In the anime and manga series 'Jutsushi Kaisen,' we do not know Megumi Fushiguro's mother. The tale centers on the relationship of Megumi Fushiguro and his father, Toji Fushiguro. However, after the death of Toge Fujiwara, Megumi spent his time living largely under Gojo's sensei. In future development of the story, it can only be hoped that these will become clearer.
Jujutsu Kaisen's Megumi Fushiguro is a captivating character with a deep sense of loyalty and protection towards those he loves.Since the start of Jujutsu Tech, Megumi's private life-something that puzzles everyone and besides being open aloof-also confounds us. The background of this student's family and its members beg many questions yet yield no answers for only in the storylineDeepen one's understanding of Megumi's past.His absent father, Toji Fushiguro, and sister Tsumiki can be considered their own characters of sorts as they are not linked to him as brother or son though they do exist in the same story. However, we still do not know who Megumi's mother isAfter receiving an excellent education in jujutsu techniques thanks to excellent teaching from Satoru Gojo, even though there seems to be no mother figure in his background. However, this missing female character could not escape his imagination (cf Home Vasuki).Gradually as the story continues and people's pasts are aired details are awaited with bated breath. So, when will Megumi's mysterious mother be revealed? And how will this help people understand him all the better?
2025-01-06 09:29:08
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My father was the God-King, and he loved my mortal mother with all his heart. To help her adapt to life in the divine realm, he even infused his own blood into her, granting her eternal youth and elevating her to the rank of a goddess. Defying the unanimous opposition of all gods, he built a resplendent palace solely for her here in the divine realm, making her the happiest woman across all heavens.
Yet he never loved me — his first child, born of him and my mother.
As time went by, he visited my mother less and less frequently. Eventually, I passed away. Mother begged him to seek justice for me, but he only replied indifferently, "We shall have many more children."
His words crushed every last glimmer of hope in her heart. Mother grew utterly disillusioned with him, and resolved to avenge me with her own hands. The God-King’s patience toward her dwindled day by day. It was as if I had been born bearing nothing but misfortune. To avenge my wrongful death, Mother cast aside everything she once held dear.
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When I was little, there was one time when she went out to play poker with her friends. As a result, she forgot to go home and prepare dinner on time.
After that, she slapped me in front of the entire family.
"This brat ran off to god knows where earlier! I went out looking for her, which is why dinner got delayed!"
Because of that lie, I had to kneel in the courtyard throughout the night.
When I was studying, I had to take an extremely important exam. My teacher repeatedly reminded the parents to prepare all materials required for their children.
But my mom didn't even prepare anything for me. After that, she even said in front of everyone, "I've already prepared the materials for her. She was the one who threw them away when she was on her way to school because she didn't want to take the exam at all!"
Since then, all of my classmates ostracized me throughout my entire school life.
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"Your father has been abusing me for so many years. I had to endure everything for your sake, you know!"
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"Your daughter egged me on to divorce you! She said she doesn't need a useless father like you! I couldn't stand it anymore, so I'm telling you this!"
He flew into a fit of rage on the spot, which led to him accidentally pushing me down the stairs. I died on the spot from the fall.
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I knew I deserved to die.
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Even the cheapest dish at school costs two bucks.
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“Pathetic little thing! I’m not stopping you from eating, so why are you begging?
“The school meals are expensive? Then why don’t you work hard and save up?”
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I was confident…
Who would’ve thought Mom would win?
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Dad paused for a moment, then didn't correct me.
"Yeah," he said quietly. "She passed away early."
At the school's parent-child sports day, Dad saw me slip a cleaner ten dollars and ask her to be my mom for the day.
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It wasn't until much later that Mom realized she hadn't heard from us in a long time.
She canceled her meetings and came to pick me up from school herself. But at the gate, the teacher frowned and stopped her.
Confused, she went home. The moment she stepped inside, she heard me talking to the property manager.
"My mom's dead," I said. "Do you wanna be my new mom?"
Megumi Fushiguro is one of those characters who sneaks up on you—quiet, reserved, but with a depth that makes him impossible to ignore in 'Jujutsu Kaisen'. He’s a first-year student at Tokyo Jujutsu High, and while he might not be as loud as Yuji or as flashy as Gojo, his strategic mind and moral complexity steal the spotlight. His cursed technique, 'Ten Shadows', lets him summon shikigami, and watching him evolve from cautious to confident is one of the series’ quiet triumphs.
What really hooks me about Megumi is his internal conflict. He’s constantly wrestling with the ethics of being a sorcerer, especially when it comes to killing. Unlike some shonen protagonists who charge ahead, Megumi pauses, questions, and sometimes stumbles. That humanity makes his growth feel earned. Plus, his dynamic with Tsumiki (his sister) adds this tender layer to his otherwise stoic exterior. The way Gege Akutami writes him—subtle, nuanced, never spoon-fed—is why he stands out in a sea of louder characters.
That moment in the story hits like a gut punch, and if we're talking about the direct cause of Megumi's death in 'Jujutsu Kaisen', the immediate responsibility falls on Sukuna. In the scenes where everything collapses, Sukuna is the one who executes the kill — he isn’t a passive force; he actively makes the choice in front of the other characters. That blunt fact is what most people point to first: Sukuna did the deed, and the panels don’t mince that reality. But I can't stop there because responsibility in that series rarely lives in a single fist. Kenjaku’s long game, the manipulation of events, and the way curses and humans are pitted against each other created the battlefield where such a thing could happen. Gojo’s sealing earlier, the political inertia, the moral compromises by other sorcerers — all of those threads are part of the ecosystem that made an outcome like this possible. So while Sukuna is the hand that struck, the system, the schemers, and the narrative setup are complicit. On a personal level, I find this multiplicity of blame compelling and cruel. It’s not clean justice or a simple revenge plot; it’s tragedy layered with choices, negligence, and inevitability. That makes the scene land so hard, and it makes me keep turning pages even as I dread what comes next. I still keep replaying a few panels in my head — the art, the silence, the reactions — and it's one of those moments that lingers long after the chapter ends.
Megumi is a lesser-known but fascinating manga that I stumbled upon while browsing through vintage collections at a local bookstore. The art style immediately caught my eye—it had this nostalgic, almost dreamy quality that reminded me of classic shoujo works from the '70s. After some digging, I discovered it was created by Masako Watanabe, a prolific mangaka who also wrote 'Hadashi no Gen' (though 'Megumi' is much gentler in tone). Watanabe-sensei had this incredible ability to weave heartfelt stories about everyday struggles, and 'Megumi' is no exception. It follows a young girl navigating post-war Japan with quiet resilience, and the emotional depth is just stunning.
I love how Watanabe blends subtle historical commentary with personal growth—it’s not preachy, just deeply human. If you enjoy works like 'Anne of Green Gables' but with a Japanese cultural lens, this might resonate. The manga’s out of print now, but I’ve seen scanned chapters floating around online forums. Definitely worth tracking down if you appreciate vintage storytelling with soul.