Digital archives of things that shouldn’t exist. Folklore, myths, and urban legends carefully documented, alongside forged photographs, questionable evidence, and entirely fictional eyewitnesses. For entertainment purposes only (unless you find something I missed)
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When the sea begins to sing
Case File No. 002: Siren


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Disclaimer: The stories, articles, and accounts presented here are works of fiction inspired by myths, folklore, and urban legends from around the world. While they may occasionally name-drop real places, traditions, or historical events, all supernatural bits are 100% made up (sorry, no refunds if you go monster-hunting and only find raccoons). This blog is meant purely for entertainment, so read, laugh, shiver, and please don’t fact-check me with holy water.
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The sea has always been a place of warning. Sailors marked maps with skulls, crosses, and jagged lines, but in some places, the caution was simpler: beware the song. Along certain coasts, the waves seemed to carry voices not of the living. To the fishermen of the Mediterranean, the Caribbean, or the far Pacific islands, the Siren is not a myth, but a presence, a voice rising with the tide, promising what the sea cannot give.
The oldest Greek accounts describe the Sirens not as fish-tailed beauties, but as bird-bodied women perched on rocks, their voices as sharp as their talons. They were said to be daughters of Achelous, the river god, and a Muse, which gave them the divine gift of song. In Homer’s Odyssey, they offer Odysseus not lust but knowledge, promises of secrets known only to the dead.
As centuries passed, their form shifted. By the Middle Ages, Sirens were indistinguishable from mermaids, half-woman, half-fish, singing above the surf. They no longer carried feathers, but scales. Through all these transformations, the core remained unchanged: a voice that tempts, deceives, and destroys.
Scholars often read them as metaphors, temptation, desire, distraction, but coastal traditions never treated them as symbols. They were warnings dressed as stories.
Every coast has its own Siren:
Germany’s Lorelei: A golden-haired woman on the Rhine whose song drowns sailors.

Slavic Rusalka: Spirits of drowned maidens, rising from rivers to pull men beneath.

Brazil’s Iara: A freshwater Siren whose beauty entraps fishermen of the Amazon.

Japan’s Ningyo: Less alluring, more grotesque, catching one is said to bring storms, famine, or death.

Despite their differences, the pattern repeats: the lure, the surrender, the loss.
Reported Accounts & Evidence:
The following fragments appear scattered across diaries, local interviews, and folklore collections. None are proof. Together, they draw the outline of something persistent.

“The waves were quiet, yet I heard her as plain as my mother calling my name. By dawn, only three of us remained, and the others had walked willingly into the water. Their eyes were open when the sea took them.”
- Diary fragment, Cornwall, 1874
A fishing crew at Amalfi Coast, 1907 reported one of their men leaping into the sea “to answer a voice none of us could hear.” His body was never recovered. Early newspapers blamed madness; modern oceanographers suggest seismic activity can produce “whistling” tones through rock formations. Locals, however, call it la canzone del mare, which translates to "the song of the sea."

“At first you think it’s wind in the caves, nothing more. But then you catch yourself humming along without meaning to. By the time you notice, you’re already too close to the rocks. My father warned me: never listen when the sea begins to sing.”
- Interview, recorded 1973, Amalfi Coast
The steep slate cliffs near St. Goarshausen, Germany, are notorious for wrecks. In 1801, poet Clemens Brentano immortalized the tale of Lore Lay, a woman whose song bewitched boatmen. Local records note at least a dozen shipwrecks near the Lorelei rock between the 17th and 19th centuries. While modern engineers blame treacherous currents and echoes bouncing off the cliff face, boatmen still speak of hearing a woman’s voice carried over the river on moonlit nights.

Modern Accounts - Caribbean & Pacific
• Philippines, 2012: Three fishermen drowned after what witnesses described as “chasing a song into the waves.” Villagers named the culprit a sirena, a mermaid-spirit feared in island folklore.
• Greece, 2018: A tourist’s night-time recording near Naxos went viral online. Faint singing could be heard over the surf. Audio analysts dismissed it as wind distortion, but locals noted that the stretch of beach has long been called Akra tis Fones which translates to "Cape of Voices".
“When the tide sings, the living must cover their ears, or the dead will claim them.”
- Portuguese Proverb
The Siren lingers in a space between metaphor and memory. She may be nothing more than a myth born from wind over stone, grief at sea, or the loneliness of sailors far from land. Yet the details repeat across cultures too distant to have copied one another. Always a woman’s voice, always the pull toward the water, always death waiting just beneath the surface.
Even today, fishermen on the Mediterranean still observe a simple rule: never whistle on the water. They say the Siren will answer, and once you’ve heard her, silence will never sound the same again.
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Credits:
Written & Compiled By: Zen (me)
Artwork By: Emma (my best friend)
Evidence:
Photo of the statue of Lorelei - posted on mermaidsofearth.com
Rusalka artwork - posted on ancient-origins.net
Commemorative stamp of Iara - posted on Wikipedia
Ningyo artwork - posted on Wikipedia
Diary fragment - Created by Zen
Photo of Amalfi Coast - posted on authenticamalficoast.it
Interview transcript - Created by Zen
Lorelei Rock photo and coordinates - posted on Wikipedia
Sources & Inspirations:
wikipedia.org
authenticamalficoast.it
ancient-origins.net
And more...
#fiction#literature#myths#supernatural#siren#urban legends#article#journalism#lore#creepy folklore#folklore#spooky#spooky season#horror#creepy art#creepy#native mythology#cryptid culture#cryptid#monsters#paranormal#paranormal story#cursed knowledge#haunted#haunted history#errie#scary stories#scary#scary art
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The Hunger That Walks
Case File No. 001: The Wendigo

