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Showing posts with label mythology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mythology. Show all posts

Sunday, October 15, 2023

Food and Drink: It's October! Let's Celebrate Apples

In the USA, October is the month we celebrate Halloween, pizza, and apples. I especially like the fact that October is National Apple Month. It was founded as National Apple Week in 1904 and later expanded to the entire month of October. Apples are such a delightful fruit and come in numerous varieties. There is a variety for practically every letter of the alphabet, including the letter Z. The variety is called Zestar.


Apples in Legends, Myths and Folklore

Ever Hear of Johnny Appleseed?

From childhood, I have heard all kinds of stories about apples. The story I remember vividly is the one about Johnny Appleseed. As a child I remember hearing the story about a man who walked everywhere in America and everywhere he went, he dropped apple seeds on the ground and apple trees grew. That’s not really true. It is true that he was a real person and not a legend. His real name is John Chapman (1774 – 1845) who became known as Johnny Appleseed. He introduced apple trees to various parts of America such as Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois. It’s not just the fact that he planted the trees which contributed to the environment. He was also a very kindhearted man and became known for his acts of charity, as well as his conservation efforts. It made him somewhat of a folk hero.

Other Legends and Myths About Apples

Is it in the Bible?

An apple is not mentioned in the Garden of Eden. Neither the Old or New Testament specifically state what the forbidden fruit was that Adam and Eve ate. However, for years people have insisted that it was an apple. Eating it caused them to be driven out of the Garden of Eden. An apple? Not sure why. (O.o)

Non-Biblical Myths

In Greek mythology, it was said that a golden apple is what caused the Trojan War. “The war originated from a quarrel between the goddesses Hera, Athena, and Aphrodite, after Eris, the goddess of strife and discord, gave them a golden apple, sometimes known as the Apple of Discord, marked “for the fairest”.”

In Norse mythology, it was believed that apples held the key to immortality. The name of the Norse goddess who was the keeper of the apples was Iðunn. Her name means “ever young”.

The Celtic people buried apples with the dead. To the Celts the apple was sacred and it was associated with rebirth. Excavators have found graves dating back 5,000 years that had petrified apple slices.

In ancient Silesia (now modern-day Poland), people believed if they slept under an apple tree, it would induce dreams; and if a young woman put an apple under her pillow on New Year’s Eve, she would dream of her future husband.

How Do You Like Your Apples?

Apples can be eaten raw. Just pick them right off the tree. Bake them in pies, make cobblers, cookies, brownies, put them in salads, turn them into jelly, and more. My favorite way to enjoy apples? Warm apple pie with a scoop of vanilla ice cream. YUM! What about you? 

apple




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Friday, May 14, 2021

Adonis: From Greek Mythology to Modern Day

If you are familiar with Greek mythology then you know that Adonis was a beautiful boy who was loved by the goddess Venus (or Aphrodite). This name has come down to us throughout the centuries and is now used whenever referring to any young man that is strikingly handsome. My quick research indicates this is a very popular name in Hawaii.

Are you aware of the various ways the name or word ‘Adonis’ is used in our present-day?


My connection with this name has nothing to do with mythology. It’s a childhood memory. The last name of one of my classmates in elementary/middle school was Adonis. She was a friend and she was an amazing artist. Sometimes, if I asked her, she would draw pictures for me. One time she drew me a picture of a mermaid sitting on a rock by the ocean. She is in my 8th-grade class graduation photograph. Sadly, after that grade (circa 1968), we started attending different high schools. That put a distance between us, we grew apart and lost touch with each other.

OK. Enough about me. Check out these cool tweets about “Adonis”. These are tweeters who have “Adonis” as part of their name or just folks who tweeted something with the word or name “Adonis” in the context that it being used these days.

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Source: Virily.com

♦  From the book of BREXIT Lamentations.



♦  This is probably big news in the video gaming industry.



♦  For the record, I am not gawking at this hunky guy,  I just happen to like suspenders.  LOL.



♦  I would have never thought to associate  “Adonis” with a sandwich but … Hey!  It looks yummy!



♦  I totally understand associating the name “Adonis” with this magnificent horse!



♦  What do you know?  A tweet about Adonis in Greek mythology.



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Saturday, May 30, 2020

Mythology: That’s god with small letter “g”!

I was sitting attentively in a Bible study several years ago and mention was made about the contrast between God and “the other gods”. I contributed to the discussion by saying that I had watched a documentary about the Greek and Roman gods and it seemed as if the gods enjoyed playing with humans like they were toys. That was my unscholarly observation. However, I didn’t really have a specific example to further expound on my statements.

It’s only about 10 years later, but I found an example!


According to the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite, when Zeus was asked to grant prince Tithonus eternal life, the god consented. Nonetheless, there was no request for eternal youth, so for thousands of years, Tithonus grew old and withered.”

Man! I mean … god! Emphasis on the small letter “g”. That’s jive!

This proves that my point. If Zeus wasn’t the type of god that made sport of people and toyed with them, he would have at least warned that Tithonus was not going to stay young forever!

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Edith Hamilton (1867 – 1963) was a distinguished American educator and a classical scholar, whose claim to fame was her thorough knowledge of ancient Greek and Roman mythology. We are in agreement with our understanding of the god and goddesses, but she expresses her observation much more eloquently.


For the most part the immortal gods were of little use to human beings and often they were quite the reverse of useful: Zeus a dangerous lover for mortal maidens and completely incalculable in his use of the terrible thunderbolt; Ares the maker of war and a general pest; Hera with no idea of justice when she was jealous as she perpetually was; Athena, also a warmaker, and wielding the lightning’s sharp lance quite as irresponsibly as Zeus did; Aphrodite using her power chiefly to ensnare and betray. They were beautiful, radiant company, to be sure, and their adventures made excellent stories; but when they were not positively harmful, they were capricious and undependable and in general mortals got on best without them.”

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Have you ever read the story of Tithonus?

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Quote Sources:

Bertalan, Dr. Meskó. What If We All Lived Beyond 130 Years? – The Medical Futurist. The MedicalFuturist Institute, June 2018

Hamilton, Edith. Mythology: Timeless Tales of Gods and Heroes. New American Library,1942.

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Content previously published at Virily.com


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