ลงโฆษณาเว็บบอล รับติดแบนเนอร์ รับติดป้ายโฆษณาเว็บสายเทา
ยินดีต้อนรับคุณ,
บุคคลทั่วไป
กรุณา
เข้าสู่ระบบ
หรือ
ลงทะเบียน
ข่าว: SMF - Just Installed!
หน้าแรก
ช่วยเหลือ
ค้นหา
เข้าสู่ระบบ
สมัครสมาชิก
ลงโฆษณาเว็บบอล รับติดแบนเนอร์ รับติดป้ายโฆษณาเว็บสายเทา
»
ตลาดซื้อขายสินค้าออนไลน์ โฆษณาสินค้าฟรี
»
โปรโมทเว็บ โปรโมทสินค้า อื่นๆ
(ผู้ดูแล:
admin
) »
TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
« หน้าที่แล้ว
ต่อไป »
พิมพ์
หน้า: [
1
]
2
ผู้เขียน
หัวข้อ: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS (อ่าน 1011 ครั้ง)
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
เมื่อ:
กุมภาพันธ์ 05, 2020, 12:03:56 am »
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.
TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
TOP 10 SCARY BRITISH URBAN LEGENDS
TOP 10 SCARY CHINESE URBAN LEGENDS
TOP 10 SCARY KOREAN URBAN LEGENDS
TOP 10 SCARY RUSSIAN URBAN LEGENDS
japanese urban legends
korean urban legends
british urban legends
american urban legends
chinese urban legends
russian urban legends
mexican urban legends
canadian urban legends
irish urban legends
jack the ripper urban legends
british urban legends 2
hospitol urban legends
bloody mary urban legends
indian urban legends
disney urban legends
swedish urban legends
cemetery urban legends
american urban legends 2
mcdonald urban legends
french urban legends
chinese urban legends 2
pakistani urban legends
australian urban legends
haunted train urban legends
viking urban legends
russian urban legends 2
filipino urban legends
creepiest urban legends
world urban legends
scary cursed objects
mysterious photos
top bone chilling
ancient creatures
ancient serial killers
terrifying kidnappings
fortnite creepypastas
scary cursed objects
paranormal mysteries
urban legends real crimes
the most evil kids
mysteriously vanished
unsolved mysteries
most bizarre curses
top horror movies
pets ate owners
real horror stories
scariest animated
scariest horror games
insane true crime
scariest deaths
scary ghost sightings
horrible serial killers
creepiest websites
murders blamed video games
world urban legends
mysterious people identify
«
แก้ไขครั้งสุดท้าย: กุมภาพันธ์ 25, 2023, 10:48:50 pm โดย anyaha
»
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #1 เมื่อ:
กุมภาพันธ์ 05, 2020, 12:04:37 am »
WHY MILLENNIALS CHOOSE TO BUY HOME
According to NerdWallet's Millennials & Homebuying Study, the top 5 reasons young renters choose to own are:
1. To Have Control over Their Living Space - 93%
Many Millennials who rent a home or apartment prior to
buying their own homes
, dream of the day that they will be able to paint the walls whatever color they'd like, or renovate an outdated part of their living space. Many others who have waited to add a pet to their families daydream about the day that they'll be able to go pick out their 'furever'friend. Owning your own home gives you the freedom to make those choices.
2. To Have a sense of Privacy & Security - 90%
It is no surprise that having a place to call home, with all that means, in comfort and security, is the #2 reason. As a homeowner, you have control over who has access to your home, and you are able to secure it how you see fit.
3. To Live in a Nicer Home - 81%
Similar to the #1 reason,
when you purchase a home
, you can choose to live in a nicer home or choose to renovate a home & restore its glory. Owning also allows you to accommodate your growing family or a family member who may need to move in.
4. To Feel Engaged in Their Community - 75%
Owning a home in a community is one of the major reasons why residents become more civically involved. The stakes are raised once your home value is directly tied to the neighborhood and community in which you live.
5. To Have Flexibility in Future Decisions - 53%
Owning a home allows you to use your monthly housing cost as a savings account that can be borrowed against in the future. Having this option available during uncertain times is just one of many reasons why homeowners feel more secure in their homes.
"The majority of millennials said they
consider owning a home
more sensible than renting for both financial and lifestyle reasons - including control of living space, flexibility in future decisions, privacy and security, and living in a nice home."
interest only mortgage
quicken loans rates
small personal loans
lowest mortgage rates
us bank mortgage rates
business line of credit
adjustable rate mortgage
best small business loans
low interest personal loans
credit union loans
help to buy equity loan
best mortgage rates 5 year fixed
lowest home loan rates
personal loan eligibility
short term loans online
loans for those with bad credit
personal loan interest
quick easy loans
direct payday lenders
instant personal loan
start up loans
housing loan interest rate
home finance
debt consolidation loan rates
fast loan advance
car finance rates
15 yr mortgage rates
commercial real estate loans
working capital loan
elastic line of credit
mortgage application
second mortgage rates
current home mortgage rates
first bank mortgage
vehicle finance
commercial loan rates
types of mortgage loans
private money lenders
bad credit business loans
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #2 เมื่อ:
กุมภาพันธ์ 05, 2020, 12:05:12 am »
USING CREDIT CARDS WITH NO DEBT
Credit cards are magic cards that help manage important finances. And also helps users to buy the products you want more quickly By bringing cash to pay back the products to the financial institution later. However, the convenience of spending via cards sometimes leads to spending that is more than necessary. And beyond the budget that is available in the wallet And lead to debt
How to use the card correctly is to know how to manage expenses. And understand the scope and importance of using credit cards to buy various products In which an easy method in The use of credit cards from debt as follows
1. Know the scope of their spending And do not use more than they can pay in each billing cycle collected from the cardholder financial institution
2. Know the payment due date And ensure that the financial company that uses the service receives payment from users within the stipulated time.
3. Pay with a minimum minimum rate To maintain the account status as normal But for cards with charge cards Always remember to pay the full amount every month.
4. Keep interest at a fixed rate. By paying a minimum payment at least every month
5. Choose to combine spending together. By choosing methods that provide convenience in spending to yourself Or charge interest at a lower rate
6. Use the online cost checking service. When checking card spending To ensure that all spending is met
7. Avoid cash advance withdrawals. Since you will have to pay the premium It also increases your debt and loan balance. Interest up to 28%
8. Accounting for expenses and expenses within the budget. Check spending lists to control spending patterns.
9. Check the monthly bill regularly. To ensure that there are no wrong transactions
10. Check the credit report from the National Credit Information Company Which sent to cardholders annually by mail that the credit information is correct And also helps to ensure that the financial company that uses the service Use accurate data for analysis. Credit card users will receive the transaction annually, without any charge.
subprime mortgage
quicken loans rates
small personal loans
mortgage application
lowest mortgage rates
business line of credit
mortgage broker near me
best small business loans
low interest personal loans
credit union loans
help to buy equity loan
best mortgage rates 5 year fixed
lowest home loan rates
personal loan eligibility
short term loans online
loans for those with bad credit
personal loan interest
quick easy loans
direct payday lenders
instant personal loan
start up loans
housing loan interest rate
home finance
debt consolidation loan rates
fast loan advance
car finance rates
15 yr mortgage rates
commercial real estate loans
working capital loan
elastic line of credit
mortgage application
second mortgage rates
current home mortgage rates
first bank mortgage
vehicle finance
commercial loan rates
types of mortgage loans
private money lenders
bad credit business loans
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #3 เมื่อ:
พฤษภาคม 17, 2020, 01:07:20 am »
1MORE STYLISH WIRELESS HEADPHONES
The excellent sound quality of these headphones, which are also exceptionally comfy to wear, resulted in them receiving a 2019 iF Design award. The Bluetooth 5 connection to your digital device delivers superb sound, whether it’s instrumental or voice. This tech is particularly stable over short distances. Audio is complemented by noise-cancelling technology, and you can expect a battery life of up to 6.5 hours, which can be extended to 24 hours using the dedicated charging case.
BEST ROACH KILLER 2020
BEST WOOD GLUE
BEST POWER INVERTER
BEST ELECTRIC KNIFE SHARPENER
BEST OUTDOOR SOLAR LIGHTS
BEST LAWN FERTILIZER
BEST WOOD STOVE
BEST INSECT REPELLENT
BEST DEER REPELLENT
BEST DRAIN CLEANER
BEST LAWN EDGER
BEST GAMING MONITOR
BEST MEMORY FOAM MATTRESS
BEST GAMING KEYBOARD
BEST AIR MATTRESS
BEST AIR FRYER
BEST GAMING MOUSE
BEST COFFEE GRINDER
BEST GAMING HEADSET
BEST GAMING CHAIR
BEST TOOL BELT
BEST SOLDERING IRON
BEST PRUNING SAW
BEST BACKPACKING TENT
BEST TORQUE WRENCH
BEST CAR BATTERY CHARGER
BEST ADJUSTABLE WRENCH
BEST DIGITAL CALIPER
BEST CONCRETE CLEANER
BEST CORDLESS SCREWDRIVER
BEST BELT SANDER
BEST HAMMER DRILL
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #4 เมื่อ:
กันยายน 16, 2020, 09:59:54 am »
Earwig Stories Urban Legends
The earwig got its name from an ancient folk belief claiming that this insect likes to enter the human ear and then bore its way deep into the head. The idea was probably strengthened by the earwig’s appearance, with a sharp, pincer-like appendage extending to the rear. However, earwigs are herbivores, and they are no more likely to enter an ear than are ants, bees, flies, or any other small insect. Even when earwigs do occasionally find their way into human ears, they cannot burrow through the skin and into the brain.
Modern urban legends
about earwigs elaborate upon the theme of earburrowing with accounts of a doctor supposedly extracting an earwig from the opposite ear from its entry point and declaring it to be a female that must have laid eggs during its transit of the brain. A further elaboration of this notion is an anonymously photocopied “Earwig Alert” that pretends to be a medical bulletin advising patients infested with earwigs to take vitamins fortified with large amounts of iron and then have the
“wiglets” (or “larvalettes”) extracted with a strong electromagnet. Earwig stories have entered popular culture in science-fiction plots involving small voracious creatures put into the ears of enemies. There is also a punk-rock song with the chorus “You got an earwig, crawling toward your brain.”
