GHOST STORY
“AOKIGAHARA SUICIDE FOREST”
At the base of Mt. Fuji in Japan sits
a dense forest. To those who are unfamiliar with it's reputation, Aokigahara
would appear like a run-of-the-mill forest. However, venturing inside would
reveal the weight it bares. Any unexpected hiker will likely find more than
trees, caverns and the lack of wild animals in this forest. Personal items,
such as credit cards, wallets and rail passes are often found as well as a
decomposing body hanging from a tree limb. Aokigahara is the second most
popular suicide location, ranking under the Golden Gate Bridge. There is an
average of 50 to 100 suicides bodies found each year. Signs posted throughout
the forest telling people to seek professional has saved a few lives but still
lack the power to deter all suicides. Why would so many choose this forest as a
place to take their own lives?
There area a couple of possible
reasons for the high number of suicides. Seichō Matsumoto wrote a book in
1960 called Kuroi Kaiju (Black Sea of Trees) which describes the suicide of two lovers in
Aokigahara, leading to romanticizing the act. Although, suicide is believed to
have been associated with the forest long before the book was published. It is
believed the 19th Century practice of "Ubasute" where an infirm or
elderly female relative is carried to a mountain or desolate location and left
to die by dehydration or starvation had more than once taken place there.
Wataru Tsurumui’s controversial 1993 bestseller, The Complete Suicide Manual,
describes various methods of suicide and even lists the forest as "the
perfect place to die". Some who have committed suicide in the forest had
been found with the book in their possession. However, there are those who
think Japan's expectations of excellence may have something to do with it.
Citizens who find themselves unable to succeed buckle under the pressure.
Then again, some remains found may
not be from those who took their lives willingly. Supposedly, underground iron
deposits cause compasses to go haywire and interfere with GPS devices, making
it quite easy to get lost. Not only that, but the forest also contains cenotes,
collapsed lava tubes, and hidden caves. Each can play their part in taking a
life.
Either way, Aokigahara is not only
associated with suicides but myth and ghosts as well. When Forestry workers
come upon a body in the forest they carry it back to their station where a
special room is designated for such occasions. In Japanese mythology, a corpse
can not rest alone. If it is, the lonely, unsettled soul or Yurei will scream
the whole night, and the body will move itself into the regular sleeping
quarters.
Aokigahara is considered the most
haunted location in Japan. Dubbed the "Purgatory of Yurei". Hikers
have often seen apparitions as well as heard the howl of Yurei on the wind.
Some have reported objects moving and seeing shadows amongst the trees.
Spiritualists say that the trees themselves are filled with a malevolent
energy, accumulated from decades of suicides. They try to prevent you from
getting back out. They say if you look hard at the trees, you can see the faces
of the dead in the bark.
Today, the forest is littered with
colored tape used by walkers to find their way among the trees as well as
discarded items and nooses, used to facilitate the suicide of its recent
victims and bouquets of flowers left by grieving friends and family members.
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