What does "Sakuraco" means? One of mine is that you aren't going to continue with the history of Japan videos 😨😋 Edit: now I'm scared of you, how did you knew I was eating ice cream?
If I remember correctly, in Inuyasha there's a monk that did that and got super scared to die while in the hole, wondering why he had to die when he helped so many people live, and Naraku takes advantage of his fear and uses him to hide in the last arc. His episode really gave a lot of perspective to the whole practice tbh
That's so funny because it can go both ways. Any rando can say anything in the net, but the net is where we get them infos. From randos. Also, the net is the only way for so many people to be self (inter?)-educated If you can't trust the internet, what can you trust?
Fun fact, the three great leaders of the Northern Fujiwara clan are also mummified and entombed in the Konjikido, the Golden Hall, though there version was not the same as this version and none of them were priests. Also, if you want more stories about crazy Buddhist priests the last two videos I have out are exactly about that. Just know my production quality isn't as good and I'm much newer at this stuff.
@@michaelblower7363 Undoubtedly. Although the heritage of the Emishi is disputed, one of the Three Greats of the Oshu Fujiwara, Motohira, was entombed sporting clothing reminiscent of the Ainu, and bearing a dagger with a handle made from deer antler, which was not something the Japanese did. I find them fascinating because, as you said, they were this merging of Yamato and Emishi, aristocrat and warrior, sedentary agriculturist and nomadic hunter-gatherer, and that makes for fascinating stories.
@@fran3ro To be fair, the Northern Fujiwara were basically their own separate thing, with a single tie to the Fujiwara of the capital. The Heian Fujiwara likely thought of their northern relatives as barbaric and uncouth warriors, mingling aristocrat blood with Emishi savages, and the Northern Fujiwara were more than happy to let the Heian nobility think that while they largely kept to themselves in the north. They didn't even do much when the country fell into civil war during the Gempei War while their Heian cousins found themselves caught in the middle of it all. That is all to say, that the Northern Fujiwara were related to their cousins in the capital, but also distinct and separate from them.
Asking for donations. Does stuff for followers, based on donations. Often does wierd challegnes, like eating trees for 10 days. Often had people watching him actually doing the stuff. So, they were basically Influencers?
The only wet place I could think of where a mummy could be made is a swamp. But that’s only because the bacteria, nutrients and things like that are perfect for mummifying a body. The Bog Man is a famous example of this. You could also be mummified in ice but you’d have to be at a high altitude and your body would have to keep dry. We’ve all heard of the Incan girl who was left on a mountain as a sacrifice. Poor girl was basically raised to be killed😔 I always thought it was a situation where gods are mad, pick a child, sacrifice child, people don’t starve. But no she was raised to be killed. Not given a chance to have friends or play or fall in love. That makes it sadder to me I’m rambling but that poor Girl honesty makes me so sad for her that she was never given a life and her only purpose was to have her life taken away
There’s a part of American Gods where a kid is raised in total darkness for years to be sacrificed, his body smoked and dried, and used as an idol. Those sacrificed kids eventually become German kobolds.
This is a far more widespread practice than what you have suggested. There were many sects of Buddhism that adopted this practice though it is probably exaggerated how many actually did it. Your video is filled with many serious errors. I happen to live in a house formerly owned by a member of the "Mokujiki shonin" sect. His "grave" (o-haka) is located on my property but the place he is actually buried is at a temple about 40 miles away, where he was buried "alive" and supposedly mummified (FWIW the crypt is still sealed so the condition of the body is anyone's guess). For starters, the term "mokujiki" (木食) does NOT mean that they ate wood. The Mokujiki sect were famous for wood carving, which in ancient Japanese writing used the character for "eat" wood rather than "cut" wood. It **IS** true that these monks had diet periods where they were only allowed to eat the fruit of trees (木の実 -- ie no grains or tubers). However while this diet did include a lot of nuts (especially walnuts), it did NOT involve wood and it DID include a lot of things we consider to be vegetables (like eggplant and soybeans). The way they mummified themelves was to prepare the tomb as you describe, and drink a tea concocted of the tannin from oak, walnut and kashi bark. This would rot their stomach, and basically kill them within an hour of the "burial" so the amount of time spent buried alive was not that long. Supposedly the tannin from the tea also helped the mummification process. Of course the only people who did this were really old guys who thought they were close to death anyway, so the practice was more a form of euthenasia with a big audience, and not really as frightening as "being buried alive" But please dont be mislead by bad translation. "Mokujiki" does NOT mean that the monks ate wood. It means that they were famous for their wood carvings.
