![]() The plot thickened later when a friend of the girl in question said her friend had actually bumped into a girl who looked exactly like herself on the platform. The incident was later written off as a “mass hallucination.” Amazingly, not a single trace of her was found by the police or emergency services. ![]() #PARANORMAL HK ENDING EXPLAINED DRIVER#The driver immediately hit the brakes, but as the train carried on its forward momentum before coming to a stop, it was assumed that she had been crushed under the vehicle. At the Kwun Tong-bound platform in Yau Ma Tei MTR station, back when there were no automatic doors, various bystanders-including the train driver-saw a girl jumping off of the platform onto the tracks. This Hong Kong legend was a widely publicised matter that even made the national news back in 1981. Since then, there have been rumours that the spirits of the seven sisters are lurking in the waters, seeking revenge against men. It was very popular and many would go for evening dips, but the spooky thing is, there have been many cases of male swimmers drowning. In 1911, the Chinese Recreation Club erected the Seven Sisters Swimming Shed at a nearby harbourfront space. These were then understandably named the Seven Sisters Rocks. The villagers were never able to recover their bodies, but after the tide receded, instead found seven boulders arranged in a neat row of ascending sizes. ![]() ![]() However, the third sister’s family eventually tried to marry her off, so in a fit of desperate solidarity, all seven sisters drowned themselves in the ocean the night before the ceremony. As legend has it, there was once a group of women living in the area who swore a collective vow of celibacy and became blood sisters. Tsat Tsz Mui Road (七姊妹道) in North Point literally translates to “Seven Sisters Road” and is famously named after a creepy story. Photo: Easton Mok (via Unsplash) 1 A sisterly pact ![]()
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