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Krasue: The Floating Head of Southeast Asian Nightmares

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Floating in the air in rural parts of Thailand and the rest of Southeast Asia, the disembodied ghost of the Krasue is hunting for blood. 

Across Cambodia, Thailand, Laos, and parts of Malaysia, villagers share a haunting vision that lives in whispered folklore. They speak of Krasue, a spirit unlike ghosts tied to graveyards or old houses. Krasue is a night creature that floats, haunting fields, villages, and the spaces between human life and the unseen world. In tradition she is known as a flying female ghost whose existence is bound to hunger, loss, and a body untethered from death.

Read More: Check out more ghostly tales from Thailand

While exact details differ by region, the core of the legend remains consistent: Krasue is a detached head with its internal organs trailing below like shimmering tendrils. She moves by night, drawn to life, to blood, and to the living body.

An Unquiet Spirit of Loss

Origins of Krasue vary in telling. In some versions she was once a human woman who died a violent or untimely death. In others she was cursed, punished, or transformed because of forbidden knowledge or unclean acts. After she dies, her sins cause her to be reborn as a phut (Thai: ภูต) that has to live off wasted, uncooked or rotten food.

There are others claiming that this spirit was formerly a rich woman, who had a length of black gauze or ribbon tied around the head and neck as protection from the sunlight. This woman was possessed by an evil spirit and cursed to become a Krasue.

Perhaps most popular is the origin story of the Krasue, a woman dabbling in black magic. While casting a spell, she made a mistake or used the wrong spell, causing her head and body to separate. These witches and witchcraft are also called “Mae Mot” (แม่มด) or “Yai Mot” (ยายมด). If not the witch turned into a Krasue herself, her daughters or granddaughters could, like an ancestral curse.

Usually, her upper part is described as a young and beautiful woman, at least in visual media. She has also been described as an older woman. Her head glows faintly in the dark, often compared to a flickering lamp or a will-o’-the-wisp, floating in the air.  

Below the head hang her organs, trailing down from the neck. In contemporary representations her teeth often include pointed fangs in yakkha (Thai: ยักษ์) or vampire fashion. This as well as the belief she is hunting blood, has made people see her as a vampire-like creature as well as a restless spirit. 

A Predator of Night and Flesh

Krasue is not content to wander silently. She hunts. In the day she looks like any other person, perhaps a bit tired. But at night she sheds her lower par of her body at home or somewhere else to seek substance. Every night she floats through the forest looking for food. Most often this consists of rotting meat or the blood of living animals. 

But although her victims are often livestock, she loves the blood of humans as well. Especially children, and sleeping villagers whose breath and warmth draw her closer. 

In some regions she feeds by licking blood from wounds or drinking from open water. There is a legend that says that the people who are wounded should be aware of the Krasue because it can smell the blood and will come to eat the blood at night when people fall asleep. Thai people also believe that it’s a bad idea to leave your clothes hanging outside overnight because the Krasue might just come by and wipe the feces and blood from her mouth on them. 

Her lust for blood of children has especially struck a cord in the collective fear against the Krasue. This makes many in the olden days fear when someone is giving birth, as they believe a Krasue will be able to smell it and come devour on fresh placenta and newborns.

Protection Against the Night

The Krasue is, as mentioned, mostly spotted in rural areas, especially in marshy places. According to Thai ethnographer Phraya Anuman Rajadhon, the Krasue is accompanied by a will-o’-the-wisp-like luminescent glow. The explanations attempted about the origin of the glow include the presence of methane in marshy areas. The Krasue is often said to live in the same rural areas as Krahang, a male spirit of Thai folklore and these two spirits are often mentioned or represented together.

The Krahang: The Krahang (กระหัง) manifests itself as a shirtless man, wearing a traditional loincloth, who flies in the night. Krahang uses two large kradong (กระด้ง), round rice winnowing baskets to fly in the It also often rides a sak tam khao (สากตำข้าว), the long wooden pestle of a traditional manual rice pounder. Legends of the Thai oral tradition say that this is an evil spirit that may harm people walking at night in out of the way areas.

Because belief in Krasue was strong, so were the protective practices to keep her out of the house. House-owners usually build spiky fences or grow spiky bamboo to protect themselves from the Krasue. The Krasue is scared of spiky things because it fears its intestines will get stuck and it will not be able to escape.

If the top part of the body fails to find the lower half before daybreak it will die in terrible pain. The Krasue will also die if its intestines get cut off or if its body disappears or gets hidden by someone and exposed by the sun. Some folk beliefs hold that the creature can be destroyed by burning it. 

But can you destroy her completely? Some say the danger of her transforming someone into one of her own is high. It is said that if a human consumes food that is stained with the blood or saliva of a Krasue, they will be doomed to become one. In some versions she also shares her saliva when she is at the brink of death to move host bodies. 

The Southeast Asian Fear and Krasue in Modern Imagination

In modern interpretation, the Krasue has been morphed into a Khmer princess. One story tells about a Khmer princess many years ago who was in love with a man from a lower status even though she had been set to marry a Siamese nobleman. Eventually, he found out about this and sent her to be executed by burning at the stake. The night before the execution, the Khmer princess got in touch with a powerful witch and placed a spell over her to protect herself from the flames. Unfortunately, the affect arrived too late and only her head, neck, and her internal organs remained intact while the fire charred her body.

As mentioned, the Krasue is not only told in one place, but across many southeast asian countries and cultures. There are many variations to the legend, but one common denominator to it is the floating head and torso with her organs hanging down. 

The Name of the Monster: Krasue กระสือ (Thai), អាប Ahp (Khmer, Penanggal or Palasik (Malay), Kuyang ກະສື (Lao), Kui’yang, Leyak or Pok-Pok (Indonesian), Ma lai (Vietnamese). 

There have been written records of this lore since the Ayutthaya period (around 14th – 18th century), but even today she is grabbing headlines of people claiming to have seen her, causing panic and fear, and also a bit of intrigue. Often, women acting strangely in a community are suspected of becoming a Krasue at night by other members of the village. Many sightings are still being reported each year in rural areas with people blaming Kra Sue activity for mysterious livestock deaths and villages have set up night patrol squads after a reported Krasue sighting in the last few years.

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References:

Krasue – Wikipedia

The Tale of Phi Krasue and Her Floating Head – Spooky Stories From Thailand