Female Possession

Possession
Possession
"From today onwards, I will take every decision of your life. What you will eat, where will you go, when will you speak, what you will wear it will be all as I wish. And if you dare to defy me then till now it must have been crystal clear to you how far I can go to keep my words," his voice unsympathetic and cold, causing a shiver down her spine. Out of fear she was not even able to raise her head and kept her eyes casted down. He lifted her head up with his forefinger, underneath her chin and stared directly into her mesmerizing hazel eyes. "Understood?" Her throat was parched and her mouth was dry. Her tongue felt heavy in her mouth. The seam of her lips was cracked and pasted with each other and she couldn't find enough courage in herself to say anything using her tongue, so she just nodded and casted down her eyes again. He raised her chin more now with his forefinger and thumb, indicating her to look in his eyes and she did so. "Understood?" He asked again and raised both his eyebrows, warning her. "Yy....ye..ss" she croaked out. Her eyes were widened with fear and hands were fisting the bedsheet. Her cheeks were imprinted with red finger marks. "Good. Now take of your clothes and fulfill your duty" he ordered. She only pleaded him with her eyes. Clearly, she didn't want her wedding night to turn out like this.
8.4
107 Chapters
Possession
Possession
I was living in a peaceful, lonely world of humans, until I found out that I was a mate to werewolves. I thought when the love comes, it will be sweet and kind and something of my own world. But Rush, and Liam bound me, possessed me, captivated me until there was no world beyond them. They waited for over eighty years for me to come into lives. And now that they have found me, they planned to share me. 
9
62 Chapters
Possession
Possession
Ethan Walker, the complete definition of rude, arrogant and dangerously handsome. He listens to no one, and does things his way, the first and only son to Alex and Sage Walker, he's a spoilt rich brat. If there's anything about Ethan is that he hates sharing, no matter how minute it is, once it's his then he would rather hell freeze over than share it. But that changes when he is forced to share his parents love and attention with a strange girl. At 7 he already disliked this girl that stole his parents love and attention from him. And he vowed he would make her life a living hell. But is that the only reason he dislikes her? Ava Walker, the adopted daughter of Alex and Sage Walker, after trying for years to conceive after their first child with no luck, they opt in for adoption and they chose her. Shy, naive, beautiful and smart, Ava is forced to take the harsh and cruel words of her foster brother all the while making sure his parents don't find out because she'd hate to be the reason his parents scold him. Hurt by the fact that Ethan will never agree to calling her his sister or accepting her into the family, she is faced with a bigger challenge when things get complicated between them. Now one question keeps ringing in her head. Does Ethan really hate her? It's going to be a long ride for Ethan and Ava. Story contains explicit sexual content and a lot of smut
10
31 Chapters
Possession~
Possession~
"What do you think you are doing?" Luna shouted looking at the man in front of her who was pointing a gun at her father. "Luna, you have to come with me." Arthur spoke as he tilted his head towards her. "Leave him, I will go with you." Luna said as tears escaped from her eyes. "Your daughter is smart," Arthur spoke looking at her father. Walking towards Luna Arthur picked her up on his shoulder whilst she kept on shouting, "I can walk on my own." and hit his back. "We never know, kitten." he pushed her inside the car and then sat next to her. {Luna, A 21 years old College Going girl, who was financially struggling caught the eyes of the most powerful mafia, Arthur. at first glance Arthur became obsessed with her and swore that he will make her possession.}
10
230 Chapters
Possession
Possession
I'll have you after tonight, if you want to get rid of me, give it to your sleep. This JayPark life has you more fun?
Not enough ratings
15 Chapters
Alpha Female
Alpha Female
Zelayah thought she had a perfect life. Her mate was her first crush. She has always loved him. He was best friends with her older brother. He her as his mate while she was still a pup and her father allowed her to move to his pack when she turned 17. They marked each other as soon as her wolf scented him. Her best friend since childhood followed her to her mate's pack. She had the love of her life and her best friend and only friend with her beside her. What could possibly go wrong? Her friend Khalis Turner decides she wants Zelyah's mate and her Luna's position. Khalis schemes with other alphas to break up the relationship between Zelayh and Kosta. Khalis feeds Kosta a bunch of lies about Zelayah. Kosta has his own demons and insecurities. Khalis feeds on them and causes a wedge between Kosta and Zelayah. Will Kosta and Zelayah live happily ever after or will Kosta live with regret and remorse after losing his Alpha Female?
8.8
75 Chapters

