Forgot to share it here š
I love this dude šš
mitsuba day infographic!!!! i made this to help educate english-speaking fans who might not be aware of the association between 3/28 and mitsuba, since i know it stumped me when i first learned about it lol :D and it was fun to make, i loved drawing the little mitsuba on the side there (*Ā“Ļļ½*) anyway happy mitsuba day!!
TOILET-BOUND HANAKO-KUN (2025) 08. make it sound nice
what i gather
Night-Life š
Sure! Hanako have too much to work with, since he is the main character, so Iāll focus on the thing I love the most about him: His inexperience when it comes to caring about others.
Hanako put up thick walls between himself and his peers, rarely connecting to others, be they humans or supernaturals.
Helping students and keeping them safe is his duty, his punishment to atone, not something he personally wants, his own personal view is far more ācoldā, Amaneās empathy was destroyed after he became a supernatural, beaten down after sixty years of being dead.
What he tells Kou here is true.
He has shown time and time again, peopleās life isnāt particularly important to him,Ā heāll exchange one life for another without guilt for the person he doomed because of personal preference, and had destroyed yorishiros since the start of the manga, knowing of the danger of doing so, for his own gains.
Before the manga story starts, Hanako is alone.
He plays with the other mysteries but he doesnāt consider anyone his friend. He keeps a distance even from Tsuchigamori, unaware Amaneās moon rock is his old teacherās yorishiro and seemingly not talking to him much, only looking for Tsuchigomori when he needs him for something.
He is apathetic to practically everything, drowning in his own misery: Tsukasa is the only one that can break him out of his apathetic state, and he terrifies Hanako. Even though he is the titular character, we never see Hanakoās boundary because he doesnāt want to face his yorishiro, finding it much easier to hide and spend his afterlife in the bathroom instead.
Tsukasa was important to Amane, and while he is important to Hanako as well, Tsukasa is rarely perceived as his brother, his presence is mostly treated as the personification of Hanakoās guilt. Hanako hasnāt tried to understand Tsukasaās feelings or expressed worry about his well-being: out of all his comflicting emotions, his priority is usually to look away.
Hanako has spent his afterlife in this limbo of running away and not connecting with anyone, but eventually, he met two people he got very attached to: Kou and Nene.
He loves them a lot, much more than he loves himself.
He will try his very best to face Tsukasa, the embodiment of the trauma he has been running away from, to keep them safe.
Most of the time, Hanako fails: he is too terrified to act, he panics.
He canāt help when Tsukasa is his oponent.
Even outside his past, there are still things Hanako canāt help with.
The guilt and panic and pain of having no use for someone he wants to help hurt, but Hanako doesnāt run away from this pain.
He tries to help anyways, to reach out as best he can.
And Kouās trouble linger in his mind, when the kid gets depressed again, Hanako try to help him again.
He want Kou to feel better.
He may have said āHe is kind of like you, isnāt he, No.2?ā but he doesnāt care about Yako or her attachment to Misaki, his attention is on Kou the second he finish his request: interested in his reaction, not her feelings.
He is selfish though, he cares about their feelings, but he mostly listens to his own, which is most obvious to see with Nene.
In the clock keepers arc he mentioned he kept Neneās lifespan secret because he wants her to live her best life in blissful ignorance, but he doesnāt make her the priority, he makesĀ himself: He is aware she hates toilet duty, no one enjoys being forced to waste their evenings cleaning a bathroom, but he likes it.
He rarely enjoys things, so he canāt let go of it. He canāt sacrifice this hint of joy for the sake of Nene living āher best lifeā.
He adores spending time with her, and since he has very little self-worth, he is convinced she would never spend time with him by her own volition, heĀ needsĀ to use the cleaning duty to keep her close.
Is why he gets so happy when she calls him a friend.
This love, this care, is something Hanako really wants from her.
But is also something Hanako doesnāt think he deserves.
He can get frustrated by how much they love him, by how distorted their view is, as if he is a āgood ghostā. He loves their kindness but he feel greedy for it, he loves their optimist but he is constantly looking down at them for it.
He loves them but he hates himself. So he sabotage himself.
He tells Kou and Nene point blank his bad traits āI am dead already. I donāt care if someone dies or not.ā āI killed someone and you shouldnāt excuse itā āI am selfish, I care about you Nene, and not your best friend.ā are things he only tell Nene and Kou, as if he was screaming. āI am not a good ghost!ā even if he will neverĀ tell them āLeave me alone, stop visiting me.ā
Hanako is constantly fighting between clinging to what he loves, regardless of how much his behavior hurt them, and telling himself he should want them away from him.
Both of his attempts to save Nene involved being away from her, either trapping her in picture-perfect until she forgot about him, or exchanging Aoiās lifespan with Neneās, saving her but making it so he canāt see her again, and she would eventually forget about him.
The more Hanakoās love for Nene grow the bigger the lengths he is willing to go for her, even if at it core, his love remains selfish, he knew Nene wouldnāt be happy with his solutions, but he doesnāt care, cause she will live, and she will live by his own hands.
He acts like doesnāt know why he does this a lot of times:
And to some degree, he truly doesnāt know.
Hanako has many mental blocks when it comes to admitting vulnerability, even to himself. He looks anguished when he confesses to Nene that he wants her to live.
Hanako never had a wish, not outside his āwishā to atone, which he constantly refears to as punishment, not something he personally want, just something he deserves.
Ā Even as Amane he had given up on his wish.
So wishing for Nene to live is a very new feeling.
