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ผู้เขียน หัวข้อ: Top 10 Scary Japanese Urban Legends  (อ่าน 82 ครั้ง)

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เมื่อ: ตุลาคม 19, 2022, 12:02:17 pm
Top 10 Scary Japanese Urban Legends
10. Teke-Teke


This is the Urban Legend about a girl who fell under a train and was cut in half. She became a vengeful spirit that moves using her hands and elbows, dragging herself while making the sound -Tek-Tek- … if you hear that noise, youre supposed to run. Those who are caught by the Tek Tek will recieve a fate like her - shes said to slash her victims in half so that they look like her, and possibly become wandering vengeful spirits as she is.

9. Slit Mouthed Woman


You may recognise this one from a number of Japanese movies and TV shows. The traditional name for this being is Kuchi-sake-onna and dates back over 300 years ago. She is a woman who was brutally mutilated by her husband after he found she was having an affair with another Samurai. This left her in death as a restless spirit. She is said to cover her mouth with a cloth mask, a fan or a scarf. If you approach her, shell ask you if you think shes pretty. If you answer yes, she will remove the mask and when the victim screams they will be slashed from ear to ear until they look like her. Even if you say no, shes said to follow you home and brutally murder you that night.

8. Daruma-san


This urban legend is more of an old game passed down through the years. You shower in a bath, turn off the lights and chant -Daruma-san fell down- while you wash your hair … its said that you will see a woman in your mind. She is Daruma-San. Shell be standing up in a bath. Youll see her slip and fall onto an old rusty tap. It goes straight through her eye and kills her. Then, you will feel her ghostly presence behind you. If you turn around - there she is. Black tangled hair, rotting clothes, one eye is bloodshot and the other is just a bloody, hollow eye socket. The game continues even further than that if you dare, but I think thats enough for you to understand this creepy urban legend.

7. Girl From The Gap


This Japanese story comes from peoples natural fear of what lies lurking in the cracks of a home. Do you ever see something move past the hinge of a door? Is that someone looking out from inside your wardrobe? Have you ever pictured a hand reaching out from between your bed and the floor? Well it could be the girl from the gap - a spirit that lives both physically and metaphorically -between worlds-. Its said that if you ever see her, she will ask if you want to play hide and seek. At that point the game is on. When you her between a gap again, shell drag you to an other worldly hell.

6. The Red Room


This is a very modern Japanese urban legend about a pop up ad thats red with black test. In a childs voice, it simply repeats the phrase -Do you like?-. A boy who got the popup tried to close it but it kept reappearing. Then, it changed to -Do you like red?- … he keeps trying to close it but it grows large and changes again to say -Do you like the red room?- … then, the site changes. All red and black. It has a list of names on it - his friends is at the bottom. And hand reaches out towards the boys neck from a video. tHE Ending gets even more twisted but guess what, its based on a real website. Its still out there. If you can find it, youll know the gruesome legend of the red room and if the horrible ending comes true for you.

5. The Human Pillars


This legend dates back to ancient times in Japan where its known as Hito-bashira. Back then, there was a belief that a human sacrifice sealed inside a structure would make a foundation more stable. This means that many old Japanese buildings are said to contain the spirits of the people who were sacrificed during their construction. One famous example is Matsue Castle where a woman was sealed inside the foundations during its construction. Now her spirit is said to haunt the castle and whenever a woman dances there, the castle shakes violently. Many building owners in Japan are open about their building being a Human Pillar.

4. The Snake Woman


This one comes from the old Japanese folklore pf Nure-onna which translates to wet woman. She is often described as having the head of a woman and the body of a snake - with long claws, snake eyes and jet black hair.  She carries with her a childlike bundle to lure in her victims. If a person tries to pick up the baby, they find its not a child at all. The bundle then becomes very heavy and stops the victim from fleeing. The snake woman then uses her long tongue to suck all of the blood from the victims body until they die.

3. Onibaba


She is a demon women that often appears in Japanese folk folklore. She will often appear as an old woman asking for help but if you get to close, she will slice you open with a knife and eat you. She is said to be the tormented spirit of a woman who accidently killed her pregnant daughter and unborn grandchild in an effort to find a cure for her friends child being sick. She was told to bring them the liver of an unborn child but when she finally killed her victims, she found they were her own family.

2. The Dream School


This one is extra creepy because apparently if you don't forget it within a week - it will happen to you. Lets see if this is true. One night, a boy had a dream about a school. The hallways looped forever, bringing him back to the start. Staircases led back to the first floor. As he got scared, he heard footsteps behind him. He ran until he found an emergency exit with a glass box and a key next to it. The glass had been smashed and there was a note saying it could be found in room 108. When he found that room, it was empty - no students - but there were backpacks hanging off every chair. There was a pounding on the door. He opened it, terrified, to find the hallways covered with dead children. Its said that he never woke up from his dream and if you don't forget the story in one week, youll meet the same fate. Don't worry though guys

1. Onryo


This is a traditional Japanese ghost belief about a vengeful spirt that can and will physically hurt the living. Its a very scary concept if youre only familiar with the western idea of ghosts which don't really take solid forms and so cant hurt humans with physical contact. Thats not true for an Onryo. They are vengeful and full of hate, stopping at nothing to enact the suffering they received when they were alive. For any of you guys who have seen The Grudge, this spirit is the influence for that creepy girl in that movie.








