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  • You know when someone tells you there’s something cool nearby that you didn't know about

  • and you don’t believe it at first like er

  • 20 minutes away, in the mountains, incredible donkey farm.

  • Donkeys! I bloody love donkeys! Who doesn’t love a donkey.

  • Or

  • Two streets away, amazing Mexican restaurant, life changing tacos.

  • Tacos! Now way, everybody loves tacos don’t they? Tacos yeah!

  • Or

  • Next town over, an actual Mummy, better than Egypt.

  • No way! A Mummy! Everybody loves a Mummywait what?

  • It turns out I don’t have to spend my pocket money to go to Egypt to see a Mummy,

  • there’s one just an hour down the road.

  • And this isn’t just a mummy who’s been wrapped in bandages and chucked in a box

  • - this Mummy, is actually a person who killed themselves in a deliberate and torturous act of self mummification.

  • Now I’ll admit I’ve always wanted to see a Mummy, ever since I was kid reading about Ancient Egypt and the infamous pharaoh Tutankhamen.

  • As someone who hasn’t considered turning themselves into a mummy, recently,

  • I find it quite difficult to understand what led them to actually do such a thing.

  • So today were off to Fukushima to get some answers. Were going on a day trip to explore the local area but above all,

  • to find out why someone would turn themselves into a Mummy.

  • I didn’t think I’d ever say that in a video.

  • The tour group were joining in Fukushima is in the middle of Sendai and Tokyo,

  • and our first stop of the day is a temple hidden away in a cedar oak forest,

  • in a scene that looks like something straight out of Indiana Jones.

  • So there’s 466 of these statues, they cost $2,000 to make and theyre donated by people who want some good luck and good fortune.

  • I almost see it as religious bribery. Some of them are quite new

  • - in fact the newest one was only made just 3 days ago. I love the way each one of them has it’s own unique special characteristic.

  • This guy has his sunglasses on, with some kind of giant polo.

  • This guy has the scariest face I’ve ever seen.

  • There’s even one over there with beats headphones. There’s no escape from Beat by Dre is there?

  • Theyre everywhere.

  • The temple has a limit of 500 statues, so if you fancy some good luck, there’s still time for you to commission a statue of yourself

  • looking like Kim Jong il,

  • or an amazing spinach face.

  • It’s surely the best possible way to spend $2,000 dollars.

  • I’d love to make my own, but I don’t have $2,000 laying around.

  • Our next stop is a world away from the forest of cheeky statues.

  • Or at least, it certainly looks like it; down in the depths of Fukushima’s most impressive caves.

  • So were in this hall now in this giant cave - it’s 29 meters tall and 25 meters in diameter

  • and it’s incredible to think this wall just formed just by water coming down and dissolving all the lime.

  • But my first thought was, fuck, I hope one of those lime stone spikes doesn’t fall down on my head. That’d be a pretty bad end to the afternoon.

  • Apparently it took 80 million years for this to form so that’s quite reassuring. I don’t think theyll be coming down in a hurry.

  • I think the best way to describe this cave is, it’s like being in an alien’s stomach.

  • Imagine youve been eaten by a really big alien, this is probably be what it looks like.

  • I’ve gone a bit delusional. Being down in the cave for the last hour has driven me slightly mad.

  • I may have lost my mind, but to be fair I can be forgiven, considering the randomness of what I discovered down in the cave.

  • So were in this limestone cave and there’s this big illumination.

  • Balloon art they call it - and there’s hundreds of little balloons lit up.

  • And then over here there’s just randomly a space shuttle. A space shuttle and space men.

  • I suppose nothing says limestone cave quite like a space shuttle.

  • Don’t know what the relevance is.

  • After the caves we were given kimonos to wear for the rest of the day, and headed off to welcome in some good luck for the New Year.

  • I might not have 2,000 dollars, but I can do the next best thing.

  • These small objects are everywhere in Japan. Theyre called Daruma, and theyre modeled on Bodhidharma, the founder of zen buddhism.

  • Daruma dolls are seen as a symbol of perseverance and good luck, and today I’m paining my own and trying to make it look good.

  • Such skill and craftmanship.

  • Everyone’s looks quite good, except mine.

  • And I just ruined it. It looked really good. It had a beautiful little face and then I just got carried away.

  • It’s beyond repair now.

  • Maybe I’ll just turn it into a cat or something.

  • It’s just getting worse, isn’t? Still it’s unique in it’s own special way.

  • The Mummy could be found in a little town called Asakawa, in the Kinkyuuzan Kansyuji temple, sat upright in the position he passed away in.

  • I don’t want to stare at it too long, as I’m going to have some serious nightmares tonight.

  • It’s a little bit creepy to think that was a person once.

  • So 330 years ago this monk made the ultimate sacrifice.

  • It’s kind of like suicide but maybe much more difficult than suicide.

  • Disciplined suicide, is the only way I can think of describing it.

  • In Japanese the Mummy is called a Sokushinbutsu - which roughly translates asflesh idol”.

  • His name is Yutei and 330 years ago he was a Buddhist monk,

  • who followed a sect of Buddhism which practiced the art of self mummification.

  • The practitioners believed that by this wasn’t an act of suicide, but a form of enlightenment.

  • At the age of 92, the local townsfolk were infected with a terrible disease, and Yutei believed he could help people’s suffering by becoming a Soksushinbutsu.

  • And in this form, he would be able to pray for the town for eternity.

  • The first stage of becoming a flesh idol is to rid your body of all water and fat, by limiting food intake to just a few nuts, until youre little more than a skeleton.

  • Only then are you ready for the next stage of locking yourself away.

  • So this is the stone coffin that Yutei sat in for 15 days.

  • And everyday for 15 days, he’d ring a little bell to let the people on the outside know that he was alive.

  • And when stopped and he was dead, they left him in there for 3 years and 3 months and then they brought him out and he looked like that.

  • But if you looked at Yutei’s mummified body, you can see he has some flesh intact.

  • He’s not all just bone. And that’s a symbol that he’s succeeded in becoming a sokunshibutsu.

  • And where I’m standing right now he’s staring right at me. I’m going to have some serious nightmares tonight.

  • These Buddha here was actually placed on top of this stone coffin, to make sure he couldn't get out.

  • A minute ago I looked at that and thought, oh that’s beautiful.

  • But now I look at that and can’t help but think, that kept him locked in there. That makes me feel eurgh.

  • Apparently a lot of people went through with this procedure, but not many actually succeeded as they couldn't bare it.

  • But Yutei succeeded he pulled it off. And now look at him. He’s got his very own shrine.

  • What a lucky guy.

  • At just one hour north of Tokyo by bullet train, it’s a pretty easy region to explore.

  • If you need somewhere to stay after there’s lots of good resorts in the region;

  • we stayed at the nearby Yahataya Inn, with some excellent food and hot springs.

  • I’ve put the full itinerary in the description box below,

  • including the place in Koriyama city where we were given the stylish kimonos to wear during our trip.

  • I’m off now, to write about a book on how to paint,

  • so anyone can paint with the same skill and precision as myself.

  • Many thanks for watching guys - I’ll see you next time.

  • But if you looked at Yutei’s mummified body, you can see he has some flesh intact.

  • He’s not all just bone. And that’s a symbol that he’s succeeded in becoming a ...

  • And that’s a symbol that he’s succeeded in becoming a sokunshibutsu.

You know when someone tells you there’s something cool nearby that you didn't know about

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