I remember reading that in slang was used in certain areas; clover was used for wild boars, while maple leaves referred to deer. That puts a different light on the foraging in the woods thing. 😅
Rome stole ideas from Greece, and the same goes with Japan stealing from China since it was an older civilization. Which is what the other commenter meant by that
Even if a lot of the past Japanese Buddhist monk mummies were accidents, if you were to ask them now they would actually do the 1000 days of self preparation. I remember a Buddhist monk being interviewed and him going over the whole process (he essentially did everything they did except the burying part and drink from a spring which I will explain later). When researchers studied his diet and combined it with existing accounts it turns out that the kind of trees the monks would eat bark from had anti fungal and insecticide properties. Then they took a sample of the spring and it was unusually high in arsenic. So if by accident or intention that diet essentially concentrated chemicals that helped preserve the body after death.
It's All-Saint's Day. The day all the Catholics celebrate any Saint they can find. If it looks saintly, they celebrate. So our Buddhist Brothers count.
Yeah, when you start to consider death by dehydration, self mummification starts to sound a lot less feasible. You would die long before you could remove sufficient water content to stop decomposition.
Accidental self-mummification does happen occasionally. There are several kinds of toxins that prevent decomposition but don't kill you until your body is saturated with it. The most obvious one is methylmercury (the cause for Minamata Disease), but potassium cyanide also does the job. The most common self-mummification toxin, however, was chromium sulfate. It was used as a tanning agent and many workers in the leather industry were exposed to it. It kills people very slowly but can be absorbed by the body in such amounts as to cause immediate desiccation and preservation of the body after death because at that point ingestion of water stops.
I can imagine having 108 soldiers make sure you stick to your diet is quite efficient, I'll have to remember that diet hack for January! Edit: I'm poor, will it also work if I hire fewer soldiers? How few soldiers would I need? I'm asking because this is my favourite fitness channel
This reminds me of Waldon. Thoreau wasn't alone in the wilderness. He went into town, had visitors, etc. The ascetic aesthetic (hee!) has just gotten around to people who aren't very familiar with the whole idea.
Well, ok here in Colorado we had a bandit who accidentally mummified himself by dying in a cave most likely in winter, the drying was probably relatively slow but occurred at low temperature. The whole “meditation on the mountain” might be the key there.
Nah, that's not meditation led, there are many forms of standing/moving/sitting meditation. That was just stupid, these men(the japanese monks) actually did practiced, even though the diet and trips were lacking in truth in certain individuals who practice this. This is why I chose chan buddhism, at least you can eat meat two days out of the week, rest is fish, eggs, rice, and tofu!
Here in colorado, we got some of the wierdest chrecters for assholes/fuck wits that most choose criminal careers and most fail miserably at simple tasks and applying any tact.
Here in colorado, we got some of the wierdest chrecters for assholes/fuck wits that most choose criminal careers and most fail miserably at simple tasks and applying any tact.
Another amazing video!! I didn’t even know they have mummified monks in Japan that’s pretty crazy 👀 the fact that the real stories behind the monks were marketed with made up stories even in their own era, made a lot of sense how easy it can be to come up with really insane stories lol
If you add people selling false pilgrim badge (badges you got at station when you go on a pilgrimage) and also false relic trafic i just understood that whenever there is profit to be made someone will try to make profit
I mean surely not ALL the attempts were done post-mortem. Bukkai Shonin in 1903 probably did it while alive given all the witnesses and political stuff surrounding it happening. (Since anything like that was made illegal in the Meiji period, so he ultimately wasn't dug up later, but he was at least buried alive), and the poisonous Urushi Tea was apparently a thing.
Funny this vid came out. I finally got around to buying a book talking about the subject...eh ayo Linfamy? You sure you ain't the federal agent monitoring me?
I read online that Brendan Fraser is going to star in a remake of The Mummy where he fasts to lose fat after The Whale and becomes a mummy. PS: I read it as I write it. I am my own source. It was a present tense. English is a mess.
Oh, you didn't address the rumour about the self mumifiers drinking lacquer to stop decomposition or that they'd sit in the lotus position, so their fluids would seep out of them, helping them to dry out. How disappointing!
