Do you know the story of Toire no Hanako-san, or Miss Hanako of the Toilet? It’s a Japanese urban legend that can be found at most every elementary school here, and it goes like this: if you go to the fourth stall of a specified girl’s bathroom, usually on the third floor of the school, knock three times and call out “Hanako-san, are you there?” then you’ll hear her reply, “Hai” (yes). Open the stall and you’ll see a shimmering figure of a girl with bobbed hair with a red skirt on standing there. It’s the ghost of Hanako, a girl who committed suicide after being bullied by her classmates (ijime), who is said to haunt the girl’s bathroom looking for revenge. Or in an older version, Hanako is a girl who was playing hide-and-seek in the school bathroom during the war and was killed in an American air raid because she couldn’t hear the air raid siren. Hanako-san is part of a pantheon of “school ghost” stories that are well known in Japan, like Kuchisake Onna or Split-Faced Woman, a female ghost who asks you if she’s beautiful before trying to devour you, and Teke-Teke, the upper torso of a female who claws her way around Japan searching for her lower half, which was severed in a train accident in Hokkaido. Anyone hearing this story will supposedly see Teke-Teke’s lower half walking aimlessly around the countryside within three days. Let us know if you see anything!
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