What Are Acclaimed Novels About Female Possession?

5 Answers2025-08-26 22:03:59

I still get the chills thinking about the first time I read 'The Exorcist' — there’s a reason it’s the touchstone for stories about girls being possessed. William Peter Blatty’s novel nails the old-school demonic-possession blueprint: a young girl, a desperate mother, and the ritualistic, theological fight to reclaim a body. If you want the classic, visceral take, start there. It’s also fun (in the spine-tingling way) to follow that by the modern meta-horror of 'A Head Full of Ghosts' by Paul Tremblay, which rewrites the premise through the lens of media sensationalism and unreliable narration. Tremblay keeps you unsure about whether the girl is actually possessed or if the family is collapsing under a different kind of real-world horror.

For a different, more literary and haunting treatment, read 'Beloved' by Toni Morrison. It’s not possession in the exorcist sense, but the way a ghost — a young woman — returns and overtakes a household is a devastating study of trauma, memory, and ownership of the body. If you like gothic atmospheres mixed with psychological ambiguity, add 'The Haunting of Hill House' by Shirley Jackson and 'The Turn of the Screw' by Henry James to your list; both revolve around women (or a woman) who may be claimed by forces they can’t fully name. Each book approaches possession from a different angle — theological, psychological, social — so you end up reading the same idea through many fascinating lenses.

Which Films Depict Female Possession Most Realistically?

6 Answers2025-08-26 00:41:36

Watching possession movies as a late-night horror junkie has made me picky about what feels 'realistic' — for me realism comes from behavior, medical confusion, and cultural rituals that don't feel cartoonish. The classic that still resonates is 'The Exorcist' because Regan's changes — the voice shifts, aversion to holy symbols, sudden fits — are shown with medical skepticism first, then spiritual intervention. That back-and-forth between doctors and clergy is what sells it.

If you want something that blurs psychiatry and the supernatural, 'The Exorcism of Emily Rose' is brilliant; it stages a courtroom drama that forces viewers to weigh neurological explanations against testimony of otherworldly events. On the quieter, more unsettling end, 'Requiem' captures the slow, draining ambiguity of a young woman losing touch with reality, and it's loosely based on a real case which helps it feel grounded rather than theatrical. For raw, emotionally volatile breakdowns masquerading as possession, 'Possession' (1981) is terrifyingly honest about a woman's unraveling, though it's far more surreal. Those films, to me, balance clinical detail, family trauma, and religious response in ways that feel believable instead of exploitative.

What Are Cinematic Tropes Of Female Possession In Horror?

5 Answers2025-08-26 14:07:56

I get chills thinking about how often female possession in horror leans on the body-as-battleground trope. When I watch a film like 'The Exorcist' or 'Carrie', what stands out isn’t just the supernatural act but how filmmakers use physical transformation—vomit, levitation, convulsions—as shorthand for something cultural being ruptured. Directors love to make the female body a visible site where anxieties about sexuality, motherhood, and obedience play out. Hair gets stubbornly long or slashed, eyes go black or roll wildly, and the camera lingers on mouths and throats as if the voice itself were stolen.

