Téléchargez l'application Tap

Scannez le code QR pour télécharger l'application

QR code to scan for downloading the Tap app

Kegareboshi Stream Official

In the vast tapestry of Japanese spiritual belief, few concepts are as simultaneously haunting and obscure as Kegareboshi (穢れ星) — literally, the “Stain Star” or “Star of Defilement.” Unlike the well-documented Tsukuyomi or Amaterasu , Kegareboshi doesn’t appear in the Kojiki or Nihon Shoki . Instead, it emerges from the liminal space between folk superstition, online occult fiction, and modern anime-inspired worldbuilding.

| Aspect | Meaning | |--------|---------| | | No celestial body is pure forever; even stars can “stain.” | | Contagious fate | Some misfortunes are cosmic, not personal. | | The observer’s guilt | Seeing the star implies you already carry kegare. | | Liminal threat | Appears only at borders—between constellations, seasons, or life and death. | kegareboshi stream

In a psychological sense, Kegareboshi represents the —disease, trauma, sin—that follows you not because of what you did, but because of where you are. 5. Comparisons to Other Folklore | Concept | Culture | Similarity | |---------|---------|-------------| | Algol (Beta Persei) | Arabic / Western | The “Demon Star” – a variable star associated with Medusa’s eye, bloodshed, and misfortune. | | Ketev (Jewish demon) | Hebrew | A spirit of destruction linked to the noonday star/heat. | | Rahu (shadow planet) | Hindu | A celestial body that causes eclipses by swallowing the sun/moon; brings chaos. | | Māori Whiro | Māori | God of darkness, death, and evil; sometimes linked to a dark star. | In the vast tapestry of Japanese spiritual belief,