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« แก้ไขครั้งสุดท้าย: กุมภาพันธ์ 24, 2023, 02:10:58 am โดย anyaha »



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ตอบกลับ #1 เมื่อ: กุมภาพันธ์ 09, 2023, 04:11:45 pm
Top 10 Japanese Urban Legends You Never Heard Of
Every country has its own set of creepy urban legends  but japan might just have some of the  creepiest  from faceless ghosts that will play  tricks on you to demons that could drag  you to hell  i'm going to be discussing these and  more on today's top 10 list but before i  begin i just want to thank our sponsor  for today's video  tokyo treat tokyo treat is a monthly  subscription box service where you can  get a box  full of delicious japanese candy and  snacks  right to your door the holidays are  coming up and this would be the perfect  gift to get someone  if you're interested we got a link in  the description box below  just for you this is just a little sneak  peek of the stuff that you could get in  your box  and now i am going to taste test the  kitkat cheesecake and you know what i  like cheesecake and i like kitkat so  i think it's gonna be really good it's a  cute little packaging  that's really good wow  they're so cute and minnie starting off  this countdown we have the faceless  ghost  the nopera bow or faceless ghosts are  creepy looking creatures with  no face they typically disguise  themselves as  humans but can wipe all the facial  features off of their face  so they look terrifying but no need to  worry these ghosts mean no harm  they are tricksters and all they like to  do is scare humans with their appearance  what's the worst is that they can  impersonate your family or friends  so one second you're talking to your mom  and then bam her face is gone and you're  talking to this  nightmarish creature moving on number  nine we have the riverboy  and if you guys are liking this video so  far make sure to give it a big thumbs up  now this legend is quite an unusual one  so it surrounds these creatures known as  river boys they are said to live in  ponds or rivers and are about the size  of a small  child but they look kind of like turtles  with  webbed human-like feet and hands a shell  type thing  on their back and green skin now  these creatures are known to be quite  mischievous  they're stories of them peering up  women's kimonos or  tooting really loud in public on top of  that they can be quite  evil they have lured swimmers to their  death along with horses  and cows because apparently they hate  those two animals but how could anyone  hate cows like they're so cute anyway  another interesting fact about these  creatures are that they have a small  bowl type thing on their head that  always has to remain wet  or filled with water if it dries out or  spills  they can lose their powers or die in  japan the stories of the river boy  creatures are used to deter  kids from swimming alone moving on down  to number eight we have  the painted buddha noribotokai otherwise  known as the lacquered buddha or the  painted buddha  gets its name because it resembles a  buddha with its protruding gut  but this creature has black skin a long  tail like a catfish  and has eyes that dangle out of its  sockets  it also is said to give off a foul odor  now japanese homes or temples often have  a buddhist  shrine but legend goes if you leave this  shrine open at night  or if you don't keep it well kept then  this creature can  lurk out of it once it's out it will  trick humans by providing them with  false prophecies or they will dance  around all night and keep you  up so they look more terrifying than  they actually  are in our seventh spot we have the  human pillar  yeah it's as creepy as it sounds so the  human pillars in japan  are pillars that are rumored to have  humans trapped inside of them  legend goes that if you put humans  inside of pillars during the  construction of a building  then it would bless it and help hold it  in place  and this was an actual ritual that  people would practice  it's a form of human sacrifice and  people were buried alive  but now legend goes that the buildings  are haunted by the souls trapped inside  one famous legend surrounds matsu castle  where apparently a woman was sealed  inside during construction  and now her spirit haunts the castle in  fact sometimes the castle shakes  randomly and that's said to be from the  woman  trapped within it making our way down  the list number six we have the girl in  the gap  this was a japanese superstition that  turned into an Japanese urban legend  so there's a superstition that spirits  live between the gaps of things like  in between the gap of a door or couch or  closet etc  now legend goes that a demon girl  resides in this gap  if you lock eyes with her she will ask  you to play hide and seek with her  no matter what you have to play with her  but at one point in the game  she will grab you and drag you to hell  yeah  good luck sleeping tonight we're now at  our fifth and halfway mark with the  dream school  legend goes that one night a young boy  had a dream about  school which alone is terrifying itself  but in this dream the school had  hallways that went on and on  forever you had staircases that led to  the same  floor no matter what he couldn't escape  at one point in the dream he heard  someone coming close to him  so he ran until he found an emergency  exit the emergency exit had a glass box  where a key to the door was held  but the glass was smashed and there was  no key  instead there was a note that said it  could be found in room 108  but when he found the room it was quite  terrifying  the room was empty there were no  students but there were backpacks  hanging off of  every chair he went back out to the hall  and that's when he saw  it was littered with dead students it  said that he never woke up from this  dream  he's still trapped inside the legend  ends saying if you don't forget the  story in one week  the same will happen to you so good luck  and may the odds be ever in your favor  no i'm just kidding this is just Japanese urban legend i have to put this  disclaimer in here  because my other video i scared people  so bad like i got dms  asking if it was fake or if they were  gonna die so you guys are good in our  fourth spot we have the  paper lantern ghost cho chinobaki or the  paper lantern ghost was a regular  lantern that after 100 years of use  turned into this creature this comes  from the old belief that all  objects have a soul living or non-living  now this lantern ghost might look a bit  terrifying with its large  eyes or sometimes just one eye and its  big mouth and long tongue  but it's harmless it's another one of  those tricksters that just want to spook  humans legend goes that the chochinobaki  will flick its tongue out  roll its eyes and give out a big laugh  in order to frighten humans  coming in at number three we have the  carnivorous spider  the carnivorous spider is a reference to  the golden orb weaver spider which can  be found  in japan but this spider is a bit  different  apparently when the spider reaches 400  years old  it can transform into a young beautiful  woman  but there's one problem with this she  gains an appetite  for eating young men so this woman  spider creature thing then lures men to  their home where they  trap them and eat them slowly so don't  be fooled  your next tinder match could actually be  this creature in disguise in our second  spot we have the wriggling body  the wriggling body is an urban legend  about this tall almost  paper looking thing that shimmers and  wiggles in rice or barley fields  it said that this thing constantly moves  even on windless days  from afar you can't tell what it is but  whatever you do  don't get anywhere close to it according  to the legend if you get too close to it  has the power to drive you insane  if you touch it you will die although  this is just a legend some people have  claimed to see this in real life  but it may just be a scarecrow they see  moving around in the fields  at least we only hope that it's just a  scarecrow in our number one spot we have  the ghost  of okiku okiku is the name of a young  girl who lived in a castle as a servant  to a samurai  one of the things that okiku was  responsible for was looking after the  samurai's collection of  10 valuable plates now one day when  caring for the plate she noticed that  there were only nine  one was missing she began to worry and  obsessively started to count the plates  over and over hoping she was just  miscounting and 10 were actually there  the samurai became so mad at her that he  threw her down a well  but the girl's soul could never find  peace  so every night she would crawl out of  the well and could be seen  counting the plates over and over when  she realizes the tenth plate is missing  she will scream at the top of her lungs  okiku haunted the castle for months  until a priest came  and released her soul now before i go to  the comment shoutouts i would just like  to let you know that tokyo treat is  having an upcoming promotion for black  friday  you can use the code bf2020 to get the  ultimate  black friday bonus and at the end of  november they will have a cyber monday  madness bonus and for both campaigns you  have the chance to win  a lottery prize so go ahead and check  that link in the description for some  good deals and tasty treats  and now it's time for our comment  shoutout portion i'll be shouting out  comments from my video top 10 dark  hidden messages  in classic rock songs happy skies  commented lindsey ivan is the best host  ever  thank you thank you very much i  appreciate comments like that rihanna  adams commented i know this isn't  related to the story but where did you  get that dress from  it was not a dress it was a top and it  was from garage clothing so  if you're in canada or america you can  get the top then we can be matching so  get it ai gaming commented  i'm only shouting out this comment  because they have a cat as a profile  picture  ai gaming commented 428 views let's go  like i said i'm only shouting out your  comment because you have a cow as a  profile picture and it's really cute  so there you go and that's all the  comments i'm showing out for today's  video make sure to comment something  down below for a chance to be featured  in my next comment shout  out.