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Disclaimer: The stories, articles, and accounts presented here are works of fiction inspired by myths, folklore, and urban legends from around the world. While they may occasionally name-drop real places, traditions, or historical events, all supernatural bits are 100% made up (sorry, no refunds if you go monster-hunting and only find raccoons). This blog is meant purely for entertainment, so read, laugh, shiver, and please don’t fact-check me with holy water.
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The forests of the northern United States and Canada have always carried warnings older than the maps drawn over them. The Algonquian peoples, Cree, Ojibwe, Innu, Saulteaux, among others, spoke of something that lingered in the treeline during famine winters, something that waits for men to break. They called it the Wendigo.
Not just Wendigo, though. The name mutates as much as the stories do: Windigo, Witiko, Weendigo, even Windikouk in some accounts. The word changes depending on whose fire you’re sitting beside, but the meaning remains: a creature of hunger without end.
The Wendigo myth was born in survival stories. During winters when the snow buried every path and food ran out, starvation pushed people into unthinkable choices. The tale says those who resorted to eating human flesh crossed a threshold, they became cursed, hollowed out into something no longer human.
But cannibalism is just one root. Other traditions describe the Wendigo as a malevolent spirit, one that possesses the desperate or the greedy, twisting them into monsters. In some tellings, it’s not an accident or a choice, it’s a curse, laid by spirits or shamans as punishment for gluttony, selfishness, or consuming more than one’s share.
Either way, the Wendigo is never just about hunger. It’s a moral story first: a nightmare given form to keep people alive, and human, when survival threatened to strip them of both.
Descriptions diverge across regions. Some Cree stories describe the Wendigo as emaciated, its skin stretched over bones, lips gnawed away, eyes sunken deep. Among the Ojibwe, it is said to grow taller with every meal, forever towering, its size increasing in proportion to its appetite.
Later retellings, especially in modern horror, add antlers or a deer skull face, an image that looks cinematic but strays far from older traditions. The original Wendigo looked uncomfortably human, almost too human: gaunt, gray-skinned, the stench of decay clinging to it. Some legends even speak of a frozen heart, a shard of ice at its core.
Wherever the story is told, the Wendigo is always cold, always hungry, and never full.
The Wendigo is defined by what it lacks, satisfaction. It craves human flesh, but the more it consumes, the hungrier it becomes. Stories say it stalks the wilderness during deep winters, mimicking human voices to lure travelers into the snow. Others grant it unnatural speed, impossible endurance, or even near-immortality, making it less a predator and more a natural disaster given legs.
Symbolically, the Wendigo is greed itself. A devourer that consumes not just food, but people, communities, even entire landscapes. Modern scholars have drawn parallels between the Wendigo and colonialism, or even capitalism, an endless appetite that strips the land bare, leaving nothing but ruin in its wake.
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Reported Accounts & Evidence:
“You can smell it before you hear it. Like frozen meat that’s gone bad. That’s when you know to stay inside.”
- Collected from Cree oral tradition, 1910
The most infamous historical case is that of Swift Runner, a Cree man in Alberta who murdered and ate his family during the famine of 1878. He confessed he was under the influence of a Wendigo. To the courts, it was murder; to locals, it was proof of the curse.

Psychiatrists once coined the term “Wendigo Psychosis” to explain what they believed were cases of delusion: individuals fearing they were becoming cannibals, or craving human flesh. The diagnosis has since been disputed, but the name remains as a footnote in psychology.
“Trapper reports finding camp abandoned, stew pot still boiling. Nearby snow showed prints ‘not of man, nor moose.’ Locals refused to pursue trail further north.”
- Newspaper clipping, Whitefish Bay, 1921

“They whisper of a sickness of the soul. A man may look as any other, but his heart is ice, his eyes are black, and he feeds where no man should.”
- Field note, unnamed missionary, 1896
“The Wendigo is born when the fire dies first.”
- Folk proverb, attributed to Saulteaux elders
Traditionally, fire is the weapon of choice. Burn the body, scatter the ashes, prevent it from returning. Some versions speak of shamans able to drive out the spirit with ritual, releasing the trapped human soul inside. Modern pop culture, of course, adds silver bullets and holy weapons, but those belong more to Hollywood than to the northern woods.
The Wendigo survives because hunger never really leaves us. It’s a story about famine, about fear, about what we’re willing to do when survival strips away morality. But the story also mutates, from spirit to monster, from cannibal to capitalism, always finding a new form, like it refuses to die.
Whether it’s a myth to frighten children, a metaphor for endless greed, or something that still waits in the tree line when the snow comes down, the Wendigo remains an old warning that never lost its teeth.
Some nights, hunters swear they still hear voices calling their name in the woods. And those who’ve heard them don’t go looking.
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Credits:
Written & Compiled By: Zen (me)
Artwork By: Emma (my best friend)
Evidence:
Newspaper clipping, field note - Created by Zen
Wendigo territory map - posted on Reddit by user u/badbitch115 under the subreddit r/WendigoStories
Profile records of Swift Runner - posted on murderpedia.org
Sources & Inspirations:
wikipedia.org
britannica.com
thearcheologist.org
murderpedia.org
mysteriesofcanada.com
And more...
#fiction#literature#myths#supernatural#wendigo#urban legends#article#journalism#lore#folklore#spooky#spooky season#horror#creepy art#creepy#creepy folklore#native mythology#cryptid#cryptid culture#monsters#paranormal#paranormal story#cursed knowledge#haunted#haunted history#errie#scary stories#scary
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