wind phone

seen from Ukraine
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Malaysia
seen from Maldives
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Ukraine
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Romania
seen from China
seen from Singapore
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
wind phone
THE PHONE GUYS
IT'S A WIND PHONE
A wind phone originated in Ōtsuchi Japan, after a tragic tsunami.
This unplugged phone is for those of the living, can use to send messages to their loved ones, and send them off on whispers of the wind.
(PrincessElemmiriel on insta posted this on their story and it definitely makes sense!!! There's a Japanese Drama about it! I think there's also an anime movie. What a beautiful concept!!)
KH is occupying my headspace and I'm thinking about that wind phone again, which I still think it will be relevant in KH4.
Because of that damn rotary phone, this is the draft I wrote the other night.
Wind phone 🍁🍂
https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/2025/06/26/wind-phone-joshua-tree-grief/
After their teens died, this couple made a phone booth for anyone coping with loss
The “wind phone” was installed by Colin Campbell and Gail Lerner, whose children, Ruby and Hart, were killed by a drunk driver in 2019.
With respect to Itaru Sasaki.
I dedicate this Wind Phone to Grandmother.
Feel free to leave your posts to your departed loved ones.
Please be respectful, please be kind. We are all suffering. Perhaps, together, we can find some solace.
Itaru Sasaki, Creator of the Original Wind Phone
“The original Wind Phone was created in Japan by Itaru Sasaki while grieving his cousin who died of cancer. He purchased an old-fashioned phone booth and set it up in his garden. He installed an obsolete rotary phone that was not connected to wires or any "earthly system." Here, Itaru felt a continued connection to his cousin and found comfort and healing amid his grief. Itaru gave his phone booth a name, Kaze No Denwa (風の電話), translated as The Wind Phone.
The following year, in 2011, an earthquake (9.1 magnitude) resulted in a tsunami with 30-foot waves that obliterated the coast of Japan, destroying entire towns and taking thousands of lives. Many were swept out to sea, and their bodies never recovered. The city of Ōtsuchi is recorded with the highest number of missing persons. The tsunami's catastrophic ocean waves destroyed the town; its people were left in ruins by the tsunami of grief thrust upon them.
Itaru Sasaki salvaged his phone booth and relocated it on a windy hill overlooking the Pacific Ocean at the foot of the Kujira-Yama, next to the town of Otsuchi. He welcomed mourners to visit his phone booth to make calls to their friends and relatives lost in the great tsunami, hoping they would find a connection to help them cope with their grief as it did him.
The Phone of the Wind is a shrine mindfully created to connect people to their loved ones on the other side. It is one of the world's most powerful resilience sites. Grievers travel from around the world to "call" their loved ones in spirit, to say the things they didn't get a chance to say while the person was living. It is a place that offers the peace and solitude grievers need to work through their pain. Itaru Sasaki has inspired the creation of many beautiful spaces worldwide to hold space for a griever—one where the wind will carry their words to those they love who have gone ahead.
The Wind Phone in the Garden of Bell Gardia is managed solely by Itaru Sasaki and his wife. They depend on a charitable foundation that supports the area. To donate, please visit their official website for further information.”
https://bell-gardia.jp/en/donation/
Thousands of people visit a disconnected phone in Japan. Click to read the full fact.