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ตอบกลับ #2 เมื่อ: กุมภาพันธ์ 24, 2023, 02:11:50 am
Scary Stories Urban Legend 1
Backseat Driver Urban Legend
One summer night, a British driver was forced to pull into a deserted petrol station—the only one around. She was in a hurry and didn’t want to hang around any longer than was necessary, so she proceeded to pay at the pump and started to fill up her car. Suddenly, a man’s voice came over the loudspeaker, telling her to come into the garage to pay. She pretended she hadn’t heard him and continued to fill the tank. He spoke again and told her that there was a problem with her credit card so she would have to pay in the kiosk. Then the pump stopped.

Now she was annoyed—she was sure that there was nothing wrong with her card, but she didn’t want to drive off without paying, so she walked over to the garage, where the man beckoned her inside. She angrily protested that her card worked perfectly well and that she had places to be, but he interrupted her and locked the door. He quietly told her that he had watched a man sneak into her car when she was distracted at the pump, and he had already called the police. The woman looked out of the window: she saw the back door of her car wide open and a hooded figure walking quickly away from the station.

Date Night Urban Legend
One summer evening a teenage girl who lived in a remote English village was picked up by a boy for their second date. They were driving through the countryside when he mentioned that they were running out of petrol and therefore might not make it home. She thought he was joking, but she didn’t find it particularly funny, especially when the car spluttered to a halt under an old oak tree—they really had run out of fuel. They both glanced at their mobile phones but neither could get a signal in such an isolated spot.

“Maybe we’ll just have to stay here until morning?” he suggested. This didn’t go down well with his date, so he told her to stay in the car and lock the doors while he went looking for help: the village was only a few miles back the other way and there was an old-fashioned phone box there if his phone still didn’t work. The girl was understandably angry at her useless date for managing to run out of fuel and leaving her stranded in the middle of nowhere, but she settled down to wait for his return. It was too quiet for her liking, with the only sound being the wind, so she turned on the radio to keep her company. A news bulletin was being read out, but the reception was terrible so she put on a CD instead.

An hour passed, then two, and she started to get worried, wondering if he had abandoned her. Maybe he had been hit by a car on the dark country roads? She had heard of such accidents happening before. Then the car battery died and the music stopped. She cursed and slammed the dashboard. Suddenly, she heard a thump, followed by a scratching or tapping sound on the roof of the car. She told herself that it was probably a tree branch—it was a windy night—but it was a loud noise, so she kept still and didn’t make a sound.

The noises continued and her imagination began to play tricks on her—was someone out there? Her fear continued to grow, but she didn’t dare open the door to escape. Just when she couldn’t bear it any longer, flashing blue lights lit up the car and she breathed a sigh of relief, thinking that her date must have come back with some help. The car stopped and a policeman walked slowly towards her, but there was no sign of the boy. The officer shined his torch through the window and beckoned her out of the car.

