In folk religion, especially in western Japan, misaki are connected to the faith in spirit possession, and like
yukiaigami and
hidarugami among others, the
onryō of people who die of unexpected deaths and are not prayed for would frequently possess humans and cause calamities. and are frequently encountered as a type of premonition of sicknesses and other things. In the
Chūgoku region, it is said that the spirit of humans who die violent deaths become misaki. In the
Miyoshi District,
Tokushima Prefecture, it is said that when one senses fatigue at a river, it is because one has "become possessed by a kawa-misaki." In Shikoku, these spirit possession are called
hakaze, and it is said that humans and domestic animals who encounter them will become ill, and sometimes even die. In the
Kōchi Prefecture and the
Fukuoka Prefecture, they are seen as a type of
funayurei, and the spirits of people who die at sea are said to become misaki, and are said to possess fishing boats and inflict harm such as making the boat completely unable to move. This is commonly called "
shichinin misaki," and it is said that they would go away when one takes the ashes left over after cooking and drops them off the back of the boat. In the Fukuoka Prefecture, they are also considered a type of funayurei. Also, in western Japan, in the
Tsugaru Region,
Aomori Prefecture, when one is possessed by a misaki, one's body would shake without stop as if one's whole body was put in cold water, and like in Kōchi, by throwing the ashes from the firewood used in cooking off the ship, the misaki would be exorcised. ==References==