The Eaten Pets Urban Legends
The common folk idea in the West that some foreigners, especially Eastern Europeans and Asians, eat cats and dogs as a regular part of their diets has given rise to numerous rumors and legends claiming that immigrants are stealing our cats and dogs for their dinner tables or to serve in ethnic restaurants. Such stories have a long history in Europe and Australia but have emerged more recently in the United States, especially with waves of new immigrants coming from Asia since the late 1960s. Local police, health officials, and journalists have repeatedly investigated such stories, almost always concluding that they are untrue. Spokespersons for the targeted immigrant groups have explained that
dogs and cats are seldom eaten in their home countries and that in the United States, with so many other kinds of meat readily available, there is no motivation for hunting down people’s pets for food. Besides the ethnic stereotyping evident in such stories, the actual disappearance of many pets seems to lend credibility to the claim. (“If those Asians are not eating our missing pets, then where are they disappearing!?”) Often these eaten-pet rumors and legends, as well as news stories about them, imply that even though such practices have not been documented locally, they do exist in other states, California being a leading example to be cited. A degree of skepticism about the stories is suggested by a sick joke that a new Vietnamese cookbook is titled 100 Ways to Wok Your Dog.
The Eaten Ticket
Urban Legends
A European legend that appeared in the mid-eighties in Denmark. The story was first quoted in a Swedish collection as having been received in a 1989 letter from Viborg, Denmark. The story began, in the original, “En ?ldre dam och en punkara satt mitt emot varandra I ett S-t?g.” (“An elderly lady
and a punker were sitting opposite each other in an S-train.”) The clothing, hairdo, and loud ghetto-blaster of the punker offended the lady, who sounded off in a loud voice to all of the other passengers saying what she thought of the guy. The punker bore the criticism without replying, but when the conductor arrived in the car to take tickets, he snatched the lady’s ticket, chewed it up, and swallowed it. In spite of her explanation and protest, the lady had to pay a fine of 200 crowns. After the conductor left the car, the punker pulled out his wallet and repaid her, saying the cost was worth it just to see her reaction.
Variations of the story soon spread to Finland, Germany, France, and Switzerland. In 1987, the story was used in Norway as the basis for a short film intended to urge people to buy season passes for public transportation instead of daily tickets. In 1993, short films based on the same story were also made in Germany and Belgium. “The Eaten Ticket” shares with
urban legends
like “The Elevator Incident” and “The Packet of Biscuits” the theme of “Prejudice Rebuked” or “Tolerance Taught.”
The Economical Car Urban Legends
Someone’s new car gets phenomenal gas mileage—sometimes as much as 1,000 miles per gallon. The driver is astounded and mentions it to the dealer from whom he bought the car. The dealer realizes that the customer has accidentally been sold an experimental model that the factory was desperately trying to locate and recall. The man is given a huge cash bonus for returning the car, or else is promised a new car annually for the rest of his life. Variations of “The Economical Car” have circulated at least since the late 1940s when, supposedly, new cars would improve greatly by incorporating the technical advances pioneered in the recent war. The legend resurfaces periodically with different details, especially in times of oil crisis and high gasoline prices. The reason for the claimed miracle mileage is usually said to be a revolutionary carburetor that the oil companies, in a conspiracy with automobile manufacturers, are suppressing.
Despite the complete lack of any scientific or engineering support for such claims, the economical-car and miracle-carburetor rumors and stories continue to circulate, and some people always seem eager to purchase or invest in the phantom products, even in the face of fantastic claims, such as that the device will allow automobiles to be fueled by water. The development of commercially viable hybrid and all-electric cars in the early twenty-first century, to some extent, made this legend come true.
Education and Urban Legends
Teachers, especially in English composition classes, from middle school through college, find urban legends to be effective subjects for class discussions, essay topics, and research projects. Whether using stories already known to students or introducing legends from published sources, teachers have found such material fascinating to their classes and useful as an introduction to literary analysis, research methods, and critical thinking. Of course, specific
urban legends
must be selected with some caution for the classroom, to find examples appropriate to the age and sophistication of the students.
Gail de Vos outlined three possible general topics for classroom use:
“Studying the Functions of Contemporary Legends,” “Comparing Variants,” and gathering “Contemporary Legends in Your School.” Her first two topics are based on analysis of published stories, while her third topic suggests assembling “an anthology of legends gathered in the community or at school.” Besides the educational value of such projects, de Vos mentions that “Folklore is an inexpensive source of material for financially strapped schools.”
Mary B. Nicolini described her approach to using
urban legends
in the classroom of an Indianapolis high school showing how her seniors “become hooked on tales of their own culture before being immersed in literature centuries old.” Besides reading and discussing
urban legends
from published collections, her students collected and analyzed stories told by classmates, other teachers, staff members, and parents. “Teens are skeptics; they demand proof,” Nicolini found, as her classes examined the truth claims and improbabilities of the
urban legends
they collected. They also discovered urban legends alluded to in movies, television, cartoons, and other media. A high point of the project was on an overnight field trip when one chaperone spontaneously “shared an amazing story about something which had happened to ‘a friend of a woman at work.’ ” It turned out to be the “Spiders in the Cactus” legend. Not only did the American students recognize this as a “new”
urban legend
, but an exchange student from Martinique said the same thing had supposedly happened to “a friend of my mother’s in France.”
A specific goal of teaching critical thinking
via urban legends
is the subject of the first chapter of Joseph Calabrese’s book Legends, Lore, and Lies. Reprinting my essay on the “Lights Out!” legend along with three other selections, Calabrese suggests such discussion and writing topics as these:
• What details do various e-mail versions of the story present?
• What steps were taken by sources to lend the tales an official appearance?
• Campus life revolves around academic routines familiar to any college student. What are some of these routines, and how do the legends exploit them?
• The “Lights Out” legend focuses on gangs. Find several more tales that involve gangs and analyze them to determine what fears they prey on.
The Elephant That Sat on the VW
An elephant in a circus parade, or one recently retired from a circus now giving rides in a zoo, spots a red Volkswagen. Apparently believing it to be the red stool on which it sat during its act, the elephant lumbers over to the VW and sits on it, crushing the front end. Driving home in the badly damaged car, the VW owner stops for a drink to calm his nerves, then is pulled over by the police who ask about the damage to the car. He explains that an elephant sat on his VW; the police breathalyze him, then cite him for driving under the influence.
Variations of this story have been around since the early 1960s, and it was debunked in the Volkswagen company’s periodical Small World in 1970, but it persists. The legend is well known in England, Germany, Sweden, France, Canada, and in Australia, where it was retold in Peter Carey’s 1981 novel Bliss (involving a red Fiat) and depicted in the 1985 film based on the novel. Bill Scott included the following version full of specific local details in his 1985 collection of “Australian yarns”: There was a doctor in Brisbane who bought a new Mercedes with all the latest fittings and power operated windows. The first weekend he had it he took his wife and children to visit the Lion Park at Beenleigh. The kids were in the back seat, and feeding the elephant through the back window,
buns or something. They stopped feeding the elephant who then reached through the opening to feel around for more food. One of the children panicked and pushed the button to wind up the window, trapping the animal’s trunk. The elephant reacted by kicking the new car and denting and damaging it severely.
The irate doctor cut the visit short and decided to take the children home as punishment. About the Kingston turn-off he came to a very bad road accident, and pulled up to see if he could give any help to the injured. While he was busy helping, the police arrived. They eventually began to question him as to his part in the accident. When he protested, and said that he had simply arrived afterwards, they pointed to the damage to his car. “How did that happen, then?” they asked. “It was kicked by an elephant,” he replied. They then charged him with driving under the influence, giving false information, etc. Scott devotes several pages to Aussie variations on the elephant-car mishap story involving Minis, Datsuns, or VWs, as well as repeating a French version he heard involving a red Renault. American versions are invariably localized to a particular zoo, amusement park, or circus. Sometimes the story is told to explain an insurance claim for a badly dented small car.
Elevator Accidents
In the 1940s, a legend circulated about a disturbing dream that warned someone away from a fatal elevator accident. In 1959, Richard Dorson wrote of “another macabre legend” about elevator accidents said to have occurred in various Michigan settings. He summarized three versions he
had heard:
In J. L. Hudson’s Department Store in Detroit, a woman entered an elevator car before it had completely stopped, and was caught with her body hanging inside the shaft and only her head visible to the passengers inside. The body fell down the shaft twelve floors, while the head was decapitated
and rolled into the car. The hair had turned completely white from the shock, and all the women in the car fainted. Another account places the blame on a careless operator, who closed the doors too soon. A third party states, “This really happened in Flint, in the building where my father worked. And it wasn’t due to a careless operator. The cable broke and that is why the car fell.”
These legends apparently did not survive into the later twentieth century, perhaps because elevators have proven to be extremely safe and because nowadays stores and shopping malls primarily use escalators to move people between floors.
The Elevator Incident
This is one of the most durable and
popular urban legends
of the late twentieth century. The modern form of the story emerged in the early 1980s, telling of a large black man with a dog on a leash entering an elevator that contained just two or three white middle-aged women. He says “Sit!” or “Sit, lady!” and the women, thinking him a mugger, sit on the floor. He laughingly explains that he was talking to his dog. Later they learn that the man was baseball star Reggie Jackson.
With innumerable variations in the setting, the command, the identity of the celebrity, and the aftermath, the legend continues to circulate nearly two decades later both at home and abroad, although foreign versions usually set the scene in the United States. Generally the incident is said to take place in a major resort city such as Las Vegas, Atlantic City, or New York City. The victims are either vacationers or people from out of town on a business or shopping trip. Sometimes they are set up for their misunderstanding by repeated warnings to be careful in the big city. The accidental supposed mugger in the legend has also been identified as Lionel Richie, Wilt Chamberlain, Arsenio Hall, Larry Holmes, Mike Tyson, O. J. Simpson, and many others, but especially in recent years
Eddie Murphy. The command may be quoted as “Hit the floor!” or “Hit fo!” (i.e., hit the button for floor four). Following the incident, the black celebrity may send the victims a note, money, roses, or champagne, and/or pay their hotel bill, their restaurant bill, and so on.
