Your Excellency! Spare these peasants a second of your time!
In Japanese Schools, do students come up with "mysteries" "supernatural phenomenon" "folktales" "stories" that are unique to their own school? (A version of the 8 wonders of the world, but more local and creepy?) Are the people there just more spiritual? A legit way to mess with transfer students? Old traditions?
Or is that a trope from anime/manga/movies that only foreigners believe in?
Share with us your profound knowledge, oh great one! (So that we can copy paste it, he~he~he.)
It's usually kind of natural progression thing. You got one guy who said he saw a ghost in the science lab. And then another guy said he saw the human anatomy model move. And then another guy said he couldn't breathe while in the science room. And boom, you got a ghost who at some point in the past suffocated to death in the science room.
In some cases, the mysteries of different schools are copypasted. All it takes is one person who make it up, a few more people to corroborate the encounter and before you know it, the whole school think it's real. Kids are just like that. Kids love mysterious stories.
Ai-chan can't remember all but back in Ai-chan's old middle school, we also had our own school mysteries.
1. The white cloth outside the 2-2 window. On some nights, if you see a white cloth outside the window, don't open the windows. Because if you do, you will be dragged outside and fall to your death. Ai-chan has never seen it, but some classmates apparently did.
2. The knocking on the night of school festival. On the night before school festival, if you heard a knock at the door, keep quiet. Don't ask who, don't open the door. If it's a person, they would open the door themselves. If they don't open the door, keep quiet and let it pass. If you open the door, whoever saw who's on the other side of the door will die in 7 days. Ai-chan actually came across this once. It was a raining day. Suddenly there was the sound of knocking at the door, one of us wanted to open but the rest pushed him down. Then the knocking just went away. But as the sound of thunder hit us, the door shook like it was about to open and we all screamed. But nothing happened.
3. The ball that bounced on its own. The story is about the ball that for some reason appeared on the ball court. Sometimes it was a football, sometimes it was the softball, and sometimes it was the volleyball. Basically on some days, you could hear a ball that bounced on its own. There is a ball there, but you don't see it bounce. It just had the sound of a bouncing ball, but it's not bouncing. Ai-chan never came across this, but supposedly a lot of people have experienced it.
4. The red water. Sometimes at night, you would open the pipes, and red water the colour of blood would come out. No, nothing would happen. It's just that if you use it to wash your face and you come back to your friends, they will think you just got murdered. Ai-chan only know this happen once, during the Kendo Club's stayover during summer break. But the story happened after Ai-chan graduated, so not really sure of what happened. Nobody died, but the victims supposedly was bedridden for several days.
Instead of more spiritual, Ai-chan thinks it's more accurate to say that the Japanese are superstitious. The whole Shinto thing is basically the belief that everything has a god and if that god wants to bless you, they can, but the opposite is true, they can curse you if they're angry. So you respect pretty much everything so that you don't get cursed. Food? Yeah, eat that fucking shit before it curses you with kidney stones.
Shinto also doesn't not really have the concept of 'afterlife'. They believe that a dead soul simply returns to nature. Basically, Shintoism is used for living people. But for dead people, you depend on Buddhism. The Japanese themselves do not think much of religion. It's not that they're atheists, it's more like "Why bother praying to a god you can't see?" Yes, the Japanese do pay homage to the kami, but it is cultural, not religious. It's kind of hard to explain, the concept of Japanese spirituality is an entire book of its own.
A legit way to mess with transfer students?
Certainly, there are 'school mysteries' that were meant to troll foreigners. But sorry, Ai-chan only recalls one. The story about the ghostly watermelon. It is said that if you come across a watermelon in the middle of the road, you must carry it to the police officer and say the words, roughly translated, "Green and white. How I miss you! Those days of summer!"
At this point, the policeman would usually tell you to stop messing around. One officer said it's blue, not green. And if he was Shinoyama-san, he would laugh, cut the watermelon and give you half. Then he'd ask you to say thanks to the friend who pranked you.