Lo Re Poko Sukusuku Official
In many animistic traditions, to name something is to gain power over it—or to give it power over you. By calling Sukusuku’s name, you are not summoning a servant; you are feeding a predator. The act of recognition (seeing it, naming it again) is precisely what empowers it. This inverts the typical heroic dynamic: victory lies not in confrontation but in ignoring . The only winning move is silence.
Physically, Sukusuku is unassuming: it resembles a small, childlike or rodent-like creature, no larger than a finger or a sparrow. It has large, inquisitive eyes and a soft, fur-like texture. Some accounts describe it as carrying a small mallet or staff, reminiscent of the shōjō or koro-pok-guru (the “little people” of Ainu mythology). Its most defining feature, however, is its total dependence on human speech. Sukusuku has no independent will to grow; it is a reactive being, an acoustic parasite. The core narrative of Lo Re Poko Sukusuku functions as a cautionary fable about repetition and escalation. The legend states that if a person speaks the name “Lo Re Poko Sukusuku” aloud, the creature will appear. Initially, it is barely visible—a speck, a whisper of fur. The moment the observer says its name a second time, the creature grows slightly, perhaps to the size of a mouse. With a third utterance, it becomes cat-sized. A fourth utterance yields a dog. A fifth, a small bear. lo re poko sukusuku
In an era of mass media, gossip, and later the internet, the story captures the fear that a single word—a rumor, a nickname, a slur—cannot be taken back. Each repetition amplifies its reality, making it larger and more unmanageable. The creature’s growth mirrors the way a small lie becomes a monstrous deception, or how an idle comment can balloon into a reputation-destroying scandal. In many animistic traditions, to name something is