The obvious racist themes in “The Elevator Incident” include the notion that whites cannot tell black people apart or understand their accents. Since the white victims expect the worst from the black man on the elevator (who is sometimes accompanied by his dog and/or bodyguards), they misinterpret the man’s words in the worst possible way. Seemingly “excusing” this racism is the fact that the black man turns out to be good-humored and generous. The comic persona of Eddie Murphy in his popular films helps to fit the legend to him, although Murphy has strongly denied that any such thing ever occurred. Older versions of an elevator-incident legend do not involve a black man but instead a person named Neil. When someone calls out the name, bystanders misunderstand it as the command to “Kneel!” and immediately obey. Victims in the Neil/kneel versions are usually intimidated by someone in a position of authority or who has a “commanding” appearance.
A scene evidently based on an “Elevator Incident” prototype appeared in the episode of The Bob Newhart Show first broadcast on December 1, 1973. A black client (not a celebrity) of Dr. Bob’s has a large dog named “Whitey.” When he commands the dog, “Sit, Whitey!” a white character in the scene hastily sits on the edge of a desk. Although the characters are not on an elevator, the doors of the office elevator are visible in the background. The pun on the name of the dog sounds like a scriptwriter’s addition to what was probably at that time a traditional story beginning to take shape as an
urban legend
.
5 CREEPIEST URBAN LEGENDS
10 CREEPY URBAN LEGENDS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
10 URBAN LEGENDS THAT INSPIRED REAL CRIMES
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #5 เมื่อ:
มีนาคม 16, 2021, 10:32:46 am »
Argentina Facts
Armenia Facts
Australia Facts
Bahamas Facts
Bangladesh Facts
Benin Facts
Bolivia Facts
Brazil Facts
Canada Facts
China Facts
Costa Rica Facts
Czech Republic Facts
England Facts
France Facts
Germany Facts
Greece Facts
Guyana Facts
Haiti Facts
Holland Facts
Hong Kong Facts
Country Fact
and Event Around The World
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #6 เมื่อ:
มีนาคม 16, 2021, 10:34:26 am »
India Facts
Israel Facts
Italy Facts
Ivory Coast Facts
Jamaica Facts
Japan Facts
Jordan Facts
Kenya Facts
Madagascar Facts
Malawi Facts
Mexico Facts
New Zealand Facts
Norway Facts
Pakistan Facts
Panama Facts
Peru Facts
Philippines Facts
Poland Facts
Russia Facts
Scotland Facts
Country Fact
and Event Around The World
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #7 เมื่อ:
มีนาคม 16, 2021, 10:36:51 am »
5 Tips to Prepare for Your Property Settlement
1. Insurance
Haven't organised insurance yet? Get it now! It can be a risky practice to rely on the vendor's insurance cover (or lack thereof) if something happens to the property during the period from exchange to settlement. Having adequate insurance in place will give you peace of mind.
2. Keys, codes and passes
Make sure you organise who has the keys and when you can collect them from the agent or your legal representative. Also, make sure you have the alarm codes (if any) and instruction manuals. Some purchasers want to collect the keys that day from the agent; others have the keys delivered to their
solicitor after settlement
. By sorting out the logistics beforehand, you can enjoy your property sooner (without setting off any house alarms!).
3. Final inspection
This is probably the most important inspection you will undertake, so you should organise it during daylight hours as close as
possible to settlement
and really take your time with it. Has any debris been left behind? Do the fittings and fixtures remain? Are the contractual inclusions actually in place? Have the exclusions been disposed of?
4. Final Title Search
Just like a final inspection, a final title search will inform you if there have been any dealings with or new interests in the legal ownership of the property. After all, you can't buy something from someone if they don't own it. You'll also need to remove any caveat you've placed on the title to enable the change of ownership to take place.
5. Cheque directions
Your legal advisor and lender will organise the cheques on your behalf, but it's up to you to make sure the settlement amounts and payees are correct before
property settlement
. Also, make sure the cheques have correct spellings - incorrectly issued non-negotiable bank cheques can hold up and delay a settlement, and that's the last thing you want!
subprime mortgage
quicken loans rates
small personal loans
mortgage application
lowest mortgage rates
business line of credit
mortgage broker near me
best small business loans
low interest personal loans
credit union loans
help to buy equity loan
best mortgage rates 5 year fixed
lowest home loan rates
personal loan eligibility
short term loans online
loans for those with bad credit
personal loan interest
quick easy loans
direct payday lenders
instant personal loan
start up loans
housing loan interest rate
home finance
debt consolidation loan rates
fast loan advance
car finance rates
15 yr mortgage rates
commercial real estate loans
working capital loan
elastic line of credit
mortgage application
second mortgage rates
current home mortgage rates
first bank mortgage
vehicle finance
commercial loan rates
types of mortgage loans
private money lenders
bad credit business loans
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #8 เมื่อ:
มิถุนายน 21, 2021, 06:31:29 am »
จุดเริ่มต้นของทุกสรรพสิ่ง - บิ๊กแบง
ทฤษฏีที่บอกว่าเอกภพ ได้เกิดขึ้นและมีวันสิ้นสุด จนกระทั่งศตวรรษที่ 20 นักวิทยาศาสตร์ส่วนใหญ่เห็นด้วยกับแนวคิดที่ว่า
เอกภพ
ไม่มีวันสิ้นสุดและไม่มีอายุขัย จนทฤษฏีของไอน์ไสตน์ ได้อธิบายเกี่ยวกับแรงดึงดูดได้ดีกว่า และเอ็ดเวิร์ด ฮับเบิ้ล ได้ค้นพบว่า จักรวาลกำลังเคลื่อนที่ออกจากกัน ซึ่งสอดคล้องกันกับการทำนายก่อนหน้านี้
ในปี 1964 รังสีคอสมิคได้ถูกค้นพบโดยบังเอิญ ซึ่งเป็นหลักฐานของยุคแรกหลังการเกิดจักรวาล ร่วมกับหลักฐานอื่นๆ แล้วทำให้ ทฤษฏี "
การเกิดบิ๊กแบง
" ได้รับการยอมรับ ต่อมา โลกก็มีการพัฒนาเทคโนโลยี กล้องโทรทรรศน์อวกาศฮับเบิลทำให้เราได้ปะติดปะต่อภาพรวมเกี่ยวกับ การเกิดบิ๊กแบงและโครงสร้างของจักรวาล เมื่อเร็วๆ นี้ หลายหลักฐานชี้ว่าเอกภพกำลังขยายตัวด้วยความเร่ง แต่ "
บิ๊กแบง
" เกิดขึ้นได้อย่างไรล่ะ จะมีบางอย่างสิ่งเกิดขั้นจากความว่างเปล่าได้หรือ? มาดูกัน!
เราข้ามจุดก่อนเกิดบิ๊กแบงไปเลยแล้วกัน ก่อนอื่น ต้องบอกเลย บิ๊กแบงนั้นไม่ใช่การระเบิด! แต่เป็นการขยายตัวของพื้นที่ว่าง พร้อมๆ กันต่างหาก เอกภพมีขนาดเล็กมากๆ ในช่วงเริ่มต้น และสามารถขยายตัวได้รวดเร็วจนเท่ากับขนาดลูกฟุตบอล เอกภพไม่ได้ขยายตัวเป็นดาวหรืออะไรทั้งนั้น แต่ขยายเป็นพื้นที่ว่างเปล่า เอกภพไม่ได้ขยายตัวเข้าสิ่งใดเลย เพราะตัวมันเองก็ไม่มี "ขอบ" หมายความว่า ไม่มี "ขอบ" ก็ไม่มี "ข้างนอก" ของเอกภพเหมือนกัน เอกภพก็มีเพียงเท่านี้ ในสภาพที่ร้อน หนาแน่นแบบนี้ พลังงานได้แสดงตัวเป็นอนุภาคที่มีอยู่ชั่วประเดี๋ยวจากกลูออน คู่ของควาร์กได้ถูกสร้างขึ้นซึ่งพุ่งเข้าชนกันเอง เมื่อมีกลูออนที่มากขึ้น นั่นทำให้เกิดควาร์กที่หาคู่ชนกันขึ้นมาอีก สสารและพลังงานในตอนนี้มันไม่ได้แยก และเท่ากันตามทฤษฎี สภาวะนั้นมันร้อนมากจนแทบจะแยกสสารและพลังงานไม่ออก จนจู่ๆ สสารก็ชนะปฏิสสารในตอนนนั้น และปัจจุบันนี้เรามีแค่เพียงสสารเท่านั้นที่อยู่กับเรา
แต่เพราะบางอย่างทำให้อนุภาคสสารหนึ่งพันล้านหนึ่งตัวก่อตัวขึ้น สำหรับทุกๆ หนึ่งพันล้านอนุภาคปฏิสสาร (มันมีไม่เท่ากัน) แล้วแทนที่จะมีแค่หนึ่งแรงขนาดใหญ่ในจักรวาล มีแรงหลายแบบกระทำกันได้ภายใต้กฏโดยเงื่อนไขต่างๆ ถึงตอนนี้ เอกภพยืดออกจนเส้นผ่านศูนย์กลางเป็นพันล้านกิโลเมตร ซึ่งนำไปสู่การเย็นตัวลง วัฏจักรของการเกิดควาร์กและเปลี่ยนไปเป็นพลังอย่างทันที ได้ยุติลง ต่อจากนี้ไป เราจะอธิบายเท่าที่เราได้เข้าใจ(ความรู้เท่าที่มีอยู่)ควาร์กหลายตัวเริ่มก่อตัวเป็นอนุภาคใหม่ คือ ฮาดรอน อย่างเช่น โพรตอน และนิวตรอน การรวมตัวของควาร์กมีหลายแบบทำให้เกิดฮาดรอนหลายประเภท แต่มีเพียงการรวมตัวบางแบบที่คงตัวอยู่ได้นาน
ที่เล่ามาทั้งหมด นี่คือสิ่งที่เกิดในหนึ่งวินาที หลังการเกิดบิ๊กแบงนะ เอกภพขยายไปมากถึง 100 พันล้านกิโลเมตร เย็นตัวลงพอที่จะทำให้นิวตรอนส่วนใหญ่สลายไปเป็นโปรตรอน แล้วก่อตัวเป็นอะตอมไฮโดรเจนตัวแรก นึกภาพ เอกภพ ณ จุดนี้ ยังกะซุปร้อน 10 พันล้านองศาเซลเซียส เต็มไปด้วยอนุภาคนับไม่ถ้วนและพลังงานมหาศาล ผ่านไปสองสามนาที สิ่งต่างเย็นตัวและคงตัวอย่างรวดเร็ว อะตอมจากฮาดรอนและอิเล็กตรอนทำให้เกิดสภาพที่เสถียรและประจุเป็นกลาง บ้างก็เรียกช่วงนี้ว่า ยุคมืด เพราะไม่มีดวงดาว และแก๊สไฮโดรเจนก็ไม่ยอมให้แสงที่มองเห็นได้ทะลุผ่าน แต่ "แสงที่มองเห็นได้" นิยามมันคืออะไรกันแน่? เมื่อไม่มีสิ่งมีชีวิตมีตาไปมองเห็นแสง พอแก๊สไฮโดรเจนเกาะกลุ่มกันหลังจากหลายล้านปีผ่านไป และแรงโน้มถ่วงทำให้มันอยู่ภายใต้แรงกดดันสูง กำเนิดดวงดาวและกาแล็กซี่ได้เริ่มขึ้น การแผ่รังสีของมันทำให้แก็สไฮโดรเจนกลายเป็นพลาสมา ซึ่งยังคงแผ่ซ่านไปทั่วเอกภพจนทุกวันนี้และยอมให้แสงผ่านได้ นี่แหละจุดกำเนิดของแสง
