Showing posts with label Week 10. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Week 10. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Week 10 Storytelling: Mighty Princess Maya

One day, the mighty princess Maya stood on the tallest rock in the forest and admired her kingdom.  Before she took over, the dense forest had been run by rakshasas and lowly folks such as robbers and thieves.  Every time someone in her father's city tried to hunt in the woods they either ended up robbed or badly injured, or they never returned.  This caused a great famine in the city, so princess Maya decided she was going to put an end to this madness.

During the first sign of spring that year, she and her company men and women started on the outside of the forest with torches and began burning any bush too thick to see through.  By doing this, she planned to void the trees of all places that were previously used for hiding and treachery. Just a few weeks into their journey, rakshasas stormed their camp and abducted three men!  Maya knew she had to save these men without losing any more, so she threw on her armor and readied her weapons.  Her favorite weapon was the sword, but she was a master of them all.  She was the top at javelin throwing in her kingdom, and her sword abilities could cut anything clean and through.  Her boomerang would hit anything she aimed at and return.  Maya's most favorite weapon was her bow.  For this trip, she decided to leave the javelin at the camp so it didn't weigh her down.

The great Joan of Arc, another mighty warrior like Maya (Wiki)

She set out in darkness to find where the rakshasas stayed.  Not long into her journey she heard cackling like that of a jackal.  She crouched down and edged closer.  Peering through a thicket, she saw three of her men tied to poles surrounding the massive bonfire the demons had erected.  A few of the stronger looking rakshasas picked up the man closest to her and began parading him through the camp over their heads.  Onlookers yelled and cheered while eating their fest, which consisted of the last men that were wandering through the forest.  These side rakshasas threw sticks and bones from their supper at the man as he passed by on the large rakshasas shoulders.

Maya had had enough.  She burst through the bush and ran at the demon closest to her.  With her mighty fists she punched two at the same time, knocking them out.  Pulling out her bow, she began shooting arrows at every breathing creature but her men.  The rakshasas advanced, less shocked now, and drew their swords.  This was no match for Maya.   Five, ten, fifteen at a time they came in raids and in one swipe of her sword she took them all out.  Finally only a few were left.  They were hiding behind the tent, so she pulled out her boomerang and took all of their heads off with one swift throw.

Finally, she had killed all of the demons, and she rushed to untie the three men from her company.  They were so grateful that they each pledged their life, stating that they would follow her wherever she went and do what she needed done.  They finished cleaning up the forest, and even started preparing some farming land for the farmers hiding behind the walls of the city.

Until Maya's last breath, the city was safe from any outside peril.

Author's Note.  This story idea comes from the story The Felon Demon in Indian Fables and Folklore.  It is about a demon with a shovel gifted from a god that has allowed him to be an all-powerful demon.  No one could defeat him, not even an entire army.  One day, he kidnapped the king's daughter (the princess).  The king said that whoever saved her would be permitted to marry her.  One prince was willing, and he fought the demon for three days straight.  In the end, the prince won the battle and also won the princess.
I feel like this stories (and many I read like it) are so old times where the poor princess was a damsel in distress that couldn't lift a pinky for herself.  This is why I decided to write a story of my own where the woman saved the man.
The picture I selected was done so very carefully.  Joan of Arc was a famous warrior in France in the 15th century, and I likened my character, Maya, to her.  The picture (painting) is of Joan in her battle gear, very similar to what I pictured Maya wearing.  They both were also loyal to their country, and they only wanted the best, gender norms aside.

Bibliography.  This story, The Felon Demon, comes from a compilation of short stories, Indian Fables and Folklore, by Shovona Devi in the year 1919.

Week 10 Reading Diary: Indian Fables and Folklore (Part B)

Title: Indian Fables and Folklore
Author: Shovona Devi
Year: 1919


Reading Part B
Shibi and the Hawk
This story is bold, but insane.  Maybe I could re-write this to come up with a better food for the hawk (that is the bird or the man's flesh).

A red-tailed hawk like the one in Shibi and the Hawk (Wiki)

Ekalavya and Drona
I passionately hate this story.  I remember it in previous readings in this class, and it is so messed up that Drona took advantage of the boys faithfulness.  I HATE this story.
I thought someone would end up killing each other, but they became friends at the end! I must say, this was quite unexpected.
This is weird. She's married to a doll, people.
This is an excellent life lesson.  Be careful that you don't ask too much, or it could be the end of yourself.  I could write a story similar to this as storytelling.
This is way too old school for me.  The poor princess needed saving, blah blah blah.
This reminds me of karma; where you get a punishment or reward based on something previous you have done.
Well, he is definitely logical.  He did follow the instructions...
So I think the lesson here is that you can't take for granted what you have been given.  It seems like a weird lesson to me. 
I seriously just have no clue.  Don't be mean? Don't be a bully? Don't show off? I am clueless.
SO the way to win is to lie?  I am really starting to hate these stories...
Another damsel in distress... Yay.
The guy didn't like the sage, so he became him?
Not my favorite story. 

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Week 10 Reading Diary: Indian Fables and Folklore (Part A)

Title: Indian Fables and Folklore
Author: Shovona Devi
Year: 1919

Reading Part A
The Man in the Eye
I have never heard of the man in the eye, and to be honest it's a little creepy.

The Hare in the Moon
This was a good lesson for the big elephant, but I don't understand if the moon was everywhere because the story was true or it was a trick of water.
I really enjoyed this.  The hare fooled the elephants in more ways than one!
This makes elephants look bad, because when the elephant didn't get what he wanted, he stomped his feet and broke things.  Suddenly, he had everything he wanted by being a jerk.
This was mean to monkeys. 
The story of the girl that became a rat was very cute.  I like that it is a circle of life.  
The story about the rat to cat to dog to tiger was a valuable lesson on understanding your strengths.

A rat like the one in A Rat's Syamvara (Wiki)

The snake out-smarted the frogs...I could write a story where the opposite happens.
WOW.  Because he was ungrateful, he was cut into chunks of meat but none of the vile animals would even eat him. What the heck.
So the Goddess turned good? I don't know...  It is very neat that this is the back story for Valmiki, the guy who is the reason The Ramayana exists!
No one in the family wanted to rule the kingdom; this is odd.  
SO this is the origin of parasols and shoes.  This is a fun story.
The lesson here is good, but I can't exactly put a name on it.  When he lived low no one wanted to ruin him, but when he became powerful people suddenly wanted to ruin him.
I like this story.  "All Dogs Go To Heaven" comes to mind here.
These dogs sound very evil and creepy.
I did not know that this is specifically how the Pandava's survived in exile.

Saturday, March 5, 2016

Tech Tip: Embedded YouTube

I never realized how simple it is to put a YouTube video right where you want it in Blogger.  I will have to start adding more videos to my posts!