9:30 In summary, this tradition probably started with a Weekend At Bernie's- the temple had received vast amounts of donations for the head monk's next trip, but the head monk had a heart attack while spending a night with his chigo. As such, they told the donners "uh, change of plans, the head monk is going on a much larger spiritual trip than expected. It will be...uh...2....no 3 years long. Yeah. He is going to be in total seclusion"
Decades ago, before the invention of the WWW, I watched a documentary that described this 'practice', with a few differences. First, this monk wasn't a hermit but a high ranking member of a cloister/ashram. In preparation he would remove 'impure' elements from his diet until he ate only five kinds of grain, and ingest medical herbs for about a month. After he had cleansed himself enough, he would start drinking lacquer which was supposed to help him to preserve his body. After having fasted long enough the entombment would happen, and he would chant and ring a bell until he couldn't any longer. His disciples would wait for seven more days and then pull him out of the chamber. Looks like - in the times of the internet - this story wasn't extreme enough and so they had to embellish it.
One of the children’s books I read on mummies (when I was a child myself) featured a Buddhist monk who only drank tree sap tea and was in a room With a bell. He rang the bell each day to let the other monks know he was alive. After a couple of years the bell stopped ringing each day, and the other monks sealed it off for 2 years. When they returned they were met with their monk brother who was now mummified.
The Japanese must have had a different definition of "cereal" or "grain" than we do today. 5 of the items on the list are not types of grass. and would not be called cereals or grains today.
Well, don’t I feel silly telling people about this. (Wouldn’t be surprised if tree sap/lacquer was applied to the corpse as well, there’s a, I guess inaccurate but this still makes sense, video from Ask A Mortician about these guys that mentions that. Kinda checks out…)
Yeah, Smithsonian and a study in the National Institue of Health describe how they basically made wrappers of the body by soaking cloth in laquer... like a funeral piñata.
I became aware of Buddhist monks attire thanks to the introduction of one of the Gorma Tribe's high ranked officers who appeared early in the Sentai Dairanger's run the Archbishop Saw who was dressed like a Buddhist monk in his human guise.
Fun fact: When people show monks who supposedly underwent sokushinbutsu procedure or even if you just type that into google you are going to get photo of a mummified monk in shades. The joke is that this specyfic monk is not Japanese but rather Thai and nobody in Thailand even believes that he somehow self-mumiffied. People just believe him to be uncorrupted anachronite, like he was so holy that he did not decompose so like it doesn't matter if you are religious or not nobody believes that he self-mumiffied and yet just because he is a Buddhist mummy footage of him is omnipresent in shokushimbutsu/self-mummification materials. It is annoying to me that every instance of mummified Buddhist monk is seen through the self-mummification story even though it is actually only believed in Japan.
One of my greatest fears is being buried alive. What’s yours?
What does "Sakuraco" means? One of mine is that you aren't going to continue with the history of Japan videos 😨😋
Edit: now I'm scared of you, how did you knew I was eating ice cream?
I'm here because of JJK
Wow, first time I heard a counter to the voluntary self made mummies!
"Brother, we need more followers."
"Quick, cut off master's balls!"
I see the regret of not having this joke in the video lol
Actually.
Chinpo Kiri
If I remember correctly, in Inuyasha there's a monk that did that and got super scared to die while in the hole, wondering why he had to die when he helped so many people live, and Naraku takes advantage of his fear and uses him to hide in the last arc. His episode really gave a lot of perspective to the whole practice tbh
that arc was far from the final arc, that particular arc was in the middle.
I was looking for someone who mentioned Hakushin, nice to find another Inuyasha fan!
This episode genuinely made me cry. I appreciate how Kikyo did her best to console Hakushin as well, even if im not a big Kikyo fan.
If you cannot trust the Internet about Japanese Mummies, whom can you trust?!
@@R.P.-hw2rq "100% Risky Free!"
You can't trust my grandma, she says that no matter what internet says, Japanese mummies where black.
Yuduno either, eh?
That's so funny because it can go both ways. Any rando can say anything in the net, but the net is where we get them infos. From randos. Also, the net is the only way for so many people to be self (inter?)-educated
If you can't trust the internet, what can you trust?
LINFAMY
Fun fact, the three great leaders of the Northern Fujiwara clan are also mummified and entombed in the Konjikido, the Golden Hall, though there version was not the same as this version and none of them were priests.
Also, if you want more stories about crazy Buddhist priests the last two videos I have out are exactly about that. Just know my production quality isn't as good and I'm much newer at this stuff.