โอเค แต่แล้ว ส่วนที่เราไม่ได้พูดถึงล่ะ? เกิดอะไรขึ้นก่อนบิ๊กแบงและย้อนไปถึงตั้งแต่แรกจริงๆ? ส่วนนี้เรานิยามว่าการเกิดบิ๊กแบงคือจุดเริ่มต้น เกิดอะไรขึ้นก่อนนี้ เราแทบจะไม่มีความรู้เลย เครื่องมือเราพังลง (ยังไม่มีหลักฐานและทฤษฎี) กฏธรรมชาติไม่เป็นแบบที่เราเข้าใจ เวลาเองก็แปลกไป จะเข้าใจว่าเกิดอะไรขึ้น ณ จุดนี้ได้ เราต้องการทฤษฎีที่รวม สัมพันธภาพของไอสไตน์และกลศาสตร์ควอนตัม เป็นหนึ่งเดียว มันเป็นอะไรที่นักวิทยาศาสตร์มากมายกำลังไขคำตอบกันอยู่ ณ ตอนนี้ แต่นี่ก็ได้ทิ้งคำถามที่ไม่มีคำตอบไว้ให้เรามากมาย เช่น มีเอกภพก่อนหน้าเอกภพเราตอนนี้หรือไม่? เอกภพมีเพียงหนึ่งเดียวหรือไม่? อะไรทำให้เกิดบิ๊กแบง? หรือ มันแค่เกิดขึ้นตามธรรมชาติ โดยกฏที่เรายังไม่เข้าใจ? เรายังไม่รู้ และ บางที เราจะไม่มีทางรู้เลย แต่ที่เรารู้ คือ เอกภพที่เรารู้จักเกิดจากบิ๊กแบงจุดนี้เอง และให้กำเนิดอนุภาคหลากหลาย กาแล็กซี่ และ ดวงดาวมากมาย รวมถึงโลก และคุณด้วย! เพราะว่าตัวเราเองนั้นประกอบขึ้นจากเศษเสี้ยวของฝุ่นดาว(อนุภาคและสสาร) เราไม่ได้แยกจากเอกภพ เราเป็นส่วนหนึ่งของมัน เรียนรู้เอกภพคือเรียนรู้ตัวเอง (เราเป็นส่วนหนึ่งของเอกภพ) เช่นนั้นแล้ว เรียนรู้มันจนกระทั่งไม่มีคำถามใดใดเหลือ
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #9 เมื่อ:
กรกฎาคม 29, 2022, 12:51:24 am »
Dream About Teeth Falling Out
If you dream like this You are going through a very bad situation. It may happen to people close to you, family members, loved ones.
love
There are reasons for breaking up or being separated from each other without saying goodbye.
work
cause problems in operation.
finance
Money may be needed to treat family illnesses.
Thai people and their beliefs belong together. especially beliefs about dreams A dream that can foretell future events. one of them is dream of teeth falling out We may have heard that some. If you dream that your teeth fall out, and your relatives die, what is the connection between your
dreams about teeth falling out
, and death? What can dreams like this tell us? And will it really happen? Find out in this article.
what dreams are made of
Before we go to
dream that the teeth fall out
. Let's get to know the process of creating dreams first. According to science Dreams are created by the brain's process of eliminating unnecessary information each day. and select useful datasets that will be stored in the long-term memory repository.
Many prophecies dream that teeth fall out.
ancient people believed If you dream that your teeth fall out, your teeth are broken, or your teeth are broken, this is a bad omen that someone in your household or an elderly relative is sick. some deaths Each tooth has a different meaning. We have compiled them below.
dream of teeth falling out
dreaming of teeth falling out The meaning will differ for each location of the loose tooth. But the overall meaning is the loss of a loved one, family or an ill relative. Can solve the problem by making merit to enhance the destiny to make life better. From heavy to light in which each tooth is said to include
Dreaming that the upper teeth fall out
predicts that the paternal elder relative may have health problems, illnesses or birth defects.
unexpected life especially the elder relatives on the father's side and have the criteria to receive a floating fortune or have commercial luck
Dreaming that the lower teeth fall out
predicts that the maternal adult relative may have health problems, illnesses or birth defects.
unexpected life especially the mother's elder relatives It was a bad dream. But there will be a criteria to get commercial luck. better job duties
Dreaming that your front teeth fell out , predicting that during this time, don't put too much effort into yourself. Whether it's work, friends or love
and be careful about health There may be joint pain, bone pain, or other illnesses that follow.
Dream of teeth falling out of mouth
Dreaming of teeth falling out of your mouth predicts that you may have the criteria for a long journey. or go abroad Be careful about your emotions. because there may be quarrels with the people around and you are eligible for a new job or there is an issue that requires a job change Beware of being stabbed in the back or someone brings trouble
dream of broken teeth
Dreaming that your teeth are broken
predicts that you will have something to do with your money, property, and loved ones. and caring for the elders in the house more
dream of loose teeth
Dreaming of loose teeth predicts that unexpected events may occur with friends or close friends. Accident causing injury or may be sick
The number of teeth that fell out was predictable.
In addition to dreaming that teeth fall out, it can predict dreams. The number of teeth that fall out also means:
Dreaming that one of the upper teeth fell out predicts that be careful, younger people will cause problems. Beware of financial gossip
beware the cost Work has moved in a good way.
Dreaming that one of the lower teeth fell out predicts that meeting new friends of the opposite sex will bring good luck. Married people if there is a problem
Stay together so that you can get back together. Be careful of missing items. Even if money is a problem, someone will help you.
Dreaming that 2 upper teeth fall out, predicts that you must be careful in arguing with your lover. or conflicts with people close to work for
Be cautious because it may be blamed. may lose property from damaged belongings
Dreaming that 2 lower teeth fall out predicts that someone will disturb your mind. Beware of malicious enemies Love has people flirting with
older than flirting If thinking about doing business during this period is a good time.
Although dreaming of missing teeth, broken teeth, is what the ancients believed, but do not forget to live your life carefully. careless is the best and diligently make merit It will help us feel more comfortable.
https://www.maxgax.com/p/finance.html
https://www.maxgax.com/p/dream-interpretation.html
https://www.maxgax.com/p/urban-legends.html
https://www.maxgax.com/p/country-fact.html
https://www.maxgax.com/p/best-product-rank.html
https://www.maxgax.com
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #10 เมื่อ:
ตุลาคม 23, 2022, 11:10:47 am »
Supernatural Urban Legend
Calls From
Beyond Urban Legend
A middle-aged man was on a train to Los Angeles, on his way to a job interview. He had recently become engaged, and he hoped that the job would allow the pair to marry. At 4.30 p.m. the vehicle collided at 85 mph with a freight train running in the opposite direction, in one of the worst accidents in America’s history.
His fianc?e heard about the crash while driving to the train station with the man’s parents and his siblings. Several of his loved ones received calls from the man’s mobile phone so they naturally assumed that he had survived the accident, even though all they could hear when they picked up was static. Although their subsequent calls to him went straight to voicemail, all through the night they waited for confirmation that he had been found alive and well.
Twelve hours after the accident, having tracked the signal from his mobile phone, rescuers finally located him in the wreckage. He had died instantly in the crash…and yet 35 calls had been made from his phone—only to his nearest and dearest—as if the mobile had been reaching out to help lead them to his body.
Midnight Fare Urban Legend
A taxi driver working the night shift on a quiet Sunday was driving past a hospital. A young girl hailed him down and hurried into the car to get out of the rain. She was wearing a hood and her hair partly obscured her face. She requested that he take her to a lake nearby, which he thought was odd, but he reasoned that perhaps she lived near it. She didn’t answer any of his questions, so he drove to the destination in silence, with the rain drumming on the car.
When they arrived, she asked him to wait for her, and she disappeared into the darkness. He waited for a long time, not wanting to abandon the girl out there on her own. Finally, she returned and asked to be taken to a new address, this time to a neighborhood that the driver knew. When they arrived, the girl got out of the car without paying the fare and disappeared inside a house. Annoyed, the driver got out of the taxi and knocked on the door.
An elderly man opened it but there appeared to be no sign of the girl. When the driver asked about his mysterious passenger, the old man said that there were no children in the house, but then he explained something: he once had a daughter, but she had drowned in the lake in a car accident with her boyfriend many years earlier. He said that sometimes her spirit caught a cab to look for him in the lake, before returning to her childhood home. The old man asked, worried, “You didn’t get a good look at her face, did you?” The driver replied he had not, and the old man smiled, “Good.” He then paid the fare and closed the door. When the taxi driver got back to the car, he saw that in the place where the girl had sat down was a puddle of black water.
