.

1:38.8

So it was kind of an informal survey.

1:41.6

And overwhelmingly, the response was, we hate hate this please ask your network to stop

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