The Oushu Fujiwara were a mix of Emishi and Japanese people right? Do you reckon they adopted mummification from the "Hairy People"?
@@michaelblower7363 Undoubtedly. Although the heritage of the Emishi is disputed, one of the Three Greats of the Oshu Fujiwara, Motohira, was entombed sporting clothing reminiscent of the Ainu, and bearing a dagger with a handle made from deer antler, which was not something the Japanese did. I find them fascinating because, as you said, they were this merging of Yamato and Emishi, aristocrat and warrior, sedentary agriculturist and nomadic hunter-gatherer, and that makes for fascinating stories.
Ah the Fujiwara. They were famous for something with the imperial court if I'm correct.
@@fran3ro To be fair, the Northern Fujiwara were basically their own separate thing, with a single tie to the Fujiwara of the capital. The Heian Fujiwara likely thought of their northern relatives as barbaric and uncouth warriors, mingling aristocrat blood with Emishi savages, and the Northern Fujiwara were more than happy to let the Heian nobility think that while they largely kept to themselves in the north. They didn't even do much when the country fell into civil war during the Gempei War while their Heian cousins found themselves caught in the middle of it all. That is all to say, that the Northern Fujiwara were related to their cousins in the capital, but also distinct and separate from them.
*their version
Asking for donations.
Does stuff for followers, based on donations.
Often does wierd challegnes, like eating trees for 10 days.
Often had people watching him actually doing the stuff.
So, they were basically Influencers?
🤔
There truly is nothing new under the sun 😂
Mummy bloggers
And they often were pedo too
The only wet place I could think of where a mummy could be made is a swamp. But that’s only because the bacteria, nutrients and things like that are perfect for mummifying a body. The Bog Man is a famous example of this. You could also be mummified in ice but you’d have to be at a high altitude and your body would have to keep dry. We’ve all heard of the Incan girl who was left on a mountain as a sacrifice. Poor girl was basically raised to be killed😔 I always thought it was a situation where gods are mad, pick a child, sacrifice child, people don’t starve. But no she was raised to be killed. Not given a chance to have friends or play or fall in love. That makes it sadder to me
I’m rambling but that poor Girl honesty makes me so sad for her that she was never given a life and her only purpose was to have her life taken away
Poor girl, that's super interesting 👍
But isn't humidity the worst thing for mummification?
There’s a part of American Gods where a kid is raised in total darkness for years to be sacrificed, his body smoked and dried, and used as an idol. Those sacrificed kids eventually become German kobolds.
@@fran3roGoogle says it needs to be really dry or really wet.
I find it interesting that in Europe, most swamp mummies were murdered and tied up... Reminds me somehow of the Mummy trillogy...
This is a far more widespread practice than what you have suggested. There were many sects of Buddhism that adopted this practice though it is probably exaggerated how many actually did it. Your video is filled with many serious errors.
I happen to live in a house formerly owned by a member of the "Mokujiki shonin" sect. His "grave" (o-haka) is located on my property but the place he is actually buried is at a temple about 40 miles away, where he was buried "alive" and supposedly mummified (FWIW the crypt is still sealed so the condition of the body is anyone's guess). For starters, the term "mokujiki" (木食) does NOT mean that they ate wood. The Mokujiki sect were famous for wood carving, which in ancient Japanese writing used the character for "eat" wood rather than "cut" wood.
It **IS** true that these monks had diet periods where they were only allowed to eat the fruit of trees (木の実 -- ie no grains or tubers). However while this diet did include a lot of nuts (especially walnuts), it did NOT involve wood and it DID include a lot of things we consider to be vegetables (like eggplant and soybeans).
The way they mummified themelves was to prepare the tomb as you describe, and drink a tea concocted of the tannin from oak, walnut and kashi bark. This would rot their stomach, and basically kill them within an hour of the "burial" so the amount of time spent buried alive was not that long. Supposedly the tannin from the tea also helped the mummification process.
Of course the only people who did this were really old guys who thought they were close to death anyway, so the practice was more a form of euthenasia with a big audience, and not really as frightening as "being buried alive"
But please dont be mislead by bad translation. "Mokujiki" does NOT mean that the monks ate wood. It means that they were famous for their wood carvings.
Actually there are English translations that also explain that they didn't eat wood. Just very nutrient scarce nuts.
You are the very best advertiser there is.
Honestly...