I also notice how often narratives force a binary: purity vs corruption, innocence vs monstrous. That dichotomy shows up in costume (white dresses drenched in blood), in domestic spaces invaded (nurseries, bathrooms), and in rituals—Catholic exorcisms, witch-hunts, courtroom hearings—that externalize and institutionalize fear. There's usually a male authority trying to fix it, which adds a political layer: possession becomes a way to control or explain a woman’s behavior. I tend to watch these films with my laptop on my knees and a cup of tea, simultaneously fascinated and a little irked by how recycled some of the imagery is, but still thrilled when a movie subverts those expectations in unexpected ways.

Which Directors Specialize In Female Possession Stories?

5 Answers2025-08-26 13:15:40

I still get chills thinking about late-night horror marathons, and one pattern I kept noticing was how certain filmmakers keep circling back to women as vessels for otherworldly forces. William Friedkin is the obvious place to start — 'The Exorcist' practically defined modern cinematic female possession with its raw, religious dread. Roman Polanski takes a creepier, paranoia-driven tack in 'Rosemary's Baby', which isn't possession in the classic exorcism sense but where a woman's body becomes the battleground for something sinister.

Switching cultures, Japanese directors like Hideo Nakata ('Ringu') and Takashi Shimizu ('Ju-on') explore vengeful female spirits—onryō—whose curses and hauntings feel more like a spreading taint than a single demonic takeover. Andrés Muschietti treats maternal obsession and spectral motherhood in 'Mama' with a modern, gothic twist, while Jennifer Kent's 'The Babadook' reads like possession refracted through grief and mental health.

If you want to map the territory, look at those directors for different flavors: Friedkin/Polanski for religious/psychological, Nakata/Shimizu for ghost-curse folklore, Muschietti/Kent for contemporary, character-driven supernatural. Each one uses female embodiment to interrogate fear, agency, and loss—so pick one and follow the thread; you’ll start spotting thematic echoes across decades.

How Do Exorcism Rituals Address Female Possession Today?

5 Answers2025-08-26 10:44:13

I get curious about this topic every time a new documentary or true-crime podcast drops, because modern exorcism rituals sit at a messy crossroads of faith, medicine, gender, and culture. In my experience—after reading interviews with clergy and having late-night debates with friends—people who claim female possession are treated differently depending on community norms. Some churches still follow very traditional rites, leaning heavily on prayer, fasting, and specific liturgical formulas, while others insist on medical and psychiatric evaluations first. That shift is important: it means many contemporary rituals now start with consent and screening to rule out epilepsy, dissociative episodes, or trauma responses.

What fascinates me is how gender expectations shape the process. Women often face stigma—behaviors that might be diagnosed as PTSD or bipolar disorder in a clinical setting are sometimes framed as moral or spiritual failings in others. To address that, progressive ministers and some folk healers are pairing rituals with trauma-informed counseling, empowering women to share their stories and get ongoing care rather than being isolated during a one-off ceremony. I’ve seen community groups offer aftercare, social reintegration, and spiritual direction, which feels more humane than dramatic exorcisms alone.

How Do Anime Series Portray Female Possession Differently?

5 Answers2025-08-26 01:03:31

There’s a surprising variety in how anime handles female possession, and I get kind of giddy tracing the patterns. I like to split them into two big vibes: possession as loss-of-self (horror, tragedy) and possession as alternative agency (power, rebellion).

For the loss-of-self side you have brutal, body-horror takes where the possessed woman becomes uncanny and dangerous, like the cold, fragmented violence in 'Elfen Lied' or the parasitic takeover vibes of shows that use body invasion as a metaphor. Visual language matters here: sudden camera cuts, voice changes, and grotesque animation emphasize how invasive the experience feels. On the flip side, shows like 'Claymore' and some supernatural historical pieces treat the inside-presence as a source of power — complicated, morally gray — where the female host negotiates with something inside rather than being fully erased.

What I love most is how culture and genre bend the trope. Shinto-influenced works lean toward spirits, rituals, and bittersweet reconciliation ('xxxHOLiC' or 'Natsume's Book of Friends' style), while western-influenced exorcism stories highlight fear and purification. And then there’s the metaphor layer: possession as puberty, grief, or societal pressure is everywhere — sometimes subtle, sometimes shouted at you by the soundtrack. It makes watching these scenes feel like decoding a whole subtext about gender, control, and survival.

