TALES OF TERROR

By Brynn_Mckenzie

152K 2.6K 267

TALES OF TERROR *CreepyPastas *Urban Legends *Ghost Stories More

Tales Of Terror - Official Trailer
TALES OF TERRORS!
What is CreepyPasta?
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Strangled Red
Hypno's Lullaby
Annora Petrova
The Expressionless
Old Man
Skin-Taker
Abandoned by Disney
The Television Set
Tim (Masky)
Zalgo
Herobrine
BOB
Ed, Edd n Eddy Lost Episode
Bad Dream
CandleJack/The Name
Anansi's Goatman Story
Mr. Widemouth
Phantom Epona
The Crying Statue
BRVR/Pokémon Dead Channel
Laughing Jack
The Grinning Man
White with Red
Beware Omegle
Chatroom 98
The Observer
Santa Claws
What Really Watches You in the Dark
Homicidal Liu
Hoodie
Tulpa
Little Pink Backpack
Ticci-Toby
Forgotten Friends
The Cameras Could Take You Home
The Wanderer
Glitchy Red
The Linen Closet
Suicidemouse.avi
The Hidebehind
Hitchhiker
Uboa
Apartment 1306
Aggie
Tails Doll
Jeff the Killer
Portrait of Roisin Dhu
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Hanging Man Hill
Dark Reflection Ritual
The Doppelgänger
Satellite Images
Candy Pop and Candy Cane
Sally Williams- Come and Play with Me
Obey The Walrus
Teddy
Mereana Mordegard Glesgorv
Squidward's Suicide
BEN Drowned
ANTRAN
Pale Luna
The Puppeteer
Dead Bart
Lavender Town Syndrome and Pokémon Creepypastas
Eyeless Jack
Always with You
Sonic.EXE
The Slender Man
The 3:00 AM Myth
The Russian Sleep Experiment
What is Urban Legend(s)
The Babysitter and the Man Upstairs
The Fatal Hairdo
The Killer in the Window
The Laundry Room Killer
Charlie, Charlie Challenge
Midnight Game
Aren't You Glad You Didn't Turn On The Light?
The Rake
The Smith Sisters Murdered Anonymously
The Smiling Man
Bloody Mary (folklore)
Carmen Winstead
The Hook
Don't Answer The Phone
Love RollerCoaster
The Toxic Woman
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The Grifter
La Pascualita - The Corpse Bride of Mexico
Buried Alive
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Vanishing HitchHiker
The Killer in the Backseat
Green Man
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Ghost Boy in Three Men and a Baby
Patterson Road
Blue Baby
What is Japanese Urban Legends
Kuchisake-Onna
Teke Teke
Kashima Reiko
Tomino's Hell
Aka Manto A.K.A The Red Cloak
The Three-legged Rika-chan
Hanako-san
Giant Skeleton (Gashadokuro)
Hitobashira (Human Pillars)
Dead body under the bed
Fatal Fare
Hitori kakurenbo / Creepy Hide and Seek
The Himuro Mansion
Jinmenken (Human Faced Dog)
The Girl From The Gap
Kune-Kune
Gozu (Cow head)
Kiyotaki Tunnel
Nure-onna (Snake Woman)
Kokkuri-san
Red Room (animation)
Okiku Doll
Cursed Japanese Kleenex Commercial
Yotsuya Kaidan
Korean Urban Legends:
Cosmetic Sesame
The Elevator Murderer
Your dead family member appears to you in a dream
The virgin ghost
The Sweet Girl of Ancol Bridge (Indonesia)
Don Simeon Bernardo's Tomb (Philippines)
Maria Labo (Philippines)
The Hello Kitty Murder (Hong Kong, China)
The Midnight Bus (Beijing, China)
Mae Nak Phra Khanong (Thailand)
Man-Eating Escalators
The 13th Floor
White Lady
Black Lady
Red Lady
Brown Lady of Raynham Hall
White Lady In Portugal: Teresa Fidalgo
White Lady In United Kingdom
White Lady in United States
White Lady in The Philippines
White Lady: La Llorona
Real Ghost Story: The Night Intruder
Real Ghost Story: The Ouija Board, The Portal and The Psychic
Real Ghost Story: Scared To Death
Real Ghost Story: A Visit From The Past
Real Ghost Story: The Ouija Revisited
Real Ghost Story: Manila Film Center: Tragic Theater (Philippines)

Yuki Onna

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By Brynn_Mckenzie

Yuki Onna (雪女?, snow woman) is a spirit or yōkai in Japanese folklore. She is a popular figure in Japanese literature,manga, and animation.