Nure-onna Urban Legend
Japanese children are often told the story of a keen swimmer who went for a dip every day in the lake near his house in the mountains. Usually, he was the only person there, as he swam early in the morning when the water was very cold. One day he thought he saw someone else in the lake but, as he approached the water, he realized that they weren’t swimming—they were drowning. It was a young woman, waving her hands silently above the surface of the lake, so he dived right in and swam powerfully to her rescue. As he got closer, he saw the girl’s long black hair swirling around her as she slipped beneath the choppy waters.
He moved to grab her but suddenly his legs felt heavy and he could barely move his arms. He couldn’t understand what was happening, but then he noticed something strange: the girl was no longer struggling but staring directly at him with black eyes. As he desperately tried to keep his head above water, he realized that instead of hands she had claws, and instead of legs she had the body of a great snake, which was wrapping itself around his torso and dragging him down into the depths. He was never seen again—being a hero can have its consequences…
Clack Clack Urban Legend
An American boy was sleeping over at a friend’s house and they were both trying to outdo each other with telling scary stories. He’d seen all of his older brother’s scary movies, so he wasn’t that impressed with what he had heard so far. Then his friend’s cousin turned up, heard what game they were playing and, despite their protestations, sat down and joined in. He told them about a girl who was waiting for a train to her high school prom one night, when she saw a group of her friends on the other side of the tracks. Not wanting to be left out, she ran over a crossing just as the train was coming, and the wheels cut her in half at the waist. Ever since, people had reported seeing her legless ghost at the school, especially on prom night, when it was said that she would cut your body in half. And anybody who heard the story would see her in one month’s time.
A few weeks later the boy was walking home from school, when a girl appeared over a wall and smiled at him. He smiled back and continued on his way when he heard a strange “clack clack” noise behind him. He looked around in horror: the girl was crawling over the wall, dragging herself on bony elbows. As she dropped to the floor, he saw that she had no legs and when she started crawling towards him, her elbows made the spine-chilling clack clack noise, as she gained on him. He didn’t turn up to school the next day.
The Doll Urban Legend
For decades a small doll kept at a temple in Hokkaido prefecture, Japan, has captured the attention of Japanese people. The story goes that the doll, which has black hair and black eyes, and wears a traditional kimono, was the favorite of a little girl who died tragically young in the 1920s. The girl carried the doll everywhere she went and, after her premature death, the family placed her favorite toy in an altar in her memory. The girl had cropped the doll’s hair short to look like her own, and people would often comment that it looked suspiciously like its owner.
Not long Urban Legend
afterwards, the family noticed that the doll’s hair appeared longer than it had been. Although they dismissed the notion as a figment of their imagination, eventually they couldn’t ignore the fact that the hair was growing. When it reached the doll’s knees, the family, suspecting some insensitive prank, cut the doll’s hair so that it was short again but, of course, it only grew back longer. The family eventually placed the mysterious toy in a local temple, where it remains to this day. The monks at the temple cut the doll’s hair on a regular basis and it always grows back. Many years after the doll arrived at the temple, the hair was tested and found to be that of a young child.
Tunnel Visions Urban Legend
A busy highway in Tokyo, Japan, runs through a tunnel that lies underneath a very large and very old cemetery. The graveyard is not visible when driving a car underneath, but many drivers are said to have felt its presence over the years. A man driving back from a late shift at work one night narrowly avoided hitting what he swore was a young mother with a small child, but after he managed to get his car under control and swerve to a stop, he saw that there was nobody there. His friends blamed lack of sleep, but he was sure there had been somebody standing in the middle of the road.
People in the know would say that he witnessed one of the sinister spirits emanating from the graveyard above and becoming trapped in the tunnel, stuck between this world and the afterlife. On more than one occasion drivers, usually male, have described how they glanced in their rear-view mirror and caught sight of a young girl with long black hair on the back seat, staring straight at them. If they managed to keep their car on the road and checked again, they would find that there was nothing there. Other reports include people hanging upside down or banging on car roofs, and mysterious handprints and faces appearing on windows. The area’s taxi drivers are particularly wary: all of them know the stories of cabs being hailed by people in the tunnel, only for them to disappear when the door is opened.
Hanako-san Urban Legend
Anybody who grew up in the West knows the
urban legend
of Bloody Mary, who will appear if you say her name three times into a mirror in a darkened room. The Japanese have their own version: you must go into an empty girls’ bathroom and knock on the door of the last cubicle three times, then ask aloud, “Are you there Hanako-san?” When you open the door, you will see a young girl who was brutally murdered in a high school bathroom many years before. She always wears a red skirt.
Benjamin’s House Urban Legend
At the turn of the twentieth century, a wealthy family bought an old mansion in the south-west of England, high on the cliffs in a remote location, overlooking the sea. They lived with their young child, a boy named Ben, and several servants. Stories would reach the local villagers, who rarely saw the inhabitants of the house, that the owners were distant and cruel to their staff, who had little other choice of employment in the area. The devoutly religious lady of the house singled out one of the maids, a young cook, for particularly cruel treatment, claiming that the girl was evil and that she was corrupting the rest of the staff.
The maid would often return late from her weekends off, and the other servants liked to gossip: they said that she was a harlot, a liar and even a witch. She was a strong-minded girl and instead of denying the rumor, she played up to the stories told about her. When the boy’s father found her performing strange rituals in the grounds of the house, she was beaten and dismissed. Before she left, she offered a doll to the boy, who had always liked her despite his parents’ suspicions, as a peace offering. His parents were all for throwing it away, but the boy liked it—in fact, it became an instant favorite, and he even named it after himself: Benjamin.
He dressed the doll in clothes to match his own and would never let it out of his sight—or was it that he was never out of its sight? The boy would often talk to Benjamin in his room alone, even pretending to speak in its voice. His parents thought his behavior strange, but as he had no other friends to speak to and it kept him occupied, they let him be. Occasionally, the servants heard him arguing with the doll in his bedroom and one morning they heard him sobbing uncontrollably from behind a locked door. They told his father, who found the little boy hiding under the bed, because he said that Benjamin couldn’t see him there. The father was again ready to get rid of the doll but the boy pleaded to let him keep it in the house.
A rumor started among the servants that the boy was not talking for the doll; the doll was talking for itself. It became common to hear loud noises coming from the boy’s room at night, and when the door was opened, he would claim that Benjamin had done it. One of the maids reported being “followed” by the doll and spotting it at different upstairs windows, as if it were watching her work. It was said that the doll’s face had a different expression depending on who was looking: sometimes happy, sometimes sad—sometimes angry.
The
urban legend stories
eventually caught the attention of a writer who was staying in the village and decided to investigate. He was rebuffed by the owners, who denied all knowledge, but he persevered. He managed to talk to some of the staff, who told him that the doll had a distinctive piercing laugh, which could be heard in the upper floors of the house, and was often spotted sitting in different rooms of the house when the boy wasn’t at home; one servant even claimed to have seen it running across the hall. Eventually, the boy grew up, but he never left the house—and he never left Benjamin. When he died many years later, the household wasted no time in banishing the toy to the attic, where it was sometimes glimpsed peering out of the windows. The doll remained in exile upstairs for many years, until the house’s new owners moved in. They had a little girl who one day, while roaming in the attic, discovered an old well-worn doll with a sad look on its face. Soon Benjamin was up to its old tricks: the girl appeared to be terrified of the doll, saying it had attacked her, but she couldn’t bear to be parted from it. On one occasion, her older brother beheaded Benjamin with scissors and left it on the floor as a cruel sibling prank, only to find the doll the next day in his bedroom…with its head reattached and smiling.
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #11 เมื่อ:
ตุลาคม 23, 2022, 11:11:11 am »
Supernatural Urban Legend
2
The Highgate Vampire Urban Legend
In the 1970s a London newspaper covered a juicy story that was terrifying the residents of a well-to-do suburb in the north of the city. The cast of characters included: a top-hatted gentleman thought to be a vampire who had been sighted several times—he apparently escaped from a cemetery each night to find fresh victims—and a vampire hunter with a band of dedicated followers. The paper reported that people walking in Highgate cemetery, resting place of many famous individuals including Karl Marx, had seen ghostly figures following them at night. A few days later it emerged that graves in the cemetery had been disturbed and the remains of a ritual act were found. Most disturbingly, an iron stake had been driven through the lid of a coffin and into the corpse inside.
The paper interviewed the self-proclaimed vampire hunter: he claimed that whoever had placed the stake in the coffin was mistaken and that the monster was still at large. Moreover, he declared that he and his followers had stalked the vampire as he was leaving the cemetery and that the creature was actually the reanimated corpse of an eighteenthcentury European gentleman: he had been transported to London in a coffin after his death and was now possessed by evil spirits. The hunter claimed that he had tracked down the vampire to a great mausoleum in the cemetery, where he had had the chance of putting a stake through his heart as he was sleeping. However, he did not carry out the deed, as it would have been illegal to desecrate a body in such a fashion, but he took sensational photographs of the creature’s evil, contorted face and scattered garlic in the vault.
Then the body of a woman was found in the grounds of the cemetery, not far from the mausoleum, causing a furore in the media. Hundreds of people turned up at the cemetery night after night in an attempt to find the vampire. The police had to guard the place for several nights to put the locals’ minds at rest. The hunter eventually cornered the vampire in a nearby mansion, where he had found refuge in a coffin. They performed an exorcism, put a stake through the creature’s heart and burned the corpse, thus ending the threat forever.
Modern Vampires Urban Legend
In Romania, land of the original Dracula, old habits die hard. Rumors of vampires rising from graves to prey on the living are still popular. In Transylvania in 2004, a group of villagers were worried about someone who had been recently buried. They thought he was responsible for a series of recent attacks in the community and decided to revert to ancient techniques in order to stop the crime spree. They went to the cemetery to dig up the body, which, they noticed, looked a lot fresher than would be expected, and a stake was driven through the heart. Then the organ was cut from the torso and burned, according to tradition. No more attacks were reported.
Vampire folklore has a long history in Romania, home as it was to the man who inspired Dracula: Vlad the Impaler, Prince of Wallachia in the fifteenth century. Vlad got his nickname because of his habit of impaling captured enemies on stakes. He carried out this practice with so many of his enemies that one visitor to the country described a “mighty forest” of corpses stuck on stakes that stunk to high heaven. When he complained to the Prince, it’s said that the same visitor was “impaled high up, so that the smell of the others would not bother him.”