“You’re safe, but keep your eyes down and don’t look back at the car,” he instructed.
Confused, the girl asked if the policeman had seen her date. “There’s time for that later,” came the reply. She opened the police car door but could not resist a quick look back. What she saw made her freeze in terror: the boy was hanging upside down from the oak tree, lit by the flashing lights and swaying in the wind. His bloodied head was knocking on the car and his fingernails scraping the roof. “Didn’t you listen to the radio?” asked the policeman. “A murderer just escaped from the mental hospital in town.”

Don’t Turn on the Light Urban Legend
Student halls of residence are strange places: you never know who or what you might find in your room. You don’t really know the people you’re suddenly living with, but everybody wants to make friends—they’re always inviting themselves around and there’s no real privacy. One Friday night at a university in England, first-year student Jennie was getting excited about a freshers’ event that was taking place that evening.

She was trying to persuade Emily, her new roommate, to come along, but the latter didn’t feel like partying, so eventually Jennie left her there and went to the party alone. Later that evening, she came back to the room to get something, leaving the light off so as not to wake Emily, before returning to the event. When Jennie awoke late the next morning, she didn’t remember much about getting home. As she rolled out of bed, she saw that Emily also appeared to be still asleep, which wasn’t like her at all. Then she saw the blood on the sheets: Emily was dead, her throat cut. Above her, on the wall and scrawled in blood, were the words, “Aren’t you glad you didn’t turn on the light?”

The Red Room Urban Legend
You are browsing on your computer one evening. You are supposed to be working on a project but instead are trawling through social media posts. Suddenly, a pop-up window appears with a cryptic question: “Do you like…?” You assume it’s an advert and close the window. You try to get back to what you were doing, but the same question keeps popping up. Then you hear a child’s voice saying, “Do you like…?” Thinking it must be some kind of computer virus, and as the voice becomes more and more insistent and aggressive, you try to ignore it. Then the screen turns red and the same window pops up again, but this time it asks, “Do you like the red room?”

Then you remember that you’ve heard of this happening to other people, and the memory makes your blood run cold. A list of names appears on the screen—a list of victims, all of whom were found in a room painted red with their own blood. You’re scared, but you can’t help clicking through it. The last name is yours, and you hear a noise behind you…

Fear of Needles Urban Legend
A series of mysterious and frightening events were reported to police forces in cities across the United States in the early 1990s. In one such incident, a man in Seattle reported to a local hospital in a panic urban legend, complaining of a small puncture wound to his right arm. He explained that he had been outside a bar in the city when he felt a sharp pain in his shoulder, as a young woman in noticeably poor health brushed past him. She was carrying a sharp implement, possibly a surgical needle, and she hissed, “Welcome to the HIV club,” while looking him directly in the eye. He frantically removed his shirt and saw the puncture wound. When he recovered from the shock to look for the perpetrator, she was nowhere to be found. He went to the police a few days later, but despite trawling through surveillance camera footage of the busy street, they could not track the woman down.




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ตอบกลับ #3 เมื่อ: กุมภาพันธ์ 24, 2023, 02:12:21 am
Scary Stories Urban Legend 2
Hooked Urban Legend
Young people in Colorado know the story of the hardened hitman who lost his mind after he was hired to kill an entire family. The job went wrong, and the contract killer lost both his hands in a gangland punishment. He was subsequently incarcerated at a secure mental hospital out of town and told that he would never be released. In place of his hands the prison authorities attached two large hooks. Several years went by and people had forgotten about him, until one night he escaped after murdering a guard who had taken pity on him.

Bulletins went out on the local radio all night: he was highly dangerous and should not be approached. A young couple who had driven into the country for some privacy heard the reports while they were parked in a popular location overlooking the town. They realized that they had driven past the psychiatric facility only a few minutes earlier. The girl didn’t want to be out at night when the killer was on the loose, but the boy told her it would be fine and that they had probably caught him by then anyway. However, his date was having none of it so the boy reluctantly fired up the car and drove back into town, listening to the radio for updates. All the way home they heard a knocking noise coming from somewhere on the car, which he explained away as a regular problem. When they reached her house and got out of the vehicle, they saw what had been causing the noise: a large hook was hanging on the passenger door handle, covered in blood.

Behind the Mask Urban Legend
A child in Japan was walking home from school one evening. The friends who usually walked with her had already gone home, but she was only one street away from her house. She saw a young woman walking towards her, wearing a surgical mask like those that many Japanese people use to protect themselves from smog and diseases. She stopped in front of the child and leaned down towards her. The child was not worried, as she seemed friendly enough.

“Where are you going?” the woman asked.
“I’m going home from school; my house is just down the road there.”
“Do you think I’m beautiful?” came the unexpected question. The girl politely, if a little concerned, said yes.
The woman then asked, as she removed the mask, “How about now?” and revealed a horrific wound that slashed her mouth from ear to ear.

She bent down to the frightened girl and asked again through her mutilated lips, “How about now?” The girl was horrified by her appearance but she had been brought up to be always polite, so she told her that she still looked beautiful. Then the terrifying figure disappeared. The next day at school the girl told her friends what she had seen and they immediately recognized the story. They told her that the woman had appeared to many girls over the years, but not all of them had been so lucky. If she hadn’t said the right thing, the woman would have cut the same terrible smile into the girl’s own face with a pair of scissors and condemned her to roam the streets in a mask. The shocked girl did not walk home alone again for a very long time.

The Green Man Urban Legend
In Pittsburgh children are told the tale of the Green Man: a terrifying figure who lives alone in an abandoned house and wanders the country lanes at night, looking for kids to chase. He was also known as Charlie No-Face, because he had a terrible disfigurement; some said that he was born that way, whereas others believed that he was struck by lightning. Other possible explanations included an accident involving power lines or a horrendous crime that drove him insane. Whatever the cause, it had made his skin glow green in the dark, and just viewing his face was enough to induce terror. However, you always had plenty of warning before you came across him, as he was blind, so you could hear him tapping his way along the road with his stick.