This wish makes him go against his duties as No.7 and his quest to ārepentā, but he canāt even care because heĀ reallyĀ wants her to live. And is not like going against āgodās willā is what trouble him, since he destroys yorishiros the second he got the chance.
He just want her to not die that much. He can no longer deny he is smitten with her.
We can see this all consuming care with Kou too, even if it is more subtle itās still very present, and just as impactful in his afterlife.
Nene is someone he loves but very rarely rely on, she is his special someone, heāll go above and beyond to do what he believe is best for her, ask anyone and even if they disapprove of his actions, they canāt deny he cling to her, always ready to rescue her.
His view on Kou is different, he is someone he ask to fight and help. Is not that he doesnāt trust Nene, not exactly, but he had the āIāll keep you in the dark mentalityā from the second they met, while he never planed to treasure Kou, he just saw enough potential, or use, in this exorcist kid to occasionally rely on him.
Hanako plans for Kou only involved a vague āhe can exorcise me laterā idea, but he ends up genuinely caring about Kou after he stand up for him agaist Teru in the young exorcist arc.Ā
Itās no longer just āthis boy is so funny! I can both make fun of him and use himā, now Kou is his friend.
Just compare how he treats Kou when he is in Yakoās boundary, and in Hell of Mirrors.
He has gotten the habit to be more honest with Kou, he is always counting on him on little things when they are together, and it hurts so bad when Kou fail, because Hanako trusts him, and he hasnāt trusted someone in such a personal way inĀ 60 years.
Hanako is more comfortable hating himself them his friends, so he usually doesnāt let his dissapointment in Kou linger. Focusing most of his negative thoughts on himself.
Kou isnāt infallible, but he is the one Hanako trusts the most. Hanako used to trust Kou almost blindly, holding on to the feeling, but once he was let down, he gets so hurt, he resents the feeling.
He is a contradictory character. It feels like he hate Kou at times and is frustrated by Nene, but he canāt stop caring about them. He only got attached to two people, he can try, and he will, but he canāt pretend they arenāt important to him.].
We know Hanako lingered in Meiās fake world because his deepest wish is to be human with Nene. So even though it is a big red flag for Nene to see āAmaneā in her class, the supernatural couldnāt resist playing pretend.
Just for a bit, just for a taste of a normal life with her.
He is consistently selfish and irrational when it comes to Nene. He canāt let go.
His view on Kou is less frenzy but he canāt be discarded either, the kid is the other half of his reason to want to be alive after years of just accepting his death.
He have made up his mind about not going anywhere, he still refuse to follow the crew to Meiās exit, to the moon, but he wants Kou and Nene to always come to him.
Cause even thought Yashiro was his focus, and Mitsuba took most of Kouās time, Hanako does make it very clear he want Kou there. He even try to knock Kou out like he did with Nene the second he notices Mitsuba failed to distract him.
He risked Kou being in this world, indulged Mitsuba in his dream to be human and live a normal school life by the side of friends, which is a wish Hanako has shown to actively disapprove of in hell of mirrors (and is the very same wish that Hanako have expressed to have in this arc), because Kou is part of it.
His motives for wanting to trap Kou until he lose his memories are unclear but his anger towards Kou for giving him hope after years of nothing only to realize he canāt back up his promises to make Nene live is all over picture perfect.
And Hanako is a coward, he get angry kou want to stop him, discount his anger on Mitsuba, doesnāt explain anything, take Nene, and leave Kou confused.
Hanako only loses his patience and tell how he feels when Kou is in his way, and Hanako needs to beat him if he wants Nene to stay.
The one thing that heāll always prioritize above all else is Nene after all.
There is a certain determination to only focus on Nene after picture-perfect, not take Kou as seriously.
And what kills me is that Hanakoās attempts to distance himself are very half-hearted.
It fails.
No matter how real his anger and dissapointment, his care is just as real, if notĀ more so.Ā He is still eager to play fight with Kou and spend time with him. Their overall trio dynamic isnāt affected.
Is always āNeneā and āKouā and āeveryone elseā. Even when Kou isnāt in the scene, Hanako thinks of him.
There is this idea Kou is important, an implied āIf I canāt save Nene, Kou will be the one to save herā, even with all the reasons and proof he has that Kou canāt do something as big as alter her fate, part of him still believe Kou can do it. Is a part of him that is illogical and Hanako hates it, and doesnāt want to deal with it.
So he focus on Neneās lifespan, he became obsessed with it.
He has always been possessive of Nene. In any chapter they are together he is touchy and flirty and so openly attached to her, itās insane!
He knows he is in love.
He also knows he is the ghost of a dead killed and feels like Nene deserves better than what he has to offer, but he canāt let her go.
Even when he is determined to grant her wish, to make a āno turn backā decision, his determination crumbles the second they are face to face, his logic dies and he is just⦠Happy to see her again.
Even if he knows his plans failed, even if he knows she will die, he just⦠like seeing her.
His love is openly selfish and doomed to not last, which is something he understands and doesnāt know how to deal with, but just like he canāt force himself to truly hate Kou and stop believing in him, he also canāt force himself to stop loving Nene and desperately trying to find ways to make her live.
He is a mess.
I LOVEEEE HOW WE CAN SEE HOW DIFFERENT THEIR HANDS LOOK. mitsuba's looks more refined and round while kou's look bigger and more square-like?? I really like these details in tbhk, you can see that kou's hands are more rough and strong looking, while mitsuba's looks fine and kinda feminine, it's a little detail but I love it so much
idgaf if he's guilty or not that's MY WIFEEEE AND HE'S BACKKKK
idk but this duo is so peak
oh
he kept his promise
i'm sick