yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

The Japanese myth of the trickster raccoon - Iseult Gillespie


2m read
·Nov 8, 2024

On the dusty roads of a small village, a travelling salesman was having difficulty selling his wares. He’d recently traversed the region just a few weeks ago, and most of the villagers had already seen his supply. So he wandered the outskirts of the town in the hopes of finding some new customers.

Unfortunately, the road was largely deserted, and the salesman was about to turn back when he heard a high-pitched yelp coming from the edge of the forest. Following the screams to their source, he discovered a trapped tanuki. While these raccoon-like creatures were known for their wily ways, this one appeared terrified and powerless. The salesman freed the struggling creature, but before he could tend to its wounds, it bolted into the undergrowth.

The next day, he set off on his usual route. As he trudged along, he spotted a discarded tea kettle. It was rusty and old—but perhaps he could sell it to the local monks. The salesman polished it until it sparkled and shone. He carried the kettle to Morin-ji Temple and presented it to the solemn monks.

His timing was perfect—they were in need of a large kettle for an important service and purchased his pot for a handsome price. To open the ceremony, they began to pour cups of tea for each monk—but the kettle cooled too quickly. It had to be reheated often throughout the long service, and when it was hot, it seemed to squirm in the pourer’s hand.

By the end of the ceremony, the monks felt cheated by their purchase and called for the salesman to return and explain himself. The following morning, the salesman examined the pot, but he couldn’t find anything unusual about it. Hoping a cup of tea would help them think, they set the kettle on the fire.

Within moments, the metal began to sweat. Suddenly, it sprouted a scrubby tail, furry paws, and a pointed nose. With a yelp, the salesman recognized the tanuki he’d freed. The salesman was shocked. He’d heard tales of shape-shifting tanuki who transformed by pulling on their testicles. But they were usually troublesome tricksters, who played embarrassing pranks on travelers or made it rain money that later dissolved into leaves.

Some people even placed tanuki statues outside their homes and businesses to trick potential pranksters into taking their antics elsewhere. However, this tanuki only smiled sweetly. Why had he chosen this unsuspecting form? The tanuki explained that he wanted to repay the salesman’s kindness. However, he’d grown too hot as a tea kettle and didn’t like being burned, scrubbed, or polished.

The monk and salesman laughed, both impressed by this honorable trickster. From that day on, the tanuki became an esteemed guest of the temple. He could frequently be found telling tales and performing tricks that amused even the most serious monks. Villagers came from far away to see the temple tanuki, and the salesman visited often to share tea made from an entirely normal kettle.

More Articles

View All
Cold Storage - Thaw Project | Life Below Zero
It’s nice soft dirt. I gotta save a lot of sand in it, or some clay—not much. Well, the point of having a fish rack and the point of having a nice cold hole to store things is to preserve stuff. If you’ve got all this food and you’re trying to keep a surp…
Khan Academy Ed Talks with Olav Schewe - Tuesday, June 1
Hello! Welcome to Ed Talks with Khan Academy. We are excited to have you here as we talk to people who are influential in the education space. Today, we’re talking to Olive Chewie, who has a book coming out that we’re looking forward to talking to about l…
Cute Squirrels Get a Second Chance At Life in This Rehab Center | National Geographic
A lot of times people ask the question, “Well, why are you rehabbing a squirrel? It’s a road, and there’s tons of them. What’s one less?” Well, squirrels play an important part in the whole ecosystem. They are prey animals, so they help feed a lot of the…
THE MOST EXPENSIVE HOME IN THE WORLD ($250,000,000)
This is the most expensive home in the world at $250 million. It’s also the tallest residential building in the world, to the point where you could actually see the curvature of the Earth right from your living room. And today, you’ll get to see exactly w…
How Much $ You Need To Live Off Dividends (FOREVER)
What’s up? Grandma’s guys here, so let’s talk about how much you really need invested to live entirely off the dividends. I’ve tried just about every passive income idea that you could think of—from side hustles, real estate, intentions, marketing progra…
How Many Things Are There?
Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. If you threw every single human alive today into the Grand Canyon, we would not fill it up. We could make a pile about this big. That’s it. That’s all of us. All 7.159 billion of us in one place. A species portrait. It kinda put…