If Linfamy was my history teacher I would never miss a class
I remember reading that in slang was used in certain areas; clover was used for wild boars, while maple leaves referred to deer. That puts a different light on the foraging in the woods thing. 😅
I think Japan and its history and mythology is the ancient Greece of Asia because it's crazy😂😅
No it would be Rome, china would be Greece.
@@taylie673 y'know this makes sense to me. Quite an accurate comparison, I think!
Rome stole ideas from Greece, and the same goes with Japan stealing from China since it was an older civilization. Which is what the other commenter meant by that
@@taylie673 Rome was bigger than Greece, so it's other way around.
Even if a lot of the past Japanese Buddhist monk mummies were accidents, if you were to ask them now they would actually do the 1000 days of self preparation. I remember a Buddhist monk being interviewed and him going over the whole process (he essentially did everything they did except the burying part and drink from a spring which I will explain later). When researchers studied his diet and combined it with existing accounts it turns out that the kind of trees the monks would eat bark from had anti fungal and insecticide properties. Then they took a sample of the spring and it was unusually high in arsenic. So if by accident or intention that diet essentially concentrated chemicals that helped preserve the body after death.
If only I made this in time for Halloween 😅
It's All-Saint's Day. The day all the Catholics celebrate any Saint they can find. If it looks saintly, they celebrate. So our Buddhist Brothers count.
Close enough 😂
Yeah, when you start to consider death by dehydration, self mummification starts to sound a lot less feasible. You would die long before you could remove sufficient water content to stop decomposition.
Accidental self-mummification does happen occasionally. There are several kinds of toxins that prevent decomposition but don't kill you until your body is saturated with it. The most obvious one is methylmercury (the cause for Minamata Disease), but potassium cyanide also does the job. The most common self-mummification toxin, however, was chromium sulfate. It was used as a tanning agent and many workers in the leather industry were exposed to it. It kills people very slowly but can be absorbed by the body in such amounts as to cause immediate desiccation and preservation of the body after death because at that point ingestion of water stops.
Love the humor on this channel!
😃👍
Another equally enlightening, amusing and disturbing debunking of Japanese history myths from Linfamy!
I was suuuuuper into this topic years ago! Fascinating stuff!
I can imagine having 108 soldiers make sure you stick to your diet is quite efficient, I'll have to remember that diet hack for January!
Edit: I'm poor, will it also work if I hire fewer soldiers? How few soldiers would I need? I'm asking because this is my favourite fitness channel
You'd probably only need to eat one of them every few days
I'm now thinking of hiring one or two soldiers (so they can work in shifts) to guard my kitchen against raids (by me)
@@vanguardiris3232just hire two really big dude. Like six foot plus
@@smolknife Yeah that should be plenty!
@@vanguardiris3232 Great idea! Will they also stop you from ordering in?
This reminds me of Waldon. Thoreau wasn't alone in the wilderness. He went into town, had visitors, etc.
The ascetic aesthetic (hee!) has just gotten around to people who aren't very familiar with the whole idea.
Wait..... The internet lied to me??!!!!
🥲
Well, ok here in Colorado we had a bandit who accidentally mummified himself by dying in a cave most likely in winter, the drying was probably relatively slow but occurred at low temperature. The whole “meditation on the mountain” might be the key there.
Nah, that's not meditation led, there are many forms of standing/moving/sitting meditation. That was just stupid, these men(the japanese monks) actually did practiced, even though the diet and trips were lacking in truth in certain individuals who practice this. This is why I chose chan buddhism, at least you can eat meat two days out of the week, rest is fish, eggs, rice, and tofu!
Here in colorado, we got some of the wierdest chrecters for assholes/fuck wits that most choose criminal careers and most fail miserably at simple tasks and applying any tact.
Here in colorado, we got some of the wierdest chrecters for assholes/fuck wits that most choose criminal careers and most fail miserably at simple tasks and applying any tact.
Thanks for the video. It was really eye opening. I mean I never questioned those stories before it, and...yeah, it makes much more sense now
My dying thought would be:” did I remember to delete my browser history?”
You sure outdid yourself with this video! 11/10!
Absolutely top-notch video Great work with the information, humor, and art. Even your sponsorship advertisements are super fun to watch.
Yamagata Prefecture has the largest number of sokushinbutsu in Japan, and you can worship them by requesting them in advance at each temple.
It's spiritual ice cream, dammit!
Oh okay.