It’s not just in Eastern Europe that stories of vampires cause people to take drastic action. In rural nineteenth-century New England, an outbreak of tuberculosis took hold, killing many, and as the disease tended to kill several members of the same family, worried locals surmised that the dead were taking others down with them. In order to try to arrest the outbreak, they invoked ancient rituals designed to stop vampires. In 1892 the Brown family of Exeter, Rhode Island, were hit by the disease. A young girl, Mercy, died, and her mother followed soon afterwards.
As inevitably happened with the disease, Mercy’s brother also fell ill. The family felt that their only option was to exhume and examine the bodies. The father enlisted the help of villagers for the job; they found that Mercy, who had died two months previously, looked suspiciously lifelike and that her heart contained fresh blood. This was a sure sign that she was the vampire to blame for the deaths, so her heart was cut out and ritually burned. The ashes were given to her brother on his sickbed, while others inhaled the smoke in a belief that it would protect them. Unsurprisingly, neither method worked.
The School Bus Urban Legend
Several decades ago, an odd
urban legend story
appeared in a local newspaper in a rural region of Wales. On the last day of term, a school bus taking children home was making its usual crossing over a railway line that ran up a mountain. The driver never liked taking the children over the crossing, but he had done it hundreds of times without incident. However, this time something went wrong, and the bus stopped right in the middle of the tracks. As the driver frantically tried to restart the engine, his worst nightmare began to come true: he heard a train sound its horn in the distance. Within seconds a heavy goods vehicle was looming large in the window. His first instinct was to save the children, so he leapt from the bus and smashed open the emergency exit. The last thing he heard was the terrible noise as the locomotive’s brakes screeched in vain and the children screamed as they jumped off the bus. The last thing he saw was the train driver above him, shielding his eyes as he awaited the inevitable. The train obliterated the bus, but by some miracle only the bus driver lost his life.
Over time the small mining community slowly forgot about the accident, until a recent story appeared in the same paper. It reported that an elderly man, a retired teacher, was driving over the same railway crossing when his car stalled on the tracks. The alarm began to sound and his panic grew as he fumbled with his seat belt. Just as he opened the door, and the guard rails lowered behind him, he felt the car shift, as though it was being lifted up from underneath, and the next thing he knew the train was thundering past behind him, so close that it rocked the car. He was so shaken that he had to get out of his vehicle and call his wife to drive him home, which is when he checked the back of his car for damage: the train had missed it by a foot. It was also at that moment that he noticed the marks on the boot of his car: they were bloody handprints. The man looked around in a panic, but there was no one else in sight.
Red Paper Urban Legend
Japanese children scare each other by repeating the tale of what happened to two schoolboys many years ago. One day one of the boys went to the bathroom, only to find that there was no toilet paper in the stall. As he cursed to himself, he heard a voice asking him whether he wanted red or blue paper. He answered “red” and all the blood seeped out of his body so that he died in minutes. The story spread around the school. Some months later the boy’s friend found himself in the same toilet stall, and again there was no paper. He heard the same voice ask him what paper he would like. Knowing the story and remembering what had happened to his friend, he chose blue. Gradually, his throat began to tighten and soon he was struggling to breathe. Classmates found him dead, blue in the face from suffocation.
The Survivor Urban Legend
One sunny summer day, a young couple were driving down to the coast for a vacation. They had left the town and were winding through the hills when they noticed a woman at the side of the road, flagging them down. She looked distressed and her clothes were covered in blood, so they quickly pulled over and asked her what had happened. She struggled to get her words out; she appeared to have an injury to her neck and was in pain. They finally established that she and her family had been in a car crash, although there was no vehicle visible from the road. The woman pointed over the side of the valley, saying that the car was somewhere down there and her husband was dead, but her baby was trapped in the back seat and he was still alive when she left him.
The man started to clamber down the valley through broken trees, while his girlfriend said she would call for help and look after the woman. He saw that the car had rolled a long way down the hill, and looked in a very bad way, but as he got closer he could hear the muffled sounds of a young child. The wreckage was terrible and he could barely see the driver. Although the back door was bent into the frame, he tugged with all his might and managed to wrench it open. He was able to pull the screaming baby out and carry him back up the hill.
As he hurried back to his girlfriend, he noticed that the woman was no longer with her. “Where did she go?” he asked.
“She went to see her baby. I tried to stop her,” replied his girlfriend.
So the man handed the baby over and returned to the crash site to find the boy’s mother. As there was no sign of her, he checked the rest of the vehicle. He hauled the smashed windscreen out of the way and saw that the driver was clearly beyond help, so he turned his attention to the passenger and what he saw took his breath away: it was the mother who had flagged them down, clearly dead and trapped in the wreckage all that time.
Esmeralda Urban Legend
Around 100 years ago, a
sensational urban legend
story filled the papers in Nottingham, England. A young gypsy girl named Esmeralda, who was visiting the area with her family, was raped one night and the attacker was never found. It was said that the police weren’t bothered about the fate of a traveller. What the papers didn’t know was that she had fallen pregnant after the attack and gave birth to a child, but he was horribly deformed and didn’t survive his first year. He was buried in an unmarked grave in a field on the borders of the city. Esmeralda was said to have visited the place every time she came through the area with her family until she was middle aged. On one occasion she found that the grave had been dug up, the coffin opened and the body taken. After struggling to deal with the memories of her ordeal for many years, the shock of that discovery tipped her over the edge and she lost her mind. Esmeralda was shunned by her community and ended her days in a cruel asylum in the city.
The
urban legend story
was forgotten, and the field became a children’s playground after the war. For many years locals had reported strange happenings at the site: some described the sounds of a baby crying, or something like the shrieks of a fox or a feral cat. Children playing would find the mutilated remains of animals, such as birds, cats and once even a large dog. A newspaper report warned parents that a young girl had been approached by an old woman wearing strange clothes who had asked if she had seen her child and then had muttered a curse when the girl ran off.
One night in the 1960s, a man was walking his dog, a German shepherd, through the park. The dog was running off the leash when his owner heard him growling somewhere in the darkness. He called for him, scared that he might bite a stranger, but then came a terrible yowling, and the animal raced back to his side, whimpering. It had a vicious gash on its nose and was limping. Then the man heard something wailing from the trees, like nothing he had heard before, and caught sight of something moving quickly across the ground towards him. He didn’t wait to see what it was and ran home as fast as he could.
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #12 เมื่อ:
ตุลาคม 23, 2022, 11:12:06 am »
Supernatural Urban Legend
3
The Woman in White Urban Legend
A group of children were playing in a river in their hometown near Mexico City—a place they usually visited to let off steam. A woman appeared and started to ask them questions. She stood out from the locals because of her appearance: she was dressed all in white and immaculately groomed. She spoke quietly and occasionally sobbed, asking the children if they had seen Marcus and Gabriela, whom she called her “little babies.” One of the boys was called Marcus, but he didn’t know the lady, so they ignored her.
The woman disappeared as quietly as she had appeared. When the time came to leave the river, the children noticed that Marcus was missing. They assumed that he had gone home by himself and thought nothing of it, but by the next morning he hadn’t turned up and the whole town was looking for him. He was eventually found face down in the river; he had drowned. His family assumed he had got into trouble while swimming with the others, until one of the children told her mother about the woman in white and how she had been looking for her children. When Marcus’s mother heard the tale, her blood ran cold; she knew who had taken her son. Three more children from the town disappeared over the following month, and each death was preceded by a sighting of the pale-faced woman in white, asking after her children.
Centuries earlier, when the Spanish invaded South America, a beautiful native interpreter became involved with one of the commanders and had two children by him. The man eventually married a Spanish woman, shunning his native mistress and their offspring. In her grief she went mad and drowned the children in the river before leaping off a bridge herself. She tried to enter heaven, but could not gain access without her children, so she was condemned to roam the earth, trapped between the living and the dead. The
urban legend
goes that she wanders the land looking for her children, taking any she finds that resemble her own and drowning them, in order to bring them to heaven to try to receive forgiveness for her terrible crimes.
La Mala Hora Urban Legend
Maria from Arizona received a phone call from her best friend, Rosanna, who sounded distraught. Rosanna was breaking up with her boyfriend and he had left the house in a rage, so she asked if her friend could come and keep her company. As Maria’s husband was away on a business trip, she was feeling lonely so she decided to accept. It was late, just after midnight, when she left her house in her car, and the dark roads were deserted. She couldn’t escape the feeling that something was watching or following her, but she told herself that it was just her mind playing tricks.
Halfway to her destination, she stopped at a crossroads and suddenly a dark shape, like a cloud of smoke, rolled towards her car. Then it disappeared. The lights turned green and she accelerated but immediately slammed on the brakes when she saw a figure in the road right in front of her. She was small, like a girl, but with the face of an old lady twisted into a hateful grin. Her eyes glowed red, and she bared black and sharpened teeth. She crawled on top of the car, and started to scrape and hit the window on the driver’s side with clawed hands. Maria put her foot to the floor in sheer terror and the car lurched away from the crossroads, leaving her attacker on the tarmac. As she sped away from the lights, she realized with horror that the demon woman was still chasing her car and somehow keeping pace, her talons scraping at the metal with a terrible noise. She accelerated to well over the speed limit, her heart pounding, and then the noise stopped. Her heart was hammering in her chest as she watched in her rear-view mirror the figure in the middle of the road: she was standing still but seemed to be as close as before; she was growing towards the sky and her great claws were so large that they touched the ground. Then the car turned a corner and she was gone.
When Maria reached Rosanna’s house, she screeched to a halt, ran up the drive and slammed her fists on the door, shouting to be let in. Her friend opened the door in fright, and Maria told her to shut it and lock it. She closed all the curtains and told Rosanna not to look out of the window.
“What happened?” Rosanna asked, and Maria explained what she had seen on the road: the dark shape, the woman with claws and how she seemed to grow in the moonlight behind her. Her friend listened quietly, kept looking at her watch and seemed to know what she was talking about.
“Are you sure you were stopped at a crossroads?”