Kids who played in the country at night would scare each other with stories about him, and young couples who drove out to the “Green Man Tunnel” under the railroad would keep an eye out for him, as everybody knew that Charlie No-Face liked to wait under the bridge and tap on the steamy windows of cars with his stick. If you were brave, you would drive round the roads where he had been seen before, trying to catch sight of his face. Cars would drive from miles around.

Tragically, there was a real person behind this myth, but he wasn’t called Charlie. He was a local boy who had suffered a near-fatal electric shock aged eight, after daring to climb up a railway bridge. In doing so he accidentally touched a live electrical wire and was blasted with 20,000 volts. He lost his left arm below the elbow, as well as his eyes and nose, and his face was severely burned. Somehow he survived and eventually returned home to his family. He lived into old age, mostly spending his days inside, as his appearance in the bright light of day would scare people, but he wandered the country lanes at night, looking for someone to talk to. Once people got over his shocking appearance and got to know him, they said that he was actually a nice guy—proof of the saying that you shouldn’t judge a book by its cover.

Clowning Around Urban Legend
A couple went out for a dinner date one night and left their children with a new babysitter. The mother was a little unsure about her, as she was quite young, and the children hadn’t been sleeping well lately after scaring each other with stories about a bogeyman hiding in their bedrooms. She wanted to ring to check how things were going at home, but the father reassured her that it was better not to interfere. Just then the mother’s mobile phone rang and it was the babysitter, who said that there was no problem—the kids were fine—but “the clown” was creeping out all of them. Would it be OK if she moved it?

“What clown?” the mother asked.
“That weird clown figure that is standing in the corner of the living room?” the sitter explained. The mother told her to grab the children, go next door immediately and call her as soon as they got there. The babysitter replied, “OK, but why? There’s nothing to worry about.” The mother replied, “There is something to worry about. We don’t own a clown statue.”

Don’t Look Behind You Urban Legend
A young woman was driving home in her new SUV one night from a 24-hour supermarket. The high driving position made her feel safer on the road after her last car, a hatchback, was written off in an accident with a truck. A few minutes after she had pulled onto a main road, she noticed bright lights in her rear-view mirror. She paid no attention to them but they continued to dazzle her: the large truck behind her was flashing his lights. She decided to ignore the driver and accelerated away from him. It wasn’t safe to stop and she wasn’t far from her home in the suburbs, where her boyfriend would be waiting. Then the truck loomed in her mirror again and she could see the driver trying to get her to pull over.

She was worried he was going to ram her off the road, but soon she reached her junction and pulled off the main road. To her horror, however, she saw that the truck was still following her, so she put her foot down and screeched to a halt outside her house, running for the door. The truck driver pulled up some way behind her, lowered his window and yelled, “Get in your house and lock the door!” She turned round in surprise, as her boyfriend opened the door, and saw in the truck’s headlights a man roll out from underneath her car and run off down the road. When he had gone, the truck driver got out of his cab and approached her, explaining why he had been following her since she had left the supermarket: “That guy has been hanging underneath your car all the way here. I think he had a knife.”

Black-eyed Teens Urban Legend
This story first appeared in the early days of the internet, posted on a message board. A young professional in a Midwestern American town had gone to pick up some supplies from a late-night convenience store. After leaving the shop, he got into his car and prepared to drive off, when he heard a knock at the window. Standing there were two small boys, both quite young and wearing hoods. He wound the window down to see what they wanted and instantly felt that something was not quite right with these children, who were asking him where he lived. He wasn’t exactly scared, but for some reason he lied and said that he lived on the opposite side of town. They told him that was where they lived as well and that they needed a lift home because they had missed their bus. At that point it was past 10 p.m. and the man was aware that the buses had stopped running a few hours previously: what were they doing out at this time on their own?

The boys asked if he was going to let them in, saying that they were getting hungry, and one of them put his hand on the door handle, which the man quickly locked from the inside. The taller of the pair said that they were only kids, insisting, “We’re not going to do anything bad, but we can’t get in the car unless you ask us.” This kind of talk alarmed the driver. He started the car, but they knocked again, and he wondered whether leaving kids of that age alone in the dark would be the right thing to do. Then he noticed their eyes.

Their eyeballs were totally black, with no visible iris, as if they were full of jet-black ink. “You need to let us in; we can’t come in unless you ask us. You can’t leave us out here,” they repeated. He ignored them and sped off, and as he looked back in his mirrors, he saw that they had disappeared. Shaken by the incident, he posted a description on a local message board and it wasn’t long before his story was picked up nationwide. Several other sightings were reported up and down the country, all of them involving young children knocking on doors and windows of cars and houses, asking to be let in for food and becoming quietly insistent when they were denied access. Nobody knows what would happen if you beckoned them inside, because the only people who did were sadly unable to tell the tale.

Home Alone Urban Legend
British newspapers reported the mysterious case of a girl who was spending the day at home alone after her school was closed due to a snowstorm. She was watching TV in the living room when she noticed something out of the corner of her eye, in the glass doors that led out into the garden. There was a man standing in the bushes, staring directly at her. She screamed, and immediately sprang off the sofa and ran out of the room to call the police. When she got through, she told them that there was an intruder in her garden, and the operator told her to make sure all the doors and windows were locked. Officers were on their way but would be delayed by the snow on the roads.