Another amazing video!! I didn’t even know they have mummified monks in Japan that’s pretty crazy 👀 the fact that the real stories behind the monks were marketed with made up stories even in their own era, made a lot of sense how easy it can be to come up with really insane stories lol
If you add people selling false pilgrim badge (badges you got at station when you go on a pilgrimage) and also false relic trafic i just understood that whenever there is profit to be made someone will try to make profit
Brutal reality check below the belt Linfamy! I love your videos.
aside from being very educational, dude you're hilarious. can't remember the last time i actually laughed at the words "holy shit"
7:26 Not me nearly choking on my cold stone ice cream cause Linfamy called me out lol
I knew it!
I love how he added the add
Are they totally wrong about Japanese Daddies too?
PS My Ramen has has not been stirred like this in many years!
Japanese daddies don't exist.
@@Linfamywhy did they went out to get milk?
You: I'm looking at you!
Me: Eating leftover Halloween candy
"You're a Buddhist wizard, Harry."
Ahahahahahahaha😂😂😂☠️☠️☠️
This was amazing. Thank you for making this.
Outrageous! No notification?😢
🥲
So, were these Yudono guys different from the so-called Yamabushi, or were they basically one flavor of the "mountain ascetic" type? 🤔
Yeah, they were one of many mountain ascetic sects.
I can't wait until you get to the history of Christianity in Japan
He made a video relating to that a year ago
The Ad is so good that i did not skip it, Damn
7:24 not me actually eating ice cream😭
I knew it!
I was eating a ice-cream I FEEL CALLED OUT
Me eating ice cream: "How did he know!!??"
I mean surely not ALL the attempts were done post-mortem. Bukkai Shonin in 1903 probably did it while alive given all the witnesses and political stuff surrounding it happening. (Since anything like that was made illegal in the Meiji period, so he ultimately wasn't dug up later, but he was at least buried alive), and the poisonous Urushi Tea was apparently a thing.
Funny this vid came out. I finally got around to buying a book talking about the subject...eh ayo Linfamy? You sure you ain't the federal agent monitoring me?
He's not, we are tho...
👀
"Shitting food? Holy shit" I almost spits out my brownie! HA!
Oh im earlyyyy, love these videos
Hi earlyyyy, I'm linfamy
@@Linfamylove you videos Man and your comedy is great for these videos😂
I read online that Brendan Fraser is going to star in a remake of The Mummy where he fasts to lose fat after The Whale and becomes a mummy.
PS: I read it as I write it. I am my own source. It was a present tense. English is a mess.
Can't wait for it to come out.
I wanna hear you say : Mummified monks munched on a mushy mochi.
I didnt even know japan had mummies
Oh, you didn't address the rumour about the self mumifiers drinking lacquer to stop decomposition or that they'd sit in the lotus position, so their fluids would seep out of them, helping them to dry out. How disappointing!
yippee new linfamy video
You did such a fantastic job! i wish i could have a person like you as my Japanese history teacher!
God I LOVE this channel
Ohhh Linfamy, it's not ice cream, it's cake I'm eating while watching... For breakfast. 😉✌️
Was there a Halloween live stream this year? BTW, this video make me laugh a lot. Thank you for this video.
There was not, sorry 🥲
Must please the UA-cam algorithm gods
The ad-reads blend SEAMLESSLY into the humor. This is peak @linfamy
9:30 In summary, this tradition probably started with a Weekend At Bernie's- the temple had received vast amounts of donations for the head monk's next trip, but the head monk had a heart attack while spending a night with his chigo. As such, they told the donners "uh, change of plans, the head monk is going on a much larger spiritual trip than expected. It will be...uh...2....no 3 years long. Yeah. He is going to be in total seclusion"
Your humour! Gods! I love it. XD
ah, the old "dick in a box" trick. Now I realize what I was doing wrong; I never cut it off
Tell me how it goes
Mumblerappers. I adore that term. Ill probably use Mumblerock though :)
I’m a Nichiren Buddhist and I got to say this is pretty interesting
Love the little diglett at 2:01
Can you cover Emperor Jimmu? There is hardly any coverage on his expedition and how his ascension affected Japan
Never heard about this...until now
I've been known to eat pretty much any kind of food while watching your videos... No chance to find me ever eating twigs, though.