“Yes, I’m sure,” replied Maria, listening carefully for any noises coming from outside.
“It may have been la mala hora,” explained Rosanna. “It means “the evil hour”. They say she appears at a crossroads when someone is about to die. If you manage to escape her grasp, someone you love will die in your place.”
Maria was horrified, but she tried to make light of it, saying that she must have imagined the whole thing. However, she knew that she hadn’t, and she couldn’t stop shaking.
It took her hours to get to sleep, but when she awoke the following morning, she wondered if it had all been a dream. Rosanna didn’t mention anything over breakfast and Maria slowly forgot about it. Later that day, as she was driving home, her phone kept ringing but she didn’t stop to answer it. She had to pass over the same crossroads on her journey back but was relieved to find that in the daylight she wasn’t frightened. When she reached home, she saw a police car waiting in her driveway and wondered whether she had been burgled—or maybe her husband had been caught speeding again?
The officers got out of the car but wouldn’t tell her anything until she went inside. They asked if she was alone in the house and said that her husband had been found dead in his hotel. They thought that he had been followed back to his room by a thief, who had forced his way in and stabbed him to death for his wallet. Maria didn’t want to believe them, as she had spoken to him late the night before, so she asked what time it had happened. “Not long after midnight,” came the reply.
The Psychic Urban Legend
A girl and some friends went to a show put on by a “psychic medium” at a local theater. They didn’t know if they really believed in those sorts of things, but they thought it might be fun. Who knew, they might even get an insight into their future! One of their friends had been to see the same psychic for a private tarot card reading, and been told that she would find the man of her dreams and marry him within six months. As that’s exactly what then happened, maybe there was something to it after all!
It was a fun evening, if a little creepy at times, as the psychic seemed to be aware of things that only they and their loved ones knew. The psychic did a reading of the cards for the girl’s friends, writing something inside an envelope for each of them, and said that they could open them straight away or later at home. They all tore them open and read out predictions about marriage, heartache and great wealth.
Then the psychic asked the girl to come up to the stage and laid out the cards. She looked at her with a pained look on her face and claimed that something was stopping her from seeing clearly—had she lost a loved one recently? The girl replied honestly that she hadn’t. The psychic asked to read her palm instead and traced the lines on her skin, nodding solemnly. “I can see your future now, my dear; it’s all very clear.” She laid down her hand and handed her an envelope that she already had in her pocket. Her friends begged her to open it, but the girl pretended not to be too bothered by the whole affair, saying that she would leave it until she got home.
Once the evening ended, the girl bid farewell to her friends and drove home alone. She had pulled out onto a main road and was looking at the envelope lying on the passenger seat, thinking about what might be written inside, when she was startled by the blast of a horn and flashing of lights. A large lorry had missed the back of her car by inches as she pulled out in front. She breathed a sigh of relief and drove on nervously.
Eventually, she couldn’t resist the temptation any longer and leaned over to pick up the envelope. As she did so, the car drifted slightly over the white dividing lines of the road, just enough for a car coming from the opposite direction to smash into hers and shove it violently into the path of the following truck. She was killed instantly. When the firefighters arrived to cut her body out of the wreckage, they found a bloodied envelope on the floor. It made its way to her family, who decided to open it. The card inside said, “You have no future.”
Cow Head Urban Legend
A teacher in China was travelling with his students on a school trip in the mountains above the town where they lived. It was a long journey and the students, who had grown bored and restless, started to play up, so the teacher suggested that they should tell each other stories. He joined in and told them several spooky tales that soon kept them quiet as the night drew in. Then the bus driver asked him if he’d ever heard of a very
old urban legend
story known only as “cow head.”
The teacher looked shocked and went quiet for a moment. He told the driver that he had heard of the story but didn’t know how it ended. Besides, he had heard that it was too frightening for children. Some said that people who had merely listened to the tale had lost their minds, and there were even rumors that it had taken lives. The bus driver smiled to himself, but the children overheard their conversation and were soon clamoring to hear the “cow head” story.
The teacher reasoned that he couldn’t do any real harm, as he didn’t know the whole story anyway; he could make it up as he went along. He started to tell the tale of a government official who had arrived to take a census in a remote village in the mountains, many decades ago. The last census had suggested that there should have been several hundred citizens there, but the place was completely deserted. The only signs of life were the bones of animals scattered in the dust. The official found the place unnerving and travelled to the next settlement, a long way over a mountain pass, where he asked what had happened to the villagers.
They said that nobody knew for sure, but there were rumors that they went mad and ate each other during a terrible famine. The official called in colleagues from the government to investigate. Amongst the animal skeletons, they found the strange remains of a man with what appeared to be the head of a cow. Locals said that the man had seemed perfectly normal when he first arrived in the village, but he had brought a terrible curse down upon them.
At this point in the narration, the children on the bus started to cry and asked the teacher to stop telling the
urban legend story
. But something had come over him: he was no longer in control and he continued with the tale as though in a trance, staring dead ahead. The children were trying to cover their ears and some started to foam at the mouth. They attempted to move from their seats but their arms were pinned down by their sides. The teacher continued to recite the
urban legend
story with a blank look in his eyes, a tale that became more horrific with every word. The last thing the children remembered before they passed out was the look in their teacher’s eyes. When a passing driver came upon the bus many hours later, the teacher and all the students were still unconscious. It took days for them to come round but the teacher was found to be in a deep coma from which he never recovered. The bus driver was never seen again. None of the children on the bus who heard the cow head tale would ever dare to recite it, not even to each other.
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #13 เมื่อ:
ตุลาคม 23, 2022, 11:12:20 am »
Supernatural Urban Legend
4
Prime Real Estate Urban Legend
A large, pretty family house in Amityville, New York, has a secret and that’s why it has remained empty for decades, despite a local property boom. In 1974 a man murdered his entire family in that house, shooting his wife and three small children with a hunting rifle as they slept. At his trial the defense tried to get him declared insane, as he claimed that he was being controlled by strange voices in his head belonging to the previous occupants of the house, who had told him to commit the crime.
The experts, however, did not agree that he was mad. The jury convicted him of first-degree murder and he was given four consecutive life sentences, one for each life he had taken. The house lay empty for a year, as the family’s relatives couldn’t bear to even set foot in the place. They finally sold it way under market price to a young family from out of town, who had never heard about the murders. When neighbors finally told them, they pretended that they weren’t bothered, but certain things started to make sense, as they had been plagued with problems since moving in: the water ran red from the taps and mysterious foul-smelling black gunk oozed from the toilets. The father found strange marks in the door frames, which looked to him like the imprint of a small child’s teeth, but his own children denied any knowledge.
Each of the family members reported hearing the sound of music at night, from an unknown source, and, strangest of all, their youngest daughter became obsessed with a demonic imaginary friend that she described as a pig. The parents didn’t believe in ghosts, or anything supernatural, but the kids refused to go upstairs at night, so they called in a priest to perform an exorcism. They told themselves it was just to reassure the kids that the house was safe. The priest was relaxed and friendly when he arrived, but he became noticeably disturbed after blessing the upstairs rooms and left before performing a full exorcism. He told them that although the house was not haunted, on no account should anyone sleep in the third bedroom. They were sceptical, but they locked that door. The happenings continued, but the family were too proud to move—who would buy the place anyway? The final straw came when the young mother was woken by dark red liquid dripping from the ceiling of the bedroom, and the family moved out to a motel that very night. They had lasted six weeks. Nobody in the neighborhood was surprised; some had even commented on how the new owner looked remarkably similar to the murderer and joked darkly that he had escaped just in time to save his family.
Lake Ronkonkoma Urban Legend
Lake Ronkonkoma, in New York State, is an ancient and extremely deep lake that has been linked to many tragic stories. It’s often claimed that someone has drowned there every year as far back as records began. There was once a tribe of Native Americans living on the shores of the lake, at the mouth of a river, and a rival tribe was based on the opposite side. The princess of one tribe fell in love with the prince from the other, and once the elders found out, she was forbidden to even cross the river, never mind see her prince again. The two tribes had been warring for decades, and there was too much bad blood between them to risk a union.
Young love being what it is, the prince and princess took a dugout canoe one night and escaped onto the lake. They didn’t have a plan, but they wanted to be together. They had not been paddling for long when the wind suddenly grew into a monstrous storm, and the surface of the lake was whipped into great waves. They held onto the canoe for dear life as the water around them surged into a foaming whirlpool, and they were dragged down to the bottom of the lake in a tragic embrace. Afterwards, the elders told the youths of both tribes about the pair, explaining that the lake spirits did not agree with the union and that was why they had taken those young lives.
Despite the stories associated with it, the beautiful lake still draws young people to its shores every summer. They paddle boats out into the middle and dare each other to dive into the cool waters. Every year someone fails to surface—always someone who is in a loving relationship—and the body is never recovered. The
urban legend story
goes that they are cursed by the tragic Native American princess, who, jealous of her victim’s happiness, drags them down into the depths.
The Black Lady of the Woods Urban Legend
A local newspaper in Lincolnshire, England, published images taken by a girl who had been walking with her cousin in woods near her home. She told the paper that they had been playing around with her camera in the dark, taking pictures of her cousin, who was an aspiring model, and didn’t see anybody else around. But when the girls looked at the photographs a couple of days later on a computer, they saw that they had captured strange shadows in the trees: the floating figures of mysterious people and ghostly faces in the darkness. The girls didn’t really believe in ghosts, but after a little research on the history of the woods, they knew exactly what they had captured: the Black Lady of the Woods.
Hidden in the undergrowth is an abandoned stone cottage near a pond where, in the seventeenth century, a poor gamekeeper lived with his wife and son, or so the
urban legend story
goes. After the outbreak of the English Civil War he was forced into fighting for his master, who supported the king, and marched off to battle. He told his wife that he would return within six months, but he never did, and she took to wandering the woods to look for him.
One Christmas, a band of Roundheads fighting the king rode through the forest on horseback. Identifying the land as enemy territory, they claimed the wood and everything in it, including the gamekeeper’s cottage. They stole everything the wife had, including her young son, and burned the house. It was said that the woman died of grief and, from that day on, people have claimed to see a lady—hunched over and crying, dressed in a black cloak and hood—wandering the woods, looking for her missing husband and child. It’s believed that she can still be seen in the forest to this day, and if you walk in the woods at Christmas time and utter the words, “Black lady, black lady, I’ve stolen your baby” three times, she will appear in front of you.