She was terrified—she couldn’t remember whether the patio doors were locked or not—and it took all the courage she could muster to tiptoe back into the living room and check if the man was still in the garden. She couldn’t see him, and she quickly locked the doors. She endured an agonising wait by the front door until two policemen arrived. They told her that they were already searching for a dangerous suspect responsible for an assault in another home in the area and went outside to check the garden. To their confusion, they found that there were no footprints, despite the thick snow covering the grass. When they returned to the living room, they saw what they were looking for: a set of wet footprints behind the sofa. “You were very lucky, young lady. He was standing right behind you—what you saw was his reflection in the glass.”




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ตอบกลับ #4 เมื่อ: กุมภาพันธ์ 24, 2023, 02:13:02 am
Scary Stories Urban Legend 3
The Crying Baby Urban Legend
A woman was working late at her office in the city when she was interrupted by a strange noise coming from outside her window. As it got louder, she recognized the unmistakable sound of a baby crying—an unusual noise at that time of night in that part of town, where there were few houses. She looked out of the window and couldn’t see anything, but the crying continued, and it sounded almost as if it were inside the building. She checked downstairs, where the noise was so loud that it could only have been coming from right outside the front door.

She put her hand on the door handle but despite all her instincts telling her to help the baby, something stopped her from opening it. Instead, she called the police and described the situation, asking them if they knew anything about a missing baby. She didn’t get the answer she expected, as the police officer told her not to open the door under any circumstances, to move away from the windows and to wait for help to arrive. The woman took this to mean that a missing child had indeed been reported and put the phone down. She moved away from the windows and waited. But the crying continued to get louder and she began to wonder why she should wait for the police—after all, they could take hours to arrive and the baby might need urgent medical attention; it must have been getting cold out there.

She decided that she would bring the poor child inside and then wait for the police, so she opened the door and stepped out onto the street. The crying stopped, but she could see no signs of a baby. The next sounds she heard were her own screams. When the police finally arrived, they found her lifeless body on the street, her throat slashed. If she had stayed on the phone long enough, the police officer would have had time to explain that there was a serial killer on the loose in town who was luring women outside at night with the recorded sound of a crying baby.

Don’t Play the Lottery Urban Legend
The police department of a small town in Australia put out an online message warning residents about an unknown man who was suspected of killing one homeowner, seriously wounding another and trespassing on several other people’s property. He was dubbed the Lottery Killer because of his particular method of approaching his targets and murdering them. The first thing the victim would notice was a figure, with his face obscured, standing somewhere where he could clearly be seen, late at night. He would pick houses with glass doors or large windows overlooking the street, which he would stand in front of, silhouetted against the street lights and waiting to be noticed by the occupants—sometimes for several hours. Then he would knock 13 times at the door and wait for a response. If spoken to, he wouldn’t respond, but if the door was opened, he would attack viciously and indiscriminately with a long knife, murdering people in their own home. A bloody lottery ticket was left on the bodies.

The Gorbals Vampire Urban Legend
The children waited until it was dark to sneak out of their homes, picking up sticks and rocks to use as weapons on their way to the cemetery. They stalked the gravestones all night, waiting for a sight of what they had come to flush out: the Gorbals Vampire.

The Gorbals area of Glasgow, Scotland, had been terrorised by stories of a 7-foot-tall vampire with metal teeth who preyed on children and had already eaten two local boys. The rumors were so powerful that gangs of hysterical kids took to the cemetery in the south of the city to catch the monster, despite efforts by the police to stop them. Frightened parents pestered the authorities, wanting to know if there really was a child-eating bloodsucking murderer roaming the place. To alleviate their fears, the authorities blamed the new comics from America, which were full of horror stories, for whipping up wild ideas in young minds and even went as far as banning sensationalist publications. However, the local children suspected that the adults were lying and were also terrified of the iron-fanged fiend. They were sure that he wasn’t some imagined monster from a comic book: the vampire was real and they were going to find him.

The sprawling Victorian cemetery looked like the perfect lair for an undead creature of the night: home to more than a quarter of a million dead bodies, its crumbling statues and sunken gravestones were lit at night by the flames of a nearby steelworks. The children scrambled over a seven-foot wall and dropped down amongst the graves, speaking in whispers. Then someone shouted, “There he is!” as a shadow flashed quickly across a tomb. The children gave frantic chase, tumbling over headstones in the dark and brandishing makeshift weapons. Soon they came upon a great stone mausoleum, its door ajar.

Peering into the murky depths of the tomb, they could make out a large stone coffin in the corner, with its heavy marble lid pushed to one side. Was this the beast’s hiding place? A couple of the braver kids, egged on by the others, edged inside the building and fearfully poked their sticks inside the dark sarcophagus. The rest of the gang held their breath, unsure whether they would stay and fight or run for their lives if the creature was awoken. But no attack came; the tomb was empty. Clearly, the vampire had escaped their grasp once again, but his hunters vowed to return the next night—and the next, if necessary—armed with wooden stakes.

The Bunny Man Urban Legend
There is a tunnel under a road that runs through remote woods in Oregon; an insane asylum had been built in the vicinity not long after the Civil War. As the area was colonised and became more popular, houses were built around the asylum, and near the turn of the century, the residents started to question its existence. When an escaped patient attacked a child, the authorities finally decided to close the institution.