And she said “thanks?” 😂
Decades ago, before the invention of the WWW, I watched a documentary that described this 'practice', with a few differences. First, this monk wasn't a hermit but a high ranking member of a cloister/ashram. In preparation he would remove 'impure' elements from his diet until he ate only five kinds of grain, and ingest medical herbs for about a month. After he had cleansed himself enough, he would start drinking lacquer which was supposed to help him to preserve his body. After having fasted long enough the entombment would happen, and he would chant and ring a bell until he couldn't any longer. His disciples would wait for seven more days and then pull him out of the chamber.
Looks like - in the times of the internet - this story wasn't extreme enough and so they had to embellish it.
Does anybody know what the background art is at 8:10? Thanks
I friggin live for your videos. ❤😂
One of the children’s books I read on mummies (when I was a child myself) featured a Buddhist monk who only drank tree sap tea and was in a room With a bell. He rang the bell each day to let the other monks know he was alive. After a couple of years the bell stopped ringing each day, and the other monks sealed it off for 2 years. When they returned they were met with their monk brother who was now mummified.
Saying the internet was wrong is kind of misleading when some of your own sources speak of it as being a more recent interpretation.
Let's see if Rumiko Takahashi lied to me about this theme 🤔
The Japanese must have had a different definition of "cereal" or "grain" than we do today. 5 of the items on the list are not types of grass. and would not be called cereals or grains today.
So wait could he eat lucky charms or count chocoula
Neither of these.
Wow those Buddhist monks had a good PR team. I always believed that they became mummies of their own free will. Very interesting video
Wow, I just finished my own video on mummies across fantasy and wish I was able to focus on Japanese mummies as much as you did here. Great video 👍
1:19 - that Japanese Mummy almost looks like the Grim Reaper.
Udono how much I love & appreciate your videos ❤❤❤ 😜
Aidono, but I appreciate you ❤️
6:50 Holy sh*t! 😅
Ok now you've pointed it out, this version sounds a lot more plausible.
I love these ad placements (and I can't believe I'm saying that)
I just wanted to hear him talk about Japanese mommies.
😂
As a foreign speaker, they sound very similar to me.
😅
I’m actually eating ice cream rn 😭😭 How did u know???
OooO, ice cream! Thats a great idea! 🍦
HA! Joke's on you, I'm eating popcorn! >:3
🤤
Well, don’t I feel silly telling people about this.
(Wouldn’t be surprised if tree sap/lacquer was applied to the corpse as well, there’s a, I guess inaccurate but this still makes sense, video from Ask A Mortician about these guys that mentions that. Kinda checks out…)
Yeah, Smithsonian and a study in the National Institue of Health describe how they basically made wrappers of the body by soaking cloth in laquer... like a funeral piñata.
@@seregiel9541- Like the Egyptian Mummies, but the Japanese just unwrap theirs like a Birthday present when the time comes.
Very interesting, I heard the popular story cos of the Breath of the wild monks, it did seem unlikely!
It's like Hakushin from Inuyasha!! I love this. Hopefully it comes back.
I wanna be a mummy.
I became aware of Buddhist monks attire thanks to the introduction of one of the Gorma Tribe's high ranked officers who appeared early in the Sentai Dairanger's run the Archbishop Saw who was dressed like a Buddhist monk in his human guise.
The story I heard was that they ate salt and drank lacquer as they meditated themselves to death. :/
That priest literally pulled a Van Goug!? 😖😵😵💫
Stir that ramen sensei linfamy
🍜
3:03 "This month, I got a pair of chopsticks, perfect for my noodles."
me: don't you eat wood or do you just mash them until they become wheat
Bark noodles are 🔥
Also ur videos are too good to be true soo I joined ur Patreon
Hope that helped :D
@@CrystalPlayzGenshin aw thanks! It does help :)
Fun fact: When people show monks who supposedly underwent sokushinbutsu procedure or even if you just type that into google you are going to get photo of a mummified monk in shades. The joke is that this specyfic monk is not Japanese but rather Thai and nobody in Thailand even believes that he somehow self-mumiffied. People just believe him to be uncorrupted anachronite, like he was so holy that he did not decompose so like it doesn't matter if you are religious or not nobody believes that he self-mumiffied and yet just because he is a Buddhist mummy footage of him is omnipresent in shokushimbutsu/self-mummification materials.
It is annoying to me that every instance of mummified Buddhist monk is seen through the self-mummification story even though it is actually only believed in Japan.
Oh my...ur voice sounds like chumlee
That chicken ramen looked WRONG lol