She may also go by such names as yuki-musume "snow girl", yuki-onago "snow wench", yukijorō "snow harlot", yuki anesa "snow sis'", yuki-omba "snow granny or snow nanny", yukinba "snow hag" (Ehime), yukifuri-baba(?) "snowfall hag"(Nagano).

Appearance[edit]

Yuki-onna appears on snowy nights as a tall, beautiful woman with long black hair and blue lips. Her inhumanly pale or even transparent skin makes her blend into the snowy landscape (as famously described in Lafcadio Hearn's Kwaidan: Stories and Studies of Strange Things). She sometimes wears a white kimono, but other legends describe her as nude, with only her face and hair standing out against the snow. Despite her inhuman beauty, her eyes can strike terror into mortals. She floats across the snow, leaving no footprints (in fact, some tales say she has no feet, a feature of many Japanese ghosts), and she can transform into a cloud of mist or snow if threatened.

Behaviour

Some legends say the Yuki-onna, being associated with winter and snowstorms, is the spirit of someone who perished in thesnow. She is at the same time beautiful and serene, yet ruthless in killing unsuspecting mortals. Until the 18th century, she was almost uniformly portrayed as evil. Today, however, stories often color her as more human, emphasizing her ghost-like nature and ephemeral beauty.

In many stories, Yuki-onna appears to travelers trapped in snowstorms, and uses her icy breath to leave them as frost-coated corpses. Other legends say she leads them astray so they simply die of exposure. Other times, she manifests holding a child. When a well-intentioned soul takes the "child" from her, they are frozen in place. Parents searching for lost children are particularly susceptible to this tactic. Other legends make Yuki-onna much more aggressive. In these stories, she often invades homes, blowing in the door with a gust of wind to kill residents in their sleep (some legends require her to be invited inside first).

What Yuki-onna is after varies from tale to tale. Sometimes she is simply satisfied to see a victim die. Other times, she is more vampiric, draining her victims' blood or "life force." She occasionally takes on a succubus-like manner, preying on weak-willed men to drain or freeze them through sex or a kiss.

Like the snow and winter weather she represents, Yuki-onna has a softer side. She sometimes lets would-be victims go for various reasons. In one popular Yuki-onna legend, for example, she sets a young boy free because of his beauty and age. She makes him promise never to speak of her, but later in life, he tells the story to his wife who reveals herself to be the snow woman. She reviles him for breaking his promise, but spares him again, this time out of concern for their children (but if he dares mistreat their children, she will return with no mercy. Luckily for him, he is a loving father). In some versions, she chose not to kill him because he told her, which she did not treat as a broken promise (technically, Yuki-Onna herself is not a human, and thus did not count).In a similar legend, Yuki-onna melts away once her husband discovers her true nature. However, she departs to the afterlife afterward the same way.

Lafcadio Hearn's version

A long time ago, there lived two woodcutters, Minokichi and Mosaku. Minokichi was young and Mosaku was very old.

One winter day, they could not come back home because of a snowstorm. They found a hut in the mountain and decided to sleep there. On this particular evening, Mosaku woke up and found a beautiful lady with white clothes. She breathed on old Mosaku and he was frozen to death.

She then approached Minokichi to breathe on him, but stared at him for a while, and said, "I thought I was going to kill you, the same as that old man, but I will not, because you are young and beautiful. You must not tell anyone about this incident. If you tell anyone about me, I will kill you."

Several years later, Minokichi met a beautiful young lady, named Oyuki (yuki = "snow") and married her. She was a good wife. Minokichi and Oyuki had several children and lived happily for many years. Mysteriously, she did not age.

One night, after the children were asleep, Minokichi said to Oyuki: "Whenever I see you, I am reminded of a mysterious incident that happened to me. When I was young, I met a beautiful young lady like you. I do not know if it was a dream or if she was a Yuki-onna..."

After finishing his story, Oyuki suddenly stood up, and said "That woman you met was me! I told you that I would kill you if you ever told anyone about that incident. However, I can't kill you because of our children. Take care of our children... " Then she melted and disappeared. No one saw her again.


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