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Who is Oniko, anyway?
I have several other webpages as well, each based around my other interests. I write about my trips to Japan and Japanese culture in general in Oniko Goes to Japan, and I'm trying to build a page explaining some things about American culture (in English and Japanese) called "Oniko's America" -- I'll let you all know when it's been posted up. Oh, and I have a site built around my studies of supposedly paranormal events often told of in America and Britain at Anomalies.
'Oniko' is comprised of two Japanese kanji -- Chinese characters adopted for use by the Japanese -- namely the top two big figures in the title to the left [all the small stuff at the bottom is just the Japanese equivalent to "'s Gallery" tagged onto the name]. The top character is 'Oni', which is a mythical Japanese monster. This word is usually translated to English as 'demon' or 'devil', but this is not an entirely correct description of the beast so named.
In Japanese myths, Oni are very angry characters that often cause humans all sorts of problems; but Oni are also associated with temples dedicated to Kannon, Buddhist goddess of mercy, and Oni were also believed to be the cause of thunder and wind during storms... a pair of Oni living in the clouds -- by the names of Fujin and Raijin, by the way -- are said to beat their drums loudly during storms and release great gusts of air from a huge bag, presumably because they really like the weather. Oni are described as looking like humans, except they have horns and fangs [so you can see why Oni got translated as 'Devil']. Some famous ancient illustrations of Oni show them wearing Tiger skins; and now that Onis have become popular fantasy characters in every style of Japanese comic book, they are almost always drawn wearing a tiger stripe motif. And for those of you who are familiar with the manga/anime series Urusei Yatsura, yes, the lead character named Lum is an Oni.
The second Chinese character in the name above is much simpler to explain. "Ko" -- the second big figure in the title -- simply means "child", and is a popular ending to add to a given name. For example: Ichiko ["First child"] is a popular name for the first born kid, and Momoko ["Peach child"] is a popular girl's name. So 'Oniko' imitates this style of naming by declaring me "Oni child"... though, believe me, I don't know of anyone in Japan who'd be tempted to name their kid Oniko.
So now that you know what the name means, the next thing to explain is why I felt it was a good choice for me.
In Japan there are only a few critters that coincide with all these interests -- Japanese monsters that favor rainy days, and that appear commonly in both ancient myths and modern comic books. Of these creatures -- Oni, Ryuu, and Kappa -- the Oni was the first I really learned about, thanks to the afore-mentioned comic book Urusei Yatsura. Also, the very character attributed to the Oni matches me in one more way in particular, so it was the one I choose. But to find out what that one extra match is, you have to find me and ask!
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