I’ve been looking for a place to live in Taiwan for the last 2 or 3 weeks. Some landlords/agents are really helpful and others are…not. I’ve seen about ten different places and will have to decide by the end of this week.
At one point, I saw a house on a local home renting/buying site and realized it had gone down in price three times. It was stunning and I couldn’t figure out why it was still on the market.
The logical side of me said, “Maybe there’s a reason…such as the fact that there’s a recession going on.” The irrational side of me said, “Maybe it’s haunted!”
I thought that there was no way for me, as a foreigner, to find out whether a place was haunted. Given that my reading ability in Chinese is really low and the fact that I’m still new to the area, I figured that even if something had happened in a particular space, that information would be really difficult to uncover.
I was wrong.
I was talking with a Taiwanese coworker, and I joked that even if several murders happened in an apartment, I would have no way of finding out. She then told me very seriously that if the agent/landlord doesn’t tell me truthfully about any unfortunate events, my rental/purchase agreement would become nullified.
I went to take a look at a place (the apartment shown in the picture above) the next day and thought to test this out so I asked the agent if that apartment was haunted. The question sounded stupid to me, but to my surprise, he answered me very seriously and didn’t think my question was strange.
Later that day, I came across this article.
A man has been sentenced to prison for eight months for selling a house without telling the buyer that someone had committed suicide there….because he did not tell the buyer surnamed Chang (張) that it was a “violent house” — a term meaning that an unnatural death, murder or suicide had occurred at the house
Whoa.




