Cheukshin

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Cheukshin (Hangul: 측신, Hanja: 廁神) is the deity of the outhouse, or bathroom, in Korean mythology. Unlike better-known deities such as Jowangshin, deity of the hearth, her worship forms a minor part of the Gashin cult.

In Mythology

Worship

Cheukshin was believed to appear as a young virgin with 150-centimeter-long hair. The goddess, infuriated at her exile to the outhouse by the supreme deity Cheonjiwang and kitchen goddess Jowangshin, was said to spend time by counting all her hair.

The goddess was believed to appear in the three lunar days containing the number 6; Koreans avoided the outhouse in these three days in order not to accidentally provoke the rage of Cheukshin. Thus, Koreans held Jesas, or rituals, to her in the sixth, sixteenth, and twenty-sixth days in the lunar calendar, or when a shoe or a child fell in the pit toilet. Jesas were also done for her when a pig contracted disease and died, when a prophecy warned of the anger of the goddess, or when the outhouse was built in the construction of the house.

In the Jesas dedicated to Cheukshin, Koreans put all ingredients possible inside a Tteok, which was called the Ttongtteok, meaning 'dung rice cake'. The Ttongtteok was then served to the goddess. Nonglutinous rice was also served.

She was regarded to be the most dangeous of the Gashin; she was believed to despise children (possibly because of her downfall by the child Nokdisaengin; see below) and topple them into the pit toilet. When children fell in the pit, it was believed that they would die before reaching maturity unless a Jesa was done to appease the goddess.

If anyone waiting outside the outhouse entered the outhouse without coughing three times, Cheukshin was believed to use her 150-centimeter-long hair to attack the intruder.[1] When the hair of Cheukshin touched the skin of the intruder, the intruder grew sick and died. Even a mudang, or shaman, could not appease the goddess if she attacked a person with her hair.

She was believed to embody a strip of cloth or white paper on the outhouse ceiling.

She was also believed to be the deity of legal punishment, following the orders of the house deity Seongjushin.[2]

No Guts, or shamanistic rituals, were held to dedicate Cheukshin, unlike the many Guts and Bonpulis (biographies of deities) dedicated to other Gashin. This was because it was believed that Cheukshin was an evil and malevolent deity, unlike the other Gashin.

Because of the conflict of Jowangshin and Cheukshin (see Munjeon Bonpuli, in Korea it was taboo to bring anything from the outhouse into the kitchen, and vice versa.

Other names

  • Cheukganshin (측간신)
  • Byeonso Gwishin (변소 귀신)
  • Dwitgan Gwishin (뒷간 귀신)
  • Buchul Gaxi (부출 각시)
  • Chikdo Buin (칙도 부인)
  • Cheukdo Buin (측도 부인)
  • Cheukshin Gaxi (측신 각시)
  • Chigwi (치귀)
  • Jeongngang Gwishin (정난 귀신)

See also

Jowangshin, goddess of the hearth

Teojushin, goddess of the earth

Outhouse

Pit toilet

Gashin cult, the worship of household deities (Gashin)

References

  1. Bari and the Tigers' Tale
  2. http://terms.naver.com/entry.nhn?docId=1147999&mobile&categoryId=200000428
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