They loaded the patients onto buses to transfer them to alternative places, but one of the vehicles crashed in the woods after a violent passenger broke free of his chains and attacked the driver. All were later apprehended, except for two: Billy Smith and Michael Wood. Police and dogs combed the forest, and picked up a trail marked with the mutilated bodies of rabbits, some half-eaten. The trail led down the old wagon track to the bridge, where they found one of the missing patients; Michael Wood was hanging inside the tunnel. He had been bludgeoned to death and his ears had been removed. Attached to his foot was a note that read: “You’ll never catch the bunny man!”

They attributed the murder to Billy Smith, supposedly a friend of Wood and convicted of several violent crimes against animals. The search continued but Billy, or Bunny Man as the cops had taken to calling him, was never found. The only traces he possibly left behind were the rabbits nailed to trees that hunters would occasionally find on overgrown paths, which they put down to a macabre joke. Although Billy Smith was eventually forgotten, the story of the Bunny Man was passed down through generations of locals, and the tunnel became the place to be for bored teenagers, who would dare themselves to stay there until midnight.

In 1965 a group of teens had congregated at the bridge on Halloween. Seven remained until midnight, but one of the girls decided to walk home just before then and wandered away, back down the track to the main road. A moment later she looked back and saw a bright flash of light coming from under the bridge, even though there were no cars or people on the road, and then she heard her friends screaming at the top of their lungs. Soon there was nothing but silence and darkness. Terrified, she ran home. The next day, all of the teens who had remained under the bridge at midnight were discovered hanged with their ears cut off. The police found a dismembered rabbit nailed to a tree nearby, along with a note that said, “Don’t forget the Bunny Man!”

They never managed to identify a suspect, never mind the murderer. Years later a teenager and his girlfriend had driven down there in search of some privacy—if you pulled off the main road and down an old track, nobody could see your car under the bridge. They both knew the legends—they had heard them since kindergarten—but nobody was scared of them anymore. It was a bright summer night, with a full moon, and the place was indeed full of rabbits, which stopped in the car’s headlights and stared as the pair drove under the bridge.

The pair soon lost track of time and at midnight they didn’t notice the rabbits streaming under the bridge, as if running from a predator; they only looked up when they saw a flash of light. The next person who saw them was a man searching for his dog that had run off to chase the local rabbits. The teens were swinging from the roof of the bridge, their ears missing. As the pet owner stared in shock at the grisly sight, the dog brought him a piece of paper in his mouth. It said, “You’ll never catch the Bunny Man!”

The Massacre Urban Legend
In 2007 an Ohio newspaper reported the rumors buzzing around a local university campus. A famous psychic had appeared on a phone-in radio show, claiming to have heard predictions at a s?ance. She warned that a massacre would take place at the college on Halloween and that, by the end of the month, seven students would die in a large H-shaped building near a railroad track on an Ohio campus. Students made frantic phone calls to university administrators, who in turn called in the police to investigate the claims but were reassured that there was no substance to the rumors.

Nonetheless, extra officers were deployed to help the regular campus cops. The student paper reported that some students were genuinely in fear of an attack, and many had taken refuge off campus until the threat was over. Soon it was the last weekend of the month and the college drinking society was due to hold a party. To show that they weren’t scared by the rumors, they decided that it would have a serial killer theme. Students who had not taken flight turned up wearing costumes from horror movies, and the venue was deliberately chosen because it was located in an H-shaped building. Halfway through the party there was a blackout and the drunken students joked that it would be the perfect time for the psychic’s attacker to strike. When the lights came back on, though, nobody was laughing: seven students lay dead, killed with an axe to the head in the bathroom.

Where’s My Liver Urban Legend
Bobby had been told by his mother to go to the shops and pick up a packet of fresh liver from the butcher’s. His grandfather was coming for dinner, and liver and onions was his favorite dish. Bobby hated liver, and he hated going in the butcher’s, but he did as he was told and set off to the shops. On the way there he met a friend who invited him to play a new computer game at his house, with some other mates.

Bobby wanted to explain that he was running an errand for his mother but he was too embarrassed, so he accepted; after all, it wouldn’t take long. When he next checked the time, he realized that it was dark and all the shops would probably be shut. He shot out of the house and ran down the road to the butcher’s, which was indeed closed. He was wondering what he would say to his mother, when he saw an old man rummaging around in the bins to the rear of the shop. He looked like a tramp, with greasy grey hair plastered over his dirty skin. Next to him was a supermarket trolley filled with filthy bags. The man saw him, and though Bobby wanted to run away, he was curious, so he asked the man what he was looking for.

“I’ve been getting myself some meat,” he told the boy, evidently pleased with himself. “They throw out perfectly good stuff here every day,” he added, pointing at the bins. Bobby saw that he had filled his trolley with lumps of meat wrapped in paper and on top was a fat calf’s liver. Before the old man could react, he grabbed it and ran off home as fast as he could. All the way down the high street Bobby could hear the trolley squeaking after him, but there was no way such an old man could keep up with a young boy.

The liver went down a treat, and Bobby’s grandfather said it was the best he’d eaten for as long as he could remember. The boy was allowed to stay up late that night as a reward and he played computer games downstairs until the small hours, pleased with his actions. As he was walking up the stairs to bed, he heard a noise outside the front door, so he looked out of the window but there was nothing there. Then came a squeaking sound, unmistakably the noise of an old supermarket trolley.

Still he could see nothing, but the noise grew louder and when the trolley came into view, Bobby ran upstairs in terror and hid under the blankets. He didn’t dare look out of the window to see if the old man was there and, eventually, he fell asleep. He was woken later by a knock on his bedroom door, followed by silence. A voice hissed, “Where’s my liver?” Then again, louder, “Where’s my liver, boy?” Bobby was frozen to the spot, and although he tried to scream, no noise came out. The door handle turned and the old man from the butcher’s stood in the doorway, smiling in the darkness. He was flashing a meat cleaver. “There’s my liver!”

