We are the jinchuriki! And we stand against you!
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➤ These Secrets That Breed Loneliness
Fandom: Naruto
Chapters: 8 / 8
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: Graphic Depictions of Violence
Relationships: Senju Tobirama / Uchiha Madara, Jiraiya / Orochimaru, Senju Hashirama / Uzumaki Mito, Sandaime Kazekage / Yagura
Characters: Uchiha Madara, Senju Tobirama, Senju Hashirama, Uzumaki Mito, Orochimaru, Jiraiya, Yagura, Sandaime Kazekage, other background characters
Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Modern, Alternate Universe - College / University Setting, Alcohol, Underage Drinking, One-Sided Attraction, Slow Burn, Clubbing, Eventual S.x, Fluff and Smut, M.sturbation, S.xual Fantasy, Drugs, First Time, Implied / Reference R.pe / Non-con, Past Character Death
Five years following a convoluted incident that resulted in the death of Madara's little brother, Izuna, Madara and the Senju brothers who were also involved in the incident accidentally reunite in Philadelphia after losing contact with each other. Hashirama and Madara attend the same university while Tobirama completes his senior year of high school. As details of their dark pasts slowly come to light, Madara learns how to be close to someone again and Tobirama does his best to make amends. Meanwhile, Hashirama is confused but supportive, if not intimidatingly protective.
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YOUTUBE VIDEO
Birthday Bash | Yagura [New Year] Gameplay | Naruto Online - LA
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a friend of mine ( @malewifekisame ) wanted the other jinchuuriki to have themed hoodies, so yknow what i had to do! :D
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So the above photo I probably posted before; this was taken by me last summer on a trip to Kamakura (an old capital of Japan, about an hour south of Tokyo). It shows a dense cluster of "yagura", a type of tomb common in the area.
The general belief is that yagura were created because the rock around the valley of Kamakura is soft and there was not enough space in the valley below for burials, so people (mostly samurai/upper class) would cremate their dead in these things. It's also possible that some were created/used as cenotaphs (meaning the body was buried elsewhere, but the yagura contains a marker to honor the dead).
Anyways, what no sign bothers to tell you—and what I realized on my recent trip there (previous post)—is that these things (yagura) are everywhere in the hills around Kamakura. There's at least 1,500 of them and their numbers are estimated to be up to 5,000 in total.
Here's one just on the side of a small, dead-end residential road. This would be the view someone has out of their front door, across the street. You can see the stone marker inside.
But what interested me most was the lack of care/respect a lot of them are treated with. For example, on the left, on the grounds of a modern-day cemetery, is a yagura that's been reinforced with concrete and contains a cenotaph. But on the right is one that's been left to decay.
Some are put to more practical use, like this one beside a temple, which is being used to store wood.
Some people have them literally in their backyards. The fence on the let divides two residential properties, and the visible field is the backyard of a house.
Finally, some were cut deeper and turned into tunnels wide enough for a car to pass, and wide enough to store the local dumpster (the green thing on the left inside).
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