Betsy’s Voice Urban Legend
Boy Scouts on camping trips tell their rookie recruits a
urban legend
story that dates back to the early days of scouting after World War Two. In a forest surrounding an abandoned airfield, there was an old house where Scouts would play hide-and-seek. The place had been bought cheaply by a young couple, Betsy and her husband Johnny, before the war. They hoped to renovate it and make it their perfect family home.
Betsy was an aspiring singer whose career was cut short by the outbreak of the war. She was driving down the track from the house one night, when a truck full of soldiers coming back from the pub came the other way. They were making a racket, completely inebriated, and distracting the driver. He took his eyes off the road for a moment to tell them to pipe down, just long enough to veer into Betsy’s path, crashing head first into her car and killing her instantly. Her body was so badly disfigured that the police wouldn’t let her husband, Johnny, say goodbye to her. She was identified only by the large diamond ring he had given her, a family heirloom. Johnny buried the ring with her, devastated, and moved to another country, letting the house go to ruin.
Many years later the house was discovered by a group of Scouts on a hike through the forest from their camp. It seemed like the perfect place to light a campfire, play games and tell creepy stories. But it was not to be an idyllic Boy Scout adventure. The first thing they noticed was a female voice joining them in songs around the fire, which was odd because back then girls weren’t allowed in the Scouts. Above the crackling of the flames, they heard her again, and it sounded as if she was inside the house. Finally, they saw her, initially looking out of the windows and then walking round the campfire: a terribly disfigured girl in a pretty dress. And then Betsy was gone.
The next morning one of the boys could not be woken. His mates were horrified to discover that he was dead, and the only signs of any injuries suffered were some nasty scratches on his face. “Betsy did it!” cried one of the boys, when he saw the body and, after some coaxing, he recounted what had happened in the night.
Betsy had returned to pay the lads a visit in the small hours and woken two of the boys with her singing. She asked them one by one if they thought she had a beautiful voice. The first boy had been too scared to answer and an angry Betsy slashed him across the face with her diamond ring, saying that once he fell asleep, he would never wake up again. Then she asked the other boy the same question and, without hesitation, he told her that she did indeed have a beautiful voice, so Betsy smiled and disappeared into the woods, singing all the way. The terrified boys tried to stay awake, but eventually they both fell asleep. Only one of them awoke in the morning. To this day Scouts are told to listen out for Betsy around the campfire and tell her what she wants to hear; she always wanted to be a singer, but she never liked critics.
Milk Bottles Urban Legend
Two old men ran a general store in a small town in the
American urban legend
Midwest. The Depression had hit and business was hard: the customers stopped visiting and soon only a few regulars were keeping them afloat. One day a young woman dressed all in white entered the store, carrying an empty milk bottle. She placed it on the counter and one of the men filled it with milk from the churn, asking for ten cents in return. The girl, who had a sad look in her eyes, did not reply; instead, she picked up the bottle and quietly left the store. The man was too surprised to say anything and when he followed her out of the shop, she was nowhere to be found. He went back inside, muttering to himself that she was probably a migrant from the city who didn’t know how things worked out there.
He told his partner what had happened and to watch out for her. The next day she returned, again carrying an empty milk bottle. This time he told her that he knew that times were hard, but she had to pay like everybody else. He filled the bottle from the churn, but again she ignored him and walked out with the milk. On this occasion, however, the two men were ready, and they followed her through the town. She moved quickly, and they could barely keep up, but they saw that she headed for the church and stopped in front of a gravestone, where she disappeared.
The two men couldn’t believe their eyes, but they figured they couldn’t both be seeing things. Then they heard the sound of a baby crying close by, but they couldn’t see anybody. They realized that the noise was coming directly from the gravestone where the woman had vanished into thin air. They returned with shovels from their store, informing the sheriff on their way, and as they dug into the grave, the crying got louder. When they lifted the coffin out, they found a live baby inside, next to the woman from the store, who was clearly dead, and two empty milk bottles.
anyaha
Jr. Member
กระทู้: 74
บันทึกการเข้า
Re: TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS
«
ตอบกลับ #14 เมื่อ:
กุมภาพันธ์ 25, 2023, 10:47:49 pm »
Top 10 Scary Jack the Ripper Urban Legends
For those of you who don’t know, Jack the Ripper was a serial killer who terrorized the Whitechapel district of London in 1888. He brutally murdered and mutilated at least five prostitutes and his identity was never discovered. He had a very particular way of murdering his victims and he was never caught. So of course, there are a lot of conspiracy theories surrounding Jack the ripper and his murderous rampage through London. So, here are the top 10 scary
Jack The Ripper Urban Legends
.
10. MARY ANN NICHOLS
She was one of the Whitechapel murder victims who was viciously murdered by the infamous Jack the Ripper. Her throat was slashed twice from left to right and her abdomen was mutilated with one deep jagged wound. She also had many incisions across her abdomen and a ton of other deep stab wounds. Since her brutal murder, it has been said that her spirit has been haunting the Whitechapel area and people have been hearing strange ghostly noises of Jack killing Mary Ann Nichols. People have also said that they can see her spirit glowing at the site of her murder and horses and dogs will refuse to go near that location.
9. LEWIS CARROLL WAS ACTUALLY THE MURDERER
Mary Jane Kelly was believed to be the final victim of Jack The Ripper but according to an urban legend, the first four murders were just an elaborate attempt to cover up the real reason why Mary Jane Kelly was murdered. It is believed that her husband was the infamous serial killer and his motive for killing his wife was because he was so angry that his wife turned to prostitution shortly after they got married. So he killed four other prostitutes to make it look like a pattern and then he killed his wife so that the police wouldn’t suspect him of committing the crime.
7. THE MURDERS WERE PART OF A BLACK MAGIC RITUAL
According to an urban legend, it is believed that Jack the ripper was apart of a cult who indulged in a very violent form of Satanic worship. Apparently, his true motive was to kill four prostitutes in order to become the cult leader. In this black magic ritual, certain organs had to be removed from the murdered prostitutes and they had to be killed at pre-arranged sites that resemble a satanic symbol. The organs that were commonly removed were the heart, kidneys, genitalia and the womb which of course, were also commonly removed during black magic rituals during this time period.
6. THE AMERICAN JACK THE RIPPER
There is a lot of speculation that
Americans Urban Legends
were also the victim of Jack the Ripper. So, three years before the first Jack the Ripper murder happened in England, a serial killer dubbed the servant girl annihilator brutally murdered 8 people in Austin, Texas. Similar to Jack the Ripper, the servant girl annihilator has never been identified and there are so many theories about his identity. All of the women were killed indoors while asleep in their beds and some of them were dragged outside and mutilated in the same way as jack the ripper victims. Because of all this evidence, there is an urban legend that suggests that Jack the ripper was actually the servant girl annihilator and he roamed the streets of Texas, brutally murdering eight people before heading off to England to do the same.
5. ELIZABETH STRIDE
She is another victim of
Jack the Ripper
but she wasn’t as brutally murdered as the others. The only body mutilation that she had was a slashed throat, so it is believed that Jack the Ripper was most likely interrupted during his murder and he was unable to chop up her body like his other victims. The local urban legend surrounding her murder says that if you go to Dutfields Yard on Berner Street, you can supposedly hear ghostly and eerie screams of a woman struggling and crying for help.
4. MITRE SQUARE
This cobblestoned area is the site where one of London’s
most infamous crimes
occurred. At the south-west corner of Mitre Square, the mutilated body of Catherine Eddowes was discovered at this location at 1:45am on September 30th, 1888. Catherine Eddowes was Jack the Rippers fourth victim. She was found lying on her back in a pool of blood with her clothes over her waist. Her throat was slashed, her intestines were taken out and placed over her right shoulder and she had a lot of other brutal cuts all over her body. Well the local legend states that on the anniversary of her death, people have reported seeing her ghost figure lying where her corpse was discovered.
3. THE SECOND VICTIM
Annie Chapman was viciously murdered by Jack the Ripper on September 8, 1888. Her throat had been slashed, she was disembowelled with her intestines thrown out of her abdomen and part of her uterus was missing. So basically, she was chopped up and her body was severely sliced and hacked. Her disfigured body was found in the backyard of the Truman Brewery and when this brewery was still in business after her murder, it was reported that on the anniversary of her murder, you can see her ghost standing in the exact spot where she was viciously sliced up to death.
2. MARY KELLY
It is believed that she is the last and
final victim of Jack the Ripper
. She was about 25 years old at the time of her vicious murder. Her body was found lying naked on a bed in an apartment. Her whole abdomen and thighs were removed, her chest was cut off and her arms had several jagged wounds. Her face was hacked up so badly that you couldn’t even recognize her and her neck was cut so deep, that you could even see her bones. An urban legend states that after her murder, anyone who lives in that apartment will see a bloody handprint on the wall. Even if you attempt to clean it or paint over it, the bloody handprint will reappear shortly after. Some people even claim that they have seen her ghost wearing all black and she has been haunting the building on the very same night of her murder.
1. WESTMINSTER BRIDGE JACK THE RIPPER SIGHTING
Legend has it that if you stand on the Westminster Bridge on December 31st and look east as midnight approaches, you might see the ghost of Jack the Ripper. And as Big Ben chimes in the new year, you will see a shadowy figure creeping down the wall and into the Thames river. This legend began to circulate because back in 1888 it is believed that Jack the Ripper killed himself by diving into the river at this very spot and now every year since, his spirit is forced to repeat this over and over again as a form of punishment.
Source: MostAmazingTop10 Youtube Channel
พิมพ์
หน้า: [
1
]
2
« หน้าที่แล้ว
ต่อไป »
ลงโฆษณาเว็บบอล รับติดแบนเนอร์ รับติดป้ายโฆษณาเว็บสายเทา
»
ตลาดซื้อขายสินค้าออนไลน์ โฆษณาสินค้าฟรี
»
โปรโมทเว็บ โปรโมทสินค้า อื่นๆ
(ผู้ดูแล:
admin
) »
TOP 10 SCARY JAPANESE URBAN LEGENDS