So… The Tumblr staff has decided that nudity and even (only!) female nipples are sexualization and therefore offense, but hatespeech, nazi’s and white pride are still totally fine. That is very interesting to say the least.
I understand that the porn bots are annoying, but there are so many other ways to get rid of them. Banning ALL NSFW content isn’t the way to deal with it. So many people are using nude pictures or art as self expression, and nudity is often just nudity… I wonder how many of the paintings or pictures I reblog are going to be flagged.
Types of Japanese Ghosts, Illustrations by Matthew Meyer, Text from: yokai.com
Ame onna
Ame onna are a class of yokai that appear on rainy days and nights. They summon rain wherever they go, and are often blamed for kidnapping and spiriting children away. They appear as depraved, haggish women, soaked with rainwater, often licking the rain off of their hands and arms like wild animals.
Onryō
The most dreaded type of yūrei is the onryō. They are the ghosts of people who died with such strong passions –jealousy, rage, or hatred – that their soul is unable to pass on, and instead transforms into a powerful wrathful spirit who seeks vengeance on any and everything it encounters. Onryō appear as they did when they died. Often they were victims of war, catastrophe, betrayal, murder, or suicide, and they usually display wounds or marks indicative of the way they died.
Hone-onna
Not all who die turn into vengeful beings of grudge and jealousy. Hone onna retain an undying love that persists long after their flesh has rotted away, allowing them to continue to be with the object of their affection despite having died. These ghosts appear as they did in life – young, beautiful women in their prime. Only those unclouded by love or with strong religious faith are able to see through their disguise to their true form: rotting, fetid skeletal corpses returned from the grave.
Shiryō
Shiryō are the ghosts of the dead, and are contrasted with ikiryō, the ghosts of the living. Shiryō is almost exclusively used to refer to unpleasant, malevolent spirits. They appear to be relatives or close friends of the deceased, a shiryō appears in the moments just after death. Often they come to take their loved ones away with them into the world of the dead.
what’s their IGs
Japanese folklore is amazing
Fucking Japanese folklore is scary AF. Their mermaids are immortal and hideous monsters that will bite your head off literally.
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