The Bridge Urban Legend
There is a bridge in Wales where thrill-seeking teenagers go on Halloween. It’s a pretty little humpback stone bridge spanning a rocky river that flows down from the mountains, but it has a sinister past. Many years ago, there was a young woman—an only child—who lived in a manor house up the valley. She was smart and headstrong, and refused to marry the men that her father found for her, so he kept her locked away, waiting for her to agree to do his bidding.

One day a relative visited in a brand new motor car: a rare machine at the time in that part of the country. Her father had let his daughter out of her room for the occasion, so she took her one opportunity to escape. When her father wasn’t looking, the girl leapt into the driver’s seat and sped off down the valley. She flew down the hill towards the river, enjoying a blissful minute of freedom, before she realized that she didn’t know how to stop the vehicle and she ploughed straight off the bridge onto the rocks below.

Now, many years later, it’s still said that she haunts that bridge. If you flash your headlights as you’re driving over it, your car will stall. If you’re lucky, it will start again in few moments and you can be on your way but if you’re not, you will hear the girl knocking on the window. If you don’t open a door to let the girl in, you will die in a car accident within a week. The girl never managed to escape over the bridge and she won’t let you escape either…



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ตอบกลับ #5 เมื่อ: กุมภาพันธ์ 24, 2023, 02:16:27 am
Six Japanese Horror Legends That Won't Let You Sleep Tonight

If there is something that the Japanese know how to do very well (in addition to cars, technology and competitions ), it is to create horror stories , from which films have emerged that later have been taken up by Hollywood, but what is a reality is that these stories many sometimes they are based on supposed events that have given way to Japanese urban legends.

Of course, there is no way to know if these legends actually happened (or do happen), but due to their complexity and that they have passed from generation to generation, there is a sector of the Japanese population that takes them very seriously , to the extent of not play with them and never even mention them for fear of awakening the wrath of spirits.

1. Kuchisake-onna
The meaning of Kuchisake-onna would be something like "woman with the cut mouth" and its origin is not entirely clear, since on the one hand they tell us about the story of a woman who was savagely mutilated by her husband once he returned. in the form of an evil spirit, but there is another version of a woman who was found with said cut after a car accident.

Legend has it that this woman usually appears with a surgical mask, which is normal for Japanese people who seek to take care of colds or illnesses. Her victims are mainly children and if you find her she will stop you and ask you if she is beautiful , if you answer no, she will cut off your head with scissors, but if you answer yes, she will remove the mask showing her cut mouth and go back to ask if she is beautiful, if this time you answer no, she will cut you in half, but if you answer yes, she will be happy and cut your mouth from ear to ear leaving you like her.

It is impossible to run and escape because if you try she will reappear in front of you and will not leave until you answer her question. Such has been the fear of this legend that several schools have their teachers accompany their students to their homes so that they arrive safely.

2. Teke Teke
A small young student suffered an accident when she fell on the train tracks and was split in half, giving rise to the legend of Teke Teke, a name that comes from the sound that this ghost makes when it crawls moving its shoulders and tek hands. .tek ... tek ... tek.

It is extremely fast and if you find it it will chase you until it reaches you and split you in half , since that way it will not feel alone and it will know that someone else like it.

3. The Okiku doll
n 1918, 17-year-old Eikichi Suzuki bought a doll on the famous Tanuki-koji street in Sapporo, with the intention of giving it to his 2-year-old sister Okiku . The little girl fell in love with the doll, but years later Okiku died suddenly from a cold.

In tribute to the girl, the family decided to place the doll on an altar to pray for the memory of Okiku, shortly after the family began to notice that the doll's hair had grown , which meant that the spirit of the girl had grown lodged in the wrist.

By 1938 the Suzuki family decided to move and leave the doll in charge of the Mannenji Temple, which to this day has the 40-centimeter doll on display and has since seen its hair grow below the knees , which has caused periodically have to be cut.

4. Aka mantle
With this legend, Japanese toilets become the most terrifying place in the world, since Aka Manto is an evil spirit that appears while you are on the toilet , mainly in public and school toilets. Aka mantle appears before you and asks if you want red or blue toilet paper, if you answer red it will cut you with a knife until your clothes turn this color, but if you choose blue, it will strangle you until your face turns red. that color.

Do not try to trick him by asking for another color, as this will make you travel to an unknown dimension transforming into an Aka cloak, the only way to escape is to decline the use of any paper, stand up and leave.

5. Tomimo's Hell
This story tells us about a poem called "Tomimo's Hell", which can even be easily found on the internet, which is about the story of Tomimo who dies and falls into hell. The legend says that this poem should only be read in our minds, because if we read it aloud we will die .

This poem is part of the book "The Heart is Like a Rolling Stone" written by Yomota Inuhiko and was included in a collection of poems in 1919 which gave it a great exposure in the country. No one knows how the rumor started and where the legend originated, but even the poem opens with the warning: "If you read this poem out loud, tragic things will happen and you will have to take responsibility for your actions."

Of course, the legend gained popularity and many people decided to record themselves reading the poem aloud, to many nothing happened, but to others it is not clear what happened to them, since to this day they are missing.

6. Gozu (Cow Head)
Gozu is one of those japanese urban legends that in turn speak of another story, in this case of "Cabeza de vaca" a horror story that nobody knows well, nobody has heard and nobody can tell, since the level of horror that is drive in the story literally makes people die of fear after spending a few days terrified and unable to sleep.




 

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