To the uninitiated, "Bilara Toro" might sound like the name of a Spanish-era hacienda or a forgotten ritual. But in the silent barrios of the Visayas and parts of Mindanao, uttering these two words is enough to send a shiver down the spine of even the most skeptical lolo or lola .

One student, Mark, later recounted in a viral Facebook post (which has since been shared over 200,000 times): "We saw it. Not a bull. A shape. It was like looking at a photograph that was on fire. It was the size of a dump truck. My friend tried to take a video, but the footage just shows heat waves and a black square. When we drove through the spot, it felt like we drove through a spiderweb made of fire. Three of us had nosebleeds." A more historical account comes from a farm foreman named Tatay Pabling. He claimed his crew was harvesting sugarcane when a Bilara Toro appeared blocking the dirt path. The foreman, a devout Catholic, threw a milagro (religious medal) at the figure. According to Tatay Pabling, the bull let out a sound "like a train whistle underwater" before dissolving into the scorched earth. The medal was later found melted into the soil. The Science vs. The Supernatural Skeptics argue that the Bilara Toro is a classic case of pareidolia (seeing patterns where none exist) combined with the dangerous physical effects of heat stroke .

In the vast and shadowy landscape of Philippine folklore, where the Manananggal splits itself in half and the White Lady haunts midnight highways, a lesser-known but equally chilling entity has been whispered about for generations: the Bilara Toro .

Next time you find yourself on a dusty Visayan road, and the sun is directly overhead, and the heat waves start to dance—look closely. If you see two red dots staring out from the mirage that don't quite reflect the light... drive faster. And don't look in the rearview mirror.