What Are Top-Rated Manga About Female Possession Themes?

6 Answers2025-08-26 15:05:44

Whenever I dive into horror manga I get greedy — I want both the slow-burn dread and the scenes that make my stomach flip. If you’re after top picks that center on female possession or women haunted by otherworldly presences, here are a few that always come up for me.

'Tomie' by Junji Ito is non-negotiable: it’s a classic revolving around a mysterious girl who won’t stay dead. It’s less about polite, exorcism-style possession and more about an inhuman presence that invades minds and society, driving obsession and violence. The short-story structure makes it perfect for dipping in and out of late at night.

For something more atmosphere-driven, 'xxxHOLiC' by CLAMP treats possession and spiritual entanglement as recurring plot devices—Yuko and the cast confront strange curses and possessions that often involve women whose wishes or grudges tie them to the spirit world. If you want creepy but beautifully drawn, it’s a great contrast to Ito’s raw horror.

Which TV Series Feature Female Possession As Central Plot?

5 Answers2025-08-26 08:28:03

I’ve always been drawn to stories where the supernatural messes with a woman’s life in a very intimate way, so I’ll start with the one that feels most on-the-nose: 'The Exorcist' (the 2016 TV series). It revisits the classic possession setup but places it in a modern context, focusing on the traumatic, very personal experience of a teenage girl and the ripple effects on her family and the priests trying to help. It’s grim, clinical at times, and leans hard into the exorcism ritual tradition.

Another show that lives and breathes female possession is 'Penny Dreadful'. Vanessa Ives’ arc is basically built around a long, drawn-out spiritual war — demonic influence, visions, and a supernatural identity crisis that sits at the heart of the series. It’s gothic, literary, and sometimes feels like watching a psychological horror novel play out on screen.

If you like anthology or seasonal horror, 'American Horror Story' repeatedly returns to possession, witches, and bodies being taken over — seasons like 'Asylum', 'Murder House', and 'Coven' each treat women’s bodies and minds as battlegrounds in different ways. And for a different cultural angle, the Korean thriller 'The Guest' centers on exorcism and possession across multiple characters (many of them female) and ties it to crime and family drama. Those are the ones I keep coming back to when I want possession done with emotional weight rather than just jump scares.

What Is The Spice Level In 'Alpha'S Possession'?

3 Answers2025-06-13 06:26:27

The spice in 'Alpha's Possession' is like a slow-burning fire—it starts subtle but builds into something intense. The early chapters focus more on tension than explicit scenes, with lingering touches and possessive dialogue that set the mood. Around the midpoint, the heat cranks up with detailed intimate moments that don’t shy away from raw passion or dominance dynamics. What stands out is how the spice serves the plot; it’s not just gratuitous. The alpha’s control mirrors their power struggles outside the bedroom, and the omega’s defiance adds sparks. If you enjoy buildup with payoff, this delivers. For milder reads, try 'Moonlit Bonds'; for unabashed heat, 'Claimed by the Pack' goes further.

Who Does 'Alpha'S Possession' End Up With At The End?

3 Answers2025-06-13 13:02:44

After binge-reading 'Alpha's Possession', I can confirm the protagonist ends up with the enigmatic werewolf leader, Kael. Their relationship evolves from forced captivity to mutual obsession, with Kael's possessive nature gradually tempered by genuine care. The final chapters show them ruling their combined packs as equals, their bond unbreakable after surviving betrayals and wars. Kael's violent tendencies are balanced by the protagonist's strategic mind, creating a power couple that dominates the supernatural world. The epilogue hints at their future offspring inheriting both their cunning and strength, setting up potential sequels. Their love story isn't sweet—it's feral, intense, and perfectly